Russia mobilizes

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Redbrickbear
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whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:


Except national interest is hardly tenuous. As long as we remain in Nato, we have substantial interest in keeping Ukraine independent from Russia.


How did NATO survive for decades while Ukraine was literally ruled from Moscow?

How did NATO survive between 1991-2014 when Ukraine had a steady succession of pro-Russian leaders in charge?

How and when did Ukraine become an existential issue for the USA and NATO?

Especially since Ukraine is not now and never has been a member of NATO
whiterock
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Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

trey3216 said:

Sam Lowry said:

trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

https://www.theamericanconservative.com/ukraine-plans-for-world-war-iii/


[The leak of classified documents on the gaming and chat platform Discord continues to be a treasure trove of information about America's proxy war with Russia in Ukraine.

Earlier revelations from the Discord leak suggested Ukraine is a cornered animal. The latest shows it might lash out like one. The Washington Post reported Monday that documents in the leak claimed that the United States had to force Ukraine to back down from a direct attack on Moscow. Time and time again, the United States has had to rein in or express serious concern internally about Ukraine's plans to fight Russia, not just in Ukraine or even within Russia's borders, but in the Middle East and North Africa as well.



A classified report from the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) claimed that Maj. Gen. Kyrylo Budanov, who heads the Main Directorate of Intelligence (HUR) for Ukraine's defense ministry, instructed one of his officers on February 13 "to get ready for mass strikes on 24 February." Ukraine was to strike "with everything the HUR had." The NSA report also said Ukrainian officials joked about using TNT to strike Novorossiysk, a Black Sea port city east of the Crimean Peninsula. The Post asserted such an operation would be "largely symbolic," but "would nevertheless demonstrate Ukraine's ability to hit deep inside enemy territory."

Budanov has a reputation for being a loose cannon. Previously, he claimed that Russian President Vladimir Putin was terminally ill and employed body doubles for public appearances. He is apparently convinced that Ukraine will overwhelm and repel the Russian invasion, including Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014, sometime this summer. Which is why it appears the U.S. intelligence apparatus has taken up monitoring Budanov's moves and communications. And Budanov appears to know it. The Post added that, when it has interviewed Budanov on occasion since the outbreak of the war, reporters have heard white noise or music in the background of the major general's office.

This time, however, it appears the United States prevented the loose cannon from going off. On February 22, the CIA internally circulated a classified report that the HUR "had agreed, at Washington's request, to postpone strikes" on Moscow. Nevertheless, the CIA also said "there is no indication" that the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) had "agreed to postpone its own plans to attack Moscow around the same date."


Ukraine appears to now be reaching further into Russian territory and is less ambiguous about its involvement in these attacks. Earlier on in the conflict, Ukraine often denied playing a role in attacks on Russian installations and infrastructure within its borders, such as the car-bombing incident in August 2022 that killed Daria Dugina, the daughter of Aleksandr Dugin, a Russian nationalist and staunch supporter of Russia's invasion. Despite repeated Ukrainian denials, the U.S. intelligence community believes Ukraine was behind the attack.

In an interview with the Post in January, however, Budanov simultaneously denied Ukraine's involvement in many of these attacks and claimed that they would continue. Such attacks "shattered their illusions of safety," Budanov reportedly claimed. "There are people who plant explosives. There are drones. Until the territorial integrity of Ukraine is restored, there will be problems inside Russia."

Other revelations from the Discord-leaked documents: Ukraine wants to expand the scope of the conflict beyond that of continental Europe and take the Russians to task in the Middle East and North Africa. The NSA report claimed that Budanov's HUR planned to attack the Wagner Groupa Russian military contractor with a reputation for brutality whose members have assisted in the Ukraine offensivein the African country of Mali. The Wagner Group's services are retained by the government of Mali for security and training their own military forces.

The NSA document said, "It is unknown what stage the operations [in Mali] were currently in and whether the HUR has received approval to execute its plans," according to the Post.

At the same time, the HUR was developing plans to strike Russian forces in Syria by partnering with the Kurds. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reportedly put the kibosh on the special operations offensive in the Middle East, but at least one of the documents reviewed by the Post claimed that efforts to attack Russian assets in Syria that avoid Ukrainian culpability may still be on the table for the Ukrainian government.
Are these not plans for a world war? Would the United States not be responsible if the Ukrainian government, which both militarily and financially would be defunct without nearly $100 billion in U.S. aid, decided to go forward with such plans?]


I, for one, have zero s h i t s to give if Ukraine struck Moscow. You attack me, I attack you back. That's how it works.

You're Ukrainian?
No. But, if Mexico launched strikes against Houston, St Louis, Washington and Chicago, do you think we'd sit around and twiddle our thumbs rather than strike Mexico City? Do you think we'd be worried about what Brazil might think about it? Hell no.
It's hard to say what we'd do in the face of an actual threat to actual American interests. I'm not sure our leaders have even contemplated such a thing.
One thing they would most certainly NOT contemplate is to hew strictly to a policy of only attacking Mexican troops stationed in America for fear of inviting more attacks from Mexico. In the Russia/Ukraine context, both nations are fully mobilized, so there is limited escalatory impact to attacks inside Russia.

Looking under the hood is messy. You get to see all sides of the conversations. There are always hawks, and there are always doves. Smart leaders listen to both. Every now & then, one end of the spectrum or the other is completely right (or wrong) on a particular question. Ukraine has made good decisions so far on what & how to attack inside Russia, very restrained decisions. They could do a lot more. And I suspect they will. Because they should. When someone invades your country, you hit them back, only restrained by the productivity of the resources expended. The suggested attack on Russian forces in Syria, for example, does not at all suggest desperation. It's highly expensive and tangential to the fight at hand, symbolic. Deniable asymmetrical attacks inside Russia, on the other hand, are excellent ways to undermine regime stability in addition to any direct impacts on the war effort they may have. Remember: Russia caused all of this. If chickens start coming home to roost.....well....tough. They started it. All they have to do to make it all go away is withdraw their troops from Ukraine.

The primary reason NOT to attack Russia in Moscow is the unpredictability of the effect on Russian morale. It is not entirely certain whether such might strengthen or weaken Putin's support with the Russian people, which is not an insignificant question. Far better to do what Ukraine has done from day one....attack supply lines inside Russia, particularly those to Crimea, like the Kerch Bridge. Those are completely fair game.

The economic data is telling. Russia is running out of reserves. And below the headlines, those numbers do not reflect the redirection of resources to key sectors - energy and defense industries. Most other sectors in the Russian economy are doing much, much worse than the numbers indicate. Russian Central Bank is no longer defending the ruble, and all the trade deals for barter or other currencies are only going to place more downward pressure on the ruble as they do nothing at all to fix the core problem - oversupply of rubles in currency markets.


Sure, there's limited escalatory effect for Ukraine. Not so for the US.

It doesn't matter how much incentive Putin has to negotiate unless we're willing to negotiate too. "You started it, you can end it" isn't the way to do that. It signals unwillingness to make a deal, and for obvious reasons. We don't really want one. A negotiated peace is inconsistent with our actual goal -- as you've put it, fighting Russia to the last Ukrainian.

We've been hearing exaggerated reports of the effectiveness of sanctions all along. No doubt we'll continue to hear them. But Putin spent a long time preparing and is in it for the long haul. Russia is selling oil and gas to other buyers, including some Western ones. They still have around $150 billion in the National Wealth Fund. They're still exporting industrial metals, which we won't sanction because we depend on them. We won't even impose secondary sanctions on countries that continue doing business with Russia. All in all, we're doing a great job of prolonging the war and not much else.
You mean you've never said "see you in court" in order to force an opponent with a weaker hand to come to the table?

A prolonged war costs Russia a lot of money. Nato has 10x the GDP and even more wealth. So the bargaining position of "....to the last Ukrainian...." is a very wise position to take. Eventually, Russia will have to realize that it has neither the wealth nor the income to maintain its own position of trying to outlast Nato. Only then will peace talks get serious.
I expected this response, and yes, it is true that stubbornness can be a negotiating tactic. It might have been understandable early on. When over a year passes with no serious talks, let alone any progress, it looks a lot more like just plain stubbornness. If there were an impartial judge in this case, they wouldn't be happy with us.

Besides, you don't have to take my word for it. You said it yourself a few weeks ago: "The minimum objective is to push Russia back to its pre-war borders. Cannot allow any reward for the invasion."


So as a judge you'd put a 12 month cap on litigation. Interesting.

My position is the correct one, and also the one both USG and Ukraine are taking. Absolutely no reason for our side to be suing for peace when we're in a position of advantage. Press on and make Russia beg for talks.
Waco1947
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What's USG?
Oldbear83
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Waco1947 said:

What's USG?
US Government
Waco1947
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Thank you
Redbrickbear
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https://www.theamericanconservative.com/francis-in-hungary/

[Despite their differences, Pope Francis and Viktor Orban are the only European heads of state trying to end the Russia-Ukraine war


BUDAPEST; Pope Francis is very sick. How sick? On the day last week His Holiness was to arrive in Budapest, a Hungarian priest told me that the Vatican sent a hospital plane staffed with Gemelli Clinic personnel to accompany the ailing 86-year-old pontiff. And yet, Francis came anyway, to a country where, to put it mildly, the progressive pope has not always seen eye to eye with the nationalist conservative leadership.

In particular, Prime Minister Viktor Orban's hard line on immigration runs directly counter to Francis's open-borders preference. Francis's very brief visit to Hungary at last year's Eucharistic Congress in Budapest was seen by many as a snub to Orban, the Calvinist leader and bte noire of Brussels. Support for liberal migration policies is close to Francis's heart, and it is why he has stayed away from this small, conservative Central European nation for so long.

So why did he come now? Clearly Francis intended to make a statement with this visit, which entailed significant physical sacrifice for him. From the Hungarian point of view, that statement was: Peace.

That is, Francis's choice to come to Hungary now, despite his poor health and his deep-seated opposition to Hungary's migration stance, conveys how passionate the pontiff is to see an end to the ruinous Russia-Ukraine war. The Holy See and Hungary have found common cause as the only European states pushing for peace. The Orban government regards the papal pilgrimage as a sign of support for its repeated appeals for a cease-fire and a negotiated end to hostilities....]

Doc Holliday
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whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:




Ukraine will NOT win this war without foreign troops getting involved.

And as the months (years?) go by this will become obvious to everyone.

you are making some assumptions that Russia might not be able to meet. Have you checked the value trends on the ruble recently?
https://www.msn.com/en-xl/news/others/russias-ailing-ruble-takes-another-hit-what-happens-now/ar-AA1a8S7U
at five year lows:
https://tradingeconomics.com/russia/currency

Everything you say would be correct if Ukraine was on its own, having to feed, clothe, arm its own troops. Were that the case, the war would already be over. But that is not the case.

Nato has correctly identified that it does have an interest in the outcome of the war. A number of necessaries flow from that. The Ukrainian state must survive. The war must finish with Russia totally exhausted, decades away from full rearmament. If Ukraine is to remain economically viable, it must own sovereignty over Crimea (fate of Russian naval base at Sebastapol negotiable) in order to A) ensure flow of goods to/from it's major industrial ports in the Sea of Azov, and B) ensure revenues from oil/gas reserves across much of the northern Black Sea up thru the Sea of Azov and into the Donbas. Ergo, Nato has opened up cash and materiel flows that Russia cannot match over time.

A truce right now just gives Russia a breather, a chance to raise more troops and send more ammo to the front line. Ukraine must keep the battle going on, forcing Russia to strain ever harder to resupply, to the point its sclerotic supply lines crack. As long as Nato continues to supply Ukraine, Ukraine can outlast Russia, despite Russia having, on paper at least, far greater resources to wage war than Ukraine.

This is a proxy war. The Nato economy dwarfs the Russian economy by a ratio that far exceeds the advantage Russia has over Ukraine. All Ukraine has to supply is sweat equity, while the vastly superior economies of Nato outspend the heavily sanctioned Russian economy. And Ukraine has the population to do that, particularly given that they are inflicting casualties on Russia at a 7-1 rate.

As long as Russia wants to feed its sons into the maw, we should keep it grinding away. They've grabbed the tarbaby of all tarbabies.



Just the flippant way people in our government and on this site casually acknowledge that we are now in a bloody proxy war with a nuclear armed state.....without any vote by the American people...its just stunning.

A nation that has not attacked us by the way.

But this maw as you say is chewing up Ukrainian sons as much as it is chewing up Russian ones. Yet Ukraine can not keep that kind of causality rate up forever.

And even if funding these proxy wars was not at its base level highly immoral...its also unlikely to get us what we want. Heck what do we even want? Regime change in Moscow? The end of the 1,000 year old Russian State itself? No one can seem to agree with what is a final outcome should be.

Just like Afghanistan and Iraq were are tripping and stumbling into another long bloody conflict that is massively expensive and with no clear cut exit strategy or clear point of "victory".




Proxy wars are preferable to direct conflict, are they not? They are exactly how great powers engage one another militarily when they cannot come to a peaceful agreement, because they are by wide margin preferable to direct conflict.

"A nation which has not attacked us, by the way" is an old fallacy which presumes war is defined by military conflict. Remember the Cold War? Nations jockey and bluster and negotiate and ally and even poke & prod with third parties all the time. It's how the game is played......to avoid all out conflict.

Ukraine can keep up a 7-1 favorable casualty rate longer than Russia can. Ukrainians are united as one for a war to the death. Same cannot be said for Putin, who is trying to hide the true cost of the war from the Russian people to avoid unrest in the streets.

What we want has been quite clearly stated: Russian withdrawal from sovereign Ukrainian territory. You just don't take it seriously. Regime change has been mentioned as one way to achieve that outcome, and we were wise to do so. It puts pressure on Putin, who has resisted it and pressed on, tying his fate to the outcome of the war. That's fine. He needs to go. We don't want to ever have a Russian head of state who ever again thinks Nato will stand idly by when Russian armies cross European borders.

The analogs you mentioned are not applicable. Holding onto them so tightly badly affects your perception of what is happening. We have not, and will not commit troops to Ukraine. We've been quite consistent on that. Nato has been consistent on that. More to the point, it will not be necessary. Russia is not going to win the war. Ukraine can outlast them (thanks to Nato support).

The way the media has completely thrown out "beating Russia is easy" is a sign that what you're hearing about the difficulty of dealing with Russia isn't true.

Have you thought about how much your viewpoint aligns with the uniparty veiwpoint?
I haven't noticed a narrative that "beating Russia is easy" from MSM at all. The cheerleading has been obvious,though, and when it reaches the level of virtue posturing can be quite humorous. That in no way changes realities on the ground in Ukraine.

My viewpoint is my own: a masters degree in directly related subject material plus 10 years in the intel/diplomatic world with direct experience on things Russian, followed by relentless self-study on history, geopolitics, etc.... There is a reason Nato and the USA chose to support Ukraine - it is overwhelmingly in their interest to do so. And the fact there is such unity within Nato on the question is telling. Biden didn't hornswoggle them, for sure. The case for not aggressively supporting Ukraine, other than impacts on budget and readiness, is completely a priori reasoning, and laced with one foolish strawman after the other on escalation. Initially opponents ran around with their skirts up about the inevitability of nuclear war. Now, its mostly about the inevitability of direct involvement of US troops. Worst of all, opponents typically misread the situation on the ground because of a general lack of familiarity with the subject material.

One really has to work hard to remain in the shadow of obtusity not to see the wisdom of US support for Ukraine this particular proxy war. Proxy wars have happened for millennia in the past, and will happen for millennia in the future. We do not have a stake in most of them. But this one we do, for reasons that are rather obvious unless one is hidebound determined to ignore them.
Can we at least agree that the pricing that the military industrial complex is charging for weapons which is purchased by US tax dollars is way too damn high and we should work on that? They're charging tenfold, if not a hundredfold their cost of production and our government is more than willing to go along with it because they get a piece of it back for their campaigns and under the table deals. It's shifting middle class taxes to giant corporations that are hardly trickling it back into the economy.

A recent POGO analysis, for instance, documented the malfeasance of TransDigm, a military parts supplier that the Department of Defense's inspector general caught overcharging the Pentagon by as much as 3,800 percent!

https://jacobin.com/2022/02/us-pentagon-budget-military-spending-f-35-nuclear-weapons

Its not so much that I'm against the reason for this war. It's the means by which it is being carried out which I consider extremely corrupt.

Our ruling class isn't taking care of our people. They aren't taking care of our borders, our schools are god awful, our infrastructure is ghetto...but we can drop trillions on war?

I'm at the point where I'm like "no you can't have your war until you fix sh it at home".
Sam Lowry
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whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

trey3216 said:

Sam Lowry said:

trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

https://www.theamericanconservative.com/ukraine-plans-for-world-war-iii/


[The leak of classified documents on the gaming and chat platform Discord continues to be a treasure trove of information about America's proxy war with Russia in Ukraine.

Earlier revelations from the Discord leak suggested Ukraine is a cornered animal. The latest shows it might lash out like one. The Washington Post reported Monday that documents in the leak claimed that the United States had to force Ukraine to back down from a direct attack on Moscow. Time and time again, the United States has had to rein in or express serious concern internally about Ukraine's plans to fight Russia, not just in Ukraine or even within Russia's borders, but in the Middle East and North Africa as well.



A classified report from the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) claimed that Maj. Gen. Kyrylo Budanov, who heads the Main Directorate of Intelligence (HUR) for Ukraine's defense ministry, instructed one of his officers on February 13 "to get ready for mass strikes on 24 February." Ukraine was to strike "with everything the HUR had." The NSA report also said Ukrainian officials joked about using TNT to strike Novorossiysk, a Black Sea port city east of the Crimean Peninsula. The Post asserted such an operation would be "largely symbolic," but "would nevertheless demonstrate Ukraine's ability to hit deep inside enemy territory."

Budanov has a reputation for being a loose cannon. Previously, he claimed that Russian President Vladimir Putin was terminally ill and employed body doubles for public appearances. He is apparently convinced that Ukraine will overwhelm and repel the Russian invasion, including Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014, sometime this summer. Which is why it appears the U.S. intelligence apparatus has taken up monitoring Budanov's moves and communications. And Budanov appears to know it. The Post added that, when it has interviewed Budanov on occasion since the outbreak of the war, reporters have heard white noise or music in the background of the major general's office.

This time, however, it appears the United States prevented the loose cannon from going off. On February 22, the CIA internally circulated a classified report that the HUR "had agreed, at Washington's request, to postpone strikes" on Moscow. Nevertheless, the CIA also said "there is no indication" that the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) had "agreed to postpone its own plans to attack Moscow around the same date."


Ukraine appears to now be reaching further into Russian territory and is less ambiguous about its involvement in these attacks. Earlier on in the conflict, Ukraine often denied playing a role in attacks on Russian installations and infrastructure within its borders, such as the car-bombing incident in August 2022 that killed Daria Dugina, the daughter of Aleksandr Dugin, a Russian nationalist and staunch supporter of Russia's invasion. Despite repeated Ukrainian denials, the U.S. intelligence community believes Ukraine was behind the attack.

In an interview with the Post in January, however, Budanov simultaneously denied Ukraine's involvement in many of these attacks and claimed that they would continue. Such attacks "shattered their illusions of safety," Budanov reportedly claimed. "There are people who plant explosives. There are drones. Until the territorial integrity of Ukraine is restored, there will be problems inside Russia."

Other revelations from the Discord-leaked documents: Ukraine wants to expand the scope of the conflict beyond that of continental Europe and take the Russians to task in the Middle East and North Africa. The NSA report claimed that Budanov's HUR planned to attack the Wagner Groupa Russian military contractor with a reputation for brutality whose members have assisted in the Ukraine offensivein the African country of Mali. The Wagner Group's services are retained by the government of Mali for security and training their own military forces.

The NSA document said, "It is unknown what stage the operations [in Mali] were currently in and whether the HUR has received approval to execute its plans," according to the Post.

At the same time, the HUR was developing plans to strike Russian forces in Syria by partnering with the Kurds. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reportedly put the kibosh on the special operations offensive in the Middle East, but at least one of the documents reviewed by the Post claimed that efforts to attack Russian assets in Syria that avoid Ukrainian culpability may still be on the table for the Ukrainian government.
Are these not plans for a world war? Would the United States not be responsible if the Ukrainian government, which both militarily and financially would be defunct without nearly $100 billion in U.S. aid, decided to go forward with such plans?]


I, for one, have zero s h i t s to give if Ukraine struck Moscow. You attack me, I attack you back. That's how it works.

You're Ukrainian?
No. But, if Mexico launched strikes against Houston, St Louis, Washington and Chicago, do you think we'd sit around and twiddle our thumbs rather than strike Mexico City? Do you think we'd be worried about what Brazil might think about it? Hell no.
It's hard to say what we'd do in the face of an actual threat to actual American interests. I'm not sure our leaders have even contemplated such a thing.
One thing they would most certainly NOT contemplate is to hew strictly to a policy of only attacking Mexican troops stationed in America for fear of inviting more attacks from Mexico. In the Russia/Ukraine context, both nations are fully mobilized, so there is limited escalatory impact to attacks inside Russia.

Looking under the hood is messy. You get to see all sides of the conversations. There are always hawks, and there are always doves. Smart leaders listen to both. Every now & then, one end of the spectrum or the other is completely right (or wrong) on a particular question. Ukraine has made good decisions so far on what & how to attack inside Russia, very restrained decisions. They could do a lot more. And I suspect they will. Because they should. When someone invades your country, you hit them back, only restrained by the productivity of the resources expended. The suggested attack on Russian forces in Syria, for example, does not at all suggest desperation. It's highly expensive and tangential to the fight at hand, symbolic. Deniable asymmetrical attacks inside Russia, on the other hand, are excellent ways to undermine regime stability in addition to any direct impacts on the war effort they may have. Remember: Russia caused all of this. If chickens start coming home to roost.....well....tough. They started it. All they have to do to make it all go away is withdraw their troops from Ukraine.

The primary reason NOT to attack Russia in Moscow is the unpredictability of the effect on Russian morale. It is not entirely certain whether such might strengthen or weaken Putin's support with the Russian people, which is not an insignificant question. Far better to do what Ukraine has done from day one....attack supply lines inside Russia, particularly those to Crimea, like the Kerch Bridge. Those are completely fair game.

The economic data is telling. Russia is running out of reserves. And below the headlines, those numbers do not reflect the redirection of resources to key sectors - energy and defense industries. Most other sectors in the Russian economy are doing much, much worse than the numbers indicate. Russian Central Bank is no longer defending the ruble, and all the trade deals for barter or other currencies are only going to place more downward pressure on the ruble as they do nothing at all to fix the core problem - oversupply of rubles in currency markets.


Sure, there's limited escalatory effect for Ukraine. Not so for the US.

It doesn't matter how much incentive Putin has to negotiate unless we're willing to negotiate too. "You started it, you can end it" isn't the way to do that. It signals unwillingness to make a deal, and for obvious reasons. We don't really want one. A negotiated peace is inconsistent with our actual goal -- as you've put it, fighting Russia to the last Ukrainian.

We've been hearing exaggerated reports of the effectiveness of sanctions all along. No doubt we'll continue to hear them. But Putin spent a long time preparing and is in it for the long haul. Russia is selling oil and gas to other buyers, including some Western ones. They still have around $150 billion in the National Wealth Fund. They're still exporting industrial metals, which we won't sanction because we depend on them. We won't even impose secondary sanctions on countries that continue doing business with Russia. All in all, we're doing a great job of prolonging the war and not much else.
You mean you've never said "see you in court" in order to force an opponent with a weaker hand to come to the table?

A prolonged war costs Russia a lot of money. Nato has 10x the GDP and even more wealth. So the bargaining position of "....to the last Ukrainian...." is a very wise position to take. Eventually, Russia will have to realize that it has neither the wealth nor the income to maintain its own position of trying to outlast Nato. Only then will peace talks get serious.
I expected this response, and yes, it is true that stubbornness can be a negotiating tactic. It might have been understandable early on. When over a year passes with no serious talks, let alone any progress, it looks a lot more like just plain stubbornness. If there were an impartial judge in this case, they wouldn't be happy with us.

Besides, you don't have to take my word for it. You said it yourself a few weeks ago: "The minimum objective is to push Russia back to its pre-war borders. Cannot allow any reward for the invasion."


So as a judge you'd put a 12 month cap on litigation. Interesting.

My position is the correct one, and also the one both USG and Ukraine are taking. Absolutely no reason for our side to be suing for peace when we're in a position of advantage. Press on and make Russia beg for talks.
Not a cap, but certainly an expectation of good faith.

As long as the US and Ukraine take your position, we can't very well say Russia is the obstacle to negotiation.

There are many reasons to end the war now, the most pertinent being that we're in no position to drive Russia from eastern Ukraine. Their army is as big as it was before the war. They've learned from their mistakes. The great bulk of their casualties at Bakhmut are from the Wagner group, which means the Russian army itself is going mostly untouched while pulling in reinforcements. Meanwhile Ukraine is throwing its best and most experienced troops into the grinder. If the delayed spring offensive is ever mounted, their newly conscripted troops will face an armored and entrenched defense with more experience and vastly greater numbers. Ukraine's negotiating strength will end up worse, not better.

I know...I should get better sources. But my sources saw the writing on the wall in Iraqistan while yours were still manning the sunshine pumps. We shall see.
Bear8084
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https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/russian-offensive-campaign-assessment-april-23-2023

"The pattern of Russian deployments throughout Ukraine strongly suggests that most of the available maneuver elements of all military districts, as well as major surviving Airborne forces, are already committed to either active offensive or defensive operations in Ukraine. Russia will need to commit significant reserves to any discrete axis in order to conduct effective offensive operations, and the generally exhausted condition of troops and the apparently disorganized and fragmented deployment pattern in some areas will likely pose significant obstacles to Russia's prospects for defending critical sectors of the frontline."
Redbrickbear
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Redbrickbear
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whiterock
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Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:




Ukraine will NOT win this war without foreign troops getting involved.

And as the months (years?) go by this will become obvious to everyone.

you are making some assumptions that Russia might not be able to meet. Have you checked the value trends on the ruble recently?
https://www.msn.com/en-xl/news/others/russias-ailing-ruble-takes-another-hit-what-happens-now/ar-AA1a8S7U
at five year lows:
https://tradingeconomics.com/russia/currency

Everything you say would be correct if Ukraine was on its own, having to feed, clothe, arm its own troops. Were that the case, the war would already be over. But that is not the case.

Nato has correctly identified that it does have an interest in the outcome of the war. A number of necessaries flow from that. The Ukrainian state must survive. The war must finish with Russia totally exhausted, decades away from full rearmament. If Ukraine is to remain economically viable, it must own sovereignty over Crimea (fate of Russian naval base at Sebastapol negotiable) in order to A) ensure flow of goods to/from it's major industrial ports in the Sea of Azov, and B) ensure revenues from oil/gas reserves across much of the northern Black Sea up thru the Sea of Azov and into the Donbas. Ergo, Nato has opened up cash and materiel flows that Russia cannot match over time.

