I never said I approved of the Russian annexation or of their hand in eastern Ukraine.
Well, then I don't understand why you responded to my post the way you did. You responded specifically to the statement where I told the pro-russians that in my estimation the majority of the people here are not on their side of the fence. Responding to that part of the post the way you did suggested to me that you found some sort of redeeming quality in the act because of the way the US has behaved elsewhere. Chalk it up to an error in communication, I suppose.
I never said there was a “peaceful referendum“. Well the Russians certainly didn’t do what the US helped create in Syria for starters…
You said no excessive force; in my opinion, laying down minefields *is* excessive force.
I’m sure the elections leading up to the Cuban’s volunterily surrendering their sovereignty was at least a legitimate, peaceful, and supported by the Cubans themselves, as the recent Crimean vote to leave the Ukraine.
Huh? Are you suggesting that the US manipulated the Cuban elections prior to the signing of the 1903 treaty that allowed the US to keep a base there? Because that doesn't really make a whole lot of sense; after all, the US took Cuba from Spain in the US-Spanish war, and then granted it independence in 1902. If what you're implying is true, it'd have made far more sense for them to simply *not* sign the Teller Amendement into law forcing them to grant Cuba independence.
Of course two wrongs don’t make a right, but it does make a point about hypocrisy, propaganda, and the value of accords and memorandums to powerful nations.
No, not quite. First of all, one powerful nation breaking its agreements does not tell other nations that such agreements have no value, and does not justify breaking their own agreements. It simply cautions them against signing such agreements with that nation in the future. Secondly, on secondary inspections of the Algiers Accords, it is *not* in fact all that clear they've been broken. The text of the accord says the US shall not intervene 'politically' or 'militarily'; which it hasn't: espionage activities do not really fall under either definition.
I do agree that the US has been behaving dishonorably towards Iran (though Iran is hardly playing nice itself); and a lot of its foreign policy in the region is severely problematic; but I'm not sure it has actually broken its agreements with Iran, looking at the letter of the agreements.
I didn’t know you had special rights on defining relevence…
I don't, but it's a matter of simple fact. When you're say, discussing a particular comedy movie, you *could* decide to bring up a completely unrelated war movie for some reason. But it's of course entirely irrelevant to the subject of that particular comedy movie. Similarly, when we're discussing a crisis in Ukraine that only tangentially involves the US, you *could* bring up stuff that the US has done in completely different parts of the world in situations that have no relation to Ukraine whatsoever, but it is *not* relevant.
and again I haven’t said what Russia is doing, is in any way right. Personally, I consider abject poverty and mass death to be a higher concern than an international border or the “international community”. So which is worse, the sidelines or is it the back row (just trying to get what you are saying better)?
I'm not sure I understand why that second sentence follows the first; my portrayal of the US as being in the backrow wasn't even near to being a comment on whether illegal annexation or mass deaths is worse. It was a comment on the actual involvement/blame/responsibility in the Ukraine crisis, in which the US has just not been involved as much as the other parties.
Maybe the western world could do to Russia, what they have done to Israel over the West Bank occupation….
Again, there's no relevance there. You won't find any argument from me that there should be more consequences to Israel's behavior; but it has fuck-all to do with what's happening in Ukraine. You want to start another thread on Israel's shit and the US' obstructionist tendency on the matter, go ahead. But this thread is specifically regarding propaganda surrounding Ukraine.
I now realize why you see the US-Syria saga as irrelevant, as you seem to see this as contained to an international border issue. I find the border issue less important than other things like abject poverty and mass death, so I find it relevant, especially when considering geopolitical machinations.
Poverty and mass death are actually normally irrelevant to *geopolitics*. This isn't me (or anyone for that matter) being cold and heartless; it's simply the *definition* of the word. Geopolitics is either the study of the effects of *geography* on international politics and relations; OR a foreign policy based on the relation between geography and politics. The only time when the things you mentioned become relevant to geopolitics is when they are influenced/caused by geographical politics; such as can be the case with certain types of ethnic cleansing. Annexation of territory however, is always of the utmost concern to geopolitical concerns, since it literally redraws the map.
You should've said global politics, instead of geopolitics.
Incidentally, I take issue with you putting interpretations in my mouth. I did not portray the US-Syria disagreement is irrelevant to global politics, as you seem to be implying. I said it's irrelevant *to what's happening in Ukraine*; and since this thread is about Ukraine, and not Syria, it is irrelevant *to this thread*.