Херсонщина,лівий берег,Кринки pic.twitter.com/y6p2u43IY2
— Мисливець за зорями (@small10space) December 2, 2023
Херсонщина,лівий берег,Кринки pic.twitter.com/y6p2u43IY2
— Мисливець за зорями (@small10space) December 2, 2023
Significant developments in Ukraine today suggesting the Ukrainian position in front of Donetsk City - the single most stubbornly held line in the entire war - is crumbling.
— Armchair Warlord (@ArmchairW) December 2, 2023
Specifically, the Russians finally took Maryinka and Avdeevka is looking increasingly untenable.⬇️
These… pic.twitter.com/T0w409WC3s
Here's new imagery of Russia's Sevastopol harbor defenses in Crimea that were recently battered by storms. pic.twitter.com/q04uVxyOnI
— Brady Africk (@bradyafr) December 2, 2023
Avdiivka sector, Donetsk region
— Мисливець за зорями (@small10space) November 27, 2023
Destroyed Russian armored vehicles
— James Holland (@jamesholland123) December 2, 2023
docb said:
https://www.euronews.com/2023/12/02/russians-support-of-ukraine-war-collapses-finds-poll
It isn't about elections, but about civil unrest. That's also what Ukraine needs to count on, since they have fewer people.bonfarr said:docb said:
https://www.euronews.com/2023/12/02/russians-support-of-ukraine-war-collapses-finds-poll
Does anyone actually believe Putin will lose an election? No way he allows that to happen. Even if an actual competitor emerged and managed to secure more votes Putin wouldn't leave office. He would just declare the election invalid.
Russian soldiers shot two unarmed Ukrainian POWs that surrendered near Stepove. The Ukrainian soldiers were reportedly left without ammunition and had to surrender, once the second soldier came out, they decided to shoot them both.
— NOELREPORTS 🇪🇺 🇺🇦 (@NOELreports) December 2, 2023
Never forget what Ukraine is fighting against. pic.twitter.com/x53IuF6sSY
The news comes amid speculation in Western and Ukrainian media about alleged disagreements between Zelensky and Zaluzhnyi, which have received a lot of public attention following Zaluzhnyi's sobering op-ed on the state of the war for The Economist.
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) December 4, 2023
The U.S. is set to run out of funds to support Ukraine in the coming weeks if Congress does not take action, White House Budget Office Director Shalanda Young informed congressional leaders in a letter on Dec. 4.
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) December 4, 2023
Disputes within the EU over money and Ukraine’s future are endangering crucial pledges to Kyiv — just when the flow of US financial and military support for Ukraine has abruptly stalled https://t.co/zLRHpwtkmM pic.twitter.com/Z4rAjLSc2O
— Financial Times (@FT) December 4, 2023
Ukraine has reached production of six
— Special Kherson Cat 🐈🇺🇦 (@bayraktar_1love) December 4, 2023
2S22 Bohdana 155 mm self-propelled howitzers per month. https://t.co/zRMotgbmiH pic.twitter.com/4dpOx7xSdk
Why the new 2S22 Bohdana is so important:
— WhereisRussiaToday (@WhereisRussia) August 11, 2023
The 2S22 Bohdana is an impressive modern self-propelled howitzer with a range of up to 50km and an average fire rate of 6 shells per minute.
But most importantly, it's a system that has been designed, manufactured, improved and… pic.twitter.com/n5Szt5FwVJ
bonfarr said:
Ukraine is going to run out of time. We can make excuses for them all day long but the fact they did not get any results from their big offensive probably sealed their fates. They can hope that public dissatisfaction in Russia with the war leads to some kind of political shakeup but I wouldn't hold my breath on that. Russia can keep throwing more meat into the grinder for another couple of years and Ukraine will be done when Western money dries up.
Teslag said:bonfarr said:
Ukraine is going to run out of time. We can make excuses for them all day long but the fact they did not get any results from their big offensive probably sealed their fates. They can hope that public dissatisfaction in Russia with the war leads to some kind of political shakeup but I wouldn't hold my breath on that. Russia can keep throwing more meat into the grinder for another couple of years and Ukraine will be done when Western money dries up.
Russia doesn't have the ability to mount an offensive and meatgrinder strategies don't work in 2024. This thing will largely freeze along current lines.
Quote:
A freeze along current lines is a loss for Ukraine.
