Ag with kids said:
lb3 said:
Ag with kids said:
PlaneCrashGuy said:
Ag with kids said:
PlaneCrashGuy said:
GAC06 said:
The backbone of Ukraine's tank force was T-64's to start the war. T-62's were not in service at all with Russia when they invaded Ukraine. Only now is their much stronger military equipped with relics pulled from a field in Siberia. Nice attempt at a hand wave though.
I'm certain the idea of a stronger Russia is based on a much more in depth analysis than the age of the tanks used. Your post is not convincing.
I'm certain you're incorrect in that assessment.
Respectfully, I question if you have been reading the links. This war has taught the people paying attention that tanks aren't what they used to be. Drones on the other hand are much more important.
I do recall the 200 tanks per month trope, but I've never once seen someone argue the only reason is Russia is stronger is because they have more and/or newer tanks. Maybe I'm forgetting something that was posted that you could point me to?
So...you agree that they weren't making 200 tanks a month, now? Because that started over a year ago...so there should be about 2400 of them available.
Surely they wouldn't be sending 50+ year old fresh out of mothballs surplus T-62s to the front if they had those brand spanking new T-90s would they?
The claim of being stronger did not rest solely on new tanks. But, it WAS part of the claim.
There have been plenty of tanks in the inventory of both sides during this conflict. Can you give one example from this war where tanks were decisive in the outcome of a battle?
I don't know enough details of each battle to say anything definitively.
However, that doesn't have to do with the subject of this particular discussion. It is about Russian military strength with tanks a proxy example.
Tanks as a proxy for military strength in this and future conflicts seems to be a meaningless metric.
I would argue that the time from target identification to target engagement is a better metric. And in this regard Russia has significantly improved their use of combined arms. At the start of the war it would take Russia hours to relay new target information to command and back down to their artillery or even a day or more to engage targets using air power.
Today Russian soldiers can relay a target's location from infantry drone footage to their command and engage with whatever assets are best suited for the target be it artillery, suicide drones, rockets, or glide bombs, and do so in a single digit number of minutes.
It's foolish to laugh at the age of Russian tanks while ignoring the major strides Russia has made in incorporating new technologies into their units, reorganizing their military away from isolated and ineffective BTG structures, and sharpened their EW systems against actual NATO weapons to the point that entire classes of our smart weapons are now ineffective and obsolete.
There is no doubt in my mind that the 500k Russian soldiers involved in this special military operation today would kick the ass of the 200k strong unit that invaded Ukraine a few years ago. And by that metric I think even you would agree that the Russian military today is stronger today.