Update from @cossackgundi, a Brit serving as an enlisted Ukrainian Marine in Mariupol. 1/2 pic.twitter.com/60JGoxtP4V
— Nolan Peterson (@nolanwpeterson) March 23, 2022
Update from @cossackgundi, a Brit serving as an enlisted Ukrainian Marine in Mariupol. 1/2 pic.twitter.com/60JGoxtP4V
— Nolan Peterson (@nolanwpeterson) March 23, 2022
The president of the Red Cross meeting Lavrov in Moscow today. To say that this doesn’t look good is an understatement pic.twitter.com/qxNpVC8fde
— Anastasiia Lapatina (@lapatina_) March 24, 2022
I no kidding thought that guy was dead. Hadn't seen an update on him in forever.ATX_AG_08 said:Update from @cossackgundi, a Brit serving as an enlisted Ukrainian Marine in Mariupol. 1/2 pic.twitter.com/60JGoxtP4V
— Nolan Peterson (@nolanwpeterson) March 23, 2022
Do the rest of the math though.LMCane said:aggie93 said:Of course it would be better if Russia retreated but that isn't going to happen or is very unlikely to happen. Russia is trying to seal itself off from a future attack while it still can, it's in demographic collapse and in 10 years (maybe less) simply won't be capable of doing so. The lack of military age males in Russia is a real problem. So they have gone all in and to retreat means total collapse and soon rather than later. Russians don't look at this the same way we do and they are far more accustomed to a harsh life. I mean it's possible they just "go back to Russia" but extremely unlikely so what we are looking at is the much more likely scenario that they continue to attack Ukraine until the conquer it no matter the cost.JFABNRGR said:The best interest of NATO is to keep russia in russia. If you give them Ukraine you just put a significant amount of their intermediate and some of their short range weapons in NATO range. Its 500 miles from western border to Dnieper river, if you kick them out completely including Crimea that jumps to 750 miles. Ukraine also has very valuable strategic resources: Black Sea access, Agriculture, O&G, Etc absolutely nuts to give them all this while allowing them to commit genocide on the Ukrainian peoples.aggie93 said:Perhaps but I don't think so. I think this continues as a long, drawn out fight where Russia eventually wins but at tremendous cost to Russia and with Ukraine basically being destroyed. That's sadly in the best interests of NATO at this point because the real danger is when Russia decides to move to the next step and go after one of the Baltics or Poland that are NATO countries. That's when the nuclear risk really kicks in, Russia would be crushed from a conventional perspective so it's either accept defeat or go nuclear. So as much as it is horrible the best thing for us is for this to stay in Ukraine. Russia is not going to quit, they are fully committed.FireAg said:
This war seems to be shaping up as follows...
The only way for the Russians to turn the tide at this point appears to be a move away from conventional warfare toward a WMD campaign...
But a WMD campaign, at this point, I think would engage the eastern bloc NATO countries to move troops into Ukraine...which then puts other NATO countries on the verge of WWIII as they move to reinforce and protect the borders of eastern bloc NATO countries in the spirit and in honor of Article 5...
The best outcome for the entire world is one that would have saved the world from WWII given a similar predicament...cut the head off of the leadership of the offending force...
The world needs Putin to be dispatched...
As for Putin, certainly taking him out may solve this but it also means Russia goes into chaos. There is no one in Russia who can replace him, Putin has destroyed all his opposition internally and there are just very few people even capable of being in charge of such a complex country there. So you are looking at a possible Civil War or failed state or both. In a country with thousands of nukes and a lot of really bad people. Maybe that turns out ok but that could actually end up even more dangerous.
It's really frightening we don't have any adults in charge of our foreign policy right now.
The Risk of Nuclear war already exists. Is the world prepared to let anyone with Nukes steal land and murder people?
Russia is a failed state now. We have to have faith and prepare that a new group of leaders better than putin rises to the occasion. Prepare for future problems now but deal with them as they come about nukes or not.