A truce right now just gives Russia a breather, a chance to raise more troops and send more ammo to the front line. Ukraine must keep the battle going on, forcing Russia to strain ever harder to resupply, to the point its sclerotic supply lines crack. As long as Nato continues to supply Ukraine, Ukraine can outlast Russia, despite Russia having, on paper at least, far greater resources to wage war than Ukraine.

This is a proxy war. The Nato economy dwarfs the Russian economy by a ratio that far exceeds the advantage Russia has over Ukraine. All Ukraine has to supply is sweat equity, while the vastly superior economies of Nato outspend the heavily sanctioned Russian economy. And Ukraine has the population to do that, particularly given that they are inflicting casualties on Russia at a 7-1 rate.

As long as Russia wants to feed its sons into the maw, we should keep it grinding away. They've grabbed the tarbaby of all tarbabies.



Just the flippant way people in our government and on this site casually acknowledge that we are now in a bloody proxy war with a nuclear armed state.....without any vote by the American people...its just stunning.

A nation that has not attacked us by the way.

But this maw as you say is chewing up Ukrainian sons as much as it is chewing up Russian ones. Yet Ukraine can not keep that kind of causality rate up forever.

And even if funding these proxy wars was not at its base level highly immoral...its also unlikely to get us what we want. Heck what do we even want? Regime change in Moscow? The end of the 1,000 year old Russian State itself? No one can seem to agree with what is a final outcome should be.

Just like Afghanistan and Iraq were are tripping and stumbling into another long bloody conflict that is massively expensive and with no clear cut exit strategy or clear point of "victory".




Proxy wars are preferable to direct conflict, are they not? They are exactly how great powers engage one another militarily when they cannot come to a peaceful agreement, because they are by wide margin preferable to direct conflict.

"A nation which has not attacked us, by the way" is an old fallacy which presumes war is defined by military conflict. Remember the Cold War? Nations jockey and bluster and negotiate and ally and even poke & prod with third parties all the time. It's how the game is played......to avoid all out conflict.

Ukraine can keep up a 7-1 favorable casualty rate longer than Russia can. Ukrainians are united as one for a war to the death. Same cannot be said for Putin, who is trying to hide the true cost of the war from the Russian people to avoid unrest in the streets.

What we want has been quite clearly stated: Russian withdrawal from sovereign Ukrainian territory. You just don't take it seriously. Regime change has been mentioned as one way to achieve that outcome, and we were wise to do so. It puts pressure on Putin, who has resisted it and pressed on, tying his fate to the outcome of the war. That's fine. He needs to go. We don't want to ever have a Russian head of state who ever again thinks Nato will stand idly by when Russian armies cross European borders.

The analogs you mentioned are not applicable. Holding onto them so tightly badly affects your perception of what is happening. We have not, and will not commit troops to Ukraine. We've been quite consistent on that. Nato has been consistent on that. More to the point, it will not be necessary. Russia is not going to win the war. Ukraine can outlast them (thanks to Nato support).

The way the media has completely thrown out "beating Russia is easy" is a sign that what you're hearing about the difficulty of dealing with Russia isn't true.

Have you thought about how much your viewpoint aligns with the uniparty veiwpoint?
I haven't noticed a narrative that "beating Russia is easy" from MSM at all. The cheerleading has been obvious,though, and when it reaches the level of virtue posturing can be quite humorous. That in no way changes realities on the ground in Ukraine.

My viewpoint is my own: a masters degree in directly related subject material plus 10 years in the intel/diplomatic world with direct experience on things Russian, followed by relentless self-study on history, geopolitics, etc.... There is a reason Nato and the USA chose to support Ukraine - it is overwhelmingly in their interest to do so. And the fact there is such unity within Nato on the question is telling. Biden didn't hornswoggle them, for sure. The case for not aggressively supporting Ukraine, other than impacts on budget and readiness, is completely a priori reasoning, and laced with one foolish strawman after the other on escalation. Initially opponents ran around with their skirts up about the inevitability of nuclear war. Now, its mostly about the inevitability of direct involvement of US troops. Worst of all, opponents typically misread the situation on the ground because of a general lack of familiarity with the subject material.

One really has to work hard to remain in the shadow of obtusity not to see the wisdom of US support for Ukraine this particular proxy war. Proxy wars have happened for millennia in the past, and will happen for millennia in the future. We do not have a stake in most of them. But this one we do, for reasons that are rather obvious unless one is hidebound determined to ignore them.
Can we at least agree that the pricing that the military industrial complex is charging for weapons which is purchased by US tax dollars is way too damn high and we should work on that? They're charging tenfold, if not a hundredfold their cost of production and our government is more than willing to go along with it because they get a piece of it back for their campaigns and under the table deals. It's shifting middle class taxes to giant corporations that are hardly trickling it back into the economy.

A recent POGO analysis, for instance, documented the malfeasance of TransDigm, a military parts supplier that the Department of Defense's inspector general caught overcharging the Pentagon by as much as 3,800 percent!

https://jacobin.com/2022/02/us-pentagon-budget-military-spending-f-35-nuclear-weapons

Its not so much that I'm against the reason for this war. It's the means by which it is being carried out which I consider extremely corrupt.

Our ruling class isn't taking care of our people. They aren't taking care of our borders, our schools are god awful, our infrastructure is ghetto...but we can drop trillions on war?

I'm at the point where I'm like "no you can't have your war until you fix sh it at home".
Well, we can do both, you know. And on the cost questions......Please. We are educated and informed adults here on this board........

I had dinner with the CEO of a manufacturer a few weeks ago and, in a brainstorming discussion about possibilities, asked him about the cost of a potential new product as a substitute (an innovative one, at that) for an existing one. He said...."well, that depends on how much we can produce. If we can open up the plant and run it 24/7, it will be priced where you need it to be. If not....well, it will not."

That's not rocket science, just an current example.

Arms manufacturers work silo'd with R&D and production, and really only have a single customer (since that customer has to approve exports elsewhere on anything really sexy.). Purchase orders are intermittent, and limited. The initial price of the first unit is always the one quoted by critics, never the costs of the last few on a multi-year run. And on and on. And it's almost always the $900 toilet seat that gets held up as a typical example, when it is anything but. Make 900k of those particular toilet seats designed for the single head in the captain's quarters and they cost about 2-3x what the sexiest model at Home Depot costs. And, yes, the manufacturers do gouge a bit on some items, as pricing is constrained on others, and or overall plant capacity is limited to small percentages of capacity Overall, Lockheed/Martin is not making 3800% on a delivered F-35. Newport News is not going to make 3800% on the USS Doris Miller. And most assuredly, the tax returns for those companies do not show a net taxable profit of 3800%.





whiterock
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Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

trey3216 said:

Sam Lowry said:

trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

https://www.theamericanconservative.com/ukraine-plans-for-world-war-iii/


[The leak of classified documents on the gaming and chat platform Discord continues to be a treasure trove of information about America's proxy war with Russia in Ukraine.

Earlier revelations from the Discord leak suggested Ukraine is a cornered animal. The latest shows it might lash out like one. The Washington Post reported Monday that documents in the leak claimed that the United States had to force Ukraine to back down from a direct attack on Moscow. Time and time again, the United States has had to rein in or express serious concern internally about Ukraine's plans to fight Russia, not just in Ukraine or even within Russia's borders, but in the Middle East and North Africa as well.



A classified report from the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) claimed that Maj. Gen. Kyrylo Budanov, who heads the Main Directorate of Intelligence (HUR) for Ukraine's defense ministry, instructed one of his officers on February 13 "to get ready for mass strikes on 24 February." Ukraine was to strike "with everything the HUR had." The NSA report also said Ukrainian officials joked about using TNT to strike Novorossiysk, a Black Sea port city east of the Crimean Peninsula. The Post asserted such an operation would be "largely symbolic," but "would nevertheless demonstrate Ukraine's ability to hit deep inside enemy territory."

Budanov has a reputation for being a loose cannon. Previously, he claimed that Russian President Vladimir Putin was terminally ill and employed body doubles for public appearances. He is apparently convinced that Ukraine will overwhelm and repel the Russian invasion, including Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014, sometime this summer. Which is why it appears the U.S. intelligence apparatus has taken up monitoring Budanov's moves and communications. And Budanov appears to know it. The Post added that, when it has interviewed Budanov on occasion since the outbreak of the war, reporters have heard white noise or music in the background of the major general's office.

This time, however, it appears the United States prevented the loose cannon from going off. On February 22, the CIA internally circulated a classified report that the HUR "had agreed, at Washington's request, to postpone strikes" on Moscow. Nevertheless, the CIA also said "there is no indication" that the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) had "agreed to postpone its own plans to attack Moscow around the same date."


Ukraine appears to now be reaching further into Russian territory and is less ambiguous about its involvement in these attacks. Earlier on in the conflict, Ukraine often denied playing a role in attacks on Russian installations and infrastructure within its borders, such as the car-bombing incident in August 2022 that killed Daria Dugina, the daughter of Aleksandr Dugin, a Russian nationalist and staunch supporter of Russia's invasion. Despite repeated Ukrainian denials, the U.S. intelligence community believes Ukraine was behind the attack.

In an interview with the Post in January, however, Budanov simultaneously denied Ukraine's involvement in many of these attacks and claimed that they would continue. Such attacks "shattered their illusions of safety," Budanov reportedly claimed. "There are people who plant explosives. There are drones. Until the territorial integrity of Ukraine is restored, there will be problems inside Russia."

Other revelations from the Discord-leaked documents: Ukraine wants to expand the scope of the conflict beyond that of continental Europe and take the Russians to task in the Middle East and North Africa. The NSA report claimed that Budanov's HUR planned to attack the Wagner Groupa Russian military contractor with a reputation for brutality whose members have assisted in the Ukraine offensivein the African country of Mali. The Wagner Group's services are retained by the government of Mali for security and training their own military forces.

The NSA document said, "It is unknown what stage the operations [in Mali] were currently in and whether the HUR has received approval to execute its plans," according to the Post.

At the same time, the HUR was developing plans to strike Russian forces in Syria by partnering with the Kurds. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reportedly put the kibosh on the special operations offensive in the Middle East, but at least one of the documents reviewed by the Post claimed that efforts to attack Russian assets in Syria that avoid Ukrainian culpability may still be on the table for the Ukrainian government.
Are these not plans for a world war? Would the United States not be responsible if the Ukrainian government, which both militarily and financially would be defunct without nearly $100 billion in U.S. aid, decided to go forward with such plans?]


I, for one, have zero s h i t s to give if Ukraine struck Moscow. You attack me, I attack you back. That's how it works.

You're Ukrainian?
No. But, if Mexico launched strikes against Houston, St Louis, Washington and Chicago, do you think we'd sit around and twiddle our thumbs rather than strike Mexico City? Do you think we'd be worried about what Brazil might think about it? Hell no.
It's hard to say what we'd do in the face of an actual threat to actual American interests. I'm not sure our leaders have even contemplated such a thing.
One thing they would most certainly NOT contemplate is to hew strictly to a policy of only attacking Mexican troops stationed in America for fear of inviting more attacks from Mexico. In the Russia/Ukraine context, both nations are fully mobilized, so there is limited escalatory impact to attacks inside Russia.

Looking under the hood is messy. You get to see all sides of the conversations. There are always hawks, and there are always doves. Smart leaders listen to both. Every now & then, one end of the spectrum or the other is completely right (or wrong) on a particular question. Ukraine has made good decisions so far on what & how to attack inside Russia, very restrained decisions. They could do a lot more. And I suspect they will. Because they should. When someone invades your country, you hit them back, only restrained by the productivity of the resources expended. The suggested attack on Russian forces in Syria, for example, does not at all suggest desperation. It's highly expensive and tangential to the fight at hand, symbolic. Deniable asymmetrical attacks inside Russia, on the other hand, are excellent ways to undermine regime stability in addition to any direct impacts on the war effort they may have. Remember: Russia caused all of this. If chickens start coming home to roost.....well....tough. They started it. All they have to do to make it all go away is withdraw their troops from Ukraine.

The primary reason NOT to attack Russia in Moscow is the unpredictability of the effect on Russian morale. It is not entirely certain whether such might strengthen or weaken Putin's support with the Russian people, which is not an insignificant question. Far better to do what Ukraine has done from day one....attack supply lines inside Russia, particularly those to Crimea, like the Kerch Bridge. Those are completely fair game.

The economic data is telling. Russia is running out of reserves. And below the headlines, those numbers do not reflect the redirection of resources to key sectors - energy and defense industries. Most other sectors in the Russian economy are doing much, much worse than the numbers indicate. Russian Central Bank is no longer defending the ruble, and all the trade deals for barter or other currencies are only going to place more downward pressure on the ruble as they do nothing at all to fix the core problem - oversupply of rubles in currency markets.


Sure, there's limited escalatory effect for Ukraine. Not so for the US.

It doesn't matter how much incentive Putin has to negotiate unless we're willing to negotiate too. "You started it, you can end it" isn't the way to do that. It signals unwillingness to make a deal, and for obvious reasons. We don't really want one. A negotiated peace is inconsistent with our actual goal -- as you've put it, fighting Russia to the last Ukrainian.

We've been hearing exaggerated reports of the effectiveness of sanctions all along. No doubt we'll continue to hear them. But Putin spent a long time preparing and is in it for the long haul. Russia is selling oil and gas to other buyers, including some Western ones. They still have around $150 billion in the National Wealth Fund. They're still exporting industrial metals, which we won't sanction because we depend on them. We won't even impose secondary sanctions on countries that continue doing business with Russia. All in all, we're doing a great job of prolonging the war and not much else.
You mean you've never said "see you in court" in order to force an opponent with a weaker hand to come to the table?

A prolonged war costs Russia a lot of money. Nato has 10x the GDP and even more wealth. So the bargaining position of "....to the last Ukrainian...." is a very wise position to take. Eventually, Russia will have to realize that it has neither the wealth nor the income to maintain its own position of trying to outlast Nato. Only then will peace talks get serious.
I expected this response, and yes, it is true that stubbornness can be a negotiating tactic. It might have been understandable early on. When over a year passes with no serious talks, let alone any progress, it looks a lot more like just plain stubbornness. If there were an impartial judge in this case, they wouldn't be happy with us.

Besides, you don't have to take my word for it. You said it yourself a few weeks ago: "The minimum objective is to push Russia back to its pre-war borders. Cannot allow any reward for the invasion."


So as a judge you'd put a 12 month cap on litigation. Interesting.

My position is the correct one, and also the one both USG and Ukraine are taking. Absolutely no reason for our side to be suing for peace when we're in a position of advantage. Press on and make Russia beg for talks.
Not a cap, but certainly an expectation of good faith.

As long as the US and Ukraine take your position, we can't very well say Russia is the obstacle to negotiation.

There are many reasons to end the war now, the most pertinent being that we're in no position to drive Russia from eastern Ukraine. Their army is as big as it was before the war. They've learned from their mistakes. The great bulk of their casualties at Bakhmut are from the Wagner group, which means the Russian army itself is going mostly untouched while pulling in reinforcements. Meanwhile Ukraine is throwing its best and most experienced troops into the grinder. If the delayed spring offensive is ever mounted, their newly conscripted troops will face an armored and entrenched defense with more experience and vastly greater numbers. Ukraine's negotiating strength will end up worse, not better.

I know...I should get better sources. But my sources saw the writing on the wall in Iraqistan while yours were still manning the sunshine pumps. We shall see.
Russia is most assuredly the obstacle for peace, given that their army is occupying sovereign territory of another county.

You might be wrong about the possibility of driving Russia out of substantial parts of Ukraine. We will see, soon. Russia has not learned from its mistakes for centuries. They do the same thing, over and over and over. We knew that and are making them bleed. Very predictable army, unfathomably badly led. Same things I was taught 35 years ago are spot-on applicable today. They' don't need to fix any of their problems, they think, because they are so much bigger and tougher than their potential opponents. Look how that's working out for them now.

another error: Russia did not mobilize 300k troops and give them all to the Wagner Group. And regardless who is the commander of those soldiers, their deaths still reduce the overall labor pool.

You are sorta correct that a Ukrainian spring offensive could change the casualty dynamics to the detriment of Ukraine, as they will be on the offensive instead of the defensive. The difference is, the Ukrainians are better armed, better supplied, better led, and better motivated. If they can pierce the Russian defensive lines, and there's no reason to suspect such is impossible, then they can roll back the Russian lines exactly as they did last fall. The difference this time is, the Russians do not have strategic depth between their lines and the Sea of Azov. The kind of gains made on the Kharkov front will sever Russian supply lines along the Sea of Azov, likely forcing a withdrawal (or encirclement) of Russian troops on the Kherson front.

Most of the Russian defensive deployment maps I've seen suggest Russia is expecting a big push right at Zaporizhzha down toward Melitopol. Perhaps Ukraine will do that. Link could be a diversion, or part of the preparation. Should know soon. From yesterday:
https://news.yahoo.com/explosions-rock-russian-military-headquarters-172828542.html
The Russian deployments at Zaporizhzha generally use the Kakhovka Reservoir as a left flank and extend from the lake down to the south east, attempting to force Ukraine to make a wide sweep to the east to turn the flank. I would imagine the Russians have a considerable mobile reserve force, heavy on armor & mechanized infantry defending the open space of that flank. Will Ukraine engage that mobile reserve and attempt to destroy it, then sweep west to cut off the entire Russian army deployed between Kherson and Zaporizhzha? That is the high-risk/high-reward option, as it would be a strategic level defeat for Russia, leaving open the approaches to Crimea, the kind of defeat that would force Russia to the table to stave off the catastrophe of surrender of 6-digit of Russian troops. Or will Ukraine try to punch straight thru the lines at Zaporizhzha?

We will know a lot more in about 60 days. In the meantime, there will be no peace talks, because both sides think they have an advantage. But one of them is likely wrong, possibly badly so. We are about to find out.
Doc Holliday
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whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:




Ukraine will NOT win this war without foreign troops getting involved.

And as the months (years?) go by this will become obvious to everyone.

you are making some assumptions that Russia might not be able to meet. Have you checked the value trends on the ruble recently?
https://www.msn.com/en-xl/news/others/russias-ailing-ruble-takes-another-hit-what-happens-now/ar-AA1a8S7U
at five year lows:
https://tradingeconomics.com/russia/currency

Everything you say would be correct if Ukraine was on its own, having to feed, clothe, arm its own troops. Were that the case, the war would already be over. But that is not the case.

Nato has correctly identified that it does have an interest in the outcome of the war. A number of necessaries flow from that. The Ukrainian state must survive. The war must finish with Russia totally exhausted, decades away from full rearmament. If Ukraine is to remain economically viable, it must own sovereignty over Crimea (fate of Russian naval base at Sebastapol negotiable) in order to A) ensure flow of goods to/from it's major industrial ports in the Sea of Azov, and B) ensure revenues from oil/gas reserves across much of the northern Black Sea up thru the Sea of Azov and into the Donbas. Ergo, Nato has opened up cash and materiel flows that Russia cannot match over time.

A truce right now just gives Russia a breather, a chance to raise more troops and send more ammo to the front line. Ukraine must keep the battle going on, forcing Russia to strain ever harder to resupply, to the point its sclerotic supply lines crack. As long as Nato continues to supply Ukraine, Ukraine can outlast Russia, despite Russia having, on paper at least, far greater resources to wage war than Ukraine.

This is a proxy war. The Nato economy dwarfs the Russian economy by a ratio that far exceeds the advantage Russia has over Ukraine. All Ukraine has to supply is sweat equity, while the vastly superior economies of Nato outspend the heavily sanctioned Russian economy. And Ukraine has the population to do that, particularly given that they are inflicting casualties on Russia at a 7-1 rate.

As long as Russia wants to feed its sons into the maw, we should keep it grinding away. They've grabbed the tarbaby of all tarbabies.



Just the flippant way people in our government and on this site casually acknowledge that we are now in a bloody proxy war with a nuclear armed state.....without any vote by the American people...its just stunning.

A nation that has not attacked us by the way.

But this maw as you say is chewing up Ukrainian sons as much as it is chewing up Russian ones. Yet Ukraine can not keep that kind of causality rate up forever.

And even if funding these proxy wars was not at its base level highly immoral...its also unlikely to get us what we want. Heck what do we even want? Regime change in Moscow? The end of the 1,000 year old Russian State itself? No one can seem to agree with what is a final outcome should be.

Just like Afghanistan and Iraq were are tripping and stumbling into another long bloody conflict that is massively expensive and with no clear cut exit strategy or clear point of "victory".




Proxy wars are preferable to direct conflict, are they not? They are exactly how great powers engage one another militarily when they cannot come to a peaceful agreement, because they are by wide margin preferable to direct conflict.

"A nation which has not attacked us, by the way" is an old fallacy which presumes war is defined by military conflict. Remember the Cold War? Nations jockey and bluster and negotiate and ally and even poke & prod with third parties all the time. It's how the game is played......to avoid all out conflict.

Ukraine can keep up a 7-1 favorable casualty rate longer than Russia can. Ukrainians are united as one for a war to the death. Same cannot be said for Putin, who is trying to hide the true cost of the war from the Russian people to avoid unrest in the streets.

What we want has been quite clearly stated: Russian withdrawal from sovereign Ukrainian territory. You just don't take it seriously. Regime change has been mentioned as one way to achieve that outcome, and we were wise to do so. It puts pressure on Putin, who has resisted it and pressed on, tying his fate to the outcome of the war. That's fine. He needs to go. We don't want to ever have a Russian head of state who ever again thinks Nato will stand idly by when Russian armies cross European borders.

The analogs you mentioned are not applicable. Holding onto them so tightly badly affects your perception of what is happening. We have not, and will not commit troops to Ukraine. We've been quite consistent on that. Nato has been consistent on that. More to the point, it will not be necessary. Russia is not going to win the war. Ukraine can outlast them (thanks to Nato support).

The way the media has completely thrown out "beating Russia is easy" is a sign that what you're hearing about the difficulty of dealing with Russia isn't true.

Have you thought about how much your viewpoint aligns with the uniparty veiwpoint?
I haven't noticed a narrative that "beating Russia is easy" from MSM at all. The cheerleading has been obvious,though, and when it reaches the level of virtue posturing can be quite humorous. That in no way changes realities on the ground in Ukraine.

My viewpoint is my own: a masters degree in directly related subject material plus 10 years in the intel/diplomatic world with direct experience on things Russian, followed by relentless self-study on history, geopolitics, etc.... There is a reason Nato and the USA chose to support Ukraine - it is overwhelmingly in their interest to do so. And the fact there is such unity within Nato on the question is telling. Biden didn't hornswoggle them, for sure. The case for not aggressively supporting Ukraine, other than impacts on budget and readiness, is completely a priori reasoning, and laced with one foolish strawman after the other on escalation. Initially opponents ran around with their skirts up about the inevitability of nuclear war. Now, its mostly about the inevitability of direct involvement of US troops. Worst of all, opponents typically misread the situation on the ground because of a general lack of familiarity with the subject material.

One really has to work hard to remain in the shadow of obtusity not to see the wisdom of US support for Ukraine this particular proxy war. Proxy wars have happened for millennia in the past, and will happen for millennia in the future. We do not have a stake in most of them. But this one we do, for reasons that are rather obvious unless one is hidebound determined to ignore them.
Can we at least agree that the pricing that the military industrial complex is charging for weapons which is purchased by US tax dollars is way too damn high and we should work on that? They're charging tenfold, if not a hundredfold their cost of production and our government is more than willing to go along with it because they get a piece of it back for their campaigns and under the table deals. It's shifting middle class taxes to giant corporations that are hardly trickling it back into the economy.

A recent POGO analysis, for instance, documented the malfeasance of TransDigm, a military parts supplier that the Department of Defense's inspector general caught overcharging the Pentagon by as much as 3,800 percent!

https://jacobin.com/2022/02/us-pentagon-budget-military-spending-f-35-nuclear-weapons

Its not so much that I'm against the reason for this war. It's the means by which it is being carried out which I consider extremely corrupt.

Our ruling class isn't taking care of our people. They aren't taking care of our borders, our schools are god awful, our infrastructure is ghetto...but we can drop trillions on war?

I'm at the point where I'm like "no you can't have your war until you fix sh it at home".
I had dinner with the CEO of a manufacturer a few weeks ago and, in a brainstorming discussion about possibilities, asked him about the cost of a potential new product as a substitute (an innovative one, at that) for an existing one. He said...."well, that depends on how much we can produce. If we can open up the plant and run it 24/7, it will be priced where you need it to be. If not....well, it will not."

That's not rocket science, just an current example.

Arms manufacturers work silo'd with R&D and production, and really only have a single customer (since that customer has to approve exports elsewhere on anything really sexy.). Purchase orders are intermittent, and limited. The initial price of the first unit is always the one quoted by critics, never the costs of the last few on a multi-year run. And on and on. And it's almost always the $900 toilet seat that gets held up as a typical example, when it is anything but. Make 900k of those particular toilet seats designed for the single head in the captain's quarters and they cost about 2-3x what the sexiest model at Home Depot costs. And, yes, the manufacturers do gouge a bit on some items, as pricing is constrained on others, and or overall plant capacity is limited to small percentages of capacity Overall, Lockheed/Martin is not making 3800% on a delivered F-35. Newport News is not going to make 3800% on the USS Doris Miller. And most assuredly, the tax returns for those companies do not show a net taxable profit of 3800%.

Please. We are educated and informed adults here on this board........

Since you're educated and can explain, how is it that with Russia's $66b defense budget and NATO's $1t defense budget, the West is running out of weapons and equipment to transfer to Ukraine?
whiterock
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Bear8084 said:

https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/russian-offensive-campaign-assessment-april-23-2023

"The pattern of Russian deployments throughout Ukraine strongly suggests that most of the available maneuver elements of all military districts, as well as major surviving Airborne forces, are already committed to either active offensive or defensive operations in Ukraine. Russia will need to commit significant reserves to any discrete axis in order to conduct effective offensive operations, and the generally exhausted condition of troops and the apparently disorganized and fragmented deployment pattern in some areas will likely pose significant obstacles to Russia's prospects for defending critical sectors of the frontline."
If that is true, then straight for Melitopol?
Bear8084
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whiterock said:

Bear8084 said:

https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/russian-offensive-campaign-assessment-april-23-2023

"The pattern of Russian deployments throughout Ukraine strongly suggests that most of the available maneuver elements of all military districts, as well as major surviving Airborne forces, are already committed to either active offensive or defensive operations in Ukraine. Russia will need to commit significant reserves to any discrete axis in order to conduct effective offensive operations, and the generally exhausted condition of troops and the apparently disorganized and fragmented deployment pattern in some areas will likely pose significant obstacles to Russia's prospects for defending critical sectors of the frontline."
If that is true, then straight for Melitopol?


Perhaps. I think it's a guessing game until it happens, but that's a good guess.
trey3216
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Redbrickbear said:


vs Igor Girkin's take...
Mr. Treehorn treats objects like women, man.
whiterock
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Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:




Ukraine will NOT win this war without foreign troops getting involved.

And as the months (years?) go by this will become obvious to everyone.

you are making some assumptions that Russia might not be able to meet. Have you checked the value trends on the ruble recently?
https://www.msn.com/en-xl/news/others/russias-ailing-ruble-takes-another-hit-what-happens-now/ar-AA1a8S7U
at five year lows:
https://tradingeconomics.com/russia/currency

Everything you say would be correct if Ukraine was on its own, having to feed, clothe, arm its own troops. Were that the case, the war would already be over. But that is not the case.

Nato has correctly identified that it does have an interest in the outcome of the war. A number of necessaries flow from that. The Ukrainian state must survive. The war must finish with Russia totally exhausted, decades away from full rearmament. If Ukraine is to remain economically viable, it must own sovereignty over Crimea (fate of Russian naval base at Sebastapol negotiable) in order to A) ensure flow of goods to/from it's major industrial ports in the Sea of Azov, and B) ensure revenues from oil/gas reserves across much of the northern Black Sea up thru the Sea of Azov and into the Donbas. Ergo, Nato has opened up cash and materiel flows that Russia cannot match over time.

A truce right now just gives Russia a breather, a chance to raise more troops and send more ammo to the front line. Ukraine must keep the battle going on, forcing Russia to strain ever harder to resupply, to the point its sclerotic supply lines crack. As long as Nato continues to supply Ukraine, Ukraine can outlast Russia, despite Russia having, on paper at least, far greater resources to wage war than Ukraine.

This is a proxy war. The Nato economy dwarfs the Russian economy by a ratio that far exceeds the advantage Russia has over Ukraine. All Ukraine has to supply is sweat equity, while the vastly superior economies of Nato outspend the heavily sanctioned Russian economy. And Ukraine has the population to do that, particularly given that they are inflicting casualties on Russia at a 7-1 rate.

As long as Russia wants to feed its sons into the maw, we should keep it grinding away. They've grabbed the tarbaby of all tarbabies.



Just the flippant way people in our government and on this site casually acknowledge that we are now in a bloody proxy war with a nuclear armed state.....without any vote by the American people...its just stunning.

A nation that has not attacked us by the way.

But this maw as you say is chewing up Ukrainian sons as much as it is chewing up Russian ones. Yet Ukraine can not keep that kind of causality rate up forever.

And even if funding these proxy wars was not at its base level highly immoral...its also unlikely to get us what we want. Heck what do we even want? Regime change in Moscow? The end of the 1,000 year old Russian State itself? No one can seem to agree with what is a final outcome should be.

Just like Afghanistan and Iraq were are tripping and stumbling into another long bloody conflict that is massively expensive and with no clear cut exit strategy or clear point of "victory".




Proxy wars are preferable to direct conflict, are they not? They are exactly how great powers engage one another militarily when they cannot come to a peaceful agreement, because they are by wide margin preferable to direct conflict.

"A nation which has not attacked us, by the way" is an old fallacy which presumes war is defined by military conflict. Remember the Cold War? Nations jockey and bluster and negotiate and ally and even poke & prod with third parties all the time. It's how the game is played......to avoid all out conflict.

Ukraine can keep up a 7-1 favorable casualty rate longer than Russia can. Ukrainians are united as one for a war to the death. Same cannot be said for Putin, who is trying to hide the true cost of the war from the Russian people to avoid unrest in the streets.

What we want has been quite clearly stated: Russian withdrawal from sovereign Ukrainian territory. You just don't take it seriously. Regime change has been mentioned as one way to achieve that outcome, and we were wise to do so. It puts pressure on Putin, who has resisted it and pressed on, tying his fate to the outcome of the war. That's fine. He needs to go. We don't want to ever have a Russian head of state who ever again thinks Nato will stand idly by when Russian armies cross European borders.

The analogs you mentioned are not applicable. Holding onto them so tightly badly affects your perception of what is happening. We have not, and will not commit troops to Ukraine. We've been quite consistent on that. Nato has been consistent on that. More to the point, it will not be necessary. Russia is not going to win the war. Ukraine can outlast them (thanks to Nato support).

The way the media has completely thrown out "beating Russia is easy" is a sign that what you're hearing about the difficulty of dealing with Russia isn't true.

Have you thought about how much your viewpoint aligns with the uniparty veiwpoint?
I haven't noticed a narrative that "beating Russia is easy" from MSM at all. The cheerleading has been obvious,though, and when it reaches the level of virtue posturing can be quite humorous. That in no way changes realities on the ground in Ukraine.

My viewpoint is my own: a masters degree in directly related subject material plus 10 years in the intel/diplomatic world with direct experience on things Russian, followed by relentless self-study on history, geopolitics, etc.... There is a reason Nato and the USA chose to support Ukraine - it is overwhelmingly in their interest to do so. And the fact there is such unity within Nato on the question is telling. Biden didn't hornswoggle them, for sure. The case for not aggressively supporting Ukraine, other than impacts on budget and readiness, is completely a priori reasoning, and laced with one foolish strawman after the other on escalation. Initially opponents ran around with their skirts up about the inevitability of nuclear war. Now, its mostly about the inevitability of direct involvement of US troops. Worst of all, opponents typically misread the situation on the ground because of a general lack of familiarity with the subject material.

One really has to work hard to remain in the shadow of obtusity not to see the wisdom of US support for Ukraine this particular proxy war. Proxy wars have happened for millennia in the past, and will happen for millennia in the future. We do not have a stake in most of them. But this one we do, for reasons that are rather obvious unless one is hidebound determined to ignore them.
Can we at least agree that the pricing that the military industrial complex is charging for weapons which is purchased by US tax dollars is way too damn high and we should work on that? They're charging tenfold, if not a hundredfold their cost of production and our government is more than willing to go along with it because they get a piece of it back for their campaigns and under the table deals. It's shifting middle class taxes to giant corporations that are hardly trickling it back into the economy.

A recent POGO analysis, for instance, documented the malfeasance of TransDigm, a military parts supplier that the Department of Defense's inspector general caught overcharging the Pentagon by as much as 3,800 percent!

https://jacobin.com/2022/02/us-pentagon-budget-military-spending-f-35-nuclear-weapons

Its not so much that I'm against the reason for this war. It's the means by which it is being carried out which I consider extremely corrupt.

Our ruling class isn't taking care of our people. They aren't taking care of our borders, our schools are god awful, our infrastructure is ghetto...but we can drop trillions on war?

I'm at the point where I'm like "no you can't have your war until you fix sh it at home".
I had dinner with the CEO of a manufacturer a few weeks ago and, in a brainstorming discussion about possibilities, asked him about the cost of a potential new product as a substitute (an innovative one, at that) for an existing one. He said...."well, that depends on how much we can produce. If we can open up the plant and run it 24/7, it will be priced where you need it to be. If not....well, it will not."

That's not rocket science, just an current example.

Arms manufacturers work silo'd with R&D and production, and really only have a single customer (since that customer has to approve exports elsewhere on anything really sexy.). Purchase orders are intermittent, and limited. The initial price of the first unit is always the one quoted by critics, never the costs of the last few on a multi-year run. And on and on. And it's almost always the $900 toilet seat that gets held up as a typical example, when it is anything but. Make 900k of those particular toilet seats designed for the single head in the captain's quarters and they cost about 2-3x what the sexiest model at Home Depot costs. And, yes, the manufacturers do gouge a bit on some items, as pricing is constrained on others, and or overall plant capacity is limited to small percentages of capacity Overall, Lockheed/Martin is not making 3800% on a delivered F-35. Newport News is not going to make 3800% on the USS Doris Miller. And most assuredly, the tax returns for those companies do not show a net taxable profit of 3800%.

Please. We are educated and informed adults here on this board........

Since you're educated and can explain, how is it that with Russia's $66b defense budget and NATO's $1t defense budget, the West is running out of weapons and equipment to transfer to Ukraine?
Firstly it's the definition of "running out." Nato is running out of inventory to transfer (without unduly affecting readiness levels), not running out of production capacity. Beyond inventory levels there is the question of mobiliziation of existing capacity. Production in Europe largely has not been ramped up to meet Ukrainian needs, while in USA it has been substantially increased. I understand conventional artillery round production in the US, for example, has ramped up to current max capacity. And that is all within context of peace-time capabilities. We have not mobilized our industries for war-time production.

Russia has. And is under severe sanctions that effectively cut off its ability to produce it's most technologically advanced systems. So it's pretty much limited to the supply chain it has right now, and fighting with Vietnam War era technology. It is almost impossible to innovate while fighting a war. The Axis started WWII with superior aircraft, and Germany even developed the jet fighter before war-end. But the supply chain demands of training pilots and building existing airframes to stave off an invader......made impossible to deploy that superior technology in battle at scale. It would have required industrial capacity Germany did not and could not employ. The only way they could have done it was to have secured a 1 year truce and use the breathing room to rearm and redeploy. (that story is a direct analog for this war; no truce to allow Russia to rearm, resupply, reform practices.....make them struggle to keep up with what they have.....while we keep upping the ante with new systems for Ukraine....the longer it goes, the worse that equation pressures Russia).

So Russia is facing an even worse and more daunting proposition than it did when Reagan ramped up military spending. Our economy has enjoyed continued growth, built upon a broadening foundation of population growth. Russia, on the other hand, has less than half the population it did during the Cold War, and considerably lower manufacturing and resource levels to draw upon PLUS a population already old and in decline. The demo of young men of "military age" in Russia is approaching half the number it was 40 years ago. Russia cannot afford to let this war drag on indefinitely. It needs to force a quick end. And it cannot. It is not built to do that, and it can neither ramp up nor modernize the way it needs to do that.

For Nato? It's merely a question of how much we're willing to spend to make Russia squirm. We have the resources to bury them, if we want to. Sure, everyone is shocked at the rate at which munitions are being expanded. Current production capacity is inadequate to keep up with it. Which means we'd have to mobilize over to war-time footing. That still would probably not allow us to fire all the rounds we could aim at everything we'd need to shoot at, but it'd be 100x what Russia could manage, so it would be enough.

Most war critics focus too much on Russia's POTENTIAL and not enough on their ability. Yes, they have enormous advantages in manpower and resources. But their ability to deliver what they have at their disposal is pitifully inadequate, as we see on display in Ukraine. A nation they should have been able to roll over in a few days is likely going to win the war on favorable terms. But they can't, because they are still trying to fight with a logistics system that is in some respects essentially 19th century technology.
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:




Ukraine will NOT win this war without foreign troops getting involved.

And as the months (years?) go by this will become obvious to everyone.

you are making some assumptions that Russia might not be able to meet. Have you checked the value trends on the ruble recently?
https://www.msn.com/en-xl/news/others/russias-ailing-ruble-takes-another-hit-what-happens-now/ar-AA1a8S7U
at five year lows:
https://tradingeconomics.com/russia/currency

Everything you say would be correct if Ukraine was on its own, having to feed, clothe, arm its own troops. Were that the case, the war would already be over. But that is not the case.

Nato has correctly identified that it does have an interest in the outcome of the war. A number of necessaries flow from that. The Ukrainian state must survive. The war must finish with Russia totally exhausted, decades away from full rearmament. If Ukraine is to remain economically viable, it must own sovereignty over Crimea (fate of Russian naval base at Sebastapol negotiable) in order to A) ensure flow of goods to/from it's major industrial ports in the Sea of Azov, and B) ensure revenues from oil/gas reserves across much of the northern Black Sea up thru the Sea of Azov and into the Donbas. Ergo, Nato has opened up cash and materiel flows that Russia cannot match over time.

A truce right now just gives Russia a breather, a chance to raise more troops and send more ammo to the front line. Ukraine must keep the battle going on, forcing Russia to strain ever harder to resupply, to the point its sclerotic supply lines crack. As long as Nato continues to supply Ukraine, Ukraine can outlast Russia, despite Russia having, on paper at least, far greater resources to wage war than Ukraine.

This is a proxy war. The Nato economy dwarfs the Russian economy by a ratio that far exceeds the advantage Russia has over Ukraine. All Ukraine has to supply is sweat equity, while the vastly superior economies of Nato outspend the heavily sanctioned Russian economy. And Ukraine has the population to do that, particularly given that they are inflicting casualties on Russia at a 7-1 rate.

As long as Russia wants to feed its sons into the maw, we should keep it grinding away. They've grabbed the tarbaby of all tarbabies.



Just the flippant way people in our government and on this site casually acknowledge that we are now in a bloody proxy war with a nuclear armed state.....without any vote by the American people...its just stunning.

A nation that has not attacked us by the way.

But this maw as you say is chewing up Ukrainian sons as much as it is chewing up Russian ones. Yet Ukraine can not keep that kind of causality rate up forever.

And even if funding these proxy wars was not at its base level highly immoral...its also unlikely to get us what we want. Heck what do we even want? Regime change in Moscow? The end of the 1,000 year old Russian State itself? No one can seem to agree with what is a final outcome should be.

Just like Afghanistan and Iraq were are tripping and stumbling into another long bloody conflict that is massively expensive and with no clear cut exit strategy or clear point of "victory".




Proxy wars are preferable to direct conflict, are they not? They are exactly how great powers engage one another militarily when they cannot come to a peaceful agreement, because they are by wide margin preferable to direct conflict.

"A nation which has not attacked us, by the way" is an old fallacy which presumes war is defined by military conflict. Remember the Cold War? Nations jockey and bluster and negotiate and ally and even poke & prod with third parties all the time. It's how the game is played......to avoid all out conflict.

Ukraine can keep up a 7-1 favorable casualty rate longer than Russia can. Ukrainians are united as one for a war to the death. Same cannot be said for Putin, who is trying to hide the true cost of the war from the Russian people to avoid unrest in the streets.

What we want has been quite clearly stated: Russian withdrawal from sovereign Ukrainian territory. You just don't take it seriously. Regime change has been mentioned as one way to achieve that outcome, and we were wise to do so. It puts pressure on Putin, who has resisted it and pressed on, tying his fate to the outcome of the war. That's fine. He needs to go. We don't want to ever have a Russian head of state who ever again thinks Nato will stand idly by when Russian armies cross European borders.

The analogs you mentioned are not applicable. Holding onto them so tightly badly affects your perception of what is happening. We have not, and will not commit troops to Ukraine. We've been quite consistent on that. Nato has been consistent on that. More to the point, it will not be necessary. Russia is not going to win the war. Ukraine can outlast them (thanks to Nato support).

The way the media has completely thrown out "beating Russia is easy" is a sign that what you're hearing about the difficulty of dealing with Russia isn't true.

Have you thought about how much your viewpoint aligns with the uniparty veiwpoint?
I haven't noticed a narrative that "beating Russia is easy" from MSM at all. The cheerleading has been obvious,though, and when it reaches the level of virtue posturing can be quite humorous. That in no way changes realities on the ground in Ukraine.

My viewpoint is my own: a masters degree in directly related subject material plus 10 years in the intel/diplomatic world with direct experience on things Russian, followed by relentless self-study on history, geopolitics, etc.... There is a reason Nato and the USA chose to support Ukraine - it is overwhelmingly in their interest to do so. And the fact there is such unity within Nato on the question is telling. Biden didn't hornswoggle them, for sure. The case for not aggressively supporting Ukraine, other than impacts on budget and readiness, is completely a priori reasoning, and laced with one foolish strawman after the other on escalation. Initially opponents ran around with their skirts up about the inevitability of nuclear war. Now, its mostly about the inevitability of direct involvement of US troops. Worst of all, opponents typically misread the situation on the ground because of a general lack of familiarity with the subject material.

One really has to work hard to remain in the shadow of obtusity not to see the wisdom of US support for Ukraine this particular proxy war. Proxy wars have happened for millennia in the past, and will happen for millennia in the future. We do not have a stake in most of them. But this one we do, for reasons that are rather obvious unless one is hidebound determined to ignore them.
Can we at least agree that the pricing that the military industrial complex is charging for weapons which is purchased by US tax dollars is way too damn high and we should work on that? They're charging tenfold, if not a hundredfold their cost of production and our government is more than willing to go along with it because they get a piece of it back for their campaigns and under the table deals. It's shifting middle class taxes to giant corporations that are hardly trickling it back into the economy.

A recent POGO analysis, for instance, documented the malfeasance of TransDigm, a military parts supplier that the Department of Defense's inspector general caught overcharging the Pentagon by as much as 3,800 percent!

https://jacobin.com/2022/02/us-pentagon-budget-military-spending-f-35-nuclear-weapons

Its not so much that I'm against the reason for this war. It's the means by which it is being carried out which I consider extremely corrupt.

Our ruling class isn't taking care of our people. They aren't taking care of our borders, our schools are god awful, our infrastructure is ghetto...but we can drop trillions on war?

I'm at the point where I'm like "no you can't have your war until you fix sh it at home".
I had dinner with the CEO of a manufacturer a few weeks ago and, in a brainstorming discussion about possibilities, asked him about the cost of a potential new product as a substitute (an innovative one, at that) for an existing one. He said...."well, that depends on how much we can produce. If we can open up the plant and run it 24/7, it will be priced where you need it to be. If not....well, it will not."

That's not rocket science, just an current example.

Arms manufacturers work silo'd with R&D and production, and really only have a single customer (since that customer has to approve exports elsewhere on anything really sexy.). Purchase orders are intermittent, and limited. The initial price of the first unit is always the one quoted by critics, never the costs of the last few on a multi-year run. And on and on. And it's almost always the $900 toilet seat that gets held up as a typical example, when it is anything but. Make 900k of those particular toilet seats designed for the single head in the captain's quarters and they cost about 2-3x what the sexiest model at Home Depot costs. And, yes, the manufacturers do gouge a bit on some items, as pricing is constrained on others, and or overall plant capacity is limited to small percentages of capacity Overall, Lockheed/Martin is not making 3800% on a delivered F-35. Newport News is not going to make 3800% on the USS Doris Miller. And most assuredly, the tax returns for those companies do not show a net taxable profit of 3800%.

Please. We are educated and informed adults here on this board........

Since you're educated and can explain, how is it that with Russia's $66b defense budget and NATO's $1t defense budget, the West is running out of weapons and equipment to transfer to Ukraine?
Firstly it's the definition of "running out." Nato is running out of inventory to transfer, not running out of production capacity. Beyond inventory levels there is the question of mobiliziation of existing capacity. Production in Europe largely has not been ramped up to meet Ukrainian needs, while in USA it has been substantially increased. I understand conventional artillery round production in the US, for example, has ramped up to current max capacity. And that is all within context of peace-time capabilities. We have not mobilized our industries for war-time production.

Russia has. And is under severe sanctions that effectively cut off its ability to produce it's most technologically advanced systems. So it's pretty much limited to the supply chain it has right now, and fighting with Vietnam War era technology. It is almost impossible to innovate while fighting a war. The Axis started WWII with superior aircraft, and Germany even developed the jet fighter before war-end. But the supply chain demands of training pilots and building existing airframes to stave off an invader......made impossible to deploy that superior technology in battle at scale. It would have required industrial capacity Germany did not and could not employ. The only way they could have done it was to have secured a 1 year truce and use the breathing room to rearm and redeploy. (that story is a direct analog for this war; no truce to allow Russia to rearm, resupply, reform practices.....make them struggle to keep up with what they have.....while we keep upping the ante with new systems for Ukraine....the longer it goes, the worse that equation pressures Russia).

So Russia is facing an even worse and more daunting proposition than it did when Reagan ramped up military spending. Our economy has enjoyed continued growth, built upon a broadening foundation of population growth. Russia, on the other hand, has less than half the population it did during the Cold War, and considerably lower manufacturing and resource levels to draw upon PLUS a population already old and in decline. The demo of young men of "military age" in Russia is approaching half the number it was 40 years ago. Russia cannot afford to let this war drag on indefinitely. It needs to force a quick end. And it cannot. It is not built to do that, and it can neither ramp up nor modernize the way it needs to do that.

For Nato? It's merely a question of how much we're willing to spend to make Russia squirm. We have the resources to bury them, if we want to. Sure, everyone is shocked at the rate at which munitions are being expanded. Current production capacity is inadequate to keep up with it. Which means we'd have to mobilize over to war-time footing. That still would probably not allow us to fire all the rounds we could aim at everything we'd need to shoot at, but it'd be 100x what Russia could manage, so it would be enough.

Most war critics focus too much on Russia's POTENTIAL and not enough on their ability. Yes, they have enormous advantages in manpower and resources. But their ability to deliver what they have at their disposal is pitifully inadequate, as we see on display in Ukraine. A nation they should have been able to roll over in a few days is likely going to win the war on favorable terms. But they can't, because they are still trying to fight with a logistics system that is in some respects essentially 19th century technology.

No one has questioned the economic and production power of the USA-EU

Combined population is 778 million and nominal GDP of the USA is 23 trillion and the EU is 17 trillion.

The issue is that Ukraine is running out of men and does not have the manpower to push Russia out of Donbas...much less Crimea.
Oldbear83
How long do you want to ignore this user?
"The issue is that Ukraine is running out of men and does not have the manpower to push Russia out of Donbas...much less Crimea."

Have you considered the ugly possibility that this may be the short-term objective of a number of nations?
trey3216
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:




Ukraine will NOT win this war without foreign troops getting involved.

And as the months (years?) go by this will become obvious to everyone.

you are making some assumptions that Russia might not be able to meet. Have you checked the value trends on the ruble recently?
https://www.msn.com/en-xl/news/others/russias-ailing-ruble-takes-another-hit-what-happens-now/ar-AA1a8S7U
at five year lows:
https://tradingeconomics.com/russia/currency

Everything you say would be correct if Ukraine was on its own, having to feed, clothe, arm its own troops. Were that the case, the war would already be over. But that is not the case.

Nato has correctly identified that it does have an interest in the outcome of the war. A number of necessaries flow from that. The Ukrainian state must survive. The war must finish with Russia totally exhausted, decades away from full rearmament. If Ukraine is to remain economically viable, it must own sovereignty over Crimea (fate of Russian naval base at Sebastapol negotiable) in order to A) ensure flow of goods to/from it's major industrial ports in the Sea of Azov, and B) ensure revenues from oil/gas reserves across much of the northern Black Sea up thru the Sea of Azov and into the Donbas. Ergo, Nato has opened up cash and materiel flows that Russia cannot match over time.

A truce right now just gives Russia a breather, a chance to raise more troops and send more ammo to the front line. Ukraine must keep the battle going on, forcing Russia to strain ever harder to resupply, to the point its sclerotic supply lines crack. As long as Nato continues to supply Ukraine, Ukraine can outlast Russia, despite Russia having, on paper at least, far greater resources to wage war than Ukraine.

This is a proxy war. The Nato economy dwarfs the Russian economy by a ratio that far exceeds the advantage Russia has over Ukraine. All Ukraine has to supply is sweat equity, while the vastly superior economies of Nato outspend the heavily sanctioned Russian economy. And Ukraine has the population to do that, particularly given that they are inflicting casualties on Russia at a 7-1 rate.

As long as Russia wants to feed its sons into the maw, we should keep it grinding away. They've grabbed the tarbaby of all tarbabies.



Just the flippant way people in our government and on this site casually acknowledge that we are now in a bloody proxy war with a nuclear armed state.....without any vote by the American people...its just stunning.

A nation that has not attacked us by the way.

But this maw as you say is chewing up Ukrainian sons as much as it is chewing up Russian ones. Yet Ukraine can not keep that kind of causality rate up forever.

And even if funding these proxy wars was not at its base level highly immoral...its also unlikely to get us what we want. Heck what do we even want? Regime change in Moscow? The end of the 1,000 year old Russian State itself? No one can seem to agree with what is a final outcome should be.

Just like Afghanistan and Iraq were are tripping and stumbling into another long bloody conflict that is massively expensive and with no clear cut exit strategy or clear point of "victory".




Proxy wars are preferable to direct conflict, are they not? They are exactly how great powers engage one another militarily when they cannot come to a peaceful agreement, because they are by wide margin preferable to direct conflict.

"A nation which has not attacked us, by the way" is an old fallacy which presumes war is defined by military conflict. Remember the Cold War? Nations jockey and bluster and negotiate and ally and even poke & prod with third parties all the time. It's how the game is played......to avoid all out conflict.

Ukraine can keep up a 7-1 favorable casualty rate longer than Russia can. Ukrainians are united as one for a war to the death. Same cannot be said for Putin, who is trying to hide the true cost of the war from the Russian people to avoid unrest in the streets.

What we want has been quite clearly stated: Russian withdrawal from sovereign Ukrainian territory. You just don't take it seriously. Regime change has been mentioned as one way to achieve that outcome, and we were wise to do so. It puts pressure on Putin, who has resisted it and pressed on, tying his fate to the outcome of the war. That's fine. He needs to go. We don't want to ever have a Russian head of state who ever again thinks Nato will stand idly by when Russian armies cross European borders.

The analogs you mentioned are not applicable. Holding onto them so tightly badly affects your perception of what is happening. We have not, and will not commit troops to Ukraine. We've been quite consistent on that. Nato has been consistent on that. More to the point, it will not be necessary. Russia is not going to win the war. Ukraine can outlast them (thanks to Nato support).

The way the media has completely thrown out "beating Russia is easy" is a sign that what you're hearing about the difficulty of dealing with Russia isn't true.

Have you thought about how much your viewpoint aligns with the uniparty veiwpoint?
I haven't noticed a narrative that "beating Russia is easy" from MSM at all. The cheerleading has been obvious,though, and when it reaches the level of virtue posturing can be quite humorous. That in no way changes realities on the ground in Ukraine.

My viewpoint is my own: a masters degree in directly related subject material plus 10 years in the intel/diplomatic world with direct experience on things Russian, followed by relentless self-study on history, geopolitics, etc.... There is a reason Nato and the USA chose to support Ukraine - it is overwhelmingly in their interest to do so. And the fact there is such unity within Nato on the question is telling. Biden didn't hornswoggle them, for sure. The case for not aggressively supporting Ukraine, other than impacts on budget and readiness, is completely a priori reasoning, and laced with one foolish strawman after the other on escalation. Initially opponents ran around with their skirts up about the inevitability of nuclear war. Now, its mostly about the inevitability of direct involvement of US troops. Worst of all, opponents typically misread the situation on the ground because of a general lack of familiarity with the subject material.

One really has to work hard to remain in the shadow of obtusity not to see the wisdom of US support for Ukraine this particular proxy war. Proxy wars have happened for millennia in the past, and will happen for millennia in the future. We do not have a stake in most of them. But this one we do, for reasons that are rather obvious unless one is hidebound determined to ignore them.
Can we at least agree that the pricing that the military industrial complex is charging for weapons which is purchased by US tax dollars is way too damn high and we should work on that? They're charging tenfold, if not a hundredfold their cost of production and our government is more than willing to go along with it because they get a piece of it back for their campaigns and under the table deals. It's shifting middle class taxes to giant corporations that are hardly trickling it back into the economy.

A recent POGO analysis, for instance, documented the malfeasance of TransDigm, a military parts supplier that the Department of Defense's inspector general caught overcharging the Pentagon by as much as 3,800 percent!

https://jacobin.com/2022/02/us-pentagon-budget-military-spending-f-35-nuclear-weapons

Its not so much that I'm against the reason for this war. It's the means by which it is being carried out which I consider extremely corrupt.

Our ruling class isn't taking care of our people. They aren't taking care of our borders, our schools are god awful, our infrastructure is ghetto...but we can drop trillions on war?

I'm at the point where I'm like "no you can't have your war until you fix sh it at home".
I had dinner with the CEO of a manufacturer a few weeks ago and, in a brainstorming discussion about possibilities, asked him about the cost of a potential new product as a substitute (an innovative one, at that) for an existing one. He said...."well, that depends on how much we can produce. If we can open up the plant and run it 24/7, it will be priced where you need it to be. If not....well, it will not."

That's not rocket science, just an current example.

Arms manufacturers work silo'd with R&D and production, and really only have a single customer (since that customer has to approve exports elsewhere on anything really sexy.). Purchase orders are intermittent, and limited. The initial price of the first unit is always the one quoted by critics, never the costs of the last few on a multi-year run. And on and on. And it's almost always the $900 toilet seat that gets held up as a typical example, when it is anything but. Make 900k of those particular toilet seats designed for the single head in the captain's quarters and they cost about 2-3x what the sexiest model at Home Depot costs. And, yes, the manufacturers do gouge a bit on some items, as pricing is constrained on others, and or overall plant capacity is limited to small percentages of capacity Overall, Lockheed/Martin is not making 3800% on a delivered F-35. Newport News is not going to make 3800% on the USS Doris Miller. And most assuredly, the tax returns for those companies do not show a net taxable profit of 3800%.

Please. We are educated and informed adults here on this board........

Since you're educated and can explain, how is it that with Russia's $66b defense budget and NATO's $1t defense budget, the West is running out of weapons and equipment to transfer to Ukraine?
Firstly it's the definition of "running out." Nato is running out of inventory to transfer, not running out of production capacity. Beyond inventory levels there is the question of mobiliziation of existing capacity. Production in Europe largely has not been ramped up to meet Ukrainian needs, while in USA it has been substantially increased. I understand conventional artillery round production in the US, for example, has ramped up to current max capacity. And that is all within context of peace-time capabilities. We have not mobilized our industries for war-time production.

Russia has. And is under severe sanctions that effectively cut off its ability to produce it's most technologically advanced systems. So it's pretty much limited to the supply chain it has right now, and fighting with Vietnam War era technology. It is almost impossible to innovate while fighting a war. The Axis started WWII with superior aircraft, and Germany even developed the jet fighter before war-end. But the supply chain demands of training pilots and building existing airframes to stave off an invader......made impossible to deploy that superior technology in battle at scale. It would have required industrial capacity Germany did not and could not employ. The only way they could have done it was to have secured a 1 year truce and use the breathing room to rearm and redeploy. (that story is a direct analog for this war; no truce to allow Russia to rearm, resupply, reform practices.....make them struggle to keep up with what they have.....while we keep upping the ante with new systems for Ukraine....the longer it goes, the worse that equation pressures Russia).

So Russia is facing an even worse and more daunting proposition than it did when Reagan ramped up military spending. Our economy has enjoyed continued growth, built upon a broadening foundation of population growth. Russia, on the other hand, has less than half the population it did during the Cold War, and considerably lower manufacturing and resource levels to draw upon PLUS a population already old and in decline. The demo of young men of "military age" in Russia is approaching half the number it was 40 years ago. Russia cannot afford to let this war drag on indefinitely. It needs to force a quick end. And it cannot. It is not built to do that, and it can neither ramp up nor modernize the way it needs to do that.

For Nato? It's merely a question of how much we're willing to spend to make Russia squirm. We have the resources to bury them, if we want to. Sure, everyone is shocked at the rate at which munitions are being expanded. Current production capacity is inadequate to keep up with it. Which means we'd have to mobilize over to war-time footing. That still would probably not allow us to fire all the rounds we could aim at everything we'd need to shoot at, but it'd be 100x what Russia could manage, so it would be enough.

Most war critics focus too much on Russia's POTENTIAL and not enough on their ability. Yes, they have enormous advantages in manpower and resources. But their ability to deliver what they have at their disposal is pitifully inadequate, as we see on display in Ukraine. A nation they should have been able to roll over in a few days is likely going to win the war on favorable terms. But they can't, because they are still trying to fight with a logistics system that is in some respects essentially 19th century technology.

No one has questioned the economic and production power of the USA-EU

Combined population is 778 million and nominal GDP of the USA is 23 trillion and the EU is 17 trillion.

The issue is that Ukraine is running out of men and does not have the manpower to push Russia out of Donbas...much less Crimea.
They don't have to push Russia out of Crimea. They take Melitopol down to Sea of Azov and blow the Kerch Bridge and Russia can't supply it's military in Crimea. Ukraine shuts the water supply off up river and starves the army out. Russian military in Crimea is forced to surrender.
Mr. Treehorn treats objects like women, man.
whiterock
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Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:




Ukraine will NOT win this war without foreign troops getting involved.

And as the months (years?) go by this will become obvious to everyone.

you are making some assumptions that Russia might not be able to meet. Have you checked the value trends on the ruble recently?
https://www.msn.com/en-xl/news/others/russias-ailing-ruble-takes-another-hit-what-happens-now/ar-AA1a8S7U
at five year lows:
https://tradingeconomics.com/russia/currency

Everything you say would be correct if Ukraine was on its own, having to feed, clothe, arm its own troops. Were that the case, the war would already be over. But that is not the case.

Nato has correctly identified that it does have an interest in the outcome of the war. A number of necessaries flow from that. The Ukrainian state must survive. The war must finish with Russia totally exhausted, decades away from full rearmament. If Ukraine is to remain economically viable, it must own sovereignty over Crimea (fate of Russian naval base at Sebastapol negotiable) in order to A) ensure flow of goods to/from it's major industrial ports in the Sea of Azov, and B) ensure revenues from oil/gas reserves across much of the northern Black Sea up thru the Sea of Azov and into the Donbas. Ergo, Nato has opened up cash and materiel flows that Russia cannot match over time.

A truce right now just gives Russia a breather, a chance to raise more troops and send more ammo to the front line. Ukraine must keep the battle going on, forcing Russia to strain ever harder to resupply, to the point its sclerotic supply lines crack. As long as Nato continues to supply Ukraine, Ukraine can outlast Russia, despite Russia having, on paper at least, far greater resources to wage war than Ukraine.

This is a proxy war. The Nato economy dwarfs the Russian economy by a ratio that far exceeds the advantage Russia has over Ukraine. All Ukraine has to supply is sweat equity, while the vastly superior economies of Nato outspend the heavily sanctioned Russian economy. And Ukraine has the population to do that, particularly given that they are inflicting casualties on Russia at a 7-1 rate.

As long as Russia wants to feed its sons into the maw, we should keep it grinding away. They've grabbed the tarbaby of all tarbabies.



Just the flippant way people in our government and on this site casually acknowledge that we are now in a bloody proxy war with a nuclear armed state.....without any vote by the American people...its just stunning.

A nation that has not attacked us by the way.

But this maw as you say is chewing up Ukrainian sons as much as it is chewing up Russian ones. Yet Ukraine can not keep that kind of causality rate up forever.

And even if funding these proxy wars was not at its base level highly immoral...its also unlikely to get us what we want. Heck what do we even want? Regime change in Moscow? The end of the 1,000 year old Russian State itself? No one can seem to agree with what is a final outcome should be.

Just like Afghanistan and Iraq were are tripping and stumbling into another long bloody conflict that is massively expensive and with no clear cut exit strategy or clear point of "victory".




Proxy wars are preferable to direct conflict, are they not? They are exactly how great powers engage one another militarily when they cannot come to a peaceful agreement, because they are by wide margin preferable to direct conflict.

"A nation which has not attacked us, by the way" is an old fallacy which presumes war is defined by military conflict. Remember the Cold War? Nations jockey and bluster and negotiate and ally and even poke & prod with third parties all the time. It's how the game is played......to avoid all out conflict.

Ukraine can keep up a 7-1 favorable casualty rate longer than Russia can. Ukrainians are united as one for a war to the death. Same cannot be said for Putin, who is trying to hide the true cost of the war from the Russian people to avoid unrest in the streets.

What we want has been quite clearly stated: Russian withdrawal from sovereign Ukrainian territory. You just don't take it seriously. Regime change has been mentioned as one way to achieve that outcome, and we were wise to do so. It puts pressure on Putin, who has resisted it and pressed on, tying his fate to the outcome of the war. That's fine. He needs to go. We don't want to ever have a Russian head of state who ever again thinks Nato will stand idly by when Russian armies cross European borders.

The analogs you mentioned are not applicable. Holding onto them so tightly badly affects your perception of what is happening. We have not, and will not commit troops to Ukraine. We've been quite consistent on that. Nato has been consistent on that. More to the point, it will not be necessary. Russia is not going to win the war. Ukraine can outlast them (thanks to Nato support).

The way the media has completely thrown out "beating Russia is easy" is a sign that what you're hearing about the difficulty of dealing with Russia isn't true.

Have you thought about how much your viewpoint aligns with the uniparty veiwpoint?
I haven't noticed a narrative that "beating Russia is easy" from MSM at all. The cheerleading has been obvious,though, and when it reaches the level of virtue posturing can be quite humorous. That in no way changes realities on the ground in Ukraine.

My viewpoint is my own: a masters degree in directly related subject material plus 10 years in the intel/diplomatic world with direct experience on things Russian, followed by relentless self-study on history, geopolitics, etc.... There is a reason Nato and the USA chose to support Ukraine - it is overwhelmingly in their interest to do so. And the fact there is such unity within Nato on the question is telling. Biden didn't hornswoggle them, for sure. The case for not aggressively supporting Ukraine, other than impacts on budget and readiness, is completely a priori reasoning, and laced with one foolish strawman after the other on escalation. Initially opponents ran around with their skirts up about the inevitability of nuclear war. Now, its mostly about the inevitability of direct involvement of US troops. Worst of all, opponents typically misread the situation on the ground because of a general lack of familiarity with the subject material.

One really has to work hard to remain in the shadow of obtusity not to see the wisdom of US support for Ukraine this particular proxy war. Proxy wars have happened for millennia in the past, and will happen for millennia in the future. We do not have a stake in most of them. But this one we do, for reasons that are rather obvious unless one is hidebound determined to ignore them.
Can we at least agree that the pricing that the military industrial complex is charging for weapons which is purchased by US tax dollars is way too damn high and we should work on that? They're charging tenfold, if not a hundredfold their cost of production and our government is more than willing to go along with it because they get a piece of it back for their campaigns and under the table deals. It's shifting middle class taxes to giant corporations that are hardly trickling it back into the economy.

A recent POGO analysis, for instance, documented the malfeasance of TransDigm, a military parts supplier that the Department of Defense's inspector general caught overcharging the Pentagon by as much as 3,800 percent!

https://jacobin.com/2022/02/us-pentagon-budget-military-spending-f-35-nuclear-weapons

Its not so much that I'm against the reason for this war. It's the means by which it is being carried out which I consider extremely corrupt.

Our ruling class isn't taking care of our people. They aren't taking care of our borders, our schools are god awful, our infrastructure is ghetto...but we can drop trillions on war?

I'm at the point where I'm like "no you can't have your war until you fix sh it at home".
I had dinner with the CEO of a manufacturer a few weeks ago and, in a brainstorming discussion about possibilities, asked him about the cost of a potential new product as a substitute (an innovative one, at that) for an existing one. He said...."well, that depends on how much we can produce. If we can open up the plant and run it 24/7, it will be priced where you need it to be. If not....well, it will not."

That's not rocket science, just an current example.

Arms manufacturers work silo'd with R&D and production, and really only have a single customer (since that customer has to approve exports elsewhere on anything really sexy.). Purchase orders are intermittent, and limited. The initial price of the first unit is always the one quoted by critics, never the costs of the last few on a multi-year run. And on and on. And it's almost always the $900 toilet seat that gets held up as a typical example, when it is anything but. Make 900k of those particular toilet seats designed for the single head in the captain's quarters and they cost about 2-3x what the sexiest model at Home Depot costs. And, yes, the manufacturers do gouge a bit on some items, as pricing is constrained on others, and or overall plant capacity is limited to small percentages of capacity Overall, Lockheed/Martin is not making 3800% on a delivered F-35. Newport News is not going to make 3800% on the USS Doris Miller. And most assuredly, the tax returns for those companies do not show a net taxable profit of 3800%.

Please. We are educated and informed adults here on this board........

Since you're educated and can explain, how is it that with Russia's $66b defense budget and NATO's $1t defense budget, the West is running out of weapons and equipment to transfer to Ukraine?
Firstly it's the definition of "running out." Nato is running out of inventory to transfer, not running out of production capacity. Beyond inventory levels there is the question of mobiliziation of existing capacity. Production in Europe largely has not been ramped up to meet Ukrainian needs, while in USA it has been substantially increased. I understand conventional artillery round production in the US, for example, has ramped up to current max capacity. And that is all within context of peace-time capabilities. We have not mobilized our industries for war-time production.

Russia has. And is under severe sanctions that effectively cut off its ability to produce it's most technologically advanced systems. So it's pretty much limited to the supply chain it has right now, and fighting with Vietnam War era technology. It is almost impossible to innovate while fighting a war. The Axis started WWII with superior aircraft, and Germany even developed the jet fighter before war-end. But the supply chain demands of training pilots and building existing airframes to stave off an invader......made impossible to deploy that superior technology in battle at scale. It would have required industrial capacity Germany did not and could not employ. The only way they could have done it was to have secured a 1 year truce and use the breathing room to rearm and redeploy. (that story is a direct analog for this war; no truce to allow Russia to rearm, resupply, reform practices.....make them struggle to keep up with what they have.....while we keep upping the ante with new systems for Ukraine....the longer it goes, the worse that equation pressures Russia).

So Russia is facing an even worse and more daunting proposition than it did when Reagan ramped up military spending. Our economy has enjoyed continued growth, built upon a broadening foundation of population growth. Russia, on the other hand, has less than half the population it did during the Cold War, and considerably lower manufacturing and resource levels to draw upon PLUS a population already old and in decline. The demo of young men of "military age" in Russia is approaching half the number it was 40 years ago. Russia cannot afford to let this war drag on indefinitely. It needs to force a quick end. And it cannot. It is not built to do that, and it can neither ramp up nor modernize the way it needs to do that.

For Nato? It's merely a question of how much we're willing to spend to make Russia squirm. We have the resources to bury them, if we want to. Sure, everyone is shocked at the rate at which munitions are being expanded. Current production capacity is inadequate to keep up with it. Which means we'd have to mobilize over to war-time footing. That still would probably not allow us to fire all the rounds we could aim at everything we'd need to shoot at, but it'd be 100x what Russia could manage, so it would be enough.

Most war critics focus too much on Russia's POTENTIAL and not enough on their ability. Yes, they have enormous advantages in manpower and resources. But their ability to deliver what they have at their disposal is pitifully inadequate, as we see on display in Ukraine. A nation they should have been able to roll over in a few days is likely going to win the war on favorable terms. But they can't, because they are still trying to fight with a logistics system that is in some respects essentially 19th century technology.

No one has questioned the economic and production power of the USA-EU

Combined population is 778 million and nominal GDP of the USA is 23 trillion and the EU is 17 trillion.

The issue is that Ukraine is running out of men and does not have the manpower to push Russia out of Donbas...much less Crimea.
Not running out of men. Not even close. Have approx 400k reaching 18yoa each year. (Same basic number from two separate sources.)
https://www.statista.com/statistics/1006655/ukraine-population-by-age-group/
https://www.globalfirepower.com/manpower-reaching-military-age-annually.php

Have available manpower of 22m. Fit for service of 15m. Have an immediate prime mobilization pool of circa 4m or so.
https://www.globalfirepower.com/country-military-strength-detail.php?country_id=ukraine

The manpower dynamics you mention presumes that Ukraine attempts to match Russian tactics. I doubt we will see that unfold. Even then, Ukraine can sustain current levels of casualties for a decade or so, although such would come at great cost to future population growth.


Russia war critics often pose arguments based on assumed facts that are incredibly at odds with reality. The Global Firepower site ranks Ukraine as #15 on it's power rating. No, not quite Russia, but not exactly chopped liver, either. And given Ukraine's demonstrated superiority in strategy, tactics, supply, leadership, motivation, etc.....Ukraine is more than a match for Russia.
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:


I had dinner with the CEO of a manufacturer a few weeks ago and, in a brainstorming discussion about possibilities, asked him about the cost of a potential new product as a substitute (an innovative one, at that) for an existing one. He said...."well, that depends on how much we can produce. If we can open up the plant and run it 24/7, it will be priced where you need it to be. If not....well, it will not."

That's not rocket science, just an current example.

Arms manufacturers work silo'd with R&D and production, and really only have a single customer (since that customer has to approve exports elsewhere on anything really sexy.). Purchase orders are intermittent, and limited. The initial price of the first unit is always the one quoted by critics, never the costs of the last few on a multi-year run. And on and on. And it's almost always the $900 toilet seat that gets held up as a typical example, when it is anything but. Make 900k of those particular toilet seats designed for the single head in the captain's quarters and they cost about 2-3x what the sexiest model at Home Depot costs. And, yes, the manufacturers do gouge a bit on some items, as pricing is constrained on others, and or overall plant capacity is limited to small percentages of capacity Overall, Lockheed/Martin is not making 3800% on a delivered F-35. Newport News is not going to make 3800% on the USS Doris Miller. And most assuredly, the tax returns for those companies do not show a net taxable profit of 3800%.

Please. We are educated and informed adults here on this board........

Since you're educated and can explain, how is it that with Russia's $66b defense budget and NATO's $1t defense budget, the West is running out of weapons and equipment to transfer to Ukraine?
Firstly it's the definition of "running out." Nato is running out of inventory to transfer, not running out of production capacity. Beyond inventory levels there is the question of mobiliziation of existing capacity. Production in Europe largely has not been ramped up to meet Ukrainian needs, while in USA it has been substantially increased. I understand conventional artillery round production in the US, for example, has ramped up to current max capacity. And that is all within context of peace-time capabilities. We have not mobilized our industries for war-time production.

Russia has. And is under severe sanctions that effectively cut off its ability to produce it's most technologically advanced systems. So it's pretty much limited to the supply chain it has right now, and fighting with Vietnam War era technology. It is almost impossible to innovate while fighting a war. The Axis started WWII with superior aircraft, and Germany even developed the jet fighter before war-end. But the supply chain demands of training pilots and building existing airframes to stave off an invader......made impossible to deploy that superior technology in battle at scale. It would have required industrial capacity Germany did not and could not employ. The only way they could have done it was to have secured a 1 year truce and use the breathing room to rearm and redeploy. (that story is a direct analog for this war; no truce to allow Russia to rearm, resupply, reform practices.....make them struggle to keep up with what they have.....while we keep upping the ante with new systems for Ukraine....the longer it goes, the worse that equation pressures Russia).

So Russia is facing an even worse and more daunting proposition than it did when Reagan ramped up military spending. Our economy has enjoyed continued growth, built upon a broadening foundation of population growth. Russia, on the other hand, has less than half the population it did during the Cold War, and considerably lower manufacturing and resource levels to draw upon PLUS a population already old and in decline. The demo of young men of "military age" in Russia is approaching half the number it was 40 years ago. Russia cannot afford to let this war drag on indefinitely. It needs to force a quick end. And it cannot. It is not built to do that, and it can neither ramp up nor modernize the way it needs to do that.

For Nato? It's merely a question of how much we're willing to spend to make Russia squirm. We have the resources to bury them, if we want to. Sure, everyone is shocked at the rate at which munitions are being expanded. Current production capacity is inadequate to keep up with it. Which means we'd have to mobilize over to war-time footing. That still would probably not allow us to fire all the rounds we could aim at everything we'd need to shoot at, but it'd be 100x what Russia could manage, so it would be enough.

Most war critics focus too much on Russia's POTENTIAL and not enough on their ability. Yes, they have enormous advantages in manpower and resources. But their ability to deliver what they have at their disposal is pitifully inadequate, as we see on display in Ukraine. A nation they should have been able to roll over in a few days is likely going to win the war on favorable terms. But they can't, because they are still trying to fight with a logistics system that is in some respects essentially 19th century technology.

No one has questioned the economic and production power of the USA-EU

Combined population is 778 million and nominal GDP of the USA is 23 trillion and the EU is 17 trillion.

The issue is that Ukraine is running out of men and does not have the manpower to push Russia out of Donbas...much less Crimea.
They don't have to push Russia out of Crimea. They take Melitopol down to Sea of Azov and blow the Kerch Bridge and Russia can't supply it's military in Crimea. Ukraine shuts the water supply off up river and starves the army out. Russian military in Crimea is forced to surrender.
Exactly.

The Kerch Bridge will be a signal for Ukrainian intent. Two scenarios to watch for:
A) they blow the entire bridge, both highway and rail lines. That traps the Russian Army in Crimea, forcing resupply by air/sea. Ukraine can make both an airbridge and a seabridge very costly. Conditions for Russian Army will be very difficult. The larger that army is, the worse those conditions will be.
B) they blow the rail bridge but leave at least one lane of the highway open. That effectively denies Russia the ability to resupply their entire army (bowling ball thru the garden hose dynamic) but leaves the door open for the army to retreat.

Will Ukraine try to starve the Russian Army into surrender, or will it allow the Russian Army to escape?

June could be very interesting.
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:




Ukraine will NOT win this war without foreign troops getting involved.

And as the months (years?) go by this will become obvious to everyone.

you are making some assumptions that Russia might not be able to meet. Have you checked the value trends on the ruble recently?
https://www.msn.com/en-xl/news/others/russias-ailing-ruble-takes-another-hit-what-happens-now/ar-AA1a8S7U
at five year lows:
https://tradingeconomics.com/russia/currency

Everything you say would be correct if Ukraine was on its own, having to feed, clothe, arm its own troops. Were that the case, the war would already be over. But that is not the case.

Nato has correctly identified that it does have an interest in the outcome of the war. A number of necessaries flow from that. The Ukrainian state must survive. The war must finish with Russia totally exhausted, decades away from full rearmament. If Ukraine is to remain economically viable, it must own sovereignty over Crimea (fate of Russian naval base at Sebastapol negotiable) in order to A) ensure flow of goods to/from it's major industrial ports in the Sea of Azov, and B) ensure revenues from oil/gas reserves across much of the northern Black Sea up thru the Sea of Azov and into the Donbas. Ergo, Nato has opened up cash and materiel flows that Russia cannot match over time.

A truce right now just gives Russia a breather, a chance to raise more troops and send more ammo to the front line. Ukraine must keep the battle going on, forcing Russia to strain ever harder to resupply, to the point its sclerotic supply lines crack. As long as Nato continues to supply Ukraine, Ukraine can outlast Russia, despite Russia having, on paper at least, far greater resources to wage war than Ukraine.

This is a proxy war. The Nato economy dwarfs the Russian economy by a ratio that far exceeds the advantage Russia has over Ukraine. All Ukraine has to supply is sweat equity, while the vastly superior economies of Nato outspend the heavily sanctioned Russian economy. And Ukraine has the population to do that, particularly given that they are inflicting casualties on Russia at a 7-1 rate.

As long as Russia wants to feed its sons into the maw, we should keep it grinding away. They've grabbed the tarbaby of all tarbabies.



Just the flippant way people in our government and on this site casually acknowledge that we are now in a bloody proxy war with a nuclear armed state.....without any vote by the American people...its just stunning.

A nation that has not attacked us by the way.

But this maw as you say is chewing up Ukrainian sons as much as it is chewing up Russian ones. Yet Ukraine can not keep that kind of causality rate up forever.

And even if funding these proxy wars was not at its base level highly immoral...its also unlikely to get us what we want. Heck what do we even want? Regime change in Moscow? The end of the 1,000 year old Russian State itself? No one can seem to agree with what is a final outcome should be.

Just like Afghanistan and Iraq were are tripping and stumbling into another long bloody conflict that is massively expensive and with no clear cut exit strategy or clear point of "victory".




Proxy wars are preferable to direct conflict, are they not? They are exactly how great powers engage one another militarily when they cannot come to a peaceful agreement, because they are by wide margin preferable to direct conflict.

"A nation which has not attacked us, by the way" is an old fallacy which presumes war is defined by military conflict. Remember the Cold War? Nations jockey and bluster and negotiate and ally and even poke & prod with third parties all the time. It's how the game is played......to avoid all out conflict.

Ukraine can keep up a 7-1 favorable casualty rate longer than Russia can. Ukrainians are united as one for a war to the death. Same cannot be said for Putin, who is trying to hide the true cost of the war from the Russian people to avoid unrest in the streets.

What we want has been quite clearly stated: Russian withdrawal from sovereign Ukrainian territory. You just don't take it seriously. Regime change has been mentioned as one way to achieve that outcome, and we were wise to do so. It puts pressure on Putin, who has resisted it and pressed on, tying his fate to the outcome of the war. That's fine. He needs to go. We don't want to ever have a Russian head of state who ever again thinks Nato will stand idly by when Russian armies cross European borders.

The analogs you mentioned are not applicable. Holding onto them so tightly badly affects your perception of what is happening. We have not, and will not commit troops to Ukraine. We've been quite consistent on that. Nato has been consistent on that. More to the point, it will not be necessary. Russia is not going to win the war. Ukraine can outlast them (thanks to Nato support).

The way the media has completely thrown out "beating Russia is easy" is a sign that what you're hearing about the difficulty of dealing with Russia isn't true.

Have you thought about how much your viewpoint aligns with the uniparty veiwpoint?
I haven't noticed a narrative that "beating Russia is easy" from MSM at all. The cheerleading has been obvious,though, and when it reaches the level of virtue posturing can be quite humorous. That in no way changes realities on the ground in Ukraine.

My viewpoint is my own: a masters degree in directly related subject material plus 10 years in the intel/diplomatic world with direct experience on things Russian, followed by relentless self-study on history, geopolitics, etc.... There is a reason Nato and the USA chose to support Ukraine - it is overwhelmingly in their interest to do so. And the fact there is such unity within Nato on the question is telling. Biden didn't hornswoggle them, for sure. The case for not aggressively supporting Ukraine, other than impacts on budget and readiness, is completely a priori reasoning, and laced with one foolish strawman after the other on escalation. Initially opponents ran around with their skirts up about the inevitability of nuclear war. Now, its mostly about the inevitability of direct involvement of US troops. Worst of all, opponents typically misread the situation on the ground because of a general lack of familiarity with the subject material.

One really has to work hard to remain in the shadow of obtusity not to see the wisdom of US support for Ukraine this particular proxy war. Proxy wars have happened for millennia in the past, and will happen for millennia in the future. We do not have a stake in most of them. But this one we do, for reasons that are rather obvious unless one is hidebound determined to ignore them.
Can we at least agree that the pricing that the military industrial complex is charging for weapons which is purchased by US tax dollars is way too damn high and we should work on that? They're charging tenfold, if not a hundredfold their cost of production and our government is more than willing to go along with it because they get a piece of it back for their campaigns and under the table deals. It's shifting middle class taxes to giant corporations that are hardly trickling it back into the economy.

A recent POGO analysis, for instance, documented the malfeasance of TransDigm, a military parts supplier that the Department of Defense's inspector general caught overcharging the Pentagon by as much as 3,800 percent!

https://jacobin.com/2022/02/us-pentagon-budget-military-spending-f-35-nuclear-weapons

Its not so much that I'm against the reason for this war. It's the means by which it is being carried out which I consider extremely corrupt.

