Iraq is an Arab Muslim majority country with very few white people. Russia is a white, European Christian majority country with minorities from other religious and ethnic groups. There is a world of difference there. Iraq also occurred before the great financial collapse.
The definitions of whiteness, Christendom and Europeanism are not set in stone - for example, quite a lot of pro-Western Ukrainians think that Russians are actually Mongoloid Finno-Ugrs with a slave mentality. By applying some appropriate media coverage, any opposition to the war with Russia on the grounds of Russia being white, Christian and European can be easily dealt with. It has already happened at least twice during the past 200 years.
Indeed. I don't buy the "European and white" racial argument at all. The US didn't invade Honduras in 2009, didn't invade Syria in 2011, didn't invade Egypt in 2011 or 2014, didn't invade Yemen, didn't invade Tunisia, hasn't yet invaded Bolivia, Brazil, Venezuela, or Iran, has barely bothered even with ISIS, and only launched a cursory bombing campaign in Libya (albeit at French insistence). These aren't white nations, according to American definitions (who specifically introduced "Hispanic" for that matter, where most Europeans would consider Spanish-descended groups as white). Iraq wasn't even a NATO action; this is hence why all the talk about the Iraq invasion used the "coalition of the willing" newspeak instead of the NATO operation in Afghanistan.
I also have no idea why Sergarr thinks the world is still stuck in the exact same political situation of over a decade ago, though, nor do I understand why he thinks Russia has the political and military weakness of even Hussein's Iraq. There's a teeny, tiny power disparity between the armed forces of Estonia and Russia which I suspect would play a not-entirely-inconsiderable role in any consideration of a unilateral Estonian invasion of Russia.
USA is NATO's main force vastly exceeding all other force in NATO in power.
There's zero functional difference between USA's invasion and occupation and NATO's invasion and occupation.
There's a huge difference as far as those NATO nations that didn't send forces to Iraq are concerned. For one thing, they didn't throw away their lives on a fool's venture.