I agree with this as a general description, with the obvious caveats that it’s hard to not welcome someone who’s pointing a gun at you etc., since that makes it somewhat coercive, even if you’d have welcomed them anyway. Crimea really does seem to like Russia, or at least did so before the war started getting serious (I’m guessing it’s more complicated now).
That being said, I was talking about it being Ukrainian soil from the point of view of the soldiers. They’d be thinking of themselves as heroes rescuing a captive population, so are more likely to be nice. Although you could imagine the opposite story, where they think of them as traitors to be punished and purged.
I agree with this as a general description, with the obvious caveats that it’s hard to not welcome someone who’s pointing a gun at you etc., since that makes it somewhat coercive, even if you’d have welcomed them anyway. Crimea really does seem to like Russia, or at least did so before the war started getting serious (I’m guessing it’s more complicated now).
That being said, I was talking about it being Ukrainian soil from the point of view of the soldiers. They’d be thinking of themselves as heroes rescuing a captive population, so are more likely to be nice. Although you could imagine the opposite story, where they think of them as traitors to be punished and purged.