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Notes -
Why not Vietnam, Germany, South Korea, Japan, Thailand, etc.? Why did you choose those two examples from a long list?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_proxy_wars
Russia is directly involved in the conflict, so strictly speaking it cannot be called a proxy war. If we really stretch the definition, the Indo-Pakistani conflicts may be called American-Soviet proxy wars (unlike, say, the 1973 Arab-Israeli War, which meets the definition perfectly).
In Japan or Thailand there was no such internal conflict and no foreign intervention, between the two German states there was never a war, so I wouldn’t count those.
Korea offers a better parallel, with the huge caveat that US troops have been stationed in the South from the beginning, so again, calling it a proxy war is quite stretching it.
South Vietnam, on the other hand, indeed is a good parallel. However, I wouldn’t say we’ll ever reach a point in the near future where US military aid to the Ukraine will be completely cut.
But anyway, it’s not the proxy war aspect that I had in mind.
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