Our ruling class isn't taking care of our people. They aren't taking care of our borders, our schools are god awful, our infrastructure is ghetto...but we can drop trillions on war?

I'm at the point where I'm like "no you can't have your war until you fix sh it at home".
I had dinner with the CEO of a manufacturer a few weeks ago and, in a brainstorming discussion about possibilities, asked him about the cost of a potential new product as a substitute (an innovative one, at that) for an existing one. He said...."well, that depends on how much we can produce. If we can open up the plant and run it 24/7, it will be priced where you need it to be. If not....well, it will not."

That's not rocket science, just an current example.

Arms manufacturers work silo'd with R&D and production, and really only have a single customer (since that customer has to approve exports elsewhere on anything really sexy.). Purchase orders are intermittent, and limited. The initial price of the first unit is always the one quoted by critics, never the costs of the last few on a multi-year run. And on and on. And it's almost always the $900 toilet seat that gets held up as a typical example, when it is anything but. Make 900k of those particular toilet seats designed for the single head in the captain's quarters and they cost about 2-3x what the sexiest model at Home Depot costs. And, yes, the manufacturers do gouge a bit on some items, as pricing is constrained on others, and or overall plant capacity is limited to small percentages of capacity Overall, Lockheed/Martin is not making 3800% on a delivered F-35. Newport News is not going to make 3800% on the USS Doris Miller. And most assuredly, the tax returns for those companies do not show a net taxable profit of 3800%.

Please. We are educated and informed adults here on this board........

Since you're educated and can explain, how is it that with Russia's $66b defense budget and NATO's $1t defense budget, the West is running out of weapons and equipment to transfer to Ukraine?
Firstly it's the definition of "running out." Nato is running out of inventory to transfer, not running out of production capacity. Beyond inventory levels there is the question of mobiliziation of existing capacity. Production in Europe largely has not been ramped up to meet Ukrainian needs, while in USA it has been substantially increased. I understand conventional artillery round production in the US, for example, has ramped up to current max capacity. And that is all within context of peace-time capabilities. We have not mobilized our industries for war-time production.

Russia has. And is under severe sanctions that effectively cut off its ability to produce it's most technologically advanced systems. So it's pretty much limited to the supply chain it has right now, and fighting with Vietnam War era technology. It is almost impossible to innovate while fighting a war. The Axis started WWII with superior aircraft, and Germany even developed the jet fighter before war-end. But the supply chain demands of training pilots and building existing airframes to stave off an invader......made impossible to deploy that superior technology in battle at scale. It would have required industrial capacity Germany did not and could not employ. The only way they could have done it was to have secured a 1 year truce and use the breathing room to rearm and redeploy. (that story is a direct analog for this war; no truce to allow Russia to rearm, resupply, reform practices.....make them struggle to keep up with what they have.....while we keep upping the ante with new systems for Ukraine....the longer it goes, the worse that equation pressures Russia).

So Russia is facing an even worse and more daunting proposition than it did when Reagan ramped up military spending. Our economy has enjoyed continued growth, built upon a broadening foundation of population growth. Russia, on the other hand, has less than half the population it did during the Cold War, and considerably lower manufacturing and resource levels to draw upon PLUS a population already old and in decline. The demo of young men of "military age" in Russia is approaching half the number it was 40 years ago. Russia cannot afford to let this war drag on indefinitely. It needs to force a quick end. And it cannot. It is not built to do that, and it can neither ramp up nor modernize the way it needs to do that.

For Nato? It's merely a question of how much we're willing to spend to make Russia squirm. We have the resources to bury them, if we want to. Sure, everyone is shocked at the rate at which munitions are being expanded. Current production capacity is inadequate to keep up with it. Which means we'd have to mobilize over to war-time footing. That still would probably not allow us to fire all the rounds we could aim at everything we'd need to shoot at, but it'd be 100x what Russia could manage, so it would be enough.

Most war critics focus too much on Russia's POTENTIAL and not enough on their ability. Yes, they have enormous advantages in manpower and resources. But their ability to deliver what they have at their disposal is pitifully inadequate, as we see on display in Ukraine. A nation they should have been able to roll over in a few days is likely going to win the war on favorable terms. But they can't, because they are still trying to fight with a logistics system that is in some respects essentially 19th century technology.

No one has questioned the economic and production power of the USA-EU

Combined population is 778 million and nominal GDP of the USA is 23 trillion and the EU is 17 trillion.

The issue is that Ukraine is running out of men and does not have the manpower to push Russia out of Donbas...much less Crimea.
Not running out of men. Not even close. Have approx 400k reaching 18yoa each year. (Same basic number from two separate sources.)
https://www.statista.com/statistics/1006655/ukraine-population-by-age-group/
https://www.globalfirepower.com/manpower-reaching-military-age-annually.php

Have available manpower of 22m. Fit for service of 15m. Have an immediate prime mobilization pool of circa 4m or so.
https://www.globalfirepower.com/country-military-strength-detail.php?country_id=ukraine

The manpower dynamics you mention presumes that Ukraine attempts to match Russian tactics. I doubt we will see that unfold. Even then, Ukraine can sustain current levels of casualties for a decade or so, although such would come at great cost to future population growth.


Russia war critics often pose arguments based on assumed facts that are incredibly at odds with reality. The Global Firepower site ranks Ukraine as #15 on it's power rating. No, not quite Russia, but not exactly chopped liver, either. And given Ukraine's demonstrated superiority in strategy, tactics, supply, leadership, motivation, etc.....Ukraine is more than a match for Russia.
They have to run their economy with those young men...as workers...they can't throw them all into the war.

The Southern States had this same problem in the war of 1861...with 9.1 million people and a high birthrate they had at least 240,000 young men hitting age 18 every year. But that was not enough to staff the armies effectively and run an economy.

Even if Ukraine is in a better position (since the US-EU will fund their economy and produce their weapons for them) the country is still in a tight spot and going through a massive demographic constriction.

Fertility rate is far below replacement at 1.16 and millions have fled outside the country.

In 2021 for instance it is believed that Ukraine had 271,983 live births and 714,263 deaths...for a natural change of -442,280 in population.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographics_of_Ukraine

This is very very bad

Not to mention that the kids coming of age today were born almost 20 years ago when Ukraine was having live births every year of around 500,000 kids.....today that number has collapsed to half that number....where will the soldiers come from in the future to fight this war?
KaiBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:




Ukraine will NOT win this war without foreign troops getting involved.

And as the months (years?) go by this will become obvious to everyone.

you are making some assumptions that Russia might not be able to meet. Have you checked the value trends on the ruble recently?
https://www.msn.com/en-xl/news/others/russias-ailing-ruble-takes-another-hit-what-happens-now/ar-AA1a8S7U
at five year lows:
https://tradingeconomics.com/russia/currency

Everything you say would be correct if Ukraine was on its own, having to feed, clothe, arm its own troops. Were that the case, the war would already be over. But that is not the case.

Nato has correctly identified that it does have an interest in the outcome of the war. A number of necessaries flow from that. The Ukrainian state must survive. The war must finish with Russia totally exhausted, decades away from full rearmament. If Ukraine is to remain economically viable, it must own sovereignty over Crimea (fate of Russian naval base at Sebastapol negotiable) in order to A) ensure flow of goods to/from it's major industrial ports in the Sea of Azov, and B) ensure revenues from oil/gas reserves across much of the northern Black Sea up thru the Sea of Azov and into the Donbas. Ergo, Nato has opened up cash and materiel flows that Russia cannot match over time.

A truce right now just gives Russia a breather, a chance to raise more troops and send more ammo to the front line. Ukraine must keep the battle going on, forcing Russia to strain ever harder to resupply, to the point its sclerotic supply lines crack. As long as Nato continues to supply Ukraine, Ukraine can outlast Russia, despite Russia having, on paper at least, far greater resources to wage war than Ukraine.

This is a proxy war. The Nato economy dwarfs the Russian economy by a ratio that far exceeds the advantage Russia has over Ukraine. All Ukraine has to supply is sweat equity, while the vastly superior economies of Nato outspend the heavily sanctioned Russian economy. And Ukraine has the population to do that, particularly given that they are inflicting casualties on Russia at a 7-1 rate.

As long as Russia wants to feed its sons into the maw, we should keep it grinding away. They've grabbed the tarbaby of all tarbabies.



Just the flippant way people in our government and on this site casually acknowledge that we are now in a bloody proxy war with a nuclear armed state.....without any vote by the American people...its just stunning.

A nation that has not attacked us by the way.

But this maw as you say is chewing up Ukrainian sons as much as it is chewing up Russian ones. Yet Ukraine can not keep that kind of causality rate up forever.

And even if funding these proxy wars was not at its base level highly immoral...its also unlikely to get us what we want. Heck what do we even want? Regime change in Moscow? The end of the 1,000 year old Russian State itself? No one can seem to agree with what is a final outcome should be.

Just like Afghanistan and Iraq were are tripping and stumbling into another long bloody conflict that is massively expensive and with no clear cut exit strategy or clear point of "victory".




Proxy wars are preferable to direct conflict, are they not? They are exactly how great powers engage one another militarily when they cannot come to a peaceful agreement, because they are by wide margin preferable to direct conflict.

"A nation which has not attacked us, by the way" is an old fallacy which presumes war is defined by military conflict. Remember the Cold War? Nations jockey and bluster and negotiate and ally and even poke & prod with third parties all the time. It's how the game is played......to avoid all out conflict.

Ukraine can keep up a 7-1 favorable casualty rate longer than Russia can. Ukrainians are united as one for a war to the death. Same cannot be said for Putin, who is trying to hide the true cost of the war from the Russian people to avoid unrest in the streets.

What we want has been quite clearly stated: Russian withdrawal from sovereign Ukrainian territory. You just don't take it seriously. Regime change has been mentioned as one way to achieve that outcome, and we were wise to do so. It puts pressure on Putin, who has resisted it and pressed on, tying his fate to the outcome of the war. That's fine. He needs to go. We don't want to ever have a Russian head of state who ever again thinks Nato will stand idly by when Russian armies cross European borders.

The analogs you mentioned are not applicable. Holding onto them so tightly badly affects your perception of what is happening. We have not, and will not commit troops to Ukraine. We've been quite consistent on that. Nato has been consistent on that. More to the point, it will not be necessary. Russia is not going to win the war. Ukraine can outlast them (thanks to Nato support).

The way the media has completely thrown out "beating Russia is easy" is a sign that what you're hearing about the difficulty of dealing with Russia isn't true.

Have you thought about how much your viewpoint aligns with the uniparty veiwpoint?
I haven't noticed a narrative that "beating Russia is easy" from MSM at all. The cheerleading has been obvious,though, and when it reaches the level of virtue posturing can be quite humorous. That in no way changes realities on the ground in Ukraine.

My viewpoint is my own: a masters degree in directly related subject material plus 10 years in the intel/diplomatic world with direct experience on things Russian, followed by relentless self-study on history, geopolitics, etc.... There is a reason Nato and the USA chose to support Ukraine - it is overwhelmingly in their interest to do so. And the fact there is such unity within Nato on the question is telling. Biden didn't hornswoggle them, for sure. The case for not aggressively supporting Ukraine, other than impacts on budget and readiness, is completely a priori reasoning, and laced with one foolish strawman after the other on escalation. Initially opponents ran around with their skirts up about the inevitability of nuclear war. Now, its mostly about the inevitability of direct involvement of US troops. Worst of all, opponents typically misread the situation on the ground because of a general lack of familiarity with the subject material.

One really has to work hard to remain in the shadow of obtusity not to see the wisdom of US support for Ukraine this particular proxy war. Proxy wars have happened for millennia in the past, and will happen for millennia in the future. We do not have a stake in most of them. But this one we do, for reasons that are rather obvious unless one is hidebound determined to ignore them.
Can we at least agree that the pricing that the military industrial complex is charging for weapons which is purchased by US tax dollars is way too damn high and we should work on that? They're charging tenfold, if not a hundredfold their cost of production and our government is more than willing to go along with it because they get a piece of it back for their campaigns and under the table deals. It's shifting middle class taxes to giant corporations that are hardly trickling it back into the economy.

A recent POGO analysis, for instance, documented the malfeasance of TransDigm, a military parts supplier that the Department of Defense's inspector general caught overcharging the Pentagon by as much as 3,800 percent!

https://jacobin.com/2022/02/us-pentagon-budget-military-spending-f-35-nuclear-weapons

Its not so much that I'm against the reason for this war. It's the means by which it is being carried out which I consider extremely corrupt.

Our ruling class isn't taking care of our people. They aren't taking care of our borders, our schools are god awful, our infrastructure is ghetto...but we can drop trillions on war?

I'm at the point where I'm like "no you can't have your war until you fix sh it at home".
I had dinner with the CEO of a manufacturer a few weeks ago and, in a brainstorming discussion about possibilities, asked him about the cost of a potential new product as a substitute (an innovative one, at that) for an existing one. He said...."well, that depends on how much we can produce. If we can open up the plant and run it 24/7, it will be priced where you need it to be. If not....well, it will not."

That's not rocket science, just an current example.

Arms manufacturers work silo'd with R&D and production, and really only have a single customer (since that customer has to approve exports elsewhere on anything really sexy.). Purchase orders are intermittent, and limited. The initial price of the first unit is always the one quoted by critics, never the costs of the last few on a multi-year run. And on and on. And it's almost always the $900 toilet seat that gets held up as a typical example, when it is anything but. Make 900k of those particular toilet seats designed for the single head in the captain's quarters and they cost about 2-3x what the sexiest model at Home Depot costs. And, yes, the manufacturers do gouge a bit on some items, as pricing is constrained on others, and or overall plant capacity is limited to small percentages of capacity Overall, Lockheed/Martin is not making 3800% on a delivered F-35. Newport News is not going to make 3800% on the USS Doris Miller. And most assuredly, the tax returns for those companies do not show a net taxable profit of 3800%.

Please. We are educated and informed adults here on this board........

Since you're educated and can explain, how is it that with Russia's $66b defense budget and NATO's $1t defense budget, the West is running out of weapons and equipment to transfer to Ukraine?
Firstly it's the definition of "running out." Nato is running out of inventory to transfer, not running out of production capacity. Beyond inventory levels there is the question of mobiliziation of existing capacity. Production in Europe largely has not been ramped up to meet Ukrainian needs, while in USA it has been substantially increased. I understand conventional artillery round production in the US, for example, has ramped up to current max capacity. And that is all within context of peace-time capabilities. We have not mobilized our industries for war-time production.

Russia has. And is under severe sanctions that effectively cut off its ability to produce it's most technologically advanced systems. So it's pretty much limited to the supply chain it has right now, and fighting with Vietnam War era technology. It is almost impossible to innovate while fighting a war. The Axis started WWII with superior aircraft, and Germany even developed the jet fighter before war-end. But the supply chain demands of training pilots and building existing airframes to stave off an invader......made impossible to deploy that superior technology in battle at scale. It would have required industrial capacity Germany did not and could not employ. The only way they could have done it was to have secured a 1 year truce and use the breathing room to rearm and redeploy. (that story is a direct analog for this war; no truce to allow Russia to rearm, resupply, reform practices.....make them struggle to keep up with what they have.....while we keep upping the ante with new systems for Ukraine....the longer it goes, the worse that equation pressures Russia).

So Russia is facing an even worse and more daunting proposition than it did when Reagan ramped up military spending. Our economy has enjoyed continued growth, built upon a broadening foundation of population growth. Russia, on the other hand, has less than half the population it did during the Cold War, and considerably lower manufacturing and resource levels to draw upon PLUS a population already old and in decline. The demo of young men of "military age" in Russia is approaching half the number it was 40 years ago. Russia cannot afford to let this war drag on indefinitely. It needs to force a quick end. And it cannot. It is not built to do that, and it can neither ramp up nor modernize the way it needs to do that.

For Nato? It's merely a question of how much we're willing to spend to make Russia squirm. We have the resources to bury them, if we want to. Sure, everyone is shocked at the rate at which munitions are being expanded. Current production capacity is inadequate to keep up with it. Which means we'd have to mobilize over to war-time footing. That still would probably not allow us to fire all the rounds we could aim at everything we'd need to shoot at, but it'd be 100x what Russia could manage, so it would be enough.

Most war critics focus too much on Russia's POTENTIAL and not enough on their ability. Yes, they have enormous advantages in manpower and resources. But their ability to deliver what they have at their disposal is pitifully inadequate, as we see on display in Ukraine. A nation they should have been able to roll over in a few days is likely going to win the war on favorable terms. But they can't, because they are still trying to fight with a logistics system that is in some respects essentially 19th century technology.

No one has questioned the economic and production power of the USA-EU

Combined population is 778 million and nominal GDP of the USA is 23 trillion and the EU is 17 trillion.

The issue is that Ukraine is running out of men and does not have the manpower to push Russia out of Donbas...much less Crimea.
They don't have to push Russia out of Crimea. They take Melitopol down to Sea of Azov and blow the Kerch Bridge and Russia can't supply it's military in Crimea. Ukraine shuts the water supply off up river and starves the army out. Russian military in Crimea is forced to surrender.
Wonder what odds Las Vegas would give on such a fantasy ?

Bear8084
How long do you want to ignore this user?
KaiBear said:

trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:




Ukraine will NOT win this war without foreign troops getting involved.

And as the months (years?) go by this will become obvious to everyone.

you are making some assumptions that Russia might not be able to meet. Have you checked the value trends on the ruble recently?
https://www.msn.com/en-xl/news/others/russias-ailing-ruble-takes-another-hit-what-happens-now/ar-AA1a8S7U
at five year lows:
https://tradingeconomics.com/russia/currency

Everything you say would be correct if Ukraine was on its own, having to feed, clothe, arm its own troops. Were that the case, the war would already be over. But that is not the case.

Nato has correctly identified that it does have an interest in the outcome of the war. A number of necessaries flow from that. The Ukrainian state must survive. The war must finish with Russia totally exhausted, decades away from full rearmament. If Ukraine is to remain economically viable, it must own sovereignty over Crimea (fate of Russian naval base at Sebastapol negotiable) in order to A) ensure flow of goods to/from it's major industrial ports in the Sea of Azov, and B) ensure revenues from oil/gas reserves across much of the northern Black Sea up thru the Sea of Azov and into the Donbas. Ergo, Nato has opened up cash and materiel flows that Russia cannot match over time.

A truce right now just gives Russia a breather, a chance to raise more troops and send more ammo to the front line. Ukraine must keep the battle going on, forcing Russia to strain ever harder to resupply, to the point its sclerotic supply lines crack. As long as Nato continues to supply Ukraine, Ukraine can outlast Russia, despite Russia having, on paper at least, far greater resources to wage war than Ukraine.

This is a proxy war. The Nato economy dwarfs the Russian economy by a ratio that far exceeds the advantage Russia has over Ukraine. All Ukraine has to supply is sweat equity, while the vastly superior economies of Nato outspend the heavily sanctioned Russian economy. And Ukraine has the population to do that, particularly given that they are inflicting casualties on Russia at a 7-1 rate.

As long as Russia wants to feed its sons into the maw, we should keep it grinding away. They've grabbed the tarbaby of all tarbabies.



Just the flippant way people in our government and on this site casually acknowledge that we are now in a bloody proxy war with a nuclear armed state.....without any vote by the American people...its just stunning.

A nation that has not attacked us by the way.

But this maw as you say is chewing up Ukrainian sons as much as it is chewing up Russian ones. Yet Ukraine can not keep that kind of causality rate up forever.

And even if funding these proxy wars was not at its base level highly immoral...its also unlikely to get us what we want. Heck what do we even want? Regime change in Moscow? The end of the 1,000 year old Russian State itself? No one can seem to agree with what is a final outcome should be.

Just like Afghanistan and Iraq were are tripping and stumbling into another long bloody conflict that is massively expensive and with no clear cut exit strategy or clear point of "victory".




Proxy wars are preferable to direct conflict, are they not? They are exactly how great powers engage one another militarily when they cannot come to a peaceful agreement, because they are by wide margin preferable to direct conflict.

"A nation which has not attacked us, by the way" is an old fallacy which presumes war is defined by military conflict. Remember the Cold War? Nations jockey and bluster and negotiate and ally and even poke & prod with third parties all the time. It's how the game is played......to avoid all out conflict.

Ukraine can keep up a 7-1 favorable casualty rate longer than Russia can. Ukrainians are united as one for a war to the death. Same cannot be said for Putin, who is trying to hide the true cost of the war from the Russian people to avoid unrest in the streets.

What we want has been quite clearly stated: Russian withdrawal from sovereign Ukrainian territory. You just don't take it seriously. Regime change has been mentioned as one way to achieve that outcome, and we were wise to do so. It puts pressure on Putin, who has resisted it and pressed on, tying his fate to the outcome of the war. That's fine. He needs to go. We don't want to ever have a Russian head of state who ever again thinks Nato will stand idly by when Russian armies cross European borders.

The analogs you mentioned are not applicable. Holding onto them so tightly badly affects your perception of what is happening. We have not, and will not commit troops to Ukraine. We've been quite consistent on that. Nato has been consistent on that. More to the point, it will not be necessary. Russia is not going to win the war. Ukraine can outlast them (thanks to Nato support).

The way the media has completely thrown out "beating Russia is easy" is a sign that what you're hearing about the difficulty of dealing with Russia isn't true.

Have you thought about how much your viewpoint aligns with the uniparty veiwpoint?
I haven't noticed a narrative that "beating Russia is easy" from MSM at all. The cheerleading has been obvious,though, and when it reaches the level of virtue posturing can be quite humorous. That in no way changes realities on the ground in Ukraine.

My viewpoint is my own: a masters degree in directly related subject material plus 10 years in the intel/diplomatic world with direct experience on things Russian, followed by relentless self-study on history, geopolitics, etc.... There is a reason Nato and the USA chose to support Ukraine - it is overwhelmingly in their interest to do so. And the fact there is such unity within Nato on the question is telling. Biden didn't hornswoggle them, for sure. The case for not aggressively supporting Ukraine, other than impacts on budget and readiness, is completely a priori reasoning, and laced with one foolish strawman after the other on escalation. Initially opponents ran around with their skirts up about the inevitability of nuclear war. Now, its mostly about the inevitability of direct involvement of US troops. Worst of all, opponents typically misread the situation on the ground because of a general lack of familiarity with the subject material.

One really has to work hard to remain in the shadow of obtusity not to see the wisdom of US support for Ukraine this particular proxy war. Proxy wars have happened for millennia in the past, and will happen for millennia in the future. We do not have a stake in most of them. But this one we do, for reasons that are rather obvious unless one is hidebound determined to ignore them.
Can we at least agree that the pricing that the military industrial complex is charging for weapons which is purchased by US tax dollars is way too damn high and we should work on that? They're charging tenfold, if not a hundredfold their cost of production and our government is more than willing to go along with it because they get a piece of it back for their campaigns and under the table deals. It's shifting middle class taxes to giant corporations that are hardly trickling it back into the economy.

A recent POGO analysis, for instance, documented the malfeasance of TransDigm, a military parts supplier that the Department of Defense's inspector general caught overcharging the Pentagon by as much as 3,800 percent!

https://jacobin.com/2022/02/us-pentagon-budget-military-spending-f-35-nuclear-weapons

Its not so much that I'm against the reason for this war. It's the means by which it is being carried out which I consider extremely corrupt.

Our ruling class isn't taking care of our people. They aren't taking care of our borders, our schools are god awful, our infrastructure is ghetto...but we can drop trillions on war?

I'm at the point where I'm like "no you can't have your war until you fix sh it at home".
I had dinner with the CEO of a manufacturer a few weeks ago and, in a brainstorming discussion about possibilities, asked him about the cost of a potential new product as a substitute (an innovative one, at that) for an existing one. He said...."well, that depends on how much we can produce. If we can open up the plant and run it 24/7, it will be priced where you need it to be. If not....well, it will not."

That's not rocket science, just an current example.

Arms manufacturers work silo'd with R&D and production, and really only have a single customer (since that customer has to approve exports elsewhere on anything really sexy.). Purchase orders are intermittent, and limited. The initial price of the first unit is always the one quoted by critics, never the costs of the last few on a multi-year run. And on and on. And it's almost always the $900 toilet seat that gets held up as a typical example, when it is anything but. Make 900k of those particular toilet seats designed for the single head in the captain's quarters and they cost about 2-3x what the sexiest model at Home Depot costs. And, yes, the manufacturers do gouge a bit on some items, as pricing is constrained on others, and or overall plant capacity is limited to small percentages of capacity Overall, Lockheed/Martin is not making 3800% on a delivered F-35. Newport News is not going to make 3800% on the USS Doris Miller. And most assuredly, the tax returns for those companies do not show a net taxable profit of 3800%.

Please. We are educated and informed adults here on this board........

Since you're educated and can explain, how is it that with Russia's $66b defense budget and NATO's $1t defense budget, the West is running out of weapons and equipment to transfer to Ukraine?
Firstly it's the definition of "running out." Nato is running out of inventory to transfer, not running out of production capacity. Beyond inventory levels there is the question of mobiliziation of existing capacity. Production in Europe largely has not been ramped up to meet Ukrainian needs, while in USA it has been substantially increased. I understand conventional artillery round production in the US, for example, has ramped up to current max capacity. And that is all within context of peace-time capabilities. We have not mobilized our industries for war-time production.

Russia has. And is under severe sanctions that effectively cut off its ability to produce it's most technologically advanced systems. So it's pretty much limited to the supply chain it has right now, and fighting with Vietnam War era technology. It is almost impossible to innovate while fighting a war. The Axis started WWII with superior aircraft, and Germany even developed the jet fighter before war-end. But the supply chain demands of training pilots and building existing airframes to stave off an invader......made impossible to deploy that superior technology in battle at scale. It would have required industrial capacity Germany did not and could not employ. The only way they could have done it was to have secured a 1 year truce and use the breathing room to rearm and redeploy. (that story is a direct analog for this war; no truce to allow Russia to rearm, resupply, reform practices.....make them struggle to keep up with what they have.....while we keep upping the ante with new systems for Ukraine....the longer it goes, the worse that equation pressures Russia).

So Russia is facing an even worse and more daunting proposition than it did when Reagan ramped up military spending. Our economy has enjoyed continued growth, built upon a broadening foundation of population growth. Russia, on the other hand, has less than half the population it did during the Cold War, and considerably lower manufacturing and resource levels to draw upon PLUS a population already old and in decline. The demo of young men of "military age" in Russia is approaching half the number it was 40 years ago. Russia cannot afford to let this war drag on indefinitely. It needs to force a quick end. And it cannot. It is not built to do that, and it can neither ramp up nor modernize the way it needs to do that.

For Nato? It's merely a question of how much we're willing to spend to make Russia squirm. We have the resources to bury them, if we want to. Sure, everyone is shocked at the rate at which munitions are being expanded. Current production capacity is inadequate to keep up with it. Which means we'd have to mobilize over to war-time footing. That still would probably not allow us to fire all the rounds we could aim at everything we'd need to shoot at, but it'd be 100x what Russia could manage, so it would be enough.

