AgBQ-00 said:
The Afghan reference is addressed in the simple cost analysis he describes though. And the technology they were using was sufficiently close enough to eventually overcome the advantages because of time and numbers. And in the case of USSR in Afghan, the application of advanced weaponry (MANPADs) completely changed the battlefield.
The technology that is being applied on the side of Ukraine currently is pretty far past what Russia has. Look at the open/unsecured comms that Russia uses and the lack of seemingly actionable intelligence to act nimbly. Or their atrocious supply line issues. All of those technological and tactical shortcomings are being exposed by a country that is using cutting edge comms (starlink, encryption etc., etc., etc.). Cutting edge or near cutting edge drone tech, and highly accurate and actionable intelligence (Moskova, generals dropping like prom dresses, etc. etc.) and we are getting the results we see.
Now If Russia had the capabilities and tactics being applied on the Ukraine side what we see now would look totally different. Which I think is the point he is making.
Stingers didn't really change the battlefield. The Soviets started their invasion in 1980. They internally decided to leave around 1985, and stingers were introduced in 1986. They were initially very successful, but the Russians quickly changed tactics and used countermeasures to mitigate their employment. They didn't completely change the battlefield.
In Russia's case now, they HAVE all of the technology Ukraine does. Do you think they don't have secured comms? Or trucks? That pallets don't exist in Russia? They certainly have the technology for secured communications, they're just bad at making sure it's available and deployed. They know how to make trucks, they just don't have enough to maintain adequate supply for their forces. Russia has pallets and other important logistical technology, they just don't employ it.
The cutting edge technology Ukraine is using exists within Russia and Russia has all of those capabilities, but what kills them is poor tactical employment. Their failure isn't in being ill-equipped, it's in not knowing how to use of being incapable of effectively using the technology they have. You talk about not having the intelligence to act nimbly, but it's not a matter of intelligence: it's a matter of structure and tactics. Russian soldiers aren't authorized to take advantage of such intelligence and take the initiative. If an officer doesn't say to do it or authorize it, it isn't happening. Yes, the Ukrainians had intelligence on where the Moskva was, but the Moskva should have had all of the necessary defenses to mitigate an ASM. Tactically, they did not employ what they had and the Ukrainians employed what they had on the most radically advantageous ways. It wasn't an intelligence or technology delta, it was a tactical delta that sank the Moskva. The systems can have all of the technology and intelligence in the world, but their military culture and tactical employment would make it useless.
Russia could be winning this war because they have all of the means. What they lack are the methods. Tactically, they're horrible at combined arms and utilizing all of their available tools in conjunction with each other. They can't develop synergy between units and adapt to changing conditions, despite all of the tech they have. It's not that western technology is so much better, it's that the Russians are Neanderthals fighting with tanks and machine guns.