- Joined
- Feb 16, 2021
The thing is, you might have been correct a hundred years ago. Hell, you might have been mostly correct ten years ago. However, a lot has changed after that.You see, that would be an issue if Russians were invading fucking Ugandans or something. But we're talking about Russians and Ukrainians here. Yes, there would be some unrest in the first months, but from there, Ukrainians will just accept the occupation. On top of that, ~13% of Ukraine is just straight-up Russian.
Do you really think Russia and Ukraine are that different? They have the same alphabet, the same naming customs, the same architecture (I mean just look up photos of Moscow and "kYiv" and compare), the same religion (Orthodox Christianity), among many other things.
Both countries are corrupt, yes, but I'd rather be ruled by a country that has existed for longer since their gov't would have to be more stable.
Most Russians think as you do. Ukraine is a country full of people who are exactly the same as them. Things have changed quite a bit in the last few years, however. I already know Russian speaking Ukrainian expats who, even before the invasion, hated Russia and Russians more than anything. After the invasion, they will not be the same people any more than North and South Koreans are the same people.
There has already been a lot of bad blood festering between Ukraine and Russia after 2014. If you think about how the people in the Donbas have felt that they have suffered due to the Ukrainian bombing (leading Russia to call it genocide), the Ukrainians on the other side have also suffered similarly due to the Russian bombing and skirmishes from Donbas. Once the invasion started, the Russians lost the Ukrainians for generations. One does not forget your own brother stabbing you in the back. Especially not now when the Ukrainians all have guns.
Also note, that the Russians and other orthodox people are no longer part of the same communion after the orthodox schism of 2018, where the Holy Synod of Constantinople declared the Orthodox Church of Ukraine as its own church. This led the Russian orthodox church to cut its ties with the Patriarch of Constantinople and several other extant Orthodox churches. The Ukrainian question has essentially separated the Orthodox church in two. Currently about half of the churches and 1/4 of the clergy in Ukraine consider themselves part of the new autocephalous Ukrainian Church, not as an autonomous part of the Moscow Patriarchate. However, even the Metropolitan Onuphrus, the head of the Ukrainian Church that considers itself led from Moscow, has declared that the Russian attack on Ukraine is akin to the "sin of Cain, who killed his brother out of envy" and describes the Ukrainian soldiers as "(people) fulfilling their duty to defend the Motherland."
TLDR: The Russians would probably have an easier time occupying Uganda than Ukraine.