It looks more as though we don't want our troops being killed.
We don't want anyone's troops killed. More importantly, we don't want non-combatants killed, but Russia does not seem to have those concerns. If we send troops, the situation escalates, and the Chief Twat of Russia gets desperate - who knows what sort of atrocities he'll let loose if that happens? Aside from that, the best prognosis for a de-escalation comes from Russia itself finally kicking Putin out of office and coming back to reality, and if NATO puts boots on the ground that becomes less likely.
You seem to have a perhaps religious 'pacifism' angle on this where the only goal is not having anyone killed no matter what the other consequences are, or an depiction that to support but not get involved is some sort of moral cowardice, and a complete failure to appreciate any sort of nuanced position that acknowledges there are legal and political factors at play, not just moral and military ones.
The people of Eastern and Southern territories would become part of the Russian Federation, yes - this would protect them from the rest of Ukraine, which would become neutral.
How about Ukraine gets a say in whether Russia gets to steal huge swathes of its territory? How about, at the very least, the residents of those regions of Ukraine get a say?
Even if this happens, the net result is that Putin learns if he invades somewhere he gets a reward - how does that safeguard the 'neutral' part of Ukraine from futue aggresssion? How does that in any way discourage Putin from regrouping, maybe trying to remedy some of grosser examples of inadequacy and corruption from his military, and trying again? Why should Ukraine be obliged by Russian aggression to adopt some sort of 'neutral' position because Putin doesn't want them to join an organisation set up to specifically combat exactly the sort of aggression that he's demonstrating?
Which rights do you mean? Same sex marriage?Actually a lot of them are being rounded up and compelled to fight. You are assisting that.
I was actually thinking more of the right to take part in democratic action to determine the future of their own country, but I guess that generally hateful recidivism of Russian orthodox Christianity's influence on their current politics is also something to take up arms against, now that you mention it.
That you think standing up to Russian aggression is somehow responsible for Russian ill-treatment of gay people is emblematic of how disproportionate your view of these events seems to be.
O.