Just get over it, and deal with the situation. It's not like this scenario happened yesterday.

And the world is not going to come to an end as a result. I certainly do not feel sorry for RusFed.

They have young, talented skaters in all disciplines coming up, so it's not as if there's a lack of talent. Take it on the chin when you are not winning and not in the medals all the time! Also, the Russian government should not have fostered the doping madness. Deal with that too.
Over the past decade in particular, RusFed made an absolutely conscious decision to focus intently on building their ladies singles discipline. A number of Russian ice dance coaches settled in the U.S. and began teaching, particularly over the past 20 years. The U.S. was not as dominant in ice dance in the past, but they do have historically noteworthy teams who medaled at Worlds and Olympics prior to the recent couple of decades. The U.S. had a wonderful ice dance team in Schwomeyer/Sladky in 1970 who absolutely wuzrobbed in favor of Russians, Pahkomova/Gorshkov (and when they first received gold at Worlds, Gorshkov was a very poor ice dancer

). Schwomeyer/Sladky were magical and got dumped on, because of Eastern-bloc politics in figure skating. One judge even had the nerve to cite a nose-in-the-air body-shaming reason for why Schwomeyer/Sladky did not deserve to win in 1970.
Things change and go in cycles. The sport has a long, complex and involved history.
What goes around comes around. RusFed allowed the Morosov interference that came between his young charges awhile back. That young team's relationship and partnership eventually blew up big time. Seemingly those Russian ice dance partners were destined for greatness together, not separately.