The member nation went all out anyway, whats the point of a peaceful venue to talk things out if at least one side has absolutely no interest in using it.
Not to defend the UN's cowardice, but I can kinda see drawing a legalistic distinction between a formally declared war (in which two aggressors attack each other over a casus belli [meaning that both sides publicly acknowledge that they have no grudge against anyone else --including aid workers and unrelated foreign nationals caught in the conflict area]) and an invasion (in which a single belligerent unilaterally attacks/annexes a sovereign neighbour without any formal declaration, provocation, or allowance for non-combatants).What's the difference between a military offensive and a war exactly?
Specifically, Russia a part of the UN with permanent veto power. Most other UN countries don't have that.It's not a war because Russia is part of the UN and it might make them cry.
"We aren't going to attack Ukraine with nuclear weapons, but they have a lot of nuclear power plants... sure would be a shame if they all just happened to suffer a catastrophic meltdown at the same time."It probably is part of their plan: scare both europe as a whole and ukraine in specific with nuclear disaster in a bid to blackmail for control. I wouldn't be surprised if russia starts pushing REALLY HARD for negotiations now.
Although to be fair, said Polish mayor is himself a member of a populist right-wing party.Italy’s far-right former deputy prime minister Matteo Salvini was publicly humiliated by a Polish mayor for his history of wearing Putin t-shirts:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/v...one-matteo-salvini-confronted-in-poland-video
Even evil has standards, so to speak!Although to be fair, said Polish mayor is himself a member of a populist right-wing party.
case in point:
A French restaurant says it received insults and threats from customers who thought its signature Quebecois dish poutine was named after Putin
La Maison de la Poutine said it "seems necessary" to remind diners its name and signature dish are "unrelated to the Russian regime and its leader."www.businessinsider.com