Can and Can not do

Views: 21

In the meantime, there is a Peace summit somewhere in Europe. Putin put up his terms, Mark took a voorschot on his NATO job by calling it ridiculous.

But is it?
Yes, if accepted, this could or might other countries to think an “agression war” pays off. But I doubt it.

What I want to know is this: is this referendum, where the part of the ‘occupied’ parts of Urkriania decided they wanted to join Russia, valid?

Or is it like the West said: falsefied.
I doubt Russia would risk claiming these territories if it was NOT a valid one.

That would jeopordise their strategy as the militaria intervention would be based on falsefied data and thus a lie.

Which is unstable ground to build a war upon.

Look, Russia is right about the NATO expansion, but this alone would not be the reason to intervene.

They would only intervene if the Referenda are solid and thrustworthy, otherwise they would risk their neck on a lie.

For me, I would create a standstill, freeze the conflict and borders, and get this peace threathy signed.

The stopping of the conflict is essential. No more blood and ellende.

Same with the Middle East devistation.

On another note;


AI is already involved in Warfare.
Tricky.

This AI thing is the real, underlying, huge, problem. People are just too busy killing each other, just yet. That might stop if humanity sees the real problem as it exposed itself: when AI’s going to decide what some people can and can not do.

Hmm.


Speaking on condition of anonymity because of his active service, a senior Israeli military official insists that it is people who sign off on the attacks with the knowledge of estimated civilian cost. A soldier reviews all this information and still decides that the attacks on Gazans are worth it, while the tech simply helps them locate and hit more places, faster. “The whole way we select targets is very human intensive,” he says. “Robots aren’t going to conduct a war for Israel.”

“Technology was probably the most helpful thing [to] eventually turn the battle in our favor,” the military official says, describing Israel’s regaining of control in the country’s south and launching its all encompassing offensive. However, Israel has yet to achieve any of its stated military objectives. Its Rafah invasion hasn’t led to Hamas’ destruction or killed its senior leadership. Israel rescued a captured soldier in October, two civilian hostages in Rafah in February, and four others in central Gaza’s Nuseirat refugee camp in June during the deadliest attack since December, killing more than 270 Palestinians, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. And yet Israel hasn’t come close to saving the vast majority of those still held captive in the Strip.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *