This is an absolutely fantastic quick and dirty primer to what has occurred to date.
For those stepping into this new or those who want a good, easy to follow and quick breakdown I highly recommend this video. It's a panel of three experts with about ten minutes each. One economic, one Ukrainian defense, and one Russian military doctrine. Bout the first 35 mins or so. The rest is Q&A and more nuanced stuff.
Still highly recommend yall watch it but Clifs of what to expect if you do:
Eco guy goes into the sanctions, the effect they are having and why they are having that effect. Actually pretty fascinating in it's own right for the financially dumb like myself.
Uke defense guy goes into background of how Ukraine prepared for this fight, and make no mistake, they have been preparing for this. Also how much they leaned on the West to make it happen.
Russian doctrine guy is extremely candid. Russia ****ed up. Explains why in about 8 mins in a way that took me about five days to piece together myself. He explains what they should have been able to do and what they did instead. Then what expects moving forward. Spoiler: Russia ain't out yet.
— Breaking News | FinancialJuice (@Financialjuice1) March 5, 2022
This must be for his people - presenting the image that Russia is under attack and he alone is aiming for peace. Clearly he isn't acting as if it is a declaration of war.
And regarding Elon's comment on opening up O&G. I bet there are some drilling companies that will cut him a deal if he ponies up the cash for a multi year deal.
Also, the list of destroyed or captured Russian equipment is concerningly low in artillery.
This is an absolutely fantastic quick and dirty primer to what has occurred to date.
For those stepping into this new or those who want a good, easy to follow and quick breakdown I highly recommend this video. It's a panel of three experts with about ten minutes each. One economic, one Ukrainian defense, and one Russian military doctrine. Bout the first 35 mins or so. The rest is Q&A and more nuanced stuff.
Still highly recommend yall watch it but Clifs of what to expect if you do:
Eco guy goes into the sanctions, the effect they are having and why they are having that effect. Actually pretty fascinating in it's own right for the financially dumb like myself.
Uke defense guy goes into background of how Ukraine prepared for this fight, and make no mistake, they have been preparing for this. Also how much they leaned on the West to make it happen.
Russian doctrine guy is extremely candid. Russia ****ed up. Explains why in about 8 mins in a way that took me about five days to piece together myself. He explains what they should have been able to do and what they did instead. Then what expects moving forward. Spoiler: Russia ain't out yet.
These are the times that try men's souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph.-Thomas Paine
This is an absolutely fantastic quick and dirty primer to what has occurred to date.
For those stepping into this new or those who want a good, easy to follow and quick breakdown I highly recommend this video. It's a panel of three experts with about ten minutes each. One economic, one Ukrainian defense, and one Russian military doctrine. Bout the first 35 mins or so. The rest is Q&A and more nuanced stuff.
Still highly recommend yall watch it but Clifs of what to expect if you do:
Eco guy goes into the sanctions, the effect they are having and why they are having that effect. Actually pretty fascinating in it's own right for the financially dumb like myself.
Uke defense guy goes into background of how Ukraine prepared for this fight, and make no mistake, they have been preparing for this. Also how much they leaned on the West to make it happen.
Russian doctrine guy is extremely candid. Russia ****ed up. Explains why in about 8 mins in a way that took me about five days to piece together myself. He explains what they should have been able to do and what they did instead. Then what expects moving forward. Spoiler: Russia ain't out yet.
That's him. If you dig you can find more pics and videos of him post capture.
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He's wearing an American flag. He insinuating that's US SoF or a former SoF member.
I am sure there are quite a few there, officially or not.
I may be wrong but I believe that video is older from before this invasion.
Fair enough. Here's one uploaded yesterday. Oh, and the quote from the guys over at FUNKER530 who are all former/active military:
"You'll probably want some context for this video. That's too bad. If you're interested in knowing more, you're gonna have to follow Forward Observations on YouTube. They've been in Ukraine since January."
Ukrainian civilian shot by a Russian soldier as the group was protesting against Russian military presence in Novopskov, Luhansk Oblast. pic.twitter.com/aDMAfZkuQe
Remington and Ruger should be donating thousands of bolt action .300 blackouts suppressors on, fixed 4-6X scopes, with hornady SubX 190 subsonics, zeroed at 100M. Hand them out like candy. Reloading is louder than the muzzle blast. The noise of the protestors will mask any shot & reload.
