ISIS has no territory left.
ISIS is a terrorist group, they don't need formal control of territory. In the ongoing activity against ISIS denying them control of territory is a good thing, I'd agree, but at what cost?
If ISIS would have committed genocide against Assad supporters, then their defeat is good.
Whether 'Assad supporters' would constitute a group against whom 'genocide' would be considered is a little sophistric, but I'd agree that - in isolation - limiting ISIS ability to murder people is good. In this instance, however, it's not in isolation, it's in a situation where instead the Assad regime now has the unopposed capacity to kill people instead. This is not a win.
Ukraine's resistance is unnecessary.
Russia's invasion was unnecessary.
They brought it on themselves by attacking the breakaway republics in Donbas.
If you're going by 'who first fired a shot' the separatists caused it. It's the Ukrainian government's job to enforce peace within its territory. Legally it was none of Russia's business (although, on a practical level, of course, they'd already been financially, politically, morally and logistically supporting those separatists to foment unrest). And, let's not forget, Russia was already illegally occupying Crimea at this point.
Stop pretending that Russia initiated the war.
Nobody's pretending. Russia started the war when it invaded Crimea. Even if you consider cessation of military activities after that as the end of that war and this to be a new one, Ukraine's activities within its own border are not a war. Russian troops crossing the border, whether into disputed territory or into the broader Ukrainian lands is another explicit act of war.
There is no need to 'pretend' Russia started this war, or the last one. It's readily apparent to anyone looking at the facts that Russia started both of them.
O.