Ukraine Crisis Out of courtesy I did read your entire post, but I will not be getting into a repetition of moves where we write entire essays about what has already been said.
I'll only answer those questions where I think my position may require clarification.
Could you provide criteria that would make such difference so much morally grey in one case over the other? — neomac
In the case of the Israel-Palestine conflict:
- +/-70 years of thorough documentation
- Mountains of reports by human rights organisations, including those within Israel itself
- Mountains of UN General Assembly and Security Council resolutions
- Near-unanimous global condemnation
- Condemnation within Israel itself
- Admissions by Israeli politicians
- Having studied the conflict in-depth as part of my academic education, and having visited the region as part of a research tour.
Concerning genocidal intentions and war crimes, can you articulate a bit more your moral views on that? — neomac
War crimes are an unfortunate reality of war. They happen in every war, and criminals ought to be punished.
Things take on a different guise when war crimes are carried out intentionally on a large scale, at a governmental level.
I don't believe Russia has genocidal intentions in Ukraine.
Ukrainians are returning to Russian-occupied territories every day.