x.com/meanwhileinua/status/2057872620268253572
Putin didn’t invade Ukraine because of NATO. He invaded because Ukrainians were proving democracy works.
Historian and Pulitzer Prize winner Anne Applebaum puts it plainly: Putin looked at Ukraine’s democratic movement and thought, “If they can do it in Ukraine, then people could do it in Russia. So I need to crush this.”
That’s the real threat Ukraine posed. Not missiles. Not borders. A working democracy next door.
Applebaum frames the war as a fault line between the democratic and autocratic worlds. Russia isn’t just trying to take territory. It’s trying to erase Ukraine as a nation, reduce it to a colony, and send a message to every country that the post-1945 rules of Europe no longer apply.
Those rules were simple: no invasions, no wars, borders don’t change by force. Russia understood exactly what it was breaking when it crossed into Ukraine.
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