TheOstrich wrote:Appreciate I'll be in a minority of 1 over this, but Yes, absolutely.
And send a peacekeeping force into Western Ukraine.
No problem with that. So long as you don't mind writing the letters to the dead aircrew's parents.
Because that is what it means, putting the lives of our military on the line. Granted it is to save tens of thousands of civilian lives. That is a good thing and our servicemen and servicewomen see that as a good thing and think it is their duty to do that. Sadly their families generally don't.
Let's be frank about this whole "no fly zone" thing. This isn't Iraq or Syria or Bosnia/Serbia. Russia keeps their top of the line anti aircraft weapons to themselves. They don't sell them. Our aircraft would be facing anti air weapons at least as good as NATO weapons.
We would have to sortie into Russia and Belarus to take out the anti air weapons. We'd have to mix it up with their fighters and they make some of the best in the world and have spent decades working on command and control where we had a strong lead.
Even then, the vast majority of the damage is being done by shelling. Not by air borne weapons. Should we also set up a no shelling zone and try to wipe out the artillery?
By which time you might as well just get the tanks on the border and saddle up. Because you're way involved beyond a simple "no fly zone".
Then what do you do when the Ukrainians start overflying Russia and Belarus and bombing the crap out of them to stop the influx of troops?
It all sounds really good. "set up a no fly zone, we have to stop the planes". In fact it says "get involved". Getting involved in a war is like getting pregnant, you either are or you are not.
BTW I'm not saying don't do it. I'm saying "do it for the right reasons and be prepared to back it up with everything you have".