The loss of the two helos and the two pilots is a huge loss, They used the crap out of these things to transfer all kinds of support in men, munitions, aid, etc.notex said:📷 Russian drones freely operating in the rear of Ukrainian Army, destroying valuable assets more frequently than usual in the recent days. It signals either a lack of means to counter these drones, lack of ammunition for AA, or the army became more careless under Sirskyi. https://t.co/OSYngJ4mh6
— MilitaryLand.net (@Militarylandnet) March 13, 2024
Stressboy said:
That should have happened years ago. To do it while a war is ongoing is not going to get passed. I'm afraid the Russians are catching up in the innovation curve and I'm not sure Ukraine can respond on their own.
Violates the NATO charter to admit a country that is currently at war if I am not mistaken.Teslag said:
Ukraine in NATO stops Russian cold at current lines and there's lasting peace in that area.
Russia has no ability to mount an offensive so all that's left is years of fighting back and forth over a few miles for either side.
But is Ukraine without the Donbas, much of their rich agricultural land, power from Zaporizhia (sp?) nuke plant, and access to the O&G in the sea of Azov a viable economy? What is left to base their economy on at that point and to fund their military to NATO standards?Teslag said:
It does, which is why it should be a part of any negotiated peace. The second Ukraine is in nato this war is permanently over.
💥 In just 2 days, Ukrainian drone strikes on 3 giant oil refineries reduced Russia's refining capacity by 10%.pic.twitter.com/DOEUX7GkvN
— Igor Sushko (@igorsushko) March 13, 2024
Not to mention that is literally the one thing that Putin would never, ever agree to. Any other consideration we could possibly lie enough to ourselves that it could be feasible to bring to a negotiation table. Putin allowing Ukraine going to NATO....not even a dream we can convince ourselves in.txags92 said:But is Ukraine without the Donbas, much of their rich agricultural land, power from Zaporizhia (sp?) nuke plant, and access to the O&G in the sea of Azov a viable economy? What is left to base their economy on at that point and to fund their military to NATO standards?Teslag said:
It does, which is why it should be a part of any negotiated peace. The second Ukraine is in nato this war is permanently over.
BadMoonRisin said:
Oh ok then. Never mind. I have completely changed my mind.
This super credible poster withyearsmonthsdays of credibility just assuaged all of my concerns in just a simple sentence, with the same BS he has been plugging since day zero, that still isnt true.
I don't know why, but my post was just deleted--despite it being a repeat of the strategic rationale for helping Ukraine I've posted a variety of times here without mod objection. A reasonable on-topic response to an off-topic post shouldn't be dumped along with the OT post--particularly when the response doesn't repost (quote) the OT post.Eliminatus said:BadMoonRisin said:
Oh ok then. Never mind. I have completely changed my mind.
This super credible poster withyearsmonthsdays of credibility just assuaged all of my concerns in just a simple sentence, with the same BS he has been plugging since day zero, that still isnt true.
ETA: Difference between mine and 740As response is quite stark there. Yeah. Read his instead of mine.
Nope. Either the mod takes another read and puts it back up or it stays down.BadMoonRisin said:
I was actually in the middle of reading it and it might have been my fault. My posts were removed due to being off topic and I think your update was a reply to them. Feel free to repost and my apologies.
Here are the losses I could identify today.https://t.co/lZLivxUud6 pic.twitter.com/6uT4VsmYH9
— Andrew Perpetua (@AndrewPerpetua) March 15, 2024
Quote:
Filling the sUAS Experimentation Gap
How can the United States remain abreast of its competitors in the sUAS arms race? The Army should immediately put off-the-shelf drones in the hands of its junior leaders and empower them to rigorously test these capabilities. To do so requires three initial steps.
First, the Army should provide multiple combat units with large quantities of off-the-shelf commercial drones. This means skipping technology demonstrations, specially designed tests with contractor support, and major fielding events. Instead, it should purchase a variety of existing inexpensive sUAS with differing capabilities and put them in the hands of junior leaders. Rather than betting on top-down innovation from the sUAS program office and schoolhouse, let platoon and squad leaders determine how these systems can help them complete their training cycles. From reconnaissance platoons to infantry squads, mortar platoons, fire support teams, and artillery batteries, the Army should field these cheap drones to multiple elements of combined arms formations. Widespread distribution would allow units to use ongoing training events to determine what functions sUAS can best serve, what elements and echelons to integrate them with, and what tactics, techniques, and procedures work best. After a unit has experimented with these technologies in a cycle of live fires or a combat training center rotation, feedback from its soldiers could be formalized into standard operating procedures by the battalion or brigade staff and sent to schoolhouses to shape future training and doctrine.
The Ukrainian drones hit their targets with virtually no air defense. The Russian air defense is totally overwhelmed or overstretched.
— (((Tendar))) (@Tendar) March 13, 2024
Russia’s oil, gas, pipeline and refinery industry is a sitting duck in a shooting gallery.
Source of videos: Telegram / Mash and Astra pic.twitter.com/DNJRpK57sl
Polish FM on Ukraine's negotiations with Russia: No shortage of ‘pocket Chamberlains’ ready to sacrifice someone else's territory for sake of their comfort. pic.twitter.com/fp0y7kfBkH
— UNITED24 Media (@United24media) March 12, 2024
Stressboy said:
I'm too old to serve but I have 5 boys of military age and I don't want them anywhere near the hell playing out on these pages.
This! I have two and one ages out tomorrow (3/16). Its the younger one I worry about. Natural leader that would leave it all out there. Three more years for him.
Gilligan said:Stressboy said:
I'm too old to serve but I have 5 boys of military age and I don't want them anywhere near the hell playing out on these pages.
This! I have two and one ages out tomorrow (3/16). Its the younger one I worry about. Natural leader that would leave it all out there. Three more years for him.