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Regarding "Biden's on-target message on Russia" (editorial, Sept. 22): The Russians are definitely not bluffing on this escalation of the Ukrainian conflict. They have more nuclear weapons than any other nation on Earth. They know the meaning of suffering garnered from centuries of successfully fighting and defeating invaders — most recently the Nazis.
The West needs to acknowledge its role in fomenting this crisis with the Maidan coup/putsch of 2014 and NATO's relentlessly provocative behavior against Russia since the fall of the Berlin Wall. We need to backtrack from marching toward total war with the largest nation on Earth that has the most natural resources. We are yet one more step closer to World War III, which no one will win and we will lose. I'm sorry for what is happening in Ukraine but it is not worth dragging the U.S. (which is suffering from myriad domestic problems, like inflation), down into an unwinnable conflict that will collapse our economies and possibly destroy all humanity.
Michael Pravica, Henderson, Nev.
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The thing the media seems to ignore is that all or most of the countries that were previously under the Soviet umbrella could only be kept in the union under force. These countries have opted to be independent, to the extent some are willing to join NATO or go to war with Russia rather than live under Russian rule again. Russian President Vladimir Putin has to keep a gun to the heads of other countries in his effort to "rebuild" the USSR. To ensure they don't leave, he's willing to bomb them back to the stone age to prevent them from leaving (see Chechnya). As casualties increase, it's likely Russian citizens will also turn against him. The fact that he is recruiting prisoners should speak volumes. Ukraine will require billions to rebuild. Who will pay? It will either be a huge financial burden to Russia, or an economic dead weight for years to come. Either way, any country that has to forcibly keep member states under force of military threat will never be a serious global power.
Keith Bogut, Lake Elmo