Even accepting all your factual premises, which I don't, because they are somewhat eccentric, your conclusion is illogical.
Thought experiment: A community is largely self-governing, meaning that there are no police to resolve disputes, no courts, no child protection services etc. A little boy, Oleksandr, has two parents, a mum, Barackella, and a dad, Vlad. They are separated and both want custody. Barackella is psychologically abusive to Oleksandr, calling him "fat" etc. Vlad, in addition to calling him fat, beats the living daylights out of him as well. There is a village council, that governs the village, and its decisions are law. It disallows adoption, as well as children living without parents. As such, it decides that the only way to stop Vlad's abusive behaviours - which are beginning to threaten Oleksandr's life - is to award custody to Barackella.
Just as she is about to be awarded custody by the council, you step in and say "Now, like I said before, we're not debating here if Vlad is in the wrong at all or not. I can find many reasons to prove that Barackella is in the wrong too... I'm all for tackling every single wrong anybody does, but we have to keep things in perspective. Barackella is looking for an
excuse to take Oleksandr away."
There's a guy in the newb equivalent of this thread,
@Skovoroda . He's a Russian-speaking Ukrainian who lives in the east of the country. He's precisely the kind of person Putin has been trumpeting is terrified of the fascists and needs Mother Russia's protection. Guess what? He
fu*king hates the Russian intervention, and he's pissed off as hell about the annexation of the Crimea. he doesn't know a single person who supports the intervention. I wonder if you'd go down there and tell him that he should put up with the Russian invasion of his country, and that America - the only country in the world that can stop Putin from rolling tanks into Kiev if he wanted - has no right to intervene because it bombed Syria, or something.