Lots of dual citizens.The Fife said:
I'm amazed there are any US citizens still in Russia aside from people associated with the embassy.
Lots of dual citizens.The Fife said:
I'm amazed there are any US citizens still in Russia aside from people associated with the embassy.
Dual citizens with the former Soviet Union? I didn't think Russia even allowed dual citizenship? Why Snowden had to wait so long?74OA said:Lots of dual citizens.The Fife said:
I'm amazed there are any US citizens still in Russia aside from people associated with the embassy.
aunuwyn08 said:Quote:
This is just another "US backed color revolution." Moscow doesn't interfere in the domestic politics of its neighbors or work to install puppet governments.
Someone's obviously never heard of little green men before.
Waffledynamics said:
"Escalation only comes from the defense" is the hottest take I can't stand seeing over and over and over again.
Give Ukraine what it needs to beat the **** out of Russia. They didn't start this war. People need to stop pretending they're the ones causing the problem.
Looks like trench humor to me. Heck, you can see worse in old British WWI footage (highly recommend They Shall Not Grow Old).knj2417 said:
Theres something about this that is off, can't quite put my finger on it
https://www.reddit.com/r/UkraineWarVideoReport/comments/111jiwl/ukrainian_soldier_makes_a_trench_friend_and_his/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=ios_app&utm_name=iossmf
Is that really surprising, though? If you've seen any of the Russian propaganda TV clips, it seems par for the course.knj2417 said:
I thought that was legit, just seemed off that Russia's top war correspondent has a son who is a draft dodger
https://hotair.com/john-s-2/2023/02/13/the-short-lives-of-former-russian-prisoners-used-as-cannon-fodder-in-ukraine-n530569Not a Bot said:
Ukraine claims to have killed some thing like 1500 or more Russian troops in one day last week. This may have been the battle they were talking about.
Bag said:
any general consensus on who is winning this war, one year later?
Yep.MouthBQ98 said:
I wouldn't say it is unlikely at all. Russia is plodding methodically towards exhausting itself for minimal gains while Ukraine is building a more westernized army with advanced training. It won't be a fully western army with air superiority and full combined arms, but it will be much more mobile and dynamic than what Russia is doing. There is a chance at bigger tactical successes long term against a predictable Russia.
The first confirmed loss of very recently adopted jamming station from #Russian Palantin electronic warfare system destroyed by highly accurate artillery fire. https://t.co/v4riXU69Yw pic.twitter.com/Q19wsfmkQM
— Juha Salmela (@SalmelaJS) February 14, 2023
MouthBQ98 said:
I wouldn't say it is unlikely at all. Russia is plodding methodically towards exhausting itself for minimal gains while Ukraine is building a more westernized army with advanced training. It won't be a fully western army with air superiority and full combined arms, but it will be much more mobile and dynamic than what Russia is doing. There is a chance at bigger tactical successes long term against a predictable Russia.
Russian President Putin is set to most likely meet Belarusian President Lukashenko on Friday in which they will reportedly discuss the possibility of steps to increase the “Security and Cooperation” between the Nations.
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) February 14, 2023
I mean. Russia has taken over his country and all their military equipment, ammo, and bases. Other than a coup to force his small, poorly trained army to attack from the north (I bet they don't make it 20 miles) there isn't much more he can cooperate.Not a Bot said:Russian President Putin is set to most likely meet Belarusian President Lukashenko on Friday in which they will reportedly discuss the possibility of steps to increase the “Security and Cooperation” between the Nations.
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) February 14, 2023
AgLA06 said:I mean. Russia has taken over his country and all their military equipment, ammo, and bases. Other than a coupe to force his small, poorly trained army to attack from the north (I bet they don't make it 20 miles) there isn't much more he can cooperate.Not a Bot said:Russian President Putin is set to most likely meet Belarusian President Lukashenko on Friday in which they will reportedly discuss the possibility of steps to increase the “Security and Cooperation” between the Nations.
