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Notes -
There were indeed, e.g.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/January_2015_Mariupol_rocket_attack
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volnovakha_bus_attack
(please read the articles)
It wasn't a coup. If you make an inflammatory statement — provide the evidence.
The legitimately elected leader of the country was chased away by men with guns. How is it not a coup?
You can argue that it was a good and necessary coup, but I can't see how you escape framing the undemocratic and disorderly ouster of Yanukovych as anything other than a coup.
Do you have a video of him being chased away by men with guns? He was voted out by Rada.
"Coup" is a charged word, and is used to paint the protest, and post-Maidan government by extension, as illegitimate. So why not "Revolution"? Because it is reserved for events like American revolution, and pro-Ru Americans, despite them siding with Russians and Chinese, still venerate the Founding Myth?
The American revolution wasn't a coup, since it didn't topple the previous government but separated from it. George didn't have to flee to another country.
The US constitution, there's a coup.
Is it based on any academically accepted definition? Because then French Revolution isn't a revolution either.
My french constitutional lexicon says that a coup d'état is the overthrow of a power through illegal, usually violent, means by someone invested with authority.
Louis was overthrown, Georges wasn't. The ARW was secession, not a coup.
So Maidan wasn't a coup either. An agreement has been reached, for an interim government to be formed, where Janukovich is still the president, and opposition leaders form the cabinet. But then Janukovich-controlled police shot at protestors, and he just left. He wasn't killed like Gadaffi. You might say — he was afraid for his life. But that is his problem. After that, Rada held a vote for his removal.
Those are just basic fact. They are a bit different from Russia Today version of events though, where violent Azov thugs chase the president and become the power, I understand.
So it is a coup. Intimidation counts.
Les cent jours were a coup. And Louis fled from Napoleon in similar fashion.
You can claim all you want the Emperor is the legitimate ruler of France and he didn't take power so much as stepped in after the king's dereliction of duty, we both know that's not how power works.
No. Let's face it — pro-Ru types want to call it a "coup" just to claim the the successor government was illegitimate and thus Ru had justification for launching their invasion. A rhetorical trick. I am not interested in rhetorical games, thank you.
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Wikipedia is far from a trusted source especially on politically relevant topics. So nope won’t read it. I’ve read enough to understand the Donbas is complex and yes there were anti Russian actions occurring. Again doesn’t make Russia correct but it complies the narrative.
As for the 2014 coup, I think most people are aware. Just because you like the freedom fighters doesn’t mean it isn’t a coup. Moreover, a cursory understanding of how the cia historically operated means any degree of uprising that “supports” globalhomo is in part astroturfed.
That's a nice way to deflect. The cases when Russians bombed Russian population in Ukraine controlled cities and locations are well documented. Those two are the best documented though. I also recommend to read materials from the International Court (Russia has its representatives there defending themselves, so it's not in abscence)
https://www.icj-cij.org/case/166/oral-proceedings
If you read quality source, you'd understand there is nothing deeply complex about it.
"Everyone understand" is a fallacy (building consensus), and it's a bad way to introduce garbage arguments about CIA and "globalhomo". Please build a good argument for why it was a coup, but taking into account events like disappearance of Janukovich, Supreme Council of Ukraine (Rada) vote for removing him, shooting at the protestors, introduction of anti-Constitutional laws on the 16th of Jan and so on?
Even in the west it's called "the Maidan Revolution", no?
All of the things you list might be good reasons to have a coup, but there's no reason not to call a spade a spade.
https://youtube.com/watch?v=FijiV_ISw2A
If you consider up to a million people in Kyiv alone a "small group", then it's a coup, sure.
I think the difference is important. Pro-Ru like to point that it was "undemocratic", and that it was instigated by CIA. While the first claim can still be supported (Janukovich wasn't deposed in an election), it is weakened by the demonstration of popular support of ousting of Janukovich. Even in Donetsk:
https://youtube.com/watch?v=d76wFtOzfds
If we are judging how popular or democratic things are by demonstration of public support Trump creamed Biden.
We generally think voting is the appropriate method.
The key word is generally.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Right_of_revolution
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