I think you make some very good points Ian. The contrast between the reporting on the Ukraine war and Putin’s involvement in Syria, Chechnya, and Crimea has been stark. As for the ways to end the war, short of nuclear holocaust, you are absolutely right that it appears that NATO don’t seem to have any ideas.If Britain had obliterated another country in the way Russia has done to Ukraine, there would be massive protests almost immediately. The number of people who tookto the streets to protest against Iraq was really uite staggering. Even the media coverage was more questionning. I think there was an article in the Telegraoh last week about the scale of the protests in Russia which outlined just how small they are and that their significance is so small because the Russian general public is more likely to take the view of their leaders regardless of their propaganda machine.
By contrast, the western press has focussed on the humanitarian disaster but not really looking at why we are in this position and could we have done more to prevent Putin . There is also an absence of looking towards how this conflict can be ended. I think the West has clearly antagonized Putin and has some culpability but, by the same token, I think we should have made more effort to marginalise him sooner by diplomatic means as opposed to recruiting new NATO members from his neighbours. For example, it is only with the invasion of Ukraine that people have talked about making a war criminal whereas nothing has been mentioned regarding this with his actions in other parts of the former USSR and in Syria. Ukraine has shown the west in a really poor light and our political leaders to be inactive. I would like our media to challenge them albeit I fear that we are at a point where the west cannot afford to go to war against Putin.
However, you don’t seem to appreciate the difference between the consequences of protesting in Russia and in (up until now) liberal democracies like the UK. On the one hand, Putin has a history of simply eliminating political opponents by murdering them, whereas we don’t have a history of that in this country, although the name David Kelly springs to mind.