In 2014 the Ukraine parliament voted on whether to impeach Yanukovych, according to he himself on the Oliver Stone documentary. They needed 3/4 of MPs to vote yes for it to go through, and they got less than that. Fearing for his life he had to leave his house secretly and flee to Russia; meanwhile what was thought to be his car leaving his house was fired on. A new government was formed and given the thumbs up by the US. So it was an insurrection, not a legitimate election. What had been peaceful demonstrations concerning the EU treaty prior to this, were turned into violent acts of murder by the Right Sector (iirc).
I'm not sure you understand what an 'insurrection' is. The duly elected parliament of Ukraine held a vote on whether to impeach a former president - he was already not in power, him still not being in power doesn't turn this into an 'insurrection'. Although he has claimed he was shot at as he left, that's not been independently verified so far as I'm aware. Yanykovych was elected on a mandate to foster ties with the EU, he actively campaigned on attempting to formally join, and then changed tack once he was in power, hence the widespread protests at his attempts to railroad Ukraine into Russian partnership.
And, really, Oliver Stone? Really?
The point of what I have just described is that it only takes a spark to cause a forest fire, and this big war is the result of the above relatively small events. But the original aggressor was clearly the Ukrainian nationalists.
No. The real aggressor has always been Russia - internal political disturbances, even if they escalate to violence, are not an invitation to neighbouring countries to annex territory.
Secondly we cannot look at the current events only from outside Donbass and from the West's perspective. My initial argument here was that we shouldn't get involved because doing so would make Ukraine think it could win with our support (and, it seems no nearer to defeating Russia after 9 months, with hundreds of thousands dead or injured).
We should get involved, because if we don't then millions of Ukrainians suddenly find themselves living in the rampant corruption of Russian systems, and Putin starts turning his eyes towards Finland, or Slovakia or one of the other former Communist satellite states that he wants to create a buffer around the indefensible Russian western plains.
But I was still hopeful for a Ukrainian victory, like everyone else.
You could have fooled me.
But when they started making up stories of heroism and telling us they were defending Europe, that was the start of a new scepticism for me.
You're skeptical that a country verging on the European/Asian border, defending against invasion from a predominantly Asian country that wants to see the retraction or dismantling of the majority European mutual defence organisations sees themselves as defending Europe, but you'll suck on the bullshit-teat of Russia Today like an addict mainlining heroin.
Now we have the first public evidence of Ukrainian atrocities, executing prisoners. What else have they done that we don't know about because of censorship?
We don't know, and if there are such crimes being committed they should indeed be investigated when it's safe to do so, and anyone guilty should be punished accordingly. I'll put good money on the fact that more Russians get found out for that than Ukrainians by the time it's all done.
You dismissed the witnesses on the RT documentary as actors. I'm inclined to believe them.
If you think RT is journalism, and not state-sponsored Russian propoganda, I can see why you'd make that mistake.
I'm not denying Russian war crimes may have occurred, but we now have to ask how much of what we have been told about the latter is true.
Yes we do. Just like we have to ask what's the military purpose of the mass attacks on civilian population centres and vital infrastructure from retreating Russian forces? Even if there are Ukrainian war crimes being committed, and it seems entirely plausible that there are, they still aren't on anything like the scale of the Russian infractions which aren't isolated or individual incidents, they are the explicit policy of the criminal invasion force.
O.