Ukraine's security service has reportedly shot & killed Denis Kireev, a member of the Ukrainian negotiating team, pictured far back on the right in the photo. He was apparently killed while resisting arrest on suspicion of treason, @ukrpravda_news reports. https://t.co/B0kOhWxMmIpic.twitter.com/pFWfXIEFzK
Imagine the US were fighting off a desperate invasion and our families were on the front lines. If it turned out/proven one of our negotiators was a mole and was evading arrest every person here would shoot without hesitation.
He's wearing an American flag. He insinuating that's US SoF or a former SoF member.
I am sure there are quite a few there, officially or not.
I may be wrong but I believe that video is older from before this invasion.
Fair enough. Here's one uploaded yesterday. Oh, and the quote from the guys over at FUNKER530 who are all former/active military:
"You'll probably want some context for this video. That's too bad. If you're interested in knowing more, you're gonna have to follow Forward Observations on YouTube. They've been in Ukraine since January."
He's wearing an American flag. He insinuating that's US SoF or a former SoF member.
I am sure there are quite a few there, officially or not.
I may be wrong but I believe that video is older from before this invasion.
Fair enough. Here's one uploaded yesterday. Oh, and the quote from the guys over at FUNKER530 who are all former/active military:
"You'll probably want some context for this video. That's too bad. If you're interested in knowing more, you're gonna have to follow Forward Observations on YouTube. They've been in Ukraine since January."
For those interested, I've provided a summary of this two page analysis.
Russian Military and Security Strategy Documents The 2014 Military Doctrine divides the perceived nature of threats to Russia into two categories: military risks and military threats. Military risks are a lesser designation, defined as situations that could "lead to a military threat under certain conditions." A military threat is "characterized by area real possibility of an outbreak of a military conflict."
New Generation Warfare Russia's conception of the nature of war in the modern era, defining it by the use of nonmilitary tools and politically led conflict. Subsequent Russian actions in Ukraine strongly reflected this view, as they were characterized by the extensive use of non-state armed actors, information and disinformation operations, and other non-kinetic strategies.
Use of Force Russia's preference for the measured use of force, however, does not imply a trade-off between the decisive use of military power and escalation management. Russian military strategy prioritizes the threat of further punishment.
Military Doctrine Operationally, Russia has historically emphasized mass fire offensive strategies. The concentrated use of artillery and rocket artillery, along with large tank units, remains at the core of Russian military doctrine.
Strategic Deterrence and Escalation Management Russian military doctrine emphasizes a concept of deterrence that is broader than just nuclear deterrence. Referred to as strategic deterrence in officialRussian military doctrine, this concept includes nuclear weapons, strategic conventional weapons, and nonmilitary measures including concepts such as NGW across both peace time and conflict.
Looks like an M24/35 or a 28 from what I can tell from freeze frame.
Either way, no one survived that and current estimates has each one of those models at <150 airframes in inventory total.
Incredible footage, albeit at the expense of at least 2 men who never had a chance. War is hell.
A stinger I assume?
The Ukes have Stingers and also Strelas and Iglas in their inventories that I know of. Latter two Russian versions but still effective.
Definitely would assume a MANPAD just from conditions on the ground and the corkscrewing motion of it. Hell of a shot. Hit a fuel tank I presume because that was quite a fireball from the missile hit. MANPADS actually have relatively tiny warheads on them that don't normally produce those kinds of fireballs on their own.
The West has never been as galvanized as this since WWII. What kind of world will we have? China is next and the greatest threat to freedom of speech and assembly. We in the West must become more aware and strategic with our long term policies. We must evolve and work together.
He's wearing an American flag. He insinuating that's US SoF or a former SoF member.
I am sure there are quite a few there, officially or not.
I may be wrong but I believe that video is older from before this invasion.
Fair enough. Here's one uploaded yesterday. Oh, and the quote from the guys over at FUNKER530 who are all former/active military:
"You'll probably want some context for this video. That's too bad. If you're interested in knowing more, you're gonna have to follow Forward Observations on YouTube. They've been in Ukraine since January."
