What do you call moving troops uninvited into another sovereign country?
That is not a courtesy call. That's an invasion in my book.
Yeah, at first I paused for a moment when I saw the news, because I agree with you. I would count this as an invasion, too, normally. In this case, though, the press has been feeding us such massive levels of misinformation, I wait a little while before moving to conclusions like that. Sometimes it's best to let things settle a bit so we don't go crazy. For example,
Bloomberg reported that Russia invaded Ukraine 2 and a half weeks ago. It took a few hours for others to correct that misinformation for Bloomberg, who just silently took down the error, rather than composing a proper retraction.
So I gave this news a few hours to settle, and this time that paid off.
Biden himself is not calling this an invasion. CNN said that the white house was quite explicit that this is not an invasion yet. So even when Biden is right, he's insisting that he's wrong. Why is it not an invasion, though? I mean, I was all ready to agree with you, but Biden says I was right.
Maybe it's not an invasion because it's part of a treaty that Russia is allowed to send peacekeeping troops to Donetsk and Luhansk? I have heard that, but I've also heard that this is a violation of international law, and I tend to believe the international law argument more. Another explanation might be that Biden is moving the goal posts, because he is too much of a coward to sanction Russia for invading. This seems more believable to me.
WWII didn't start as a full blown war either.
First there was Der Anschluss when Austria became (under heavy pressure) part of The German Reich. Next step was Heim ins Reich (Back into Germany) meaning de facto confiscating Südetenland and then came the invasion of Poland.
What Russia is doing has a lot of similarity with what the Germans did back then. Testing how far they can move on and grow influence on territory.
First the Crimea and now more or less the confiscation of two more parts of the Ukraine.
Oh, come on. Not everything is like World War II. My neighbor got up yesterday and had a vegan breakfast, then he got a rejection letter from art school, and drove a Volkeswagon to work. Does that make him Hitler?
The fact is, the troop numbers alone don't support the assertion that this conflict can be on the same, "scale as World War II." That's what we're talking about with this comparison: scale. Putin could create that kind of problem, if he turned his entire economy to war or something, like Stalin, but for all his faults, Putin is no Stalin. Also, as much as he denies it, Putin is having problems with Kazakastan in the East. He can't fight on two fronts like this.
One thing to keep in mind is that in America, we hear World War II comparisons differently than Europeans. Our dumbest pundits are obsessed with comparing everything with World War II. World War II comparisons are kind of short hand for "I'm a right wing dummy!" Look up Glenn Beck some time, he's the kind of person we see making these comparisons, most of the time.
Edit to add: It is for you not in your back yard, but I don't think you would be talking like this if Russian troops would role into the Yukon and British Columbia to protect them against nothing, instead of the Ukraine thousands and thousands of miles away.
Yeah, I hope it doesn't get too bad. I doubt the problems east of you will travel too far, but crazy things happen. Stay safe!