wtf…

  • grte@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    Since this psychopath’s previous administration I have advocated for Canada to pursue a nuclear weapons program. I was attacked for it. Does anyone else have any bright ideas on resisting this increasingly aggressive state? Preferably without decades of guerrilla warfare.

    • Questy@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      This is genuinely the only reasonable sovereignnty guarantee in the current geopolitical climate. We haven’t had a nuclear deterrent since the 80s, time to reaquire it. That’s just dreaming though, Canada simply lacks decisive leadership under any part, at least that’s the evidence of the last 30 years or so.

    • Victor Villas@lemmy.ca
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      21 hours ago

      If to protect ourselves from our enemies we have to become like them, I prefer to give up on Canada and go somewhere else.

      • grte@lemmy.ca
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        21 hours ago

        I would suggest that making themselves difficult to invade isn’t the part of them I find distasteful. If we’re ever in a position to annex them and do, I’ll agree with you.

        • Victor Villas@lemmy.ca
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          21 hours ago

          “making oneself difficult to invade” is quite an understatement of pursuing nuclear weapons but point taken

    • Daniel Quinn@lemmy.ca
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      23 hours ago

      How does a nuclear weapons programme help Canada’s sovereignty? In what situation would it be advantageous to us to actually launch a nuclear attack against our literal neighbour? Even if it wasn’t intercepted, and we somehow managed to land it on a high-value target like DC, the US would simply liquify every Canadian city from East to West in a matter of hours. And even if they somehow showed restraint in the face of a nuclear attack and didn’t counter with their own massive arsenal, the fallout alone would kill or injure millions of Canadians and destroy our economy for a generation… assuming our initial volley didn’t trigger automated MAD policies around the world and end the world in a nuclear winter.

      It’s an objectively terrible idea.

      Now, if you really are concerned about invasion from our crazy neighbours (a reasonable position to take), then a more effective approach would be a mandatory service model, where everyone is trained in small weapons fire and counter insurgency. If the Americans choose to invade, they should know going in that they’ll pay dearly for every hectare.

      • grte@lemmy.ca
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        23 hours ago

        The entire point of a nuclear deterrent is that it’s incredibly disadvantageous for everyone involved to use it. We would presumably not be dumb enough to develop one missile and call it a day. Your proposal would put us in the position of Ukraine against Russia, only against a more well funded military and without the weapons injections coming from the USA. The best we could hope for is decades of guerrilla resistance which, I don’t know about you, but I would rather have another alternative.

        • Daniel Quinn@lemmy.ca
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          21 hours ago

          So the argument is that there’s no winning, so no one will play. I can see the appeal in the idea, but doubt its viability. Should the US ever decide to take Canada in whole or in part, it would be through salami tactics (Wikipedia link you want something more serious) rather than a full scale invasion. The Americans could annex Toronto tomorrow and the rest of Canada would be scared and angry for sure, but would we demand that Ottawa launch our nuclear arsenal promising our annihilation? What if the Americans took Ottawa, and Montreal a few weeks later? How 'bout then? Would Alberta even care?

          The MAD doctrine was developed as a deterrent to nuclear attacks, not conventional ones. Sure, if the US were to attempt a first strike nuclear volley, having nukes on-hand might deter them from targetting us, but assuming that having nukes would protect us from conventional invasion doesn’t make any sense to me.

          Consider your reference to Ukraine. If Ukraine had nuclear weapons, what makes you think that Russia wouldn’t have annexed Donetsk anyway and claimed “liberation”? They had all manner of cover: local Russian-speaking population, strong separatist factions. They could invade claiming that they’re simply “protecting Russian interests/citizens” etc. Would the world expect Ukraine to launch their nukes then? What would be the inevitable outcome of such a choice to both parties? How many Ukranians would be left a few days later?

          So now you have a poorly trained local military (all your money has gone to developing and maintaining a nuclear arsenal you don’t expect to use after all) and the Russians have taken an entire region and are angling for Kharkiv next. Kiev calls for help from the world community but as their rhetoric is also coloured with threats of nuclear retribution, the world isn’t keen on helping either side. Maybe the Russians take Kharkiv because they’re feeling audacious and stop there, or maybe they try and Kiev launches a nuke on Moscow and everyone dies. There’s no scenario here where nuclear weapons make things better.

          • grte@lemmy.ca
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            21 hours ago

            Would the world expect Ukraine to launch their nukes then?

            YES. That would be the entire point. Can you explain why no nuclear armed state has directly confronted another since, well, ever? Why the US has been unwilling to intervene in Ukraine as anything other than a proxy war? Why Iran developing a nuclear arsenal is so concerning to the US? Did Israel develop a nuclear weapons capacity because they were legitimately concerned with being nuked themselves, or as a deterrent to conventional invasion? You are asking a lot of rhetorical questions but the actual history of nuclear weapons suggests that they would deter an invasion where giving small arms to citizens would not.

            Surely if North Korea can develop such a program and maintain armed forces, Canada can do so.