You know, this is where ideology stings the most. The most enthusiastic and vibrant of us will always see things in these tones like these:
This is true... that said, Russia has been obstructionist from the very beginning, supporting Assad and arming him. They haven't stopped (and now everyone else is arming the rebels). That's not advocating in good faith for a peaceful solution either.
This is entirely true but absolutely irrelevant. It's not even morally questionable given the context. And the context is that everyone needs their own market to export their own weapons. The US is by far the greatest exporter of weapons. Now take into consideration that the second biggest importer of US weapons is .... Egypt. This month there was also a massacre perpretated by a government in which more than a thousand people died. Where was the US's outrage? The outcry?
You keep assuming a model of the geopolitical planet that I think it's just absolutely wrong. You assume that all these countries are actually independent and make their own policies and alliances. This is clearly evident when you state that China and Russia are behaving in bad faith just because they disagree into pushing Assad out of his office. But the truth of the matter is that Assad is not just "some guy" that happens to rule some crazy country. The truth of the matter is that Syria is much more important for Russia (and China) than for any other country, not only as a weapons importer but also as the most important geopolitically located country in the ME / Mediterranean.
If you stop regarding these countries as agents in a wider world and start looking to them as pawns in a big chess game with a few players only, you begin to realise that Russia can only be really commited to support Assad until the end, so as not to suffer the big loss in the major board of the ME. And they are not doing so in either "good faith" or "bad faith", but just straightforward global strategy analysis.
You're arguing against an argument I never made. I'd say you're setting up a strawman but I think this is likely more a case of careless reading than intentional shenanigans.
But he's actually more to the point. You keep repeating this general idea that we somehow should just forget about the past and the "mistakes" (wink wink) that the US has made until now, and just decide overall which is the best idea, everyone agrees to it and there! Bam! Everything's solved!
This surprises me a bit for I really don't take you as naive. You are quite intelligent and so something escapes me here. You should understand that every political move on the international board is *NEVER* interpreted in this literal sense by any sensible influential politician "playing the game". What they are measuring is not how many people die, how we should punish this or that, how is this morally wrong or right. They are playing a game of world domination. And Syria is a damned ****ing really important pawn that the Russians have there. The hell with "humanitarian concerns". The US thinks exactly the same, but they are not the same team. Paranoia abounds. Do you really think the world will just let the US do "What Is Right" in Syria and lo and behold now they got Assad out of the power, only Iran rests as an enemy of the US in the ME?!?
I never said that vetoes in any form were good (they are decidedly awful); what I said was that NATO was formed in direct response to the Russian and Chinese vetoes on the Security Council. I know full well every veto-carrying member has abused it at some point; that was not the point I was making. I was pointing out that NATO's existence is largely a result of the broken structure of the Security Council and its five permanent members. I was simultaneously pointing out that precedent exists for NATO to act when the Security Council's uselessness is in full display for all to see, as in the present situation.
It seems to me that vetoes are not "awful". They seem to me to be a quite good deterrent. Yes, prone to failure all the time, but conservative. It fails on the side of non-intervention, which is probably where it should fail into.