:/Texasaggie32 said:False news apparentlysolishu said:
Several sources are reporting that Ukrainians have retaken the Hostomel Airport.
https://twitter.com/KyivIndependent/status/1496925642520088588?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Etweet
https://twitter.com/KyivIndependent/status/1496928031474171905?s=20&t=UQ1qCaVLdI3FQlGDTVuCgQ
74OA said:
Unrest growing in Russia? LETTER
They'll just go to detention camps along with the Ukrainians.jabberwalkie09 said:74OA said:
Unrest growing in Russia? LETTER
There's enough evidence to show that the Russian public at large is not happy. Unfortunately, Putin will see these people as dissidents and well….
Yep.TRM said:They've just go to detention camps along with the Ukrainians.jabberwalkie09 said:74OA said:
Unrest growing in Russia? LETTER
There's enough evidence to show that the Russian public at large is not happy. Unfortunately, Putin will see these people as dissidents and well….
jabberwalkie09 said:74OA said:
Unrest growing in Russia? LETTER
There's enough evidence to show that the Russian public at large is not happy. Unfortunately, Putin will see these people as dissidents and well….
Pushkin Square, maybe less than 1000 meters from Red Square and the Kremlin, is the cite of a significant protest. These people know the risks of challenging the regime. They’re on the street in-spite of major personal costs. pic.twitter.com/bYEfbO91xG
— Alexander S. Vindman (@AVindman) February 24, 2022
Look at the size of anti-war protestors in St Petersburg, Russia. Wow pic.twitter.com/dHg9Uwt9RQ
— Ragıp Soylu (@ragipsoylu) February 24, 2022
L’aéroport de Ivano-Frankivsk en #Ukraine est bombardé ce matin. pic.twitter.com/1SSaNEKZUv
— Andreï VAITOVICH (@andreivaitovich) February 24, 2022
74OA said:jabberwalkie09 said:74OA said:
Unrest growing in Russia? LETTER
There's enough evidence to show that the Russian public at large is not happy. Unfortunately, Putin will see these people as dissidents and well….Pushkin Square, maybe less than 1000 meters from Red Square and the Kremlin, is the cite of a significant protest. These people know the risks of challenging the regime. They’re on the street in-spite of major personal costs. pic.twitter.com/bYEfbO91xG
— Alexander S. Vindman (@AVindman) February 24, 2022Look at the size of anti-war protestors in St Petersburg, Russia. Wow pic.twitter.com/dHg9Uwt9RQ
— Ragıp Soylu (@ragipsoylu) February 24, 2022
G Martin 87 said:Does it occur to anyone that picture angles like this make America look small and weak? Sure, it's for COVID social distancing, but still. Just a really stupid image to use at a time when we need to project strength and resolve.JobSecurity said:"Our forces are not and will not be engaged in the conflict with Russia in Ukraine. Our forces are not going to Europe to fight in Ukraine but to defend our NATO allies and to reassure those allies in the east," Biden tells us at the White House. pic.twitter.com/5pHaVZTb9O
— Jennifer Jacobs (@JenniferJJacobs) February 24, 2022
Fair point.Htownag11 said:
To go where? Who is to say the direction they are traveling won't be hit by a missile next?
