Idon't know if "Go *****yourself!" will come knocking on his door, but his people in Ukraine will feel it more and more.
Aye, this is the question indeed.ttu_85 said:
You have long been a good poster that have have enjoyed reading through the years. To be honest, I irritate the hell out of my friends and family and especially my wife with my cold pragmatic take on things. In this case its knowing the Russians always start poorly.
The mistakes they made in 1941 are unbelievably bad. Stupidity on a mass scale- see Stalin's purges and political appointments to the officer class. Mistakes what would have doomed most nations. The only thing that saved them was the massive size of their nation and that fact Stalin had millions of bodies to throw into the path of Germany's blitzkreig. One thing about Russians they can bleed and come back for more. Its something ingrained in their makeup. Weird I know.
Thing about Russia they will either throw in the towel early like they did in 1905 vs Japan or they will come back for more and more. Which Russia shows up. In 1905 the country was hit with the fist shock wave of Revolution. The Tsar was already in trouble. Here Russia is ruled by the grip of a tyrant that has proven to be shrewd and ruthless in much the same mold as Stalin. But unlike Stalin, a Georgian, BTW, Mother Russia's very existence is not on the line..
This last fact gives me hope. That the Russian people will not be so eager to bleed for Putin's cause of expanding the old Russian Empire. We will see. Especially given the fact Russia with an old declining population doesn't have that much blood to spill.
One tells me: "if you have the ear of Western politicians, tell them to keep pushing. This can build momentum and go much further."
— Neil Hauer (@NeilPHauer) February 27, 2022
On the right is Ramzan Kadyrov's assistant and former FSB Alfa officer Daniil Martynov with an AK-74M, EOTech G33 magnifier + EXPS3 optics, Zenitco Perst-3 laser aiming device, and Glock sidearm. On the left is reportedly an SSO specialist. In Ukraine.https://t.co/VQh3nz7SsI pic.twitter.com/CRW0KetXLH
— Rob Lee (@RALee85) February 27, 2022
Captain Positivity said:On the right is Ramzan Kadyrov's assistant and former FSB Alfa officer Daniil Martynov with an AK-74M, EOTech G33 magnifier + EXPS3 optics, Zenitco Perst-3 laser aiming device, and Glock sidearm. On the left is reportedly an SSO specialist. In Ukraine.https://t.co/VQh3nz7SsI pic.twitter.com/CRW0KetXLH
— Rob Lee (@RALee85) February 27, 2022
Eliminatus said:Goes hand in hand with the reports of overextended supply lines.Gordo14 said:clw04 said:Several videos out for Russian Troops moving in Kharkiv. I expect Russia to try and take Kharkiv today and then try to take Kyiv no later than tomorrow. I think Ukraine hurt Russia's plans a little bit for Kyiv with significantly degrading the Chechen capabilities yesterday.Gordo14 said:
Seems oddly quiet in Ukraine today? Wonder if that's an indication of the current status of the Russian military.
https://liveuamap.com/en/2022/27-february-video-russian-troops-in-kharkiv
I saw the videos, but it seemed to be a group of vehicles on a suicide mission and then a bunch of guys without armor support. Maybe there's more to it. But either way there is no way they can fully takeover Kharkiv in a day. Urban combat is just too difficult.
My point is the momentum they had has completely disappeared.
Modern armies have never been more lethal in history but they HAVE to have huge amounts of consumables every single day just to move and not starve, not even counting actual combat. Several reports that their advanced weapons are extremely limited now and again explains what we seeing now.
Then there is the timing. we are going into day four of this. No amount of momentum can be kept up by the same troops for that long. The feared Nazi blitzkriegs were literally fueled with meth and even they hit their limits.
I truly believe the Russians are being ground down. This is quickly turning into a war of attrition which doesn't bode well for Russia considering how little they actually committed to initial invasion.
Just looked it up and Ramzan is Chechan Head of State.FireAg said:Captain Positivity said:On the right is Ramzan Kadyrov's assistant and former FSB Alfa officer Daniil Martynov with an AK-74M, EOTech G33 magnifier + EXPS3 optics, Zenitco Perst-3 laser aiming device, and Glock sidearm. On the left is reportedly an SSO specialist. In Ukraine.https://t.co/VQh3nz7SsI pic.twitter.com/CRW0KetXLH
— Rob Lee (@RALee85) February 27, 2022
What's the relevance here?
Nevermind, not gonna derail about our southern border/Biden.Wrec86 Ag said:
If a fairly small army like Ukraine and a bunch of citizens that were given weapons this week can repel the Russian army like thisc can you imagine how difficult it would be to invade the US?