Maybe it's tin foil hat thinking, but I honestly think Russia believed they were going to lose the war and needed Muslim terrorists attacking Israel, Iraq, and international shipping to have a chance. And it's probably going to work.bonfarr said:Teslag said:bonfarr said:
Ukraine is going to run out of time. We can make excuses for them all day long but the fact they did not get any results from their big offensive probably sealed their fates. They can hope that public dissatisfaction in Russia with the war leads to some kind of political shakeup but I wouldn't hold my breath on that. Russia can keep throwing more meat into the grinder for another couple of years and Ukraine will be done when Western money dries up.
Russia doesn't have the ability to mount an offensive and meatgrinder strategies don't work in 2024. This thing will largely freeze along current lines.
A freeze along current lines is a loss for Ukraine. At some point the US and Western Allies are no longer going to send $100 billion a year to continue to fund Ukraines war. As soon as that money dries up their ability to continue the fight is going to come to an end. Hopefully they can keep the borders at the 2014 but it is looking like they won't be able to drive the Russians out of occupied territory
bonfarr said:
It is a loss based on their current stated objective which is to push Russia out of all occupied territory including Crimea.
Compared to the first week of the war, it's a huge win.Teslag said:Quote:
A freeze along current lines is a loss for Ukraine.
Completely disagree with that. In February of 2022 the general consensus was that all of Ukraine would fall within weeks if not days. At best they'd be left as a puppet like Belarus and worst just another Russian state. If you had told anyone that Ukraine would survive with Kiev, Odessa, Kherson, Kharkiv, etc AND regain almost 60% of what Russia initially took in the spring of 2022 they would have thought you were crazy.
Ukraine existing is a victory for Ukrainians.
It seems to me Russia wanted ALL of Ukraine. Is this really a win for them since they may well have created multiple new NATO members on their actual border now?bonfarr said:
It is a loss based on their current stated objective which is to push Russia out of all occupied territory including Crimea.
My post was poorly worded. I'm calling it a win for Ukraine in the context that it still exists independently from Moscow and Putin. It will take a long time for Russia's military to recover.Teslag said:
Russia is definitely losing big unless you have some propaganda driven perspective. They've lost a ton of their modern weaponry, been exposed as a paper tiger, lost their black sea flagship, lost a significant number of their best officers and NCO's, far weaker militarily, lost their most effective PMC and leader, and take a huge hit to their economy (unless you buy into some laughable BRICS narrative).
Theyd' never admit it, but if they could go back to February of 2022 they'd never cross into Ukraine.
74OA said:
Russia is an international pariah state, with its economy slowly being strangled by sanctions. Millions of skilled young Russians have fled abroad, with hundreds of thousands more young Russians killed and maimed. Russian army is steadily being gutted, resorting to pulling Cold War equipment out of storage and begging Iran and NK for munitions. NATO is enlarged and swiftly rearming. EU has cut almost all of its 258B Euro annual trade with Russia. Ukraine is still free, defiant and now hating Russia like the devil himself, with EU and NATO membership on the horizon.
Tell me again about that Russian victory..........
For now. History says a stagnation of lines will allow Russia to fortify, refit, redraft and do this all again in a couple of years because they've learned NATO wants no part of a direct conflict.MouthBQ98 said:
To be sure, but something is better than nothing.
Remaining independent of Russia is far more than a mere moral victory.bonfarr said:74OA said:
Russia is an international pariah state, with its economy slowly being strangled by sanctions. Millions of skilled young Russians have fled abroad, with hundreds of thousands more young Russians killed and maimed. Russian army is steadily being gutted, resorting to pulling Cold War equipment out of storage and begging Iran and NK for munitions. NATO is enlarged and swiftly rearming. EU has cut almost all of its 258B Euro annual trade with Russia. Ukraine is still free, defiant and now hating Russia like the devil himself, with EU and NATO membership on the horizon.
Tell me again about that Russian victory..........
It will be a victory for NATO and the West no doubt. Russia emerges weakened and exposed.
For Ukraine there are no moral victories. They will have spent hundreds of billions in Western cash and materials and end up with less than they had prior to the invasion.
That's why there has to be some type of NATO presence once they stop.AgLA06 said:For now. History says a stagnation of lines will allow Russia to fortify, refit, redraft and do this all again in a couple of years because they've learned NATO wants no part of a direct conflict.MouthBQ98 said:
To be sure, but something is better than nothing.