Irish people arent cowards, but you (one person) possibly are. Cant know that for sure though.
Ukraine was not bombing their own people, and Ukrainians wanted to join western world and they revolted to refuse Russia.
There was most definitely a small majority of Ukrainians who preferred an orientation toward the West in the 2000s and early 2010s. But it was presumably something like 51% pro-West, 47% pro-Russia or something like that, with significant geographical polarization. Before the Maidan, the pro-Russian side had the upper hand in terms actual political power, then things flipped around after Yanukovych fled Kyiv.
I've stressed this before, but I think it's important to repeat this again: this conflict didn't start in late 2013; by that point, there had already been an ongoing tug-of-war between the West and Russia over Ukraine for well over a decade. In the long run, this kind of polarization wasn't tenable imho and Ukraine would have broken apart sooner or later anyway. Pro-Western and pro-Russian parts of Ukraine should have separated amicably, like Czechoslovakia separated into the Czech Republic and Slovakia.
The big hurdle were always the regions of Ukraine with "mixed allegiances". In places like Kyiv or Lwiw, you have overwhelming majorities for a pro-Western course, just like you have overwhelming pro-Russian majorities in places like Luhansk or Crimea. The issue were always places like Kharkiv or Odessa where you had a 55-35 split or something along those lines.
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West world soft power is that people want to live the western life.
I think that's a common misconception. What all people around the globe want is the Western standard of living, but plenty of them are perfectly fine with a lack of democracy or freedom as long as they have prosperity, safety and stability. Think of Singapore, China, Dubai or Saudi Arabia.