"The more Russia keeps sending troops and weapons into a foreign country, the more people are going to die. You keep forgetting to mention that bit. Ukrainians will die if we don't send them weapons, they don't want to be Russians, and they will continue to resist Russian invasion, just less effectively."
This can only be true if the nationalists in Ukraine force the population to fight, and there is plenty of evidence that they are.
How is Ukrainian people being willing to fight for their freedom causitive of a Russian invasion? You've (badly) dealt with the second bit, by implying that there's some small sliver of nationalist agitators motivating the entire country to fight back when the majority would be willing to submit, but you've completely ignored the fact that it's all prompted by an ILLEGAL, UNJUSTIFIED INVASION BY A COUNTRY WITH A DEMONSTRATED RECENT HISTORY OF MILITARY EXPANSIONISM.
The front lines may not be moving much, but Russia isn't in a hurry and in that sense is steamrolling through Donbas.
This is Russia 'we'll be done in three days' not in a hurry? It's an embarressment how fundamentally ineffective Russia has been for a nation pretending to be second-tier military with propoganda of first-tier status.
I wasn't saying that previous affiliations are justification for invasion, except to the extent that when the USSR broke up, millions of Russians were left in some areas of Ukraine and the majority of them weren't happy about the nationalist coup in 2014.
Wow. So much wrong in just one sentence. You explicitly said it was 'historically Russian territory' as a justification for this, which is exactly saying that the previous affiliations (if you were correct) were relevant. When the USSR broke up the people who were in Ukraine were former Soviet Citizens, Russia hadn't existed as a nationality for half a century. At that point, if they so desperately wanted to be Russian, they could have tried to get to Russia, but regardless, their existence is perhaps a reason for Russia to offer people incentives to move to Russia, it's not a legitimate basis for an invasion of a foreign state.
You say 'the majority' of the self-identifying 'Russians' (who aren't ACTUALLY Russian) were unhappy with the internal Ukrainian political situation - ok. That 'Majority of the pro-Russian' element in Ukraine was very, very far from being the majority of the population of Ukraine, and their (and your) characterisation of the demonstrations that led to the fall of the turncoat President as a coup isn't based on the reality as we exhaustively covered before.
And if it were, that STILL wouldn't be a justification for an invasion buy Russia. And it wouldn't have justified the invasions of Moldova, Chechnya and Georgia that predated it and demonstrate that this isn't a one-off, this is a pattern of militaristic, Imperialist expansionism.
They broke away and formed a collective self-defence treaty with Russia.
They don't get to do that. And Russia doesn't have the right to send troops in, even if it wants to recognise that claim.
There is also the strategic aspect whereby Russia will not allow NATO to control Crimea, hence the need to have a land corridor to Crimea in southern Ukraine.
NATO didn't control Crimea. Russian wouldn't need a land corridor to Crimea if it hadn't illegally invaded the first time.
So you think Russia will attack a NATO country and trigger article 5?
Deliberately, no. I don't think even the most rabid of Russian propogandists see an outcome of that where Russia, in anything like its current incarnation, is allowed to continue as a political operator. However, with rockets, missiles and bombs being launched I don't think it's beyond the realms of possibility that something might go wrong and things could escalate; with Russian losses so high and their achievements so poor, I can see their current despicable tactics becoming worse in an attempt to make a breakthrough, and I can see others getting dragged in that way, as well.
Not all neutrality is enforced neutrality, but all enforced neutrality is neutrality.
Russia doesn't get to decide if Ukraine should be neutral. Ukraine gets to decide that.
O.