Most war critics focus too much on Russia's POTENTIAL and not enough on their ability. Yes, they have enormous advantages in manpower and resources. But their ability to deliver what they have at their disposal is pitifully inadequate, as we see on display in Ukraine. A nation they should have been able to roll over in a few days is likely going to win the war on favorable terms. But they can't, because they are still trying to fight with a logistics system that is in some respects essentially 19th century technology.

No one has questioned the economic and production power of the USA-EU

Combined population is 778 million and nominal GDP of the USA is 23 trillion and the EU is 17 trillion.

The issue is that Ukraine is running out of men and does not have the manpower to push Russia out of Donbas...much less Crimea.
They don't have to push Russia out of Crimea. They take Melitopol down to Sea of Azov and blow the Kerch Bridge and Russia can't supply it's military in Crimea. Ukraine shuts the water supply off up river and starves the army out. Russian military in Crimea is forced to surrender.
Wonder what odds Las Vegas would give on such a fantasy ?




Probably decent since they almost pulled off taking out the bridge last year.
KaiBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Bear8084 said:

KaiBear said:

trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:




Ukraine will NOT win this war without foreign troops getting involved.

And as the months (years?) go by this will become obvious to everyone.

you are making some assumptions that Russia might not be able to meet. Have you checked the value trends on the ruble recently?
https://www.msn.com/en-xl/news/others/russias-ailing-ruble-takes-another-hit-what-happens-now/ar-AA1a8S7U
at five year lows:
https://tradingeconomics.com/russia/currency

Everything you say would be correct if Ukraine was on its own, having to feed, clothe, arm its own troops. Were that the case, the war would already be over. But that is not the case.

Nato has correctly identified that it does have an interest in the outcome of the war. A number of necessaries flow from that. The Ukrainian state must survive. The war must finish with Russia totally exhausted, decades away from full rearmament. If Ukraine is to remain economically viable, it must own sovereignty over Crimea (fate of Russian naval base at Sebastapol negotiable) in order to A) ensure flow of goods to/from it's major industrial ports in the Sea of Azov, and B) ensure revenues from oil/gas reserves across much of the northern Black Sea up thru the Sea of Azov and into the Donbas. Ergo, Nato has opened up cash and materiel flows that Russia cannot match over time.

A truce right now just gives Russia a breather, a chance to raise more troops and send more ammo to the front line. Ukraine must keep the battle going on, forcing Russia to strain ever harder to resupply, to the point its sclerotic supply lines crack. As long as Nato continues to supply Ukraine, Ukraine can outlast Russia, despite Russia having, on paper at least, far greater resources to wage war than Ukraine.

This is a proxy war. The Nato economy dwarfs the Russian economy by a ratio that far exceeds the advantage Russia has over Ukraine. All Ukraine has to supply is sweat equity, while the vastly superior economies of Nato outspend the heavily sanctioned Russian economy. And Ukraine has the population to do that, particularly given that they are inflicting casualties on Russia at a 7-1 rate.

As long as Russia wants to feed its sons into the maw, we should keep it grinding away. They've grabbed the tarbaby of all tarbabies.



Just the flippant way people in our government and on this site casually acknowledge that we are now in a bloody proxy war with a nuclear armed state.....without any vote by the American people...its just stunning.

A nation that has not attacked us by the way.

But this maw as you say is chewing up Ukrainian sons as much as it is chewing up Russian ones. Yet Ukraine can not keep that kind of causality rate up forever.

And even if funding these proxy wars was not at its base level highly immoral...its also unlikely to get us what we want. Heck what do we even want? Regime change in Moscow? The end of the 1,000 year old Russian State itself? No one can seem to agree with what is a final outcome should be.

Just like Afghanistan and Iraq were are tripping and stumbling into another long bloody conflict that is massively expensive and with no clear cut exit strategy or clear point of "victory".




Proxy wars are preferable to direct conflict, are they not? They are exactly how great powers engage one another militarily when they cannot come to a peaceful agreement, because they are by wide margin preferable to direct conflict.

"A nation which has not attacked us, by the way" is an old fallacy which presumes war is defined by military conflict. Remember the Cold War? Nations jockey and bluster and negotiate and ally and even poke & prod with third parties all the time. It's how the game is played......to avoid all out conflict.

Ukraine can keep up a 7-1 favorable casualty rate longer than Russia can. Ukrainians are united as one for a war to the death. Same cannot be said for Putin, who is trying to hide the true cost of the war from the Russian people to avoid unrest in the streets.

What we want has been quite clearly stated: Russian withdrawal from sovereign Ukrainian territory. You just don't take it seriously. Regime change has been mentioned as one way to achieve that outcome, and we were wise to do so. It puts pressure on Putin, who has resisted it and pressed on, tying his fate to the outcome of the war. That's fine. He needs to go. We don't want to ever have a Russian head of state who ever again thinks Nato will stand idly by when Russian armies cross European borders.

The analogs you mentioned are not applicable. Holding onto them so tightly badly affects your perception of what is happening. We have not, and will not commit troops to Ukraine. We've been quite consistent on that. Nato has been consistent on that. More to the point, it will not be necessary. Russia is not going to win the war. Ukraine can outlast them (thanks to Nato support).

The way the media has completely thrown out "beating Russia is easy" is a sign that what you're hearing about the difficulty of dealing with Russia isn't true.

Have you thought about how much your viewpoint aligns with the uniparty veiwpoint?
I haven't noticed a narrative that "beating Russia is easy" from MSM at all. The cheerleading has been obvious,though, and when it reaches the level of virtue posturing can be quite humorous. That in no way changes realities on the ground in Ukraine.

My viewpoint is my own: a masters degree in directly related subject material plus 10 years in the intel/diplomatic world with direct experience on things Russian, followed by relentless self-study on history, geopolitics, etc.... There is a reason Nato and the USA chose to support Ukraine - it is overwhelmingly in their interest to do so. And the fact there is such unity within Nato on the question is telling. Biden didn't hornswoggle them, for sure. The case for not aggressively supporting Ukraine, other than impacts on budget and readiness, is completely a priori reasoning, and laced with one foolish strawman after the other on escalation. Initially opponents ran around with their skirts up about the inevitability of nuclear war. Now, its mostly about the inevitability of direct involvement of US troops. Worst of all, opponents typically misread the situation on the ground because of a general lack of familiarity with the subject material.

One really has to work hard to remain in the shadow of obtusity not to see the wisdom of US support for Ukraine this particular proxy war. Proxy wars have happened for millennia in the past, and will happen for millennia in the future. We do not have a stake in most of them. But this one we do, for reasons that are rather obvious unless one is hidebound determined to ignore them.
Can we at least agree that the pricing that the military industrial complex is charging for weapons which is purchased by US tax dollars is way too damn high and we should work on that? They're charging tenfold, if not a hundredfold their cost of production and our government is more than willing to go along with it because they get a piece of it back for their campaigns and under the table deals. It's shifting middle class taxes to giant corporations that are hardly trickling it back into the economy.

A recent POGO analysis, for instance, documented the malfeasance of TransDigm, a military parts supplier that the Department of Defense's inspector general caught overcharging the Pentagon by as much as 3,800 percent!

https://jacobin.com/2022/02/us-pentagon-budget-military-spending-f-35-nuclear-weapons

Its not so much that I'm against the reason for this war. It's the means by which it is being carried out which I consider extremely corrupt.

Our ruling class isn't taking care of our people. They aren't taking care of our borders, our schools are god awful, our infrastructure is ghetto...but we can drop trillions on war?

I'm at the point where I'm like "no you can't have your war until you fix sh it at home".
I had dinner with the CEO of a manufacturer a few weeks ago and, in a brainstorming discussion about possibilities, asked him about the cost of a potential new product as a substitute (an innovative one, at that) for an existing one. He said...."well, that depends on how much we can produce. If we can open up the plant and run it 24/7, it will be priced where you need it to be. If not....well, it will not."

That's not rocket science, just an current example.

Arms manufacturers work silo'd with R&D and production, and really only have a single customer (since that customer has to approve exports elsewhere on anything really sexy.). Purchase orders are intermittent, and limited. The initial price of the first unit is always the one quoted by critics, never the costs of the last few on a multi-year run. And on and on. And it's almost always the $900 toilet seat that gets held up as a typical example, when it is anything but. Make 900k of those particular toilet seats designed for the single head in the captain's quarters and they cost about 2-3x what the sexiest model at Home Depot costs. And, yes, the manufacturers do gouge a bit on some items, as pricing is constrained on others, and or overall plant capacity is limited to small percentages of capacity Overall, Lockheed/Martin is not making 3800% on a delivered F-35. Newport News is not going to make 3800% on the USS Doris Miller. And most assuredly, the tax returns for those companies do not show a net taxable profit of 3800%.

Please. We are educated and informed adults here on this board........

Since you're educated and can explain, how is it that with Russia's $66b defense budget and NATO's $1t defense budget, the West is running out of weapons and equipment to transfer to Ukraine?
Firstly it's the definition of "running out." Nato is running out of inventory to transfer, not running out of production capacity. Beyond inventory levels there is the question of mobiliziation of existing capacity. Production in Europe largely has not been ramped up to meet Ukrainian needs, while in USA it has been substantially increased. I understand conventional artillery round production in the US, for example, has ramped up to current max capacity. And that is all within context of peace-time capabilities. We have not mobilized our industries for war-time production.

Russia has. And is under severe sanctions that effectively cut off its ability to produce it's most technologically advanced systems. So it's pretty much limited to the supply chain it has right now, and fighting with Vietnam War era technology. It is almost impossible to innovate while fighting a war. The Axis started WWII with superior aircraft, and Germany even developed the jet fighter before war-end. But the supply chain demands of training pilots and building existing airframes to stave off an invader......made impossible to deploy that superior technology in battle at scale. It would have required industrial capacity Germany did not and could not employ. The only way they could have done it was to have secured a 1 year truce and use the breathing room to rearm and redeploy. (that story is a direct analog for this war; no truce to allow Russia to rearm, resupply, reform practices.....make them struggle to keep up with what they have.....while we keep upping the ante with new systems for Ukraine....the longer it goes, the worse that equation pressures Russia).

So Russia is facing an even worse and more daunting proposition than it did when Reagan ramped up military spending. Our economy has enjoyed continued growth, built upon a broadening foundation of population growth. Russia, on the other hand, has less than half the population it did during the Cold War, and considerably lower manufacturing and resource levels to draw upon PLUS a population already old and in decline. The demo of young men of "military age" in Russia is approaching half the number it was 40 years ago. Russia cannot afford to let this war drag on indefinitely. It needs to force a quick end. And it cannot. It is not built to do that, and it can neither ramp up nor modernize the way it needs to do that.

For Nato? It's merely a question of how much we're willing to spend to make Russia squirm. We have the resources to bury them, if we want to. Sure, everyone is shocked at the rate at which munitions are being expanded. Current production capacity is inadequate to keep up with it. Which means we'd have to mobilize over to war-time footing. That still would probably not allow us to fire all the rounds we could aim at everything we'd need to shoot at, but it'd be 100x what Russia could manage, so it would be enough.

Most war critics focus too much on Russia's POTENTIAL and not enough on their ability. Yes, they have enormous advantages in manpower and resources. But their ability to deliver what they have at their disposal is pitifully inadequate, as we see on display in Ukraine. A nation they should have been able to roll over in a few days is likely going to win the war on favorable terms. But they can't, because they are still trying to fight with a logistics system that is in some respects essentially 19th century technology.

No one has questioned the economic and production power of the USA-EU

Combined population is 778 million and nominal GDP of the USA is 23 trillion and the EU is 17 trillion.

The issue is that Ukraine is running out of men and does not have the manpower to push Russia out of Donbas...much less Crimea.
They don't have to push Russia out of Crimea. They take Melitopol down to Sea of Azov and blow the Kerch Bridge and Russia can't supply it's military in Crimea. Ukraine shuts the water supply off up river and starves the army out. Russian military in Crimea is forced to surrender.
Wonder what odds Las Vegas would give on such a fantasy ?




Probably decent since they almost pulled off taking out the bridge last year.
800 - 1 at best .
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:


I had dinner with the CEO of a manufacturer a few weeks ago and, in a brainstorming discussion about possibilities, asked him about the cost of a potential new product as a substitute (an innovative one, at that) for an existing one. He said...."well, that depends on how much we can produce. If we can open up the plant and run it 24/7, it will be priced where you need it to be. If not....well, it will not."

That's not rocket science, just an current example.

Arms manufacturers work silo'd with R&D and production, and really only have a single customer (since that customer has to approve exports elsewhere on anything really sexy.). Purchase orders are intermittent, and limited. The initial price of the first unit is always the one quoted by critics, never the costs of the last few on a multi-year run. And on and on. And it's almost always the $900 toilet seat that gets held up as a typical example, when it is anything but. Make 900k of those particular toilet seats designed for the single head in the captain's quarters and they cost about 2-3x what the sexiest model at Home Depot costs. And, yes, the manufacturers do gouge a bit on some items, as pricing is constrained on others, and or overall plant capacity is limited to small percentages of capacity Overall, Lockheed/Martin is not making 3800% on a delivered F-35. Newport News is not going to make 3800% on the USS Doris Miller. And most assuredly, the tax returns for those companies do not show a net taxable profit of 3800%.

Please. We are educated and informed adults here on this board........

Since you're educated and can explain, how is it that with Russia's $66b defense budget and NATO's $1t defense budget, the West is running out of weapons and equipment to transfer to Ukraine?
Firstly it's the definition of "running out." Nato is running out of inventory to transfer, not running out of production capacity. Beyond inventory levels there is the question of mobiliziation of existing capacity. Production in Europe largely has not been ramped up to meet Ukrainian needs, while in USA it has been substantially increased. I understand conventional artillery round production in the US, for example, has ramped up to current max capacity. And that is all within context of peace-time capabilities. We have not mobilized our industries for war-time production.

Russia has. And is under severe sanctions that effectively cut off its ability to produce it's most technologically advanced systems. So it's pretty much limited to the supply chain it has right now, and fighting with Vietnam War era technology. It is almost impossible to innovate while fighting a war. The Axis started WWII with superior aircraft, and Germany even developed the jet fighter before war-end. But the supply chain demands of training pilots and building existing airframes to stave off an invader......made impossible to deploy that superior technology in battle at scale. It would have required industrial capacity Germany did not and could not employ. The only way they could have done it was to have secured a 1 year truce and use the breathing room to rearm and redeploy. (that story is a direct analog for this war; no truce to allow Russia to rearm, resupply, reform practices.....make them struggle to keep up with what they have.....while we keep upping the ante with new systems for Ukraine....the longer it goes, the worse that equation pressures Russia).

So Russia is facing an even worse and more daunting proposition than it did when Reagan ramped up military spending. Our economy has enjoyed continued growth, built upon a broadening foundation of population growth. Russia, on the other hand, has less than half the population it did during the Cold War, and considerably lower manufacturing and resource levels to draw upon PLUS a population already old and in decline. The demo of young men of "military age" in Russia is approaching half the number it was 40 years ago. Russia cannot afford to let this war drag on indefinitely. It needs to force a quick end. And it cannot. It is not built to do that, and it can neither ramp up nor modernize the way it needs to do that.

For Nato? It's merely a question of how much we're willing to spend to make Russia squirm. We have the resources to bury them, if we want to. Sure, everyone is shocked at the rate at which munitions are being expanded. Current production capacity is inadequate to keep up with it. Which means we'd have to mobilize over to war-time footing. That still would probably not allow us to fire all the rounds we could aim at everything we'd need to shoot at, but it'd be 100x what Russia could manage, so it would be enough.

Most war critics focus too much on Russia's POTENTIAL and not enough on their ability. Yes, they have enormous advantages in manpower and resources. But their ability to deliver what they have at their disposal is pitifully inadequate, as we see on display in Ukraine. A nation they should have been able to roll over in a few days is likely going to win the war on favorable terms. But they can't, because they are still trying to fight with a logistics system that is in some respects essentially 19th century technology.

No one has questioned the economic and production power of the USA-EU

Combined population is 778 million and nominal GDP of the USA is 23 trillion and the EU is 17 trillion.

The issue is that Ukraine is running out of men and does not have the manpower to push Russia out of Donbas...much less Crimea.
They don't have to push Russia out of Crimea. They take Melitopol down to Sea of Azov and blow the Kerch Bridge and Russia can't supply it's military in Crimea. Ukraine shuts the water supply off up river and starves the army out. Russian military in Crimea is forced to surrender.
Exactly.

The Kerch Bridge will be a signal for Ukrainian intent. Two scenarios to watch for:
A) they blow the entire bridge, both highway and rail lines. That traps the Russian Army in Crimea, forcing resupply by air/sea. Ukraine can make both an airbridge and a seabridge very costly. Conditions for Russian Army will be very difficult. The larger that army is, the worse those conditions will be.
B) they blow the rail bridge but leave at least one lane of the highway open. That effectively denies Russia the ability to resupply their entire army (bowling ball thru the garden hose dynamic) but leaves the door open for the army to retreat.

Will Ukraine try to starve the Russian Army into surrender, or will it allow the Russian Army to escape?

June could be very interesting.
Serious question....while all those things could conceivably happen...why would the Russian army starve in Crimea if the bridge was blown up?

Since 2014 when Russia took Crimea the authorities in Kyiv cut off the water to the peninsula. Yet Russia was able to bring in food and potable water for the 2.5 million residents and its occupying troops.

The Kerch straight bridge was not even completed until 2018...4 years after they took Crimea. So for 4 years they were still able to bring in food and water to sustain their occupation.

Why could they not do it again?


Bear8084
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:


I had dinner with the CEO of a manufacturer a few weeks ago and, in a brainstorming discussion about possibilities, asked him about the cost of a potential new product as a substitute (an innovative one, at that) for an existing one. He said...."well, that depends on how much we can produce. If we can open up the plant and run it 24/7, it will be priced where you need it to be. If not....well, it will not."

That's not rocket science, just an current example.

Arms manufacturers work silo'd with R&D and production, and really only have a single customer (since that customer has to approve exports elsewhere on anything really sexy.). Purchase orders are intermittent, and limited. The initial price of the first unit is always the one quoted by critics, never the costs of the last few on a multi-year run. And on and on. And it's almost always the $900 toilet seat that gets held up as a typical example, when it is anything but. Make 900k of those particular toilet seats designed for the single head in the captain's quarters and they cost about 2-3x what the sexiest model at Home Depot costs. And, yes, the manufacturers do gouge a bit on some items, as pricing is constrained on others, and or overall plant capacity is limited to small percentages of capacity Overall, Lockheed/Martin is not making 3800% on a delivered F-35. Newport News is not going to make 3800% on the USS Doris Miller. And most assuredly, the tax returns for those companies do not show a net taxable profit of 3800%.

Please. We are educated and informed adults here on this board........

Since you're educated and can explain, how is it that with Russia's $66b defense budget and NATO's $1t defense budget, the West is running out of weapons and equipment to transfer to Ukraine?
Firstly it's the definition of "running out." Nato is running out of inventory to transfer, not running out of production capacity. Beyond inventory levels there is the question of mobiliziation of existing capacity. Production in Europe largely has not been ramped up to meet Ukrainian needs, while in USA it has been substantially increased. I understand conventional artillery round production in the US, for example, has ramped up to current max capacity. And that is all within context of peace-time capabilities. We have not mobilized our industries for war-time production.

Russia has. And is under severe sanctions that effectively cut off its ability to produce it's most technologically advanced systems. So it's pretty much limited to the supply chain it has right now, and fighting with Vietnam War era technology. It is almost impossible to innovate while fighting a war. The Axis started WWII with superior aircraft, and Germany even developed the jet fighter before war-end. But the supply chain demands of training pilots and building existing airframes to stave off an invader......made impossible to deploy that superior technology in battle at scale. It would have required industrial capacity Germany did not and could not employ. The only way they could have done it was to have secured a 1 year truce and use the breathing room to rearm and redeploy. (that story is a direct analog for this war; no truce to allow Russia to rearm, resupply, reform practices.....make them struggle to keep up with what they have.....while we keep upping the ante with new systems for Ukraine....the longer it goes, the worse that equation pressures Russia).

So Russia is facing an even worse and more daunting proposition than it did when Reagan ramped up military spending. Our economy has enjoyed continued growth, built upon a broadening foundation of population growth. Russia, on the other hand, has less than half the population it did during the Cold War, and considerably lower manufacturing and resource levels to draw upon PLUS a population already old and in decline. The demo of young men of "military age" in Russia is approaching half the number it was 40 years ago. Russia cannot afford to let this war drag on indefinitely. It needs to force a quick end. And it cannot. It is not built to do that, and it can neither ramp up nor modernize the way it needs to do that.

For Nato? It's merely a question of how much we're willing to spend to make Russia squirm. We have the resources to bury them, if we want to. Sure, everyone is shocked at the rate at which munitions are being expanded. Current production capacity is inadequate to keep up with it. Which means we'd have to mobilize over to war-time footing. That still would probably not allow us to fire all the rounds we could aim at everything we'd need to shoot at, but it'd be 100x what Russia could manage, so it would be enough.

Most war critics focus too much on Russia's POTENTIAL and not enough on their ability. Yes, they have enormous advantages in manpower and resources. But their ability to deliver what they have at their disposal is pitifully inadequate, as we see on display in Ukraine. A nation they should have been able to roll over in a few days is likely going to win the war on favorable terms. But they can't, because they are still trying to fight with a logistics system that is in some respects essentially 19th century technology.

No one has questioned the economic and production power of the USA-EU

Combined population is 778 million and nominal GDP of the USA is 23 trillion and the EU is 17 trillion.

The issue is that Ukraine is running out of men and does not have the manpower to push Russia out of Donbas...much less Crimea.
They don't have to push Russia out of Crimea. They take Melitopol down to Sea of Azov and blow the Kerch Bridge and Russia can't supply it's military in Crimea. Ukraine shuts the water supply off up river and starves the army out. Russian military in Crimea is forced to surrender.
Exactly.

The Kerch Bridge will be a signal for Ukrainian intent. Two scenarios to watch for:
A) they blow the entire bridge, both highway and rail lines. That traps the Russian Army in Crimea, forcing resupply by air/sea. Ukraine can make both an airbridge and a seabridge very costly. Conditions for Russian Army will be very difficult. The larger that army is, the worse those conditions will be.
B) they blow the rail bridge but leave at least one lane of the highway open. That effectively denies Russia the ability to resupply their entire army (bowling ball thru the garden hose dynamic) but leaves the door open for the army to retreat.

Will Ukraine try to starve the Russian Army into surrender, or will it allow the Russian Army to escape?

June could be very interesting.
Serious question....while all those things could conceivably happen...why would the Russian army starve in Crimea if the bridge was blown up?

Since 2014 when Russia took Crimea the authorities in Kyiv cut off the water to the peninsula. Yet Russia was able to bring in food and potable water for the 2.5 million residents and its occupying troops.

The Kerch straight bridge was not even completed until 2018...4 years after they took Crimea. So for 4 years they were still able to bring in food and water to sustain their occupation.

Why could they not do it again?





No HIMARS, anti-ship missiles, drones, anti-air, etc. pre-2022.
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Bear8084 said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:


I had dinner with the CEO of a manufacturer a few weeks ago and, in a brainstorming discussion about possibilities, asked him about the cost of a potential new product as a substitute (an innovative one, at that) for an existing one. He said...."well, that depends on how much we can produce. If we can open up the plant and run it 24/7, it will be priced where you need it to be. If not....well, it will not."

That's not rocket science, just an current example.

Arms manufacturers work silo'd with R&D and production, and really only have a single customer (since that customer has to approve exports elsewhere on anything really sexy.). Purchase orders are intermittent, and limited. The initial price of the first unit is always the one quoted by critics, never the costs of the last few on a multi-year run. And on and on. And it's almost always the $900 toilet seat that gets held up as a typical example, when it is anything but. Make 900k of those particular toilet seats designed for the single head in the captain's quarters and they cost about 2-3x what the sexiest model at Home Depot costs. And, yes, the manufacturers do gouge a bit on some items, as pricing is constrained on others, and or overall plant capacity is limited to small percentages of capacity Overall, Lockheed/Martin is not making 3800% on a delivered F-35. Newport News is not going to make 3800% on the USS Doris Miller. And most assuredly, the tax returns for those companies do not show a net taxable profit of 3800%.

Please. We are educated and informed adults here on this board........

Since you're educated and can explain, how is it that with Russia's $66b defense budget and NATO's $1t defense budget, the West is running out of weapons and equipment to transfer to Ukraine?
Firstly it's the definition of "running out." Nato is running out of inventory to transfer, not running out of production capacity. Beyond inventory levels there is the question of mobiliziation of existing capacity. Production in Europe largely has not been ramped up to meet Ukrainian needs, while in USA it has been substantially increased. I understand conventional artillery round production in the US, for example, has ramped up to current max capacity. And that is all within context of peace-time capabilities. We have not mobilized our industries for war-time production.

Russia has. And is under severe sanctions that effectively cut off its ability to produce it's most technologically advanced systems. So it's pretty much limited to the supply chain it has right now, and fighting with Vietnam War era technology. It is almost impossible to innovate while fighting a war. The Axis started WWII with superior aircraft, and Germany even developed the jet fighter before war-end. But the supply chain demands of training pilots and building existing airframes to stave off an invader......made impossible to deploy that superior technology in battle at scale. It would have required industrial capacity Germany did not and could not employ. The only way they could have done it was to have secured a 1 year truce and use the breathing room to rearm and redeploy. (that story is a direct analog for this war; no truce to allow Russia to rearm, resupply, reform practices.....make them struggle to keep up with what they have.....while we keep upping the ante with new systems for Ukraine....the longer it goes, the worse that equation pressures Russia).

So Russia is facing an even worse and more daunting proposition than it did when Reagan ramped up military spending. Our economy has enjoyed continued growth, built upon a broadening foundation of population growth. Russia, on the other hand, has less than half the population it did during the Cold War, and considerably lower manufacturing and resource levels to draw upon PLUS a population already old and in decline. The demo of young men of "military age" in Russia is approaching half the number it was 40 years ago. Russia cannot afford to let this war drag on indefinitely. It needs to force a quick end. And it cannot. It is not built to do that, and it can neither ramp up nor modernize the way it needs to do that.

For Nato? It's merely a question of how much we're willing to spend to make Russia squirm. We have the resources to bury them, if we want to. Sure, everyone is shocked at the rate at which munitions are being expanded. Current production capacity is inadequate to keep up with it. Which means we'd have to mobilize over to war-time footing. That still would probably not allow us to fire all the rounds we could aim at everything we'd need to shoot at, but it'd be 100x what Russia could manage, so it would be enough.

Most war critics focus too much on Russia's POTENTIAL and not enough on their ability. Yes, they have enormous advantages in manpower and resources. But their ability to deliver what they have at their disposal is pitifully inadequate, as we see on display in Ukraine. A nation they should have been able to roll over in a few days is likely going to win the war on favorable terms. But they can't, because they are still trying to fight with a logistics system that is in some respects essentially 19th century technology.

No one has questioned the economic and production power of the USA-EU

Combined population is 778 million and nominal GDP of the USA is 23 trillion and the EU is 17 trillion.

