But if, for the sake of argument, they had stuck to it, and with the hindsight that fighting would cause half a million dead, would you have accepted the loss of territory (Donbas and Crimea) and Russia's other terms?
But if, for the sake of argument, Russia hadn't invaded in the first place... we can't deal with the authoritarian, expansionist dick-bags we wish we had, we have to deal with the ones we have.
I sense that pride is stopping Ukraine and the West from surrendering, not threat of genocide or risk of Russia invading NATO countries.
I sense that a desperate need to somehow shift the blame onto Ukraine and the west has you scrabbling for the most bat-shit crazy excuses you can find. Even if pride were the major element of it, it just change the fundamental, unalterable, unavoidable reality that the blame for all of this lies on Russia for its - checks records - eighth* invasion of a foreign nation in the last thirty or so years.
*Transnistra/Moldova 1992-94, Abkhazia/Georgia 1993, Chechnya 1994-96, Chechnya 2 1999-2009, Georgia 2 2008, Syria 2015-22, Ukraine 2014-15, Ukraine 2 2022-???
And let's also bear in mind here the admission by Merkle regarding the Minsk agreement.
Which is what? Angela Merkel said a lot of things, not least in her sixteen years as a Chancellor having to deal with a world made more dangerous by, amongst other things, Russian expansionism, militarism and sabre-rattling.
Are you referring to her commentary that the pause in fighting between 2015 and 2022 gave Ukraine the opportunity to re-arm and prepare defences? So what, that's an appropriate response to a recent invasion, and is further justified by the reality that the invasion it was preparing for came exactly as predicted. Ukraine didn't rearm in order to invade Russia, but Russia did rearm to reinvade Ukraine. Exactly where is the problematic part of Ukraine engaging in diplomatic measures to build up what it hoped would be a deterrent to prevent exactly the bloodshed that you keep trying to pin on them?
O.