The impression I was getting was that you were putting the US involvement at the same level as the Russian involvement. Are you saying that in fact the US involvement was far, far lesser then the Russian involvement?
I wouldn't be so categorical as to say, "far, far less". First of all, the circumstances were different - the USA
heavily supported the rebels in Maidan with everything they might need for a peaceful revolution, and the Euromaidan, as we all know, succeeded with just 100 casualties and the conflict never growing beyond a series of police clashes. Russia, on the other hand, got a pro-Russian movement that has already declared independence of Donetskaya and Luganskaya oblasts and was branded as "terrorists" by Ukraine, with Ukrainian forces already on the move for a counterinsurgency operation, and so the help that the separatists required was not money or propaganda, but rather arms and training. If the sides were reversed, I am fairly confident that the USA would've
armed and drilled the rebels as well. And secondly, Russia doesn't really support the war - rather than helping the rebels invade the parts of Ukraine that aren't Donbass, Kremlin, with its Minsk agreement and various shady dealings, as mentoned in the link I provided in the post above as well as in many other interviews with the rebels and their commanders posted on Colonel Cassad's blog (which is pro-Russian, and thus unlikely to exagerrate such revelations), has actually been detrimental to the Novorossian war effort. My theory is that this is because Putin has no real desire for this war to continue or for Ukraine to fall, and so he prevents the separatists from making any significant territorial advances, but at the same time, he cannot let them be defeated because that would be suicide for his "defender of Russians who is not scared of the USA" public image and, subsequently, popularity. For the same reason, he cannot give in to Obama and Merkel's demands and has to continue the current political standoff, even though Russia has absolutely nothing to gain from the ruined Novorossiya. So Putin is as concerned with putting wrenches in the rebels' works as he is concerned in not making it blatantly obvious that he doesn't want them to succeed.
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That is one of the laws of dialectic materialism btw.
True - attributing "quantity has a quality of its own" to Stalin is like attributing "Our Father, who art in Heaven" to pope Francis. They both were just quoting their holy texts.