Taking out Putin certainly reshuffles the deck but that seems very unllikely to happen. He has a death grip on power and is still supported by most Russians. Russians like a nationalist and they don't really have an alternative as Putin has made sure of that. He's 70 but in pretty good health. So the only way you are probably taking him out is assassination and that's a really, really dangerous card to play because no one knows who or what will replace him and how they will react if they think NATO is behind taking out Putin.
You need to look a few moves further down the chess board.
Russia has a population in 2022 of 146,000,000 citizens
to think that the Russian Army doesn't have enough potential recruits to seal itself off from future attack is not accurate.
ATX_AG_08 said:American volunteer in Ukraine shows off a recently destroyed Russian tank pic.twitter.com/nK6HfF5AkL
— Woofers (@NotWoofers) March 24, 2022US volunteers fighting forces in Ukraine pic.twitter.com/pz0yizgB4X
— spook (@spook_info) March 24, 2022
Am I supposed to count this or what? https://t.co/Hy3bWZA8um
— Oryx (@oryxspioenkop) March 24, 2022
I’m going to include these in the list of naval losses if this goes on. https://t.co/0iKZZbHGZT
— Oryx (@oryxspioenkop) March 24, 2022
Military field dressings left by Russian Forces after they were beaten back from Mykolaiv. Dated 1978.
— Aldin 🇧🇦 (@aldin_ww) March 24, 2022
Older than soldiers fighting and carrying these with them. pic.twitter.com/SiekwIiMcE
Ukraine's Ukrjet UJ-22 Airborne UAV reportedly downed by the Russians a few hours ago. More interesting fact is that Russian sources claim it fell near Klintsy in the Bryansk Oblast of Russia.https://t.co/bNqFeGPUgg pic.twitter.com/oHILUISesy
— Status-6 (@Archer83Able) March 24, 2022
This village has been Russian occupied for a month, they terrorized the people and took their food. Today we entered, took out 7 tanks and countless Russians thus liberating these people pic.twitter.com/0Fm3qHdepB
— James Vasquez (@jmvasquez1974) March 24, 2022
Just went through six straight hours of combat. I have crazy video I’ll post later. 2 men were shot but will be ok. One fatality 😞
— James Vasquez (@jmvasquez1974) March 24, 2022
Sounds like the Ukrainian Offensive on Kherson tonight is Confirmed. https://t.co/jC6SIvAqv5
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) March 24, 2022
On the supposed reappearance of Russia’s defense minister, Sergey Shoigu, @MoscowTimes points out that today’s teeny tiny footage seems to match what we saw on March 11, his last sighting. Background, necktie, and clothes. 🤷♂️ https://t.co/ZMftiUvLwK pic.twitter.com/1zlQNlZ1BP
— Kevin Rothrock (@KevinRothrock) March 24, 2022
Just going thru his timeline:MeatDr said:
That first video is clipped from this tweet from the guy actually involved.This village has been Russian occupied for a month, they terrorized the people and took their food. Today we entered, took out 7 tanks and countless Russians thus liberating these people pic.twitter.com/0Fm3qHdepB
— James Vasquez (@jmvasquez1974) March 24, 2022
Edited to add this tweet as well.Just went through six straight hours of combat. I have crazy video I’ll post later. 2 men were shot but will be ok. One fatality 😞
— James Vasquez (@jmvasquez1974) March 24, 2022
These men are remarkably undertrained but what they lack in skills they make up in courage so when we have downtime I train them on tactical maneuvers, use of thermal and night vision, proper weapon cleaning etc. here 10 days and they are fast learners.
— James Vasquez (@jmvasquez1974) March 24, 2022
Went to rear for supplies today with UK soldier. We were astonished to see a gate open on a hunting supply store. Turns out there were there because it had a solid basement in case of shelling. I needed binoculars. They opened for us. Saw I was American, so happy, gave to me free
— James Vasquez (@jmvasquez1974) March 23, 2022
Captured 159 Russians today!
— James Vasquez (@jmvasquez1974) March 22, 2022
We’ve been eating eggs and potato dumplings every day, we went to the rear to the only market open and I asked if they had steak? Yes but it’s expensive. No worries, I’ll but it I say. 30 pounds of steak for 30 dollars! 🤣🤣
— James Vasquez (@jmvasquez1974) March 21, 2022
When we go to there and get supplies and food from market, they check everyone’s passports because Russians are starving and putting on regular clothes to get food. Now they can’t!!!
