boneyard bill
Veteran Member
What do you mean by taken? The parliament and the public in Crimea both voted for it. Was it a "fair" election? Who knows. But the outcome isn't what want wouldn't have expected under the circumstances.
So let's get this straight.
You're saying that the invasion of Crimea wasn't an invasion, because there was a referendum afterwards? And it doesn't matter that the referendum was held at gunpoint by Russian soldiers, because the result is sort of what you would have expected anyway?
But the change of power in Kiev, that was a coup d'état by the US, even though the US didn't have any troops there, and the result was remarkably similar to what happened in the elections in March of this year?
Is there not a consistency problem here?
No. There was no invasion of Crimea. Russia had a right under its treaty with Ukraine to maintain up to 25,000 troops in Crimea. Kerry claimed an invasion when he was talking to the media, but in this Senate testimony he acknowledged that Russia had treaty right, and he never claimed that they had exceeded that number of troops.
Since Crimea was already an autonomous republic, they already had their own president and parliament so it was easy for them to simply vote for secession. I don't know how proper the election was but, since 60% of Crimea is Russian and there are various other ethnic groups besides Ukrainians, the vote to join Russia is not surprising.
That is not at all the same situation as you had in Kiev where there was an out-and-out coup d'état against a democratically-elected government, but even if it were, that merely would put Putin in the position of doing the same thing the US was doing since we were, and still are, actively supporting the coup leaders both with diplomatic support, money, and possibly US paid mercenaries.
If we are so anxious to support democracy in the world, why aren't we demanding the return of the democratically-elected government or at least threatening the Kiev regime with sanctions or a cut off of aid as we are with the Egyptian regime? At the very least, we are guilty of outrageous hypocrisy. Of course, most people don't think about that because the msm conveniently fails to mention that the Yanukovych government was democratically elected. Instead, they claim, quite untruthfully, that the usurper regime in Kiev was a protest by "democracy supporters."