For those interested, I've provided a summary of this two page analysis.
Russian Military and Security Strategy Documents The 2014 Military Doctrine divides the perceived nature of threats to Russia into two categories: military risks and military threats. Military risks are a lesser designation, defined as situations that could "lead to a military threat under certain conditions." A military threat is "characterized by area real possibility of an outbreak of a military conflict."
New Generation Warfare Russia's conception of the nature of war in the modern era, defining it by the use of nonmilitary tools and politically led conflict. Subsequent Russian actions in Ukraine strongly reflected this view, as they were characterized by the extensive use of non-state armed actors, information and disinformation operations, and other non-kinetic strategies.
Use of Force Russia's preference for the measured use of force, however, does not imply a trade-off between the decisive use of military power and escalation management. Russian military strategy prioritizes the threat of further punishment.
Military Doctrine Operationally, Russia has historically emphasized mass fire offensive strategies. The concentrated use of artillery and rocket artillery, along with large tank units, remains at the core of Russian military doctrine.
Strategic Deterrence and Escalation Management Russian military doctrine emphasizes a concept of deterrence that is broader than just nuclear deterrence. Referred to as strategic deterrence in officialRussian military doctrine, this concept includes nuclear weapons, strategic conventional weapons, and nonmilitary measuresincluding concepts such as NGWacross both peace time and conflict.
Russia perfected a Military Doctrine that is now 78 years old. Even by 1945 Panzerfaust, man portable rocket launchers, were eating the red army alive.
Today: Flood the Ukraine with Javelins and Mlaws to kill armor, soft targets, especially transport and stingers to keep the choppers and su25's honest. The Ukes can bleed them dry and starve them of supply.
The only problem is precision high altitude attacks not sure how to covertly deal with that.
The Ukrainian Ambassador very intentionally asked each of us on the zoom to NOT share anything on social media during the meeting to protect the security of President Zelenskyy. Appalling and reckless ignorance by two US Senators. https://t.co/geolhKxbLp
— Rep. Dean Phillips 🇺🇸 (@RepDeanPhillips) March 5, 2022
I've been appreciative of Rubio's insight from his briefings, but when someone that has had multiple assassination attempts sent his way asks that you not screenshot their Zoom call, please listen to them.
Today I met Natalia & her daughter Miraslava at the train station in Lviv, Ukraine. They just arrived from Zaporizhzhia, where Russian forces attacked the nuclear power plant. Only 5 years old, Miraslava was enjoying her first hot meal in days. This is why @WCKitchen is here. 🇺🇦 pic.twitter.com/DOqacGYIOf
This is an absolutely fantastic quick and dirty primer to what has occurred to date.
For those stepping into this new or those who want a good, easy to follow and quick breakdown I highly recommend this video. It's a panel of three experts with about ten minutes each. One economic, one Ukrainian defense, and one Russian military doctrine. Bout the first 35 mins or so. The rest is Q&A and more nuanced stuff.
Still highly recommend yall watch it but Clifs of what to expect if you do:
Eco guy goes into the sanctions, the effect they are having and why they are having that effect. Actually pretty fascinating in it's own right for the financially dumb like myself.
Uke defense guy goes into background of how Ukraine prepared for this fight, and make no mistake, they have been preparing for this. Also how much they leaned on the West to make it happen.
Russian doctrine guy is extremely candid. Russia ****ed up. Explains why in about 8 mins in a way that took me about five days to piece together myself. He explains what they should have been able to do and what they did instead. Then what expects moving forward. Spoiler: Russia ain't out yet.
Amazing relief effort at Berlin Hauptbahnhof, new refugees arriving every minute given food, clothes, sim cards, information in multiple languages, accommodation or free tickets for onward travel. Moved by the solidarity pic.twitter.com/BXO6bpDpfu
Like many other cities in Europe, people here in Berlin held cardboard signs up, saying how much they could offer. It was a beautiful scene to witness, and honour to be apart of. My host and I welcomed a group of Moroccan students who were caught up in the war in Ukraine. pic.twitter.com/LYWUxWlgiQ