The issue is that Ukraine is running out of men and does not have the manpower to push Russia out of Donbas...much less Crimea.
They don't have to push Russia out of Crimea. They take Melitopol down to Sea of Azov and blow the Kerch Bridge and Russia can't supply it's military in Crimea. Ukraine shuts the water supply off up river and starves the army out. Russian military in Crimea is forced to surrender.
Exactly.

The Kerch Bridge will be a signal for Ukrainian intent. Two scenarios to watch for:
A) they blow the entire bridge, both highway and rail lines. That traps the Russian Army in Crimea, forcing resupply by air/sea. Ukraine can make both an airbridge and a seabridge very costly. Conditions for Russian Army will be very difficult. The larger that army is, the worse those conditions will be.
B) they blow the rail bridge but leave at least one lane of the highway open. That effectively denies Russia the ability to resupply their entire army (bowling ball thru the garden hose dynamic) but leaves the door open for the army to retreat.

Will Ukraine try to starve the Russian Army into surrender, or will it allow the Russian Army to escape?

June could be very interesting.
Serious question....while all those things could conceivably happen...why would the Russian army starve in Crimea if the bridge was blown up?

Since 2014 when Russia took Crimea the authorities in Kyiv cut off the water to the peninsula. Yet Russia was able to bring in food and potable water for the 2.5 million residents and its occupying troops.

The Kerch straight bridge was not even completed until 2018...4 years after they took Crimea. So for 4 years they were still able to bring in food and water to sustain their occupation.

Why could they not do it again?





No HIMARS, anti-ship missiles, drones, anti-air, etc. pre-2022.

Bingo.
Also no army to feed, clothe, arm, etc…..
Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

trey3216 said:

Sam Lowry said:

trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

https://www.theamericanconservative.com/ukraine-plans-for-world-war-iii/


[The leak of classified documents on the gaming and chat platform Discord continues to be a treasure trove of information about America's proxy war with Russia in Ukraine.

Earlier revelations from the Discord leak suggested Ukraine is a cornered animal. The latest shows it might lash out like one. The Washington Post reported Monday that documents in the leak claimed that the United States had to force Ukraine to back down from a direct attack on Moscow. Time and time again, the United States has had to rein in or express serious concern internally about Ukraine's plans to fight Russia, not just in Ukraine or even within Russia's borders, but in the Middle East and North Africa as well.



A classified report from the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) claimed that Maj. Gen. Kyrylo Budanov, who heads the Main Directorate of Intelligence (HUR) for Ukraine's defense ministry, instructed one of his officers on February 13 "to get ready for mass strikes on 24 February." Ukraine was to strike "with everything the HUR had." The NSA report also said Ukrainian officials joked about using TNT to strike Novorossiysk, a Black Sea port city east of the Crimean Peninsula. The Post asserted such an operation would be "largely symbolic," but "would nevertheless demonstrate Ukraine's ability to hit deep inside enemy territory."

Budanov has a reputation for being a loose cannon. Previously, he claimed that Russian President Vladimir Putin was terminally ill and employed body doubles for public appearances. He is apparently convinced that Ukraine will overwhelm and repel the Russian invasion, including Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014, sometime this summer. Which is why it appears the U.S. intelligence apparatus has taken up monitoring Budanov's moves and communications. And Budanov appears to know it. The Post added that, when it has interviewed Budanov on occasion since the outbreak of the war, reporters have heard white noise or music in the background of the major general's office.

This time, however, it appears the United States prevented the loose cannon from going off. On February 22, the CIA internally circulated a classified report that the HUR "had agreed, at Washington's request, to postpone strikes" on Moscow. Nevertheless, the CIA also said "there is no indication" that the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) had "agreed to postpone its own plans to attack Moscow around the same date."


Ukraine appears to now be reaching further into Russian territory and is less ambiguous about its involvement in these attacks. Earlier on in the conflict, Ukraine often denied playing a role in attacks on Russian installations and infrastructure within its borders, such as the car-bombing incident in August 2022 that killed Daria Dugina, the daughter of Aleksandr Dugin, a Russian nationalist and staunch supporter of Russia's invasion. Despite repeated Ukrainian denials, the U.S. intelligence community believes Ukraine was behind the attack.

In an interview with the Post in January, however, Budanov simultaneously denied Ukraine's involvement in many of these attacks and claimed that they would continue. Such attacks "shattered their illusions of safety," Budanov reportedly claimed. "There are people who plant explosives. There are drones. Until the territorial integrity of Ukraine is restored, there will be problems inside Russia."

Other revelations from the Discord-leaked documents: Ukraine wants to expand the scope of the conflict beyond that of continental Europe and take the Russians to task in the Middle East and North Africa. The NSA report claimed that Budanov's HUR planned to attack the Wagner Groupa Russian military contractor with a reputation for brutality whose members have assisted in the Ukraine offensivein the African country of Mali. The Wagner Group's services are retained by the government of Mali for security and training their own military forces.

The NSA document said, "It is unknown what stage the operations [in Mali] were currently in and whether the HUR has received approval to execute its plans," according to the Post.

At the same time, the HUR was developing plans to strike Russian forces in Syria by partnering with the Kurds. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reportedly put the kibosh on the special operations offensive in the Middle East, but at least one of the documents reviewed by the Post claimed that efforts to attack Russian assets in Syria that avoid Ukrainian culpability may still be on the table for the Ukrainian government.
Are these not plans for a world war? Would the United States not be responsible if the Ukrainian government, which both militarily and financially would be defunct without nearly $100 billion in U.S. aid, decided to go forward with such plans?]


I, for one, have zero s h i t s to give if Ukraine struck Moscow. You attack me, I attack you back. That's how it works.

You're Ukrainian?
No. But, if Mexico launched strikes against Houston, St Louis, Washington and Chicago, do you think we'd sit around and twiddle our thumbs rather than strike Mexico City? Do you think we'd be worried about what Brazil might think about it? Hell no.
It's hard to say what we'd do in the face of an actual threat to actual American interests. I'm not sure our leaders have even contemplated such a thing.
One thing they would most certainly NOT contemplate is to hew strictly to a policy of only attacking Mexican troops stationed in America for fear of inviting more attacks from Mexico. In the Russia/Ukraine context, both nations are fully mobilized, so there is limited escalatory impact to attacks inside Russia.

Looking under the hood is messy. You get to see all sides of the conversations. There are always hawks, and there are always doves. Smart leaders listen to both. Every now & then, one end of the spectrum or the other is completely right (or wrong) on a particular question. Ukraine has made good decisions so far on what & how to attack inside Russia, very restrained decisions. They could do a lot more. And I suspect they will. Because they should. When someone invades your country, you hit them back, only restrained by the productivity of the resources expended. The suggested attack on Russian forces in Syria, for example, does not at all suggest desperation. It's highly expensive and tangential to the fight at hand, symbolic. Deniable asymmetrical attacks inside Russia, on the other hand, are excellent ways to undermine regime stability in addition to any direct impacts on the war effort they may have. Remember: Russia caused all of this. If chickens start coming home to roost.....well....tough. They started it. All they have to do to make it all go away is withdraw their troops from Ukraine.

The primary reason NOT to attack Russia in Moscow is the unpredictability of the effect on Russian morale. It is not entirely certain whether such might strengthen or weaken Putin's support with the Russian people, which is not an insignificant question. Far better to do what Ukraine has done from day one....attack supply lines inside Russia, particularly those to Crimea, like the Kerch Bridge. Those are completely fair game.

The economic data is telling. Russia is running out of reserves. And below the headlines, those numbers do not reflect the redirection of resources to key sectors - energy and defense industries. Most other sectors in the Russian economy are doing much, much worse than the numbers indicate. Russian Central Bank is no longer defending the ruble, and all the trade deals for barter or other currencies are only going to place more downward pressure on the ruble as they do nothing at all to fix the core problem - oversupply of rubles in currency markets.


Sure, there's limited escalatory effect for Ukraine. Not so for the US.

It doesn't matter how much incentive Putin has to negotiate unless we're willing to negotiate too. "You started it, you can end it" isn't the way to do that. It signals unwillingness to make a deal, and for obvious reasons. We don't really want one. A negotiated peace is inconsistent with our actual goal -- as you've put it, fighting Russia to the last Ukrainian.

We've been hearing exaggerated reports of the effectiveness of sanctions all along. No doubt we'll continue to hear them. But Putin spent a long time preparing and is in it for the long haul. Russia is selling oil and gas to other buyers, including some Western ones. They still have around $150 billion in the National Wealth Fund. They're still exporting industrial metals, which we won't sanction because we depend on them. We won't even impose secondary sanctions on countries that continue doing business with Russia. All in all, we're doing a great job of prolonging the war and not much else.
You mean you've never said "see you in court" in order to force an opponent with a weaker hand to come to the table?

A prolonged war costs Russia a lot of money. Nato has 10x the GDP and even more wealth. So the bargaining position of "....to the last Ukrainian...." is a very wise position to take. Eventually, Russia will have to realize that it has neither the wealth nor the income to maintain its own position of trying to outlast Nato. Only then will peace talks get serious.
I expected this response, and yes, it is true that stubbornness can be a negotiating tactic. It might have been understandable early on. When over a year passes with no serious talks, let alone any progress, it looks a lot more like just plain stubbornness. If there were an impartial judge in this case, they wouldn't be happy with us.

Besides, you don't have to take my word for it. You said it yourself a few weeks ago: "The minimum objective is to push Russia back to its pre-war borders. Cannot allow any reward for the invasion."


So as a judge you'd put a 12 month cap on litigation. Interesting.

My position is the correct one, and also the one both USG and Ukraine are taking. Absolutely no reason for our side to be suing for peace when we're in a position of advantage. Press on and make Russia beg for talks.
Not a cap, but certainly an expectation of good faith.

As long as the US and Ukraine take your position, we can't very well say Russia is the obstacle to negotiation.

There are many reasons to end the war now, the most pertinent being that we're in no position to drive Russia from eastern Ukraine. Their army is as big as it was before the war. They've learned from their mistakes. The great bulk of their casualties at Bakhmut are from the Wagner group, which means the Russian army itself is going mostly untouched while pulling in reinforcements. Meanwhile Ukraine is throwing its best and most experienced troops into the grinder. If the delayed spring offensive is ever mounted, their newly conscripted troops will face an armored and entrenched defense with more experience and vastly greater numbers. Ukraine's negotiating strength will end up worse, not better.

I know...I should get better sources. But my sources saw the writing on the wall in Iraqistan while yours were still manning the sunshine pumps. We shall see.
Russia is most assuredly the obstacle for peace, given that their army is occupying sovereign territory of another county.

You might be wrong about the possibility of driving Russia out of substantial parts of Ukraine. We will see, soon. Russia has not learned from its mistakes for centuries. They do the same thing, over and over and over. We knew that and are making them bleed. Very predictable army, unfathomably badly led. Same things I was taught 35 years ago are spot-on applicable today. They' don't need to fix any of their problems, they think, because they are so much bigger and tougher than their potential opponents. Look how that's working out for them now.

another error: Russia did not mobilize 300k troops and give them all to the Wagner Group. And regardless who is the commander of those soldiers, their deaths still reduce the overall labor pool.

You are sorta correct that a Ukrainian spring offensive could change the casualty dynamics to the detriment of Ukraine, as they will be on the offensive instead of the defensive. The difference is, the Ukrainians are better armed, better supplied, better led, and better motivated. If they can pierce the Russian defensive lines, and there's no reason to suspect such is impossible, then they can roll back the Russian lines exactly as they did last fall. The difference this time is, the Russians do not have strategic depth between their lines and the Sea of Azov. The kind of gains made on the Kharkov front will sever Russian supply lines along the Sea of Azov, likely forcing a withdrawal (or encirclement) of Russian troops on the Kherson front.

Most of the Russian defensive deployment maps I've seen suggest Russia is expecting a big push right at Zaporizhzha down toward Melitopol. Perhaps Ukraine will do that. Link could be a diversion, or part of the preparation. Should know soon. From yesterday:
https://news.yahoo.com/explosions-rock-russian-military-headquarters-172828542.html
The Russian deployments at Zaporizhzha generally use the Kakhovka Reservoir as a left flank and extend from the lake down to the south east, attempting to force Ukraine to make a wide sweep to the east to turn the flank. I would imagine the Russians have a considerable mobile reserve force, heavy on armor & mechanized infantry defending the open space of that flank. Will Ukraine engage that mobile reserve and attempt to destroy it, then sweep west to cut off the entire Russian army deployed between Kherson and Zaporizhzha? That is the high-risk/high-reward option, as it would be a strategic level defeat for Russia, leaving open the approaches to Crimea, the kind of defeat that would force Russia to the table to stave off the catastrophe of surrender of 6-digit of Russian troops. Or will Ukraine try to punch straight thru the lines at Zaporizhzha?

We will know a lot more in about 60 days. In the meantime, there will be no peace talks, because both sides think they have an advantage. But one of them is likely wrong, possibly badly so. We are about to find out.

There's every reason to suspect such is impossible. The offensive operation you're describing would be a challenge for the best of armies. Even we wouldn't attempt it without basically unlimited air and artillery power. The circumstances could hardly be more different from last year, when Russia had dispersed its forces all over the map in the expectation of a quick victory. Ukraine scored some surprise wins against targets with minimal personnel and no real defenses, and that only with overwhelming manpower (7-8 to 1 at Kharkiv, for example). Those conditions won't repeat themselves, especially after Bakhmut. The predominance of Wagner troops there, along with the delay in Ukraine's planned offensive, are indications of who's winning the war of attrition on that front.
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

trey3216 said:

Sam Lowry said:

trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

https://www.theamericanconservative.com/ukraine-plans-for-world-war-iii/


[The leak of classified documents on the gaming and chat platform Discord continues to be a treasure trove of information about America's proxy war with Russia in Ukraine.

Earlier revelations from the Discord leak suggested Ukraine is a cornered animal. The latest shows it might lash out like one. The Washington Post reported Monday that documents in the leak claimed that the United States had to force Ukraine to back down from a direct attack on Moscow. Time and time again, the United States has had to rein in or express serious concern internally about Ukraine's plans to fight Russia, not just in Ukraine or even within Russia's borders, but in the Middle East and North Africa as well.



A classified report from the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) claimed that Maj. Gen. Kyrylo Budanov, who heads the Main Directorate of Intelligence (HUR) for Ukraine's defense ministry, instructed one of his officers on February 13 "to get ready for mass strikes on 24 February." Ukraine was to strike "with everything the HUR had." The NSA report also said Ukrainian officials joked about using TNT to strike Novorossiysk, a Black Sea port city east of the Crimean Peninsula. The Post asserted such an operation would be "largely symbolic," but "would nevertheless demonstrate Ukraine's ability to hit deep inside enemy territory."

Budanov has a reputation for being a loose cannon. Previously, he claimed that Russian President Vladimir Putin was terminally ill and employed body doubles for public appearances. He is apparently convinced that Ukraine will overwhelm and repel the Russian invasion, including Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014, sometime this summer. Which is why it appears the U.S. intelligence apparatus has taken up monitoring Budanov's moves and communications. And Budanov appears to know it. The Post added that, when it has interviewed Budanov on occasion since the outbreak of the war, reporters have heard white noise or music in the background of the major general's office.

This time, however, it appears the United States prevented the loose cannon from going off. On February 22, the CIA internally circulated a classified report that the HUR "had agreed, at Washington's request, to postpone strikes" on Moscow. Nevertheless, the CIA also said "there is no indication" that the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) had "agreed to postpone its own plans to attack Moscow around the same date."


Ukraine appears to now be reaching further into Russian territory and is less ambiguous about its involvement in these attacks. Earlier on in the conflict, Ukraine often denied playing a role in attacks on Russian installations and infrastructure within its borders, such as the car-bombing incident in August 2022 that killed Daria Dugina, the daughter of Aleksandr Dugin, a Russian nationalist and staunch supporter of Russia's invasion. Despite repeated Ukrainian denials, the U.S. intelligence community believes Ukraine was behind the attack.

In an interview with the Post in January, however, Budanov simultaneously denied Ukraine's involvement in many of these attacks and claimed that they would continue. Such attacks "shattered their illusions of safety," Budanov reportedly claimed. "There are people who plant explosives. There are drones. Until the territorial integrity of Ukraine is restored, there will be problems inside Russia."

Other revelations from the Discord-leaked documents: Ukraine wants to expand the scope of the conflict beyond that of continental Europe and take the Russians to task in the Middle East and North Africa. The NSA report claimed that Budanov's HUR planned to attack the Wagner Groupa Russian military contractor with a reputation for brutality whose members have assisted in the Ukraine offensivein the African country of Mali. The Wagner Group's services are retained by the government of Mali for security and training their own military forces.

The NSA document said, "It is unknown what stage the operations [in Mali] were currently in and whether the HUR has received approval to execute its plans," according to the Post.

At the same time, the HUR was developing plans to strike Russian forces in Syria by partnering with the Kurds. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reportedly put the kibosh on the special operations offensive in the Middle East, but at least one of the documents reviewed by the Post claimed that efforts to attack Russian assets in Syria that avoid Ukrainian culpability may still be on the table for the Ukrainian government.
Are these not plans for a world war? Would the United States not be responsible if the Ukrainian government, which both militarily and financially would be defunct without nearly $100 billion in U.S. aid, decided to go forward with such plans?]


I, for one, have zero s h i t s to give if Ukraine struck Moscow. You attack me, I attack you back. That's how it works.

You're Ukrainian?
No. But, if Mexico launched strikes against Houston, St Louis, Washington and Chicago, do you think we'd sit around and twiddle our thumbs rather than strike Mexico City? Do you think we'd be worried about what Brazil might think about it? Hell no.
It's hard to say what we'd do in the face of an actual threat to actual American interests. I'm not sure our leaders have even contemplated such a thing.
One thing they would most certainly NOT contemplate is to hew strictly to a policy of only attacking Mexican troops stationed in America for fear of inviting more attacks from Mexico. In the Russia/Ukraine context, both nations are fully mobilized, so there is limited escalatory impact to attacks inside Russia.

Looking under the hood is messy. You get to see all sides of the conversations. There are always hawks, and there are always doves. Smart leaders listen to both. Every now & then, one end of the spectrum or the other is completely right (or wrong) on a particular question. Ukraine has made good decisions so far on what & how to attack inside Russia, very restrained decisions. They could do a lot more. And I suspect they will. Because they should. When someone invades your country, you hit them back, only restrained by the productivity of the resources expended. The suggested attack on Russian forces in Syria, for example, does not at all suggest desperation. It's highly expensive and tangential to the fight at hand, symbolic. Deniable asymmetrical attacks inside Russia, on the other hand, are excellent ways to undermine regime stability in addition to any direct impacts on the war effort they may have. Remember: Russia caused all of this. If chickens start coming home to roost.....well....tough. They started it. All they have to do to make it all go away is withdraw their troops from Ukraine.

The primary reason NOT to attack Russia in Moscow is the unpredictability of the effect on Russian morale. It is not entirely certain whether such might strengthen or weaken Putin's support with the Russian people, which is not an insignificant question. Far better to do what Ukraine has done from day one....attack supply lines inside Russia, particularly those to Crimea, like the Kerch Bridge. Those are completely fair game.

The economic data is telling. Russia is running out of reserves. And below the headlines, those numbers do not reflect the redirection of resources to key sectors - energy and defense industries. Most other sectors in the Russian economy are doing much, much worse than the numbers indicate. Russian Central Bank is no longer defending the ruble, and all the trade deals for barter or other currencies are only going to place more downward pressure on the ruble as they do nothing at all to fix the core problem - oversupply of rubles in currency markets.


Sure, there's limited escalatory effect for Ukraine. Not so for the US.

It doesn't matter how much incentive Putin has to negotiate unless we're willing to negotiate too. "You started it, you can end it" isn't the way to do that. It signals unwillingness to make a deal, and for obvious reasons. We don't really want one. A negotiated peace is inconsistent with our actual goal -- as you've put it, fighting Russia to the last Ukrainian.

We've been hearing exaggerated reports of the effectiveness of sanctions all along. No doubt we'll continue to hear them. But Putin spent a long time preparing and is in it for the long haul. Russia is selling oil and gas to other buyers, including some Western ones. They still have around $150 billion in the National Wealth Fund. They're still exporting industrial metals, which we won't sanction because we depend on them. We won't even impose secondary sanctions on countries that continue doing business with Russia. All in all, we're doing a great job of prolonging the war and not much else.
You mean you've never said "see you in court" in order to force an opponent with a weaker hand to come to the table?

A prolonged war costs Russia a lot of money. Nato has 10x the GDP and even more wealth. So the bargaining position of "....to the last Ukrainian...." is a very wise position to take. Eventually, Russia will have to realize that it has neither the wealth nor the income to maintain its own position of trying to outlast Nato. Only then will peace talks get serious.
I expected this response, and yes, it is true that stubbornness can be a negotiating tactic. It might have been understandable early on. When over a year passes with no serious talks, let alone any progress, it looks a lot more like just plain stubbornness. If there were an impartial judge in this case, they wouldn't be happy with us.

Besides, you don't have to take my word for it. You said it yourself a few weeks ago: "The minimum objective is to push Russia back to its pre-war borders. Cannot allow any reward for the invasion."


So as a judge you'd put a 12 month cap on litigation. Interesting.

My position is the correct one, and also the one both USG and Ukraine are taking. Absolutely no reason for our side to be suing for peace when we're in a position of advantage. Press on and make Russia beg for talks.
Not a cap, but certainly an expectation of good faith.

As long as the US and Ukraine take your position, we can't very well say Russia is the obstacle to negotiation.

There are many reasons to end the war now, the most pertinent being that we're in no position to drive Russia from eastern Ukraine. Their army is as big as it was before the war. They've learned from their mistakes. The great bulk of their casualties at Bakhmut are from the Wagner group, which means the Russian army itself is going mostly untouched while pulling in reinforcements. Meanwhile Ukraine is throwing its best and most experienced troops into the grinder. If the delayed spring offensive is ever mounted, their newly conscripted troops will face an armored and entrenched defense with more experience and vastly greater numbers. Ukraine's negotiating strength will end up worse, not better.

I know...I should get better sources. But my sources saw the writing on the wall in Iraqistan while yours were still manning the sunshine pumps. We shall see.
Russia is most assuredly the obstacle for peace, given that their army is occupying sovereign territory of another county.

You might be wrong about the possibility of driving Russia out of substantial parts of Ukraine. We will see, soon. Russia has not learned from its mistakes for centuries. They do the same thing, over and over and over. We knew that and are making them bleed. Very predictable army, unfathomably badly led. Same things I was taught 35 years ago are spot-on applicable today. They' don't need to fix any of their problems, they think, because they are so much bigger and tougher than their potential opponents. Look how that's working out for them now.

another error: Russia did not mobilize 300k troops and give them all to the Wagner Group. And regardless who is the commander of those soldiers, their deaths still reduce the overall labor pool.

You are sorta correct that a Ukrainian spring offensive could change the casualty dynamics to the detriment of Ukraine, as they will be on the offensive instead of the defensive. The difference is, the Ukrainians are better armed, better supplied, better led, and better motivated. If they can pierce the Russian defensive lines, and there's no reason to suspect such is impossible, then they can roll back the Russian lines exactly as they did last fall. The difference this time is, the Russians do not have strategic depth between their lines and the Sea of Azov. The kind of gains made on the Kharkov front will sever Russian supply lines along the Sea of Azov, likely forcing a withdrawal (or encirclement) of Russian troops on the Kherson front.

Most of the Russian defensive deployment maps I've seen suggest Russia is expecting a big push right at Zaporizhzha down toward Melitopol. Perhaps Ukraine will do that. Link could be a diversion, or part of the preparation. Should know soon. From yesterday:
https://news.yahoo.com/explosions-rock-russian-military-headquarters-172828542.html
The Russian deployments at Zaporizhzha generally use the Kakhovka Reservoir as a left flank and extend from the lake down to the south east, attempting to force Ukraine to make a wide sweep to the east to turn the flank. I would imagine the Russians have a considerable mobile reserve force, heavy on armor & mechanized infantry defending the open space of that flank. Will Ukraine engage that mobile reserve and attempt to destroy it, then sweep west to cut off the entire Russian army deployed between Kherson and Zaporizhzha? That is the high-risk/high-reward option, as it would be a strategic level defeat for Russia, leaving open the approaches to Crimea, the kind of defeat that would force Russia to the table to stave off the catastrophe of surrender of 6-digit of Russian troops. Or will Ukraine try to punch straight thru the lines at Zaporizhzha?

We will know a lot more in about 60 days. In the meantime, there will be no peace talks, because both sides think they have an advantage. But one of them is likely wrong, possibly badly so. We are about to find out.

There's every reason to suspect such is impossible. The offensive operation you're describing would be a challenge for the best of armies. Even we wouldn't attempt it without basically unlimited air and artillery power. The circumstances could hardly be more different from last year, when Russia had dispersed its forces all over the map in the expectation of a quick victory. Ukraine scored some surprise wins against targets with minimal personnel and no real defenses, and that only with overwhelming manpower (7-8 to 1 at Kharkiv, for example). Those conditions won't repeat themselves, especially after Bakhmut. The predominance of Wagner troops there, along with the delay in Ukraine's planned offensive, are indications of who's winning the war of attrition on that front.

All these endless "news" articles by the Western corporate media about a spring offensive about to crush Russia..... and a small forest in the Pacific northwest probably gave its life being cut down for paper for the Pentagon desk jockeys to write their policy papers about how Ukraine is just about to smash the Russian army.

And all the Russian Today talking heads saying how Russian troops will soon be in Kyiv.

I would not be surprised at all if we are back here next spring of 2024 talking about this stalemate of a war.

Neither of these two forces would be digging such expensive trench works in the East if they thought they were about to run through their opponents like swiss cheese.
trey3216
How long do you want to ignore this user?
KaiBear said:

Bear8084 said:

KaiBear said:

trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:




Ukraine will NOT win this war without foreign troops getting involved.

And as the months (years?) go by this will become obvious to everyone.

you are making some assumptions that Russia might not be able to meet. Have you checked the value trends on the ruble recently?
https://www.msn.com/en-xl/news/others/russias-ailing-ruble-takes-another-hit-what-happens-now/ar-AA1a8S7U
at five year lows:
https://tradingeconomics.com/russia/currency

Everything you say would be correct if Ukraine was on its own, having to feed, clothe, arm its own troops. Were that the case, the war would already be over. But that is not the case.

Nato has correctly identified that it does have an interest in the outcome of the war. A number of necessaries flow from that. The Ukrainian state must survive. The war must finish with Russia totally exhausted, decades away from full rearmament. If Ukraine is to remain economically viable, it must own sovereignty over Crimea (fate of Russian naval base at Sebastapol negotiable) in order to A) ensure flow of goods to/from it's major industrial ports in the Sea of Azov, and B) ensure revenues from oil/gas reserves across much of the northern Black Sea up thru the Sea of Azov and into the Donbas. Ergo, Nato has opened up cash and materiel flows that Russia cannot match over time.