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) February 14, 2023
They literally just launched 2 successful offensives just mere months ago. Kharkiv took 500 settlements and 12,000 square kilometers of territory against Russia's best units. Kherson took 1,170 square kilometers of land and a city so protected by a river and Russian defenses, Putin went on TV and annexed it.rgag12 said:What is highly unlikely is that Ukraine receives the equipment, trains, gets the equipment deployed, and uses it to affect a breakthrough in the coming months.MouthBQ98 said:
I wouldn't say it is unlikely at all. Russia is plodding methodically towards exhausting itself for minimal gains while Ukraine is building a more westernized army with advanced training. It won't be a fully western army with air superiority and full combined arms, but it will be much more mobile and dynamic than what Russia is doing. There is a chance at bigger tactical successes long term against a predictable Russia.
Forgive me.chickencoupe16 said:AgLA06 said:I mean. Russia has taken over his country and all their military equipment, ammo, and bases. Other than a coupe to force his small, poorly trained army to attack from the north (I bet they don't make it 20 miles) there isn't much more he can cooperate.Not a Bot said:Russian President Putin is set to most likely meet Belarusian President Lukashenko on Friday in which they will reportedly discuss the possibility of steps to increase the “Security and Cooperation” between the Nations.
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) February 14, 2023
A sedan might be better.
AgLA06 said:They literally just launched 2 successful offensives just mere months ago. Kharkiv took 500 settlements and 12,000 square kilometers of territory against Russia's best units. Kherson took 1,170 square kilometers of land and a city so protected by a river and Russian defenses, Putin went on TV and annexed it.rgag12 said:What is highly unlikely is that Ukraine receives the equipment, trains, gets the equipment deployed, and uses it to affect a breakthrough in the coming months.MouthBQ98 said:
I wouldn't say it is unlikely at all. Russia is plodding methodically towards exhausting itself for minimal gains while Ukraine is building a more westernized army with advanced training. It won't be a fully western army with air superiority and full combined arms, but it will be much more mobile and dynamic than what Russia is doing. There is a chance at bigger tactical successes long term against a predictable Russia.
Then you'll have to explain why they can't do something they've already done.rgag12 said:AgLA06 said:They literally just launched 2 successful offensives just mere months ago. Kharkiv took 500 settlements and 12,000 square kilometers of territory against Russia's best units. Kherson took 1,170 square kilometers of land and a city so protected by a river and Russian defenses, Putin went on TV and annexed it.rgag12 said:What is highly unlikely is that Ukraine receives the equipment, trains, gets the equipment deployed, and uses it to affect a breakthrough in the coming months.MouthBQ98 said:
I wouldn't say it is unlikely at all. Russia is plodding methodically towards exhausting itself for minimal gains while Ukraine is building a more westernized army with advanced training. It won't be a fully western army with air superiority and full combined arms, but it will be much more mobile and dynamic than what Russia is doing. There is a chance at bigger tactical successes long term against a predictable Russia.
That is a very glass half full way of looking at Ukraine's offensives (especially Kherson), to put it mildly.
You are setting yourself up for disappointment.
- Norway will donate 8 tanks and up to 4 special purpose tanks to Ukraine 🇺🇦. We are also earmarking funds to ammunition and spare parts, says 🇳🇴Minister of Defence Bjørn Arild Gram.https://t.co/ggqIhb9bkh #Ukraine #StandWithUkraine
— Forsvarsdepartement (@Forsvarsdep) February 14, 2023
Quote:
US Secretary of Defense: We expect Ukraine to launch a counterattack in the spring
Your opinion of him doesn't change the reality of this.nortex97 said:
Petraeus is such a blow hard.
If there is anyone in the US military establishment/former uniformed officers whose judgment, and wartime sense of who is winning/how to win, would be less credible after Afghanistan and Iraq, I would be hard pressed to name them. Probably not a small coincidence he's employed by CNN.
No one is winning in Ukraine. It's basically a stalemate of rich oligarchs on two sides happy to attrit the cannon fodder troops they have. Claiming a few miles this way or hamlets that way really matter in the big scheme of things is…a joke.