First, you'd have to transport your troops over the Pacific or Atlantic, and once you got here, we've already got our guns distributed. God bless the USA
nortex97 said:— Rob Lee (@RALee85) February 27, 2022
aezmvp said:
It looks like the regular military that was stationed in the East has performed very well. The defense of Kyiv is disjointed but working and the South has been the big failure. If the Ukes can shore up and keep Kiev or make it a horrific slog and begin getting reinforcements from the West to counter in Kyiv and the South, the Russians are going to be really screwed. I wonder who will get their reinforcements and logi figured out first.
Yep: "So many questions" I think that is why sports and yes, to be honest, war, fascinate us as a species. Patton once said war was one of mans greatest endeavors. I wish he was wrong. Unfortunately that is not the case. Up on the ashes of war come great innovations. The Civil War and WW2 are sad but undeniable proof of that.Eliminatus said:Aye, this is the question indeed.ttu_85 said:
You have long been a good poster that have have enjoyed reading through the years. To be honest, I irritate the hell out of my friends and family and especially my wife with my cold pragmatic take on things. In this case its knowing the Russians always start poorly.
The mistakes they made in 1941 are unbelievably bad. Stupidity on a mass scale- see Stalin's purges and political appointments to the officer class. Mistakes what would have doomed most nations. The only thing that saved them was the massive size of their nation and that fact Stalin had millions of bodies to throw into the path of Germany's blitzkreig. One thing about Russians they can bleed and come back for more. Its something ingrained in their makeup. Weird I know.
Thing about Russia they will either throw in the towel early like they did in 1905 vs Japan or they will come back for more and more. Which Russia shows up. In 1905 the country was hit with the fist shock wave of Revolution. The Tsar was already in trouble. Here Russia is ruled by the grip of a tyrant that has proven to be shrewd and ruthless in much the same mold as Stalin. But unlike Stalin, a Georgian, BTW, Mother Russia's very existence is not on the line..
This last fact gives me hope. That the Russian people will not be so eager to bleed for Putin's cause of expanding the old Russian Empire. We will see. Especially given the fact Russia with an old declining population doesn't have that much blood to spill.
If the Russia we fear shows up soon, I probably will be proven wrong. My thinking was of the efforts and ROE's that Russia has been exhibiting to this point. If they go full brutal Russia of the past, I will have to eat my prediction and hope for the best. If that Russia shows up, all we can do is hope. Still not sure NATO will step in even at that point.
The other caveat which I was thinking in that first post was logistics. CAN Russia sustain this very long? I have no idea, but I am questioning it now, which is a new territory for me from last week before they invaded. Even brutal Russia needs munitions. They are having trouble keeping their fuel levels up as is. No amount of propaganda can hide the fact they are taking losses, and probably heavy losses at that.
So many questions. But that is the point of this thread after all. Take in data and discuss what it could possibly mean both short and long term. As morbid as it sounds, and in full deference to the fighting and suffering occurring, I do find this stuff terribly fascinating and love discussing it.
I think the situation is that dire after all.cone said:Eliminatus said:Goes hand in hand with the reports of overextended supply lines.Gordo14 said:clw04 said:Several videos out for Russian Troops moving in Kharkiv. I expect Russia to try and take Kharkiv today and then try to take Kyiv no later than tomorrow. I think Ukraine hurt Russia's plans a little bit for Kyiv with significantly degrading the Chechen capabilities yesterday.Gordo14 said:
Seems oddly quiet in Ukraine today? Wonder if that's an indication of the current status of the Russian military.
https://liveuamap.com/en/2022/27-february-video-russian-troops-in-kharkiv
I saw the videos, but it seemed to be a group of vehicles on a suicide mission and then a bunch of guys without armor support. Maybe there's more to it. But either way there is no way they can fully takeover Kharkiv in a day. Urban combat is just too difficult.
My point is the momentum they had has completely disappeared.
Modern armies have never been more lethal in history but they HAVE to have huge amounts of consumables every single day just to move and not starve, not even counting actual combat. Several reports that their advanced weapons are extremely limited now and again explains what we seeing now.
Then there is the timing. we are going into day four of this. No amount of momentum can be kept up by the same troops for that long. The feared Nazi blitzkriegs were literally fueled with meth and even they hit their limits.
I truly believe the Russians are being ground down. This is quickly turning into a war of attrition which doesn't bode well for Russia considering how little they actually committed to initial invasion.
I do not understand how an army starved four days into an offensive. do they not have potato chips and energy bars in Russia? can they not make PBJs?
ttu_85 said:Yep: "So many questions" I think that is why sports and yes, to be honest, war, fascinate us as a species. Patton once said war was one of mans greatest endeavors. I wish he was wrong. Unfortunately that is not the case. Up on the ashes of war come great innovations. The Civil War and WW2 are sad but undeniable proof of that.Eliminatus said:Aye, this is the question indeed.ttu_85 said:
You have long been a good poster that have have enjoyed reading through the years. To be honest, I irritate the hell out of my friends and family and especially my wife with my cold pragmatic take on things. In this case its knowing the Russians always start poorly.
