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submitted 4 days ago by NimdaQA@lemmy.ml to c/worldnews@lemmy.ml
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[-] Cowbee@lemmy.ml 18 points 4 days ago

Reporting on what Putin has said about the state of the war is not "simping" for anyone, nor is Marxism-Leninism about "simping" for anyone.

[-] postcapitalism@lemmy.today -2 points 4 days ago

Cowbee. I appreciate some of your takes on Marxism, but disagree frequently with your frame of reference on state power in the global field.

I view the war with Ukraine as one of Russo imperialism in response to Western imperialism. Indeed the USSR itself had many imperialist tendencies under a unified Asiatic / Slavic Soviet even as did Western and Asian counterparts post WW2

The irony being I am more allied to Trotsky or Luxemburg’s take. Which no doubt wouldn’t receive fair purchase in ML group. Forgive me for not directly referencing War and International - as it meanders but hits many themes relevant to Russia/Ukraine conflict

That being said to summarize my view: wars of conquest as a tool for furthering state capital / geopolitical interests shouldn’t be supported by Marxists, and posting the rationalization of an autocrat reads as support to me.

[-] Cowbee@lemmy.ml 13 points 4 days ago

If Russia was actually imperialist and the Russo-Ukrainian war an inter-imperialist conflict, then I'd agree with you, but Russia isn't imperialist (and certainly not the USSR). In the current era, the US Empire is the hegemon, and its vassals the beneficiaries of imperialism. Russia is governed by nationalists who do not have a stake in the global imperialist system, and as such are forced into south-south trade and south-south alliances. Further, there is a rising communist movement within Russia that is growing year over year that stands to return Russia to socialism.

Ukraine is used somewhat similarly as how Israel is used by the US Empire; as millitary bases. The far-right Banderites in Kiev have power currently, and are doing their job of de-communization. The Donbass region seceded, and the ensuing war between Donetsk/Luhansk and Kiev is what is sparking Russian intervention. Russia is not doing this in pursuit of new neocolonies to exploit, nor does it have any. Russia lacks the financial capital as well as a spot in the global financial monopoly by which imperialism functions that the west has.

A NATO victory over Russia would result in ethnic cleansing in the Donbass region, serious destabilization in a significant anti-US force, and a strong ally for socialist countries and anyone trying to break away from the IMF.

[-] Edie@lemmy.ml 1 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Further, there is a rising communist movement within Russia that is growing year over year that stands to return Russia to socialism.

And, what? What difference does it make? France had a decent communist movement, right? They were still imperialists.

[-] Cowbee@lemmy.ml 14 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Russia doesn't have a stake in the world imperialist system, France does and has for centuries. If France were to lose in a war against the global south, there would be a huge blow to their continued domination and subjugation of African countries. The fact that Russia has a rising communist movement is just a bonus tacked onto the end, it isn't an indication of the country being imperialist or not. In fact, the nationalists in charge of Russia are caught between needing to appease the public yearning more and more for socialism and their own interests in perpetuating their capitalist system.

Does that make sense?

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this post was submitted on 10 Dec 2025
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