Fair enough, but back to my original point - that the negotiators in the West in 1990 understood that further NATO expansion would be perceived by Russia as a threat to its security.
No, they didn't. They knew Russia would CLAIM it was a threat to their security, because it was a threat to their agenda to grow into a world power with local influence.
I am using that to argue against the claim that Russia's invasion was unprovoked.
I know, but because your premise is flawed, your conclusion is also flawed; even if it weren't, NATO going back on its word is not reason to invade a non-NATO country, nor to lie about it being to 'rescue' Russian-speaking locals, nor is it justification for the propoganda war, nor is it justification for the atrocities in that invasion, nor is it a justification for the kidnap and repatriation of children, and nor is it a justification for the invasions of Chechnya or Georgia.
And you are answering that it isn't really security concerns but territorial ambitions.
Yes.
When I refute this with Russia signing the Minsk agreements, keeping Donbas in Ukraine, you resort to comparing Putin with Hitler.
You brought Hitler in with the nonsense about appeasement not having been tried for long enough. Like Hitler, though, the fact that Putin signs an agreement can't really be taken at face value; he has a history of reneging on agreements. He signed the Minsk agreement in September 2014 and then sent Russian forces in again in January 2015 leading to Minsk II in February 2015 in which it was agreed that Donetsk and Luhansk remained Ukrainian territory and were not independent: lo and behold, 2022, Russia decides to recognise those two territories as independent.
And that is a very serious allegation, especially when we see symbolism from 1930s Germany on the flesh and equipment of Ukrainians.
Are the neo-Fascists in Ukraine? It seems likely, there are across the rest of Central and Easter Europe. Are they a significant factor in the politics of Ukraine - not massively, but probably more than any of us are comfortable with - about the same as in Germany, from what I can gather. Is that justification for Russian invasion? No, of course not.
And if you don't like the comparison, don't bring up Hitler.
And we don't see Russia mass murdering people with little hats or prisoners of war.
No, we see them bombing civilian targets and hospitals and schools and power infrastructure and nuclear facilities, instead. We see them kidnapping children and taking them away.
Plus, Farage agrees that Russia was provoked.
And you think that somehow validates your case? That should be one of the biggest clues that your talking shit. All you need now is Katie 'rentagobshite' Hopkins.
I am now thinking that Russia might have done something similar to the Baltic states to prevent them joining NATO, if they had been strong enough at the time.
Maybe they would have done - we should probably be thankful that they weren't.
I just don't think you can explain their current actions as due to territorial ambitions.
Do you not? I think I can, I think I already have.
Unnecessary paranoia, maybe.
You can make the argument about Ukraine, and even about Moldova, although I'd disagree. But it doesn't explain Chechnya or Georgia, and they are part of a clear pattern.
But I will finish by saying that I once went up to a circus elephant (which was in a pen) to pat it on the trunk. It sent me flying: it didn't know that I didn't want to harm it, and so it assumed that I was a threat. I think that's the case with Russia - it only wants one thing at the end of the day: a buffer zone.
If Russian's are only as smart as an elephant, they deserve it - the point you appear to be missing in this is that the elephant was in a pen for a reason. It's dangerous and stupid and doesn't belong in civilised company. Russia can want a buffer zone, but that doesn't justify invading foreign countries to create one. Everyone wants a buffer zone - currently between them and Russia - but we don't get to steal someone else's land and deny them their self-determination in order to get it. Instead, we act like grown-ups and negotiated mutual defence treaties - you know, like fucking NATO.
O.