Iraq invaded Iran in that conflict. True the invasion had been repelled but the action to continue into Iraq is the same as Ukraine today.
- In July 1982, Iran invaded Iraq and conducted countless offensives in a bid to conquer territory and capture cities, such as Basra.
- The war continued until 1988 when the Iraqi army defeated the Iranian forces inside Iraq and pushed the remaining Iranian troops back across the border.
They’re been allies with Syria since forever?
en.wikipedia.org
They sent their troops into Syria did they not? It may have been in an attempt to prop of up the Assad regime against rebels, but it still shows them using military force to meddle in other countries, does it not?
Seems odd to call reclaiming land previously occupied by the UK an invasion.
Russia is trying to "reclaim" land that once belonged to them as well, so what's the difference?
Either current boundary lines are respected or they're not.
Back to my original point, capitulating and making concessions to Iran (a country that has involved itself in other countries in the region, either by direct military force, or by funneling weapons and money to militia groups that are loyal to them, who then turn around and attack our allies and create havoc in the region) isn't any better or worse than making concessions to Russia.
So why does the "Iran nuclear deal" get praise, and the idea of making certain concessions to Russia get scorn? (and vice versa)
I suspect that the rationales people have for justifying one and bristling at the other have less to do with consistent philosophical positions about interventionism, and have more do to with "Obama-centric" and/or "Trump-centric" reasons.
If you think about, the very fact that people felt that "we have to make concessions to Iran so they don't blow up the world" is an acknowledgement of the danger they present, correct? The UK has nukes, we don't have to engage in "hostage negotiation"-style concessions to them in order to protect their neighboring countries from them.