The mistakes they made in 1941 are unbelievably bad. Stupidity on a mass scale- see Stalin's purges and political appointments to the officer class. Mistakes what would have doomed most nations. The only thing that saved them was the massive size of their nation and that fact Stalin had millions of bodies to throw into the path of Germany's blitzkreig. One thing about Russians they can bleed and come back for more. Its something ingrained in their makeup. Weird I know.
Thing about Russia they will either throw in the towel early like they did in 1905 vs Japan or they will come back for more and more. Which Russia shows up. In 1905 the country was hit with the fist shock wave of Revolution. The Tsar was already in trouble. Here Russia is ruled by the grip of a tyrant that has proven to be shrewd and ruthless in much the same mold as Stalin. But unlike Stalin, a Georgian, BTW, Mother Russia's very existence is not on the line..
This last fact gives me hope. That the Russian people will not be so eager to bleed for Putin's cause of expanding the old Russian Empire. We will see. Especially given the fact Russia with an old declining population doesn't have that much blood to spill.
If the Russia we fear shows up soon, I probably will be proven wrong. My thinking was of the efforts and ROE's that Russia has been exhibiting to this point. If they go full brutal Russia of the past, I will have to eat my prediction and hope for the best. If that Russia shows up, all we can do is hope. Still not sure NATO will step in even at that point.
The other caveat which I was thinking in that first post was logistics. CAN Russia sustain this very long? I have no idea, but I am questioning it now, which is a new territory for me from last week before they invaded. Even brutal Russia needs munitions. They are having trouble keeping their fuel levels up as is. No amount of propaganda can hide the fact they are taking losses, and probably heavy losses at that.
So many questions. But that is the point of this thread after all. Take in data and discuss what it could possibly mean both short and long term. As morbid as it sounds, and in full deference to the fighting and suffering occurring, I do find this stuff terribly fascinating and love discussing it.
and speaking of logistical basics:
Russia GDP 1.7T < Texas at 2.1T
Pop 145M with a staggeringly LOW pop growth rate of -7.2%
Birth rate 9.8 births/1,000 population (2021)
Death rate 16.7 deaths/1,000 population (2021)
Russia is in serious long term demographic trouble.
As far as the tactical mistakes those are a head scratcher
1. Leaving Ukrainian communications up- including the net.
2. NOT achieving air superiority
3. Many units running out of fuel on the first day WTF !!
4. Suck night fighting capability.
5. Reports of 16/17 year old conscripts. Where are the Russian pros. They have them why were they not deployed as a spearhead ?
So many questions
Putin is meeting defense minister Shoigu and chief of general staff Gerasimov in the Kremlin.
— max seddon (@maxseddon) February 27, 2022
He says western sanctions are "illegitimate" and has ordered to place Russia's deterrence – i.e. nuclear – forces on "a special regime of duty," per @tass_agency
Putin: "Western countries aren't only taking unfriendly economic actions against our country, but leaders of major Nato countries are making aggressive statements about our country. So I order to move Russia's deterrence forces to a special regime of duty." pic.twitter.com/AC1yHncqZc
— max seddon (@maxseddon) February 27, 2022
Wrec86 Ag said:
If a fairly small army like Ukraine and a bunch of citizens that were given weapons this week can repel the Russian army like thisc can you imagine how difficult it would be to invade the US?
First, you'd have to transport your troops over the Pacific or Atlantic, and once you got here, we've already got our guns distributed. God bless the USA
Wow.JobSecurity said:Putin: "Western countries aren't only taking unfriendly economic actions against our country, but leaders of major Nato countries are making aggressive statements about our country. So I order to move Russia's deterrence forces to a special regime of duty." pic.twitter.com/AC1yHncqZc
— max seddon (@maxseddon) February 27, 2022
Once the bank run sets in, then we will get a real response from the upper levels but not before. This is likely what caused Trudeau to revoke his order.jabberwalkie09 said:
His generals and political opposition need to nut up and start making some moves.
Eliminatus said:Wow.JobSecurity said:Putin: "Western countries aren't only taking unfriendly economic actions against our country, but leaders of major Nato countries are making aggressive statements about our country. So I order to move Russia's deterrence forces to a special regime of duty." pic.twitter.com/AC1yHncqZc
— max seddon (@maxseddon) February 27, 2022
Four days into this and he is already pulling the nuclear card. I think this just adds further credence that there is no 40D chess here. Russia really did **** this whole thing up and is failing in the invasion, even in their own eyes. I might be reading into that but still. This is not a light move to make obviously. Even for Putin.
jabberwalkie09 said:
His generals and political opposition need to nut up and start making some moves.
Mayor of Kyiv Vitali Klitschko: “Kyiv continues to defend itself. There are no Russian troops in the capital.” https://t.co/2LLTK8XAmy
— Oz Katerji (@OzKaterji) February 27, 2022