— James Vasquez (@jmvasquez1974) March 21, 2022
The overarching theme was that Russia is facing an existential crisis
— Samuel Ramani (@SamRamani2) March 24, 2022
Medinsky said it bluntly: "Russia's very existence is at stake today"
This appeals to long-standing conspiracies about Western efforts to dismember Russia, which gained popularity in the late 1990s /2
Themes from Putin's recent "scum and traitors" speech were also invoked, as warnings of fifth columns inside Russia abounded
— Samuel Ramani (@SamRamani2) March 24, 2022
Medinsky stated that he was unable to completely purge traitors from the Ministry of Culture. This opens the door for more crackdowns /4
Naryshkin also justified military force as an acceptable means of preserving Russia's great power status
— Samuel Ramani (@SamRamani2) March 24, 2022
Naryshkin praised those who chose military service to prevent the West from consigning Russia to the "sidelines of world history" /6
Russia, or the Soviet Union, has been saying the West is an existential threat since 1917. That is a tenet of Marxism, Leninism, Communism, Maoism, blah, blah, blah.SPF250 said:
Medinsky's reference of Russia's existence being at risk is troubling. Setting the stage for the "existential threat" predicate for using nukes.
SPF250 said:
Medinsky's reference of Russia's existence being at risk is troubling. Setting the stage for the "existential threat" predicate for using nukes.
the NATO summit communique might be dry & diplomatic but sources inside the room told me that there were a lot of concrete commitments expressed to #Ukraine in terms of military aid that leaders simply don't want to go public with. #Russia
— Rikard Jozwiak (@RikardJozwiak) March 24, 2022
Holy crap. Ukraine is reportedly using facial recognition technology to identify dead Russian soldiers and notify their relatives. To my knowledge, this is the first publicly reported use of facial recognition for this purpose in active combat.https://t.co/Ip7s3cb0Xf
— Caroline Orr Bueno, Ph.D (@RVAwonk) March 24, 2022
MeatDr said:
At least some things are being kept quiet...the NATO summit communique might be dry & diplomatic but sources inside the room told me that there were a lot of concrete commitments expressed to #Ukraine in terms of military aid that leaders simply don't want to go public with. #Russia
— Rikard Jozwiak (@RikardJozwiak) March 24, 2022
Holy crap! Who is directing this PR? I mean that is genius for a country under siege.MeatDr said:Holy crap. Ukraine is reportedly using facial recognition technology to identify dead Russian soldiers and notify their relatives. To my knowledge, this is the first publicly reported use of facial recognition for this purpose in active combat.https://t.co/Ip7s3cb0Xf
— Caroline Orr Bueno, Ph.D (@RVAwonk) March 24, 2022
These men are remarkably undertrained but what they lack in skills they make up in courage so when we have downtime I train them on tactical maneuvers, use of thermal and night vision, proper weapon cleaning etc. here 10 days and they are fast learners.
— James Vasquez (@jmvasquez1974) March 24, 2022
aggiehawg said:Holy crap! Who is directing this PR? I mean that is genius for a country under siege.MeatDr said:Holy crap. Ukraine is reportedly using facial recognition technology to identify dead Russian soldiers and notify their relatives. To my knowledge, this is the first publicly reported use of facial recognition for this purpose in active combat.https://t.co/Ip7s3cb0Xf
— Caroline Orr Bueno, Ph.D (@RVAwonk) March 24, 2022
You know how. The Russians have been doing that in a surveilance state for years.VitruvianAg said:aggiehawg said:Holy crap! Who is directing this PR? I mean that is genius for a country under siege.MeatDr said:Holy crap. Ukraine is reportedly using facial recognition technology to identify dead Russian soldiers and notify their relatives. To my knowledge, this is the first publicly reported use of facial recognition for this purpose in active combat.https://t.co/Ip7s3cb0Xf
— Caroline Orr Bueno, Ph.D (@RVAwonk) March 24, 2022
Question is; how'd they get the database?