Yep, and the body bags haven't started returning to Mother Russia yet. Early days.Seabreeze said:74OA said:jabberwalkie09 said:74OA said:
Unrest growing in Russia? LETTER
There's enough evidence to show that the Russian public at large is not happy. Unfortunately, Putin will see these people as dissidents and well….Pushkin Square, maybe less than 1000 meters from Red Square and the Kremlin, is the cite of a significant protest. These people know the risks of challenging the regime. They’re on the street in-spite of major personal costs. pic.twitter.com/bYEfbO91xG
— Alexander S. Vindman (@AVindman) February 24, 2022Look at the size of anti-war protestors in St Petersburg, Russia. Wow pic.twitter.com/dHg9Uwt9RQ
— Ragıp Soylu (@ragipsoylu) February 24, 2022
Tends to happen when your stock market crashes, and your country becomes public enemy #1
Lol what is that, around a 1,000 people? WOW!74OA said:jabberwalkie09 said:74OA said:
Unrest growing in Russia? LETTER
There's enough evidence to show that the Russian public at large is not happy. Unfortunately, Putin will see these people as dissidents and well….Pushkin Square, maybe less than 1000 meters from Red Square and the Kremlin, is the cite of a significant protest. These people know the risks of challenging the regime. They’re on the street in-spite of major personal costs. pic.twitter.com/bYEfbO91xG
— Alexander S. Vindman (@AVindman) February 24, 2022Look at the size of anti-war protestors in St Petersburg, Russia. Wow pic.twitter.com/dHg9Uwt9RQ
— Ragıp Soylu (@ragipsoylu) February 24, 2022
Protests of any size are an embarrassment for Putin and, as I said, the body bags haven't even started returning to Mother Russia yet. Early days.2023NCAggies said:Lol what is that, around a 1,000 people? WOW!74OA said:jabberwalkie09 said:74OA said:
Unrest growing in Russia? LETTER
There's enough evidence to show that the Russian public at large is not happy. Unfortunately, Putin will see these people as dissidents and well….Pushkin Square, maybe less than 1000 meters from Red Square and the Kremlin, is the cite of a significant protest. These people know the risks of challenging the regime. They’re on the street in-spite of major personal costs. pic.twitter.com/bYEfbO91xG
— Alexander S. Vindman (@AVindman) February 24, 2022Look at the size of anti-war protestors in St Petersburg, Russia. Wow pic.twitter.com/dHg9Uwt9RQ
— Ragıp Soylu (@ragipsoylu) February 24, 2022
More from Moscow, chanting "no war." Unbelievably brave. @OvdInfo, which monitors crackdowns on Russian protests, says it's counted at least 900 arrests at demonstrations in 44 cities and towns across the country. pic.twitter.com/9Yn9mxukDr
— Alejandro Alvarez (@aletweetsnews) February 24, 2022
You don't have to irretrievably destroy a bridge to make it unusable. Just go out before the war starts and drop a bunch of jersey barriers and dead car bodies parked sideways in a pile. When the Russians come out to try to move the mess to use the bridge sit back and pick them off with the weaponry of your choice. Mobile tanks are hard to stop, but tanks sitting still with other equipment and men trying to make way for them is a less hardened objective.jabberwalkie09 said:LMCane said:jabberwalkie09 said:GAC06 said:LMCane said:most of the Ukraine military is definitely refusing to fighthbtheduce said:LMCane said:so in a country of 44 million-JobSecurity said:Ukraine loses control over Hostomel airport near Kyiv and Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant - advisor to the president’s office Mykhailo Podolyak
— Myroslava Petsa (@myroslavapetsa) February 24, 2022
there aren't 1000 troops available to move 15 minutes from the Capitol?!?!
is Biden's Customs and Border Patrol defending Kyiv?
Or are we watching a pre-determined script of actions with parts of Ukraine military command defection or refusing to fight?
you can't run hundreds of tanks and APCs across THE ONE BRIDGE linking Crimea with Ukraine and actually have a real army that is fighting.
for lord's sake- that bridge has been staring the Ukes in the face for years! notice how they can't block a single highway or airfield
but the truckers in the USA and Canada can block entire cities?
Sees tweets
Makes sweeping definitive statements
It's looking like my response to LMC's comments earlier in the thread were just blazed right on past.
LMC- are you really expecting WW1/2 type ground defense of objectives in a conflict which isn't peer or near peer?
was Iraq versus the USA "peer on peer"?
how long did it take the USA to conquer Baghdad in 1991? and in 2003?