A truce right now just gives Russia a breather, a chance to raise more troops and send more ammo to the front line. Ukraine must keep the battle going on, forcing Russia to strain ever harder to resupply, to the point its sclerotic supply lines crack. As long as Nato continues to supply Ukraine, Ukraine can outlast Russia, despite Russia having, on paper at least, far greater resources to wage war than Ukraine.

This is a proxy war. The Nato economy dwarfs the Russian economy by a ratio that far exceeds the advantage Russia has over Ukraine. All Ukraine has to supply is sweat equity, while the vastly superior economies of Nato outspend the heavily sanctioned Russian economy. And Ukraine has the population to do that, particularly given that they are inflicting casualties on Russia at a 7-1 rate.

As long as Russia wants to feed its sons into the maw, we should keep it grinding away. They've grabbed the tarbaby of all tarbabies.



Just the flippant way people in our government and on this site casually acknowledge that we are now in a bloody proxy war with a nuclear armed state.....without any vote by the American people...its just stunning.

A nation that has not attacked us by the way.

But this maw as you say is chewing up Ukrainian sons as much as it is chewing up Russian ones. Yet Ukraine can not keep that kind of causality rate up forever.

And even if funding these proxy wars was not at its base level highly immoral...its also unlikely to get us what we want. Heck what do we even want? Regime change in Moscow? The end of the 1,000 year old Russian State itself? No one can seem to agree with what is a final outcome should be.

Just like Afghanistan and Iraq were are tripping and stumbling into another long bloody conflict that is massively expensive and with no clear cut exit strategy or clear point of "victory".




Proxy wars are preferable to direct conflict, are they not? They are exactly how great powers engage one another militarily when they cannot come to a peaceful agreement, because they are by wide margin preferable to direct conflict.

"A nation which has not attacked us, by the way" is an old fallacy which presumes war is defined by military conflict. Remember the Cold War? Nations jockey and bluster and negotiate and ally and even poke & prod with third parties all the time. It's how the game is played......to avoid all out conflict.

Ukraine can keep up a 7-1 favorable casualty rate longer than Russia can. Ukrainians are united as one for a war to the death. Same cannot be said for Putin, who is trying to hide the true cost of the war from the Russian people to avoid unrest in the streets.

What we want has been quite clearly stated: Russian withdrawal from sovereign Ukrainian territory. You just don't take it seriously. Regime change has been mentioned as one way to achieve that outcome, and we were wise to do so. It puts pressure on Putin, who has resisted it and pressed on, tying his fate to the outcome of the war. That's fine. He needs to go. We don't want to ever have a Russian head of state who ever again thinks Nato will stand idly by when Russian armies cross European borders.

The analogs you mentioned are not applicable. Holding onto them so tightly badly affects your perception of what is happening. We have not, and will not commit troops to Ukraine. We've been quite consistent on that. Nato has been consistent on that. More to the point, it will not be necessary. Russia is not going to win the war. Ukraine can outlast them (thanks to Nato support).

The way the media has completely thrown out "beating Russia is easy" is a sign that what you're hearing about the difficulty of dealing with Russia isn't true.

Have you thought about how much your viewpoint aligns with the uniparty veiwpoint?
I haven't noticed a narrative that "beating Russia is easy" from MSM at all. The cheerleading has been obvious,though, and when it reaches the level of virtue posturing can be quite humorous. That in no way changes realities on the ground in Ukraine.

My viewpoint is my own: a masters degree in directly related subject material plus 10 years in the intel/diplomatic world with direct experience on things Russian, followed by relentless self-study on history, geopolitics, etc.... There is a reason Nato and the USA chose to support Ukraine - it is overwhelmingly in their interest to do so. And the fact there is such unity within Nato on the question is telling. Biden didn't hornswoggle them, for sure. The case for not aggressively supporting Ukraine, other than impacts on budget and readiness, is completely a priori reasoning, and laced with one foolish strawman after the other on escalation. Initially opponents ran around with their skirts up about the inevitability of nuclear war. Now, its mostly about the inevitability of direct involvement of US troops. Worst of all, opponents typically misread the situation on the ground because of a general lack of familiarity with the subject material.

One really has to work hard to remain in the shadow of obtusity not to see the wisdom of US support for Ukraine this particular proxy war. Proxy wars have happened for millennia in the past, and will happen for millennia in the future. We do not have a stake in most of them. But this one we do, for reasons that are rather obvious unless one is hidebound determined to ignore them.
Can we at least agree that the pricing that the military industrial complex is charging for weapons which is purchased by US tax dollars is way too damn high and we should work on that? They're charging tenfold, if not a hundredfold their cost of production and our government is more than willing to go along with it because they get a piece of it back for their campaigns and under the table deals. It's shifting middle class taxes to giant corporations that are hardly trickling it back into the economy.

A recent POGO analysis, for instance, documented the malfeasance of TransDigm, a military parts supplier that the Department of Defense's inspector general caught overcharging the Pentagon by as much as 3,800 percent!

https://jacobin.com/2022/02/us-pentagon-budget-military-spending-f-35-nuclear-weapons

Its not so much that I'm against the reason for this war. It's the means by which it is being carried out which I consider extremely corrupt.

Our ruling class isn't taking care of our people. They aren't taking care of our borders, our schools are god awful, our infrastructure is ghetto...but we can drop trillions on war?

I'm at the point where I'm like "no you can't have your war until you fix sh it at home".
I had dinner with the CEO of a manufacturer a few weeks ago and, in a brainstorming discussion about possibilities, asked him about the cost of a potential new product as a substitute (an innovative one, at that) for an existing one. He said...."well, that depends on how much we can produce. If we can open up the plant and run it 24/7, it will be priced where you need it to be. If not....well, it will not."

That's not rocket science, just an current example.

Arms manufacturers work silo'd with R&D and production, and really only have a single customer (since that customer has to approve exports elsewhere on anything really sexy.). Purchase orders are intermittent, and limited. The initial price of the first unit is always the one quoted by critics, never the costs of the last few on a multi-year run. And on and on. And it's almost always the $900 toilet seat that gets held up as a typical example, when it is anything but. Make 900k of those particular toilet seats designed for the single head in the captain's quarters and they cost about 2-3x what the sexiest model at Home Depot costs. And, yes, the manufacturers do gouge a bit on some items, as pricing is constrained on others, and or overall plant capacity is limited to small percentages of capacity Overall, Lockheed/Martin is not making 3800% on a delivered F-35. Newport News is not going to make 3800% on the USS Doris Miller. And most assuredly, the tax returns for those companies do not show a net taxable profit of 3800%.

Please. We are educated and informed adults here on this board........

Since you're educated and can explain, how is it that with Russia's $66b defense budget and NATO's $1t defense budget, the West is running out of weapons and equipment to transfer to Ukraine?
Firstly it's the definition of "running out." Nato is running out of inventory to transfer, not running out of production capacity. Beyond inventory levels there is the question of mobiliziation of existing capacity. Production in Europe largely has not been ramped up to meet Ukrainian needs, while in USA it has been substantially increased. I understand conventional artillery round production in the US, for example, has ramped up to current max capacity. And that is all within context of peace-time capabilities. We have not mobilized our industries for war-time production.

Russia has. And is under severe sanctions that effectively cut off its ability to produce it's most technologically advanced systems. So it's pretty much limited to the supply chain it has right now, and fighting with Vietnam War era technology. It is almost impossible to innovate while fighting a war. The Axis started WWII with superior aircraft, and Germany even developed the jet fighter before war-end. But the supply chain demands of training pilots and building existing airframes to stave off an invader......made impossible to deploy that superior technology in battle at scale. It would have required industrial capacity Germany did not and could not employ. The only way they could have done it was to have secured a 1 year truce and use the breathing room to rearm and redeploy. (that story is a direct analog for this war; no truce to allow Russia to rearm, resupply, reform practices.....make them struggle to keep up with what they have.....while we keep upping the ante with new systems for Ukraine....the longer it goes, the worse that equation pressures Russia).

So Russia is facing an even worse and more daunting proposition than it did when Reagan ramped up military spending. Our economy has enjoyed continued growth, built upon a broadening foundation of population growth. Russia, on the other hand, has less than half the population it did during the Cold War, and considerably lower manufacturing and resource levels to draw upon PLUS a population already old and in decline. The demo of young men of "military age" in Russia is approaching half the number it was 40 years ago. Russia cannot afford to let this war drag on indefinitely. It needs to force a quick end. And it cannot. It is not built to do that, and it can neither ramp up nor modernize the way it needs to do that.

For Nato? It's merely a question of how much we're willing to spend to make Russia squirm. We have the resources to bury them, if we want to. Sure, everyone is shocked at the rate at which munitions are being expanded. Current production capacity is inadequate to keep up with it. Which means we'd have to mobilize over to war-time footing. That still would probably not allow us to fire all the rounds we could aim at everything we'd need to shoot at, but it'd be 100x what Russia could manage, so it would be enough.

Most war critics focus too much on Russia's POTENTIAL and not enough on their ability. Yes, they have enormous advantages in manpower and resources. But their ability to deliver what they have at their disposal is pitifully inadequate, as we see on display in Ukraine. A nation they should have been able to roll over in a few days is likely going to win the war on favorable terms. But they can't, because they are still trying to fight with a logistics system that is in some respects essentially 19th century technology.

No one has questioned the economic and production power of the USA-EU

Combined population is 778 million and nominal GDP of the USA is 23 trillion and the EU is 17 trillion.

The issue is that Ukraine is running out of men and does not have the manpower to push Russia out of Donbas...much less Crimea.
They don't have to push Russia out of Crimea. They take Melitopol down to Sea of Azov and blow the Kerch Bridge and Russia can't supply it's military in Crimea. Ukraine shuts the water supply off up river and starves the army out. Russian military in Crimea is forced to surrender.
Wonder what odds Las Vegas would give on such a fantasy ?




Probably decent since they almost pulled off taking out the bridge last year.
800 - 1 at best .
I would take out a HELOC on my house if they'd give me those odds.
Mr. Treehorn treats objects like women, man.
trey3216
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

trey3216 said:

Sam Lowry said:

trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

https://www.theamericanconservative.com/ukraine-plans-for-world-war-iii/


[The leak of classified documents on the gaming and chat platform Discord continues to be a treasure trove of information about America's proxy war with Russia in Ukraine.

Earlier revelations from the Discord leak suggested Ukraine is a cornered animal. The latest shows it might lash out like one. The Washington Post reported Monday that documents in the leak claimed that the United States had to force Ukraine to back down from a direct attack on Moscow. Time and time again, the United States has had to rein in or express serious concern internally about Ukraine's plans to fight Russia, not just in Ukraine or even within Russia's borders, but in the Middle East and North Africa as well.



A classified report from the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) claimed that Maj. Gen. Kyrylo Budanov, who heads the Main Directorate of Intelligence (HUR) for Ukraine's defense ministry, instructed one of his officers on February 13 "to get ready for mass strikes on 24 February." Ukraine was to strike "with everything the HUR had." The NSA report also said Ukrainian officials joked about using TNT to strike Novorossiysk, a Black Sea port city east of the Crimean Peninsula. The Post asserted such an operation would be "largely symbolic," but "would nevertheless demonstrate Ukraine's ability to hit deep inside enemy territory."

Budanov has a reputation for being a loose cannon. Previously, he claimed that Russian President Vladimir Putin was terminally ill and employed body doubles for public appearances. He is apparently convinced that Ukraine will overwhelm and repel the Russian invasion, including Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014, sometime this summer. Which is why it appears the U.S. intelligence apparatus has taken up monitoring Budanov's moves and communications. And Budanov appears to know it. The Post added that, when it has interviewed Budanov on occasion since the outbreak of the war, reporters have heard white noise or music in the background of the major general's office.

This time, however, it appears the United States prevented the loose cannon from going off. On February 22, the CIA internally circulated a classified report that the HUR "had agreed, at Washington's request, to postpone strikes" on Moscow. Nevertheless, the CIA also said "there is no indication" that the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) had "agreed to postpone its own plans to attack Moscow around the same date."


Ukraine appears to now be reaching further into Russian territory and is less ambiguous about its involvement in these attacks. Earlier on in the conflict, Ukraine often denied playing a role in attacks on Russian installations and infrastructure within its borders, such as the car-bombing incident in August 2022 that killed Daria Dugina, the daughter of Aleksandr Dugin, a Russian nationalist and staunch supporter of Russia's invasion. Despite repeated Ukrainian denials, the U.S. intelligence community believes Ukraine was behind the attack.

In an interview with the Post in January, however, Budanov simultaneously denied Ukraine's involvement in many of these attacks and claimed that they would continue. Such attacks "shattered their illusions of safety," Budanov reportedly claimed. "There are people who plant explosives. There are drones. Until the territorial integrity of Ukraine is restored, there will be problems inside Russia."

Other revelations from the Discord-leaked documents: Ukraine wants to expand the scope of the conflict beyond that of continental Europe and take the Russians to task in the Middle East and North Africa. The NSA report claimed that Budanov's HUR planned to attack the Wagner Groupa Russian military contractor with a reputation for brutality whose members have assisted in the Ukraine offensivein the African country of Mali. The Wagner Group's services are retained by the government of Mali for security and training their own military forces.

The NSA document said, "It is unknown what stage the operations [in Mali] were currently in and whether the HUR has received approval to execute its plans," according to the Post.

At the same time, the HUR was developing plans to strike Russian forces in Syria by partnering with the Kurds. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky reportedly put the kibosh on the special operations offensive in the Middle East, but at least one of the documents reviewed by the Post claimed that efforts to attack Russian assets in Syria that avoid Ukrainian culpability may still be on the table for the Ukrainian government.
Are these not plans for a world war? Would the United States not be responsible if the Ukrainian government, which both militarily and financially would be defunct without nearly $100 billion in U.S. aid, decided to go forward with such plans?]


I, for one, have zero s h i t s to give if Ukraine struck Moscow. You attack me, I attack you back. That's how it works.

You're Ukrainian?
No. But, if Mexico launched strikes against Houston, St Louis, Washington and Chicago, do you think we'd sit around and twiddle our thumbs rather than strike Mexico City? Do you think we'd be worried about what Brazil might think about it? Hell no.
It's hard to say what we'd do in the face of an actual threat to actual American interests. I'm not sure our leaders have even contemplated such a thing.
One thing they would most certainly NOT contemplate is to hew strictly to a policy of only attacking Mexican troops stationed in America for fear of inviting more attacks from Mexico. In the Russia/Ukraine context, both nations are fully mobilized, so there is limited escalatory impact to attacks inside Russia.

Looking under the hood is messy. You get to see all sides of the conversations. There are always hawks, and there are always doves. Smart leaders listen to both. Every now & then, one end of the spectrum or the other is completely right (or wrong) on a particular question. Ukraine has made good decisions so far on what & how to attack inside Russia, very restrained decisions. They could do a lot more. And I suspect they will. Because they should. When someone invades your country, you hit them back, only restrained by the productivity of the resources expended. The suggested attack on Russian forces in Syria, for example, does not at all suggest desperation. It's highly expensive and tangential to the fight at hand, symbolic. Deniable asymmetrical attacks inside Russia, on the other hand, are excellent ways to undermine regime stability in addition to any direct impacts on the war effort they may have. Remember: Russia caused all of this. If chickens start coming home to roost.....well....tough. They started it. All they have to do to make it all go away is withdraw their troops from Ukraine.

The primary reason NOT to attack Russia in Moscow is the unpredictability of the effect on Russian morale. It is not entirely certain whether such might strengthen or weaken Putin's support with the Russian people, which is not an insignificant question. Far better to do what Ukraine has done from day one....attack supply lines inside Russia, particularly those to Crimea, like the Kerch Bridge. Those are completely fair game.

The economic data is telling. Russia is running out of reserves. And below the headlines, those numbers do not reflect the redirection of resources to key sectors - energy and defense industries. Most other sectors in the Russian economy are doing much, much worse than the numbers indicate. Russian Central Bank is no longer defending the ruble, and all the trade deals for barter or other currencies are only going to place more downward pressure on the ruble as they do nothing at all to fix the core problem - oversupply of rubles in currency markets.


Sure, there's limited escalatory effect for Ukraine. Not so for the US.

It doesn't matter how much incentive Putin has to negotiate unless we're willing to negotiate too. "You started it, you can end it" isn't the way to do that. It signals unwillingness to make a deal, and for obvious reasons. We don't really want one. A negotiated peace is inconsistent with our actual goal -- as you've put it, fighting Russia to the last Ukrainian.

We've been hearing exaggerated reports of the effectiveness of sanctions all along. No doubt we'll continue to hear them. But Putin spent a long time preparing and is in it for the long haul. Russia is selling oil and gas to other buyers, including some Western ones. They still have around $150 billion in the National Wealth Fund. They're still exporting industrial metals, which we won't sanction because we depend on them. We won't even impose secondary sanctions on countries that continue doing business with Russia. All in all, we're doing a great job of prolonging the war and not much else.
You mean you've never said "see you in court" in order to force an opponent with a weaker hand to come to the table?

A prolonged war costs Russia a lot of money. Nato has 10x the GDP and even more wealth. So the bargaining position of "....to the last Ukrainian...." is a very wise position to take. Eventually, Russia will have to realize that it has neither the wealth nor the income to maintain its own position of trying to outlast Nato. Only then will peace talks get serious.
I expected this response, and yes, it is true that stubbornness can be a negotiating tactic. It might have been understandable early on. When over a year passes with no serious talks, let alone any progress, it looks a lot more like just plain stubbornness. If there were an impartial judge in this case, they wouldn't be happy with us.

Besides, you don't have to take my word for it. You said it yourself a few weeks ago: "The minimum objective is to push Russia back to its pre-war borders. Cannot allow any reward for the invasion."


So as a judge you'd put a 12 month cap on litigation. Interesting.

My position is the correct one, and also the one both USG and Ukraine are taking. Absolutely no reason for our side to be suing for peace when we're in a position of advantage. Press on and make Russia beg for talks.
Not a cap, but certainly an expectation of good faith.

As long as the US and Ukraine take your position, we can't very well say Russia is the obstacle to negotiation.

There are many reasons to end the war now, the most pertinent being that we're in no position to drive Russia from eastern Ukraine. Their army is as big as it was before the war. They've learned from their mistakes. The great bulk of their casualties at Bakhmut are from the Wagner group, which means the Russian army itself is going mostly untouched while pulling in reinforcements. Meanwhile Ukraine is throwing its best and most experienced troops into the grinder. If the delayed spring offensive is ever mounted, their newly conscripted troops will face an armored and entrenched defense with more experience and vastly greater numbers. Ukraine's negotiating strength will end up worse, not better.

I know...I should get better sources. But my sources saw the writing on the wall in Iraqistan while yours were still manning the sunshine pumps. We shall see.
Russia is most assuredly the obstacle for peace, given that their army is occupying sovereign territory of another county.

You might be wrong about the possibility of driving Russia out of substantial parts of Ukraine. We will see, soon. Russia has not learned from its mistakes for centuries. They do the same thing, over and over and over. We knew that and are making them bleed. Very predictable army, unfathomably badly led. Same things I was taught 35 years ago are spot-on applicable today. They' don't need to fix any of their problems, they think, because they are so much bigger and tougher than their potential opponents. Look how that's working out for them now.

another error: Russia did not mobilize 300k troops and give them all to the Wagner Group. And regardless who is the commander of those soldiers, their deaths still reduce the overall labor pool.

You are sorta correct that a Ukrainian spring offensive could change the casualty dynamics to the detriment of Ukraine, as they will be on the offensive instead of the defensive. The difference is, the Ukrainians are better armed, better supplied, better led, and better motivated. If they can pierce the Russian defensive lines, and there's no reason to suspect such is impossible, then they can roll back the Russian lines exactly as they did last fall. The difference this time is, the Russians do not have strategic depth between their lines and the Sea of Azov. The kind of gains made on the Kharkov front will sever Russian supply lines along the Sea of Azov, likely forcing a withdrawal (or encirclement) of Russian troops on the Kherson front.

Most of the Russian defensive deployment maps I've seen suggest Russia is expecting a big push right at Zaporizhzha down toward Melitopol. Perhaps Ukraine will do that. Link could be a diversion, or part of the preparation. Should know soon. From yesterday:
https://news.yahoo.com/explosions-rock-russian-military-headquarters-172828542.html
The Russian deployments at Zaporizhzha generally use the Kakhovka Reservoir as a left flank and extend from the lake down to the south east, attempting to force Ukraine to make a wide sweep to the east to turn the flank. I would imagine the Russians have a considerable mobile reserve force, heavy on armor & mechanized infantry defending the open space of that flank. Will Ukraine engage that mobile reserve and attempt to destroy it, then sweep west to cut off the entire Russian army deployed between Kherson and Zaporizhzha? That is the high-risk/high-reward option, as it would be a strategic level defeat for Russia, leaving open the approaches to Crimea, the kind of defeat that would force Russia to the table to stave off the catastrophe of surrender of 6-digit of Russian troops. Or will Ukraine try to punch straight thru the lines at Zaporizhzha?

We will know a lot more in about 60 days. In the meantime, there will be no peace talks, because both sides think they have an advantage. But one of them is likely wrong, possibly badly so. We are about to find out.

There's every reason to suspect such is impossible. The offensive operation you're describing would be a challenge for the best of armies. Even we wouldn't attempt it without basically unlimited air and artillery power. The circumstances could hardly be more different from last year, when Russia had dispersed its forces all over the map in the expectation of a quick victory. Ukraine scored some surprise wins against targets with minimal personnel and no real defenses, and that only with overwhelming manpower (7-8 to 1 at Kharkiv, for example). Those conditions won't repeat themselves, especially after Bakhmut. The predominance of Wagner troops there, along with the delay in Ukraine's planned offensive, are indications of who's winning the war of attrition on that front.
Russia/Wagner has gotten absolutely slaughtered in Bakhmut. The fact that they've spent 8 months trying to take a city with the population of Harlingen tells you exactly where their fighting capability is at right now. Yes, Ukraine has suffered a lot of casualties there as well, but remember, they are a markedly smaller force in Bakhmut in a well-placed geographic defense structure.

It's all about tactics. Russia is feeding people into the grinder, and the Ukrainians are happy, willing and able to case the sausage.
Mr. Treehorn treats objects like women, man.
KaiBear
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trey3216 said:

KaiBear said:

Bear8084 said:

KaiBear said:

trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:




Ukraine will NOT win this war without foreign troops getting involved.

And as the months (years?) go by this will become obvious to everyone.

you are making some assumptions that Russia might not be able to meet. Have you checked the value trends on the ruble recently?
https://www.msn.com/en-xl/news/others/russias-ailing-ruble-takes-another-hit-what-happens-now/ar-AA1a8S7U
at five year lows:
https://tradingeconomics.com/russia/currency

Everything you say would be correct if Ukraine was on its own, having to feed, clothe, arm its own troops. Were that the case, the war would already be over. But that is not the case.

Nato has correctly identified that it does have an interest in the outcome of the war. A number of necessaries flow from that. The Ukrainian state must survive. The war must finish with Russia totally exhausted, decades away from full rearmament. If Ukraine is to remain economically viable, it must own sovereignty over Crimea (fate of Russian naval base at Sebastapol negotiable) in order to A) ensure flow of goods to/from it's major industrial ports in the Sea of Azov, and B) ensure revenues from oil/gas reserves across much of the northern Black Sea up thru the Sea of Azov and into the Donbas. Ergo, Nato has opened up cash and materiel flows that Russia cannot match over time.

A truce right now just gives Russia a breather, a chance to raise more troops and send more ammo to the front line. Ukraine must keep the battle going on, forcing Russia to strain ever harder to resupply, to the point its sclerotic supply lines crack. As long as Nato continues to supply Ukraine, Ukraine can outlast Russia, despite Russia having, on paper at least, far greater resources to wage war than Ukraine.

This is a proxy war. The Nato economy dwarfs the Russian economy by a ratio that far exceeds the advantage Russia has over Ukraine. All Ukraine has to supply is sweat equity, while the vastly superior economies of Nato outspend the heavily sanctioned Russian economy. And Ukraine has the population to do that, particularly given that they are inflicting casualties on Russia at a 7-1 rate.

As long as Russia wants to feed its sons into the maw, we should keep it grinding away. They've grabbed the tarbaby of all tarbabies.



Just the flippant way people in our government and on this site casually acknowledge that we are now in a bloody proxy war with a nuclear armed state.....without any vote by the American people...its just stunning.

A nation that has not attacked us by the way.

But this maw as you say is chewing up Ukrainian sons as much as it is chewing up Russian ones. Yet Ukraine can not keep that kind of causality rate up forever.

And even if funding these proxy wars was not at its base level highly immoral...its also unlikely to get us what we want. Heck what do we even want? Regime change in Moscow? The end of the 1,000 year old Russian State itself? No one can seem to agree with what is a final outcome should be.

Just like Afghanistan and Iraq were are tripping and stumbling into another long bloody conflict that is massively expensive and with no clear cut exit strategy or clear point of "victory".




Proxy wars are preferable to direct conflict, are they not? They are exactly how great powers engage one another militarily when they cannot come to a peaceful agreement, because they are by wide margin preferable to direct conflict.

"A nation which has not attacked us, by the way" is an old fallacy which presumes war is defined by military conflict. Remember the Cold War? Nations jockey and bluster and negotiate and ally and even poke & prod with third parties all the time. It's how the game is played......to avoid all out conflict.

Ukraine can keep up a 7-1 favorable casualty rate longer than Russia can. Ukrainians are united as one for a war to the death. Same cannot be said for Putin, who is trying to hide the true cost of the war from the Russian people to avoid unrest in the streets.

What we want has been quite clearly stated: Russian withdrawal from sovereign Ukrainian territory. You just don't take it seriously. Regime change has been mentioned as one way to achieve that outcome, and we were wise to do so. It puts pressure on Putin, who has resisted it and pressed on, tying his fate to the outcome of the war. That's fine. He needs to go. We don't want to ever have a Russian head of state who ever again thinks Nato will stand idly by when Russian armies cross European borders.

The analogs you mentioned are not applicable. Holding onto them so tightly badly affects your perception of what is happening. We have not, and will not commit troops to Ukraine. We've been quite consistent on that. Nato has been consistent on that. More to the point, it will not be necessary. Russia is not going to win the war. Ukraine can outlast them (thanks to Nato support).

The way the media has completely thrown out "beating Russia is easy" is a sign that what you're hearing about the difficulty of dealing with Russia isn't true.

Have you thought about how much your viewpoint aligns with the uniparty veiwpoint?
I haven't noticed a narrative that "beating Russia is easy" from MSM at all. The cheerleading has been obvious,though, and when it reaches the level of virtue posturing can be quite humorous. That in no way changes realities on the ground in Ukraine.

My viewpoint is my own: a masters degree in directly related subject material plus 10 years in the intel/diplomatic world with direct experience on things Russian, followed by relentless self-study on history, geopolitics, etc.... There is a reason Nato and the USA chose to support Ukraine - it is overwhelmingly in their interest to do so. And the fact there is such unity within Nato on the question is telling. Biden didn't hornswoggle them, for sure. The case for not aggressively supporting Ukraine, other than impacts on budget and readiness, is completely a priori reasoning, and laced with one foolish strawman after the other on escalation. Initially opponents ran around with their skirts up about the inevitