Don't know why british politicos are in favour of supporting fascism.
And neither can the UK.Diplomacy cannot resume until russia has had a change in management: because as it stands russia cannot be trusted to negotiate in good faith or abide by any terms laid down, even the ones they put forth.
Yeah gonna second the Oooh boy because as we've seen in recent years, Britain loooooooooooooooves facism.Ooooooh boy.
Is this the part where we say, "Sir Oswald Mosley has entered the chat?"Ooooooh boy.
It is useful as it's an official declaration of his crimes and it officially limits his international travel to only countries that won't officially recognise the warrant.But does it really mean anything? Is Putin going to travel anywhere where said warrant would be enforced?
Don't get me wrong, I think this is necessary, but without a viable path to get him, a warrant is just a useless piece of paper.
...If Putin were to leave Russia, Putin “would be arrested and surrendered to ICC,” he said. “World leaders will think twice before shaking his hand or sitting with Putin at the negotiating table. It’s another clear signal to the world that the Russian regime is criminal.”
Ukraine is not a member of the court, but it has granted the ICC jurisdiction over its territory and ICC prosecutor Karim Khan has visited four times since opening an investigation a year ago.
The U.S. does not recognize the court’s jurisdiction and Moscow formally withdrew its signature from the founding statute of the ICC in November 2016, a day after the court published a report classifying its annexation of Crimea as an occupation.
While it is unlikely that Putin will end up in prison, it further labels the country and its leader as a pariah, said Wayne Jordash, who is leading teams of Ukrainian and international prosecutors and investigators in Ukraine. That will affect Putin’s ability to travel and could hinder Russia diplomatically.
“It now puts pressure on any country, which is a signatory to the ICC, to the Rome Statute, to arrest him if he ever travels to those countries,” he said. “These are countries which may in the past have been somewhat reserved about criticizing or voting in the General Assembly against Russia’s invasion. So I think this puts a huge amount of pressure on Putin, too.”...
Russia's economy isn't as bad as some have said. Internally, it's quite stable and many people there only have state media as their primary information source. Many of those who've protested against the war (or, for various reasons, been opposed to it) have either fled, been imprisoned, killed or forced into silence. As such, it seems only a handful of people really dare to speak out.oppressed people and very quickly coming to the point of "nothing to lose", I don't see how they don't end up in a civil war anyway.