I mean, I don't to know about you but using equipment like F-117's, B-2's, and M1 Abrams not to mention cruise missiles against opfor equipment like T-72's, T-59's, and AAA emplacements doesn't exactly seem like peer or near peer to me. YMMV I guess. How we as a military function and move is also different from Russia. I think this has been covered before in the other thread. We could have absolutely steam rolled through Iraq if we wanted to but our ROE is positively more stringent than that evidenced by Russia.Quote:
was North Vietnam "peer on peer" against the USA from 1965-1973?
was Israel "peer to peer" against 6 Arab countries and their British trained armies in 1948? (when they had a total population of 640,000 citizens against 73 million)
Very different theaters of war. Also, I seem to remember Israel receiving quite a bit of material and techno know how help from Europe. Obviously the North Vietnamese had help from third parties as well.Quote:
not sure what your point is- but there are ways to at least SLOW DOWN an invading armored column.
if Taliban, Al Qaeda, ISIS, and Iraqi insurgents could figure it out - but somehow a modern country of 44 million can't figure it out?
Let me make an analogy then just quote myself again. Blowing up the bridge to Crimea would be like if the Mexican military invaded and annexed Galveston Island. Would we just blow up all the bridges leading to the island? If we were to retake it and the bridge was destroyed then air assault (given equitable assets to Ukraine) would be the only option and until that bridge was reestablished, retreat and reinforcement would be almost impossible.
While I understand what you're saying, the mindset of willingly sacrificing people, material, and land you don't have the equipment to retake later isn't necessarily applicable to what I'm seeing from Ukrainians.
That does not mean they will not fight tooth and nail for their country.Quote:
First of all calm down, take a step back, and breath. Second, go back through the thread there's evidence enough of Ukrainians putting up some resistance. They may be dying for it, but this is their fight. Ukraine's air and naval assets being destroyed was basically always accepted imo. Even most of their air defense being hit was a given. I contend that's they were given stingers since they're man portable and require little training.
Russians moving quickly was always expected. That's literally why their military is so mechanized, armor intensive, and with self propelled artillery. Ukrainians were never going to blow up their own infrastructure. Crimea to them is still Ukraine. Cutting off forces from sustainment or retreat would destroy morale. Ukraine can't afford any of that.
Russian lulled Europe and Ukraine into a false sense of reality here. Russia had done annual exercises roughly between February through April in the region for awhile. It wasn't really considered to be imminent by Europe until like the last month. By that time, it was already too late.
*UKRAINE REGULATORS IN TOUCH WITH IAEA OVER NUCLEAR SAFETY
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) February 24, 2022
#BREAKING: Ukrainian Defence Minister says Kremlin preparing a new wave of attacks, including airstrikes
— ELINT News (@ELINTNews) February 24, 2022
from my contact who works at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. Tanks surrounding the plant. You can see reactors 5&6 in the background @ProfMikeWood @JackCarrUSA @SeanParnellUSA @TimKennedyMMA pic.twitter.com/YrWt8vgnLY
— Philip Grossman (@PGPImages) February 24, 2022
txags92 said:You don't have to irretrievably destroy a bridge to make it unusable. Just go out before the war starts and drop a bunch of jersey barriers and dead car bodies parked sideways in a pile. When the Russians come out to try to move the mess to use the bridge sit back and pick them off with the weaponry of your choice. Mobile tanks are hard to stop, but tanks sitting still with other equipment and men trying to make way for them is a less hardened objective.jabberwalkie09 said:LMCane said:jabberwalkie09 said:GAC06 said:LMCane said:most of the Ukraine military is definitely refusing to fighthbtheduce said:LMCane said:so in a country of 44 million-JobSecurity said:Ukraine loses control over Hostomel airport near Kyiv and Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant - advisor to the president’s office Mykhailo Podolyak
— Myroslava Petsa (@myroslavapetsa) February 24, 2022
there aren't 1000 troops available to move 15 minutes from the Capitol?!?!
is Biden's Customs and Border Patrol defending Kyiv?
Or are we watching a pre-determined script of actions with parts of Ukraine military command defection or refusing to fight?
you can't run hundreds of tanks and APCs across THE ONE BRIDGE linking Crimea with Ukraine and actually have a real army that is fighting.
for lord's sake- that bridge has been staring the Ukes in the face for years! notice how they can't block a single highway or airfield
but the truckers in the USA and Canada can block entire cities?
Sees tweets
Makes sweeping definitive statements
It's looking like my response to LMC's comments earlier in the thread were just blazed right on past.
LMC- are you really expecting WW1/2 type ground defense of objectives in a conflict which isn't peer or near peer?
was Iraq versus the USA "peer on peer"?
how long did it take the USA to conquer Baghdad in 1991? and in 2003?
I mean, I don't to know about you but using equipment like F-117's, B-2's, and M1 Abrams not to mention cruise missiles against opfor equipment like T-72's, T-59's, and AAA emplacements doesn't exactly seem like peer or near peer to me. YMMV I guess. How we as a military function and move is also different from Russia. I think this has been covered before in the other thread. We could have absolutely steam rolled through Iraq if we wanted to but our ROE is positively more stringent than that evidenced by Russia.Quote:
was North Vietnam "peer on peer" against the USA from 1965-1973?
was Israel "peer to peer" against 6 Arab countries and their British trained armies in 1948? (when they had a total population of 640,000 citizens against 73 million)
Very different theaters of war. Also, I seem to remember Israel receiving quite a bit of material and techno know how help from Europe. Obviously the North Vietnamese had help from third parties as well.Quote:
not sure what your point is- but there are ways to at least SLOW DOWN an invading armored column.
if Taliban, Al Qaeda, ISIS, and Iraqi insurgents could figure it out - but somehow a modern country of 44 million can't figure it out?
Let me make an analogy then just quote myself again. Blowing up the bridge to Crimea would be like if the Mexican military invaded and annexed Galveston Island. Would we just blow up all the bridges leading to the island? If we were to retake it and the bridge was destroyed then air assault (given equitable assets to Ukraine) would be the only option and until that bridge was reestablished, retreat and reinforcement would be almost impossible.
While I understand what you're saying, the mindset of willingly sacrificing people, material, and land you don't have the equipment to retake later isn't necessarily applicable to what I'm seeing from Ukrainians.
That does not mean they will not fight tooth and nail for their country.Quote:
First of all calm down, take a step back, and breath. Second, go back through the thread there's evidence enough of Ukrainians putting up some resistance. They may be dying for it, but this is their fight. Ukraine's air and naval assets being destroyed was basically always accepted imo. Even most of their air defense being hit was a given. I contend that's they were given stingers since they're man portable and require little training.
Russians moving quickly was always expected. That's literally why their military is so mechanized, armor intensive, and with self propelled artillery. Ukrainians were never going to blow up their own infrastructure. Crimea to them is still Ukraine. Cutting off forces from sustainment or retreat would destroy morale. Ukraine can't afford any of that.
Russian lulled Europe and Ukraine into a false sense of reality here. Russia had done annual exercises roughly between February through April in the region for awhile. It wasn't really considered to be imminent by Europe until like the last month. By that time, it was already too late.
Just for reference, reactors 5 and 6 were never completed due to reactor #4 going boom.Keegan99 said:from my contact who works at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant. Tanks surrounding the plant. You can see reactors 5&6 in the background @ProfMikeWood @JackCarrUSA @SeanParnellUSA @TimKennedyMMA pic.twitter.com/YrWt8vgnLY
— Philip Grossman (@PGPImages) February 24, 2022
10,000 automatic rifles have been given to regular civilians in Kyiv in the last few hours - Interior Minister
— Illia Ponomarenko (@IAPonomarenko) February 24, 2022
UKRAINE: 10,000 automatic rifles have been given to regular civilians in Kyiv in the last few hours - Interior Minister - @IAPonomarenko
— Conflict News (@Conflicts) February 24, 2022
Keegan99 said:UKRAINE: 10,000 automatic rifles have been given to regular civilians in Kyiv in the last few hours - Interior Minister - @IAPonomarenko
— Conflict News (@Conflicts) February 24, 2022