Would you agree that Ukraine and Russia's problems seem to stem from strong ties left over from the Soviet era now being threatened, and it's those issues that need to be sorted out between the leaders of the two countries.
Yes and no, it's certainly a legacy of that idea of Soviet era 'Russia', but Ukraine does not appear to have a significant desire to return to that arrangement; this is a case of Russian imperialism, which predated the Soviet era, rearing its head again as Putin tries to invoke nationalism and a sense of 'manifest destiny' to detract from the obvious failings of his regime.
I feel that our role ought be to mediate rather than get involved militarily.
Nice sentiment - Putin's problems aren't going away, and if he invades Ukraine (which has made friendly overtures to NATO and the west long before this kicked off) where's he going to look next? We didn't intervene militarily when he invaded Crimea, and here we are a few years later with him emboldened by that and threatening the same thing again.
Also, Russia might also point to the presence of about 80,000 US troops in Eastern Europe as justification for its current actions.
He not just might, he already has. He doesn't get to dictate to those countries which troops they can and can't have in their own space, though. Those troops have been in place, in slightly varying numbers, since the 1950s, why is it now such a problem? Why is the presence of troops in non-Ukrainian countries that aren't bordering Russia a justification for a potential second invasion of the Ukraine?
O.