I have a theory about what's going on here, and I don't doubt that it has occurred to other people smarter than me in all areas of the globe:<p>Russia's invasion of Ukraine may be partly -- mostly, ostensibly -- about Ukraine, but it could also be an attempt to provoke lots of institutions in the rest of the world into making overly-aggressive counter-responses.<p>Russia may <i>want</i> the CIA and special forces of European nations, to overreact. It may <i>want</i> Facebook to fail to moderate within Russia's (perhaps onerous, but no less legitimate in standing than of any other country) legal requirements, may <i>want</i> NATO to overstep, may <i>want</i> individuals and groups to get involved to the extent of personal and business risk that they later regret.<p>Under that perspective, Russia's actions could be a series of provocations almost entirely to demonstrate and document alleged hypocrisies around the globe and to see whether the world is able to counteract those, or whether the general population proceeds with accepting them as matter-of-fact.<p>This idea makes me scared. There's vast potential to uncover massive wrongdoings and learn about organized, international coercion -- but there's also the chance that those same forces (who are, I'll add, not always restricted by borders, in practice -- even though citizens of all affected countries are) simply win out and become a dominant world order.