Being a former National Font member. I guess most your coverage of the Ukraine war is Nick Griffins live Templar Reports. The only UK politician that is supporting and praising the Russian invasion. 
I haven't paid attention to Nick Griffin in something like 20 years. What's he up to nowadays? I once met him and wasn't impressed. Can't deny it though: he gave you lot a fright, didn't he.
My views about Russia and Ukraine are formed on my own, independently. I can think for myself. I don't outsource my thinking functions to celebrities, podcasters, left-liberals, and the mainstream media.
To be clear, again, I support neutrality. I do not see any British national interest engaged by the demonisation of Vladimir Putin or support for the Ukraine. Quite the opposite. I also recognise that ethnic Russians have suffered persecution under the Kiev government. I further recognise the historical complexity of the issue: many Russians and Ukrainians alike do not see the Ukraine as a separate country to Russia.
The Crimea keeps being brought up here, but the Crimea is Russian in character and Russia does have a solid claim to sovereignty over the Crimea. If it didn't, they wouldn't have re-occupied it.
Somebody mentioned a 'full-scale invasion' of the Ukraine, but the objective was not to occupy the entirety of the Ukraine. The primary issues for Putin are (i). the geopolitical threat of NATO to Russia (in blatant disregard of promises given by the United States in the early 1990s) and (ii). the persecution of Russian minorities in the eastern Ukraine. No doubt there are also more selfish objectives on Russia's part, such as access to energy resources and so on, but primarily this is about Russia's security and the treatment of Russian minorities in the Ukraine itself.
Now, here I want to emphasise two very important caveats!
1. I do NOT necessarily like or support Vladimir Putin and his style of government, but I am non-committal on the matter because I do not see how Putin is any more abusive or cynical than any other world leader, including any Western leader. Some of you are hypnotised by words like 'democracy' and 'equality' and fail to recognise the flaws in these systems.
2. I do NOT necessarily support Russia. Nor do I support the Ukraine. I don't need to support either. I take what - as far as I can see - is the rational position for a disinterested third party: neutrality. I would only add that if NATO prevails and continues to threaten Russia, we will have a very dangerous situation, and it will be down to people like we have on this thread who believe what the TV tells them.
I believe the core of this issue is not Russia or Ukraine itself, but Germany. Germany is a sleeping giant in defence and is projecting its geopolitical ambitions through the EU and NATO. I think it is inevitable that Germany (perhaps through the EU) and Russia will end up in a new cold war and this needs to be addressed head-on. The best outcome is for the Ukraine, the EU, NATO, the United States and Russia to come to a security agreement that limits NATO/EU defence ambitions for the next 50 years to western Europe, which I would define as the eastern borders of Germany, Austria, and Italy, while Russia confines its influence to the former CIS states, with a shared land border between Norway and Russia. The old Western European Union could be reformed for defence purposes and Eastern Europe, including its EU member states, would become a neutral bloc, in effect a buffer zone between Russia and Germany. Anyway, that's one suggestion. NATO and the EU won't agree to such a thing of course, as it would mean withdrawal of US/NATO facilities in eastern Europe.
I'm going against my own advice to Gringo. I expect this is a waste of time, but I suppose there's no harm in posting a rebuttal to your propaganda every now and then.