So here we are again. The UK Ministry of Defence, that venerable temple of moral rectitude, has demanded a UN investigation into Ukraine’s alleged killing of four civilians in occupied Crimea. Let us pause and savour the exquisite irony: a nation that armchair-generaled its way through Iraq and Afghanistan now plays the Hague’s conscience.
The accusation itself is unsurprising. Crimea, annexed by Russia in 2014 under a fog of little green men and dubious referendums, remains a bleeding wound in international law. But the West’s posture has always been one of selective indignation.
When Moscow shelled Mariupol, we thundered. When Kyiv strikes a target in Simferopol, we bleat for investigations. This is the moral calculus of empire: some deaths are tragedies, others are statistics.
The real scandal is not the alleged killings—war is a butcher’s block, and precision munitions are never precise—but the West’s desperate need to sanitise its proxies. We want Ukraine to win, but we also want clean hands. That is not strategy.
That is self-deception. The demand for a UN investigation is a fig leaf, a ritual incantation to ward off the messy reality that in this war, there are no saints. Only survivors.








