Debating the War in Ukraine discusses whether the war could have been avoided, and, if so, how? In this dialogical book, the authors discuss nodal points of history in terms of counterfactuals and contrastive explanations, concluding by considering future possibilities.
They start in the 1990s where several causal elements of the war originate involving Russia-s economic developments and Europe-s security arrangements. Moving on to the next decade, they focus on the Iraq war, colour revolutions, and NATO-s 2008 announcement that Ukraine and Georgia will become members. Finally, they explore the past decade including the Ukrainian crisis of 2013-2014, the annexation of Crimea, and the consecutive war in east Ukraine. The current war can also be seen as a continuum of that war. The authors agree that NATO-s 2008 announcement on Ukraine-s and Georgia-s NATO membership was an unnecessary provocation, and that the implementation of the Minsk agreement could have prevented