Thank you. Do you honestly expect them to have a similar effect on Russia? I imagine there's key geographic, cultural, and temporal differences at play.
Czechoslovakia isn't even a country any more, which says something.
Do I expect that masses of people getting fed up with autocracies that pick fights they suffer from will react like masses of people getting fed up with autocracies that pick fights they suffer from? Yes.
"You only have power over people as long as you don't take everything away from them. But when you've robbed a man of everything, he's no longer in your power—he's free again." -Solzhenitsyn
Czechoslovakia is two countries. They not only gained independence, they did it twice.
Why do you think sanctions will have this stimulating effect among the Russian people when they've done the opposite in Iraq and North Korea? Practically speaking, is there something the Western world should do differently this time around? I'm keen to hear the implementation details, because without them, we're actually just speaking out of bloodlust here.
Russians have access to the broader Internet. North Koreans and most Iranians don't.
Russians have become accustomed to developed Western standards of living. North Koreans and most Iranians haven't.
And in line with Solzhenitsyn... Putin isn't a Grand Ayatollah or a flawless all-benevolent Juche godhead. Iran and North Korea still have something they can take away from their people.
Nobody chooses economic sanctions over armed conflict out of bloodlust.
Czechoslovakia isn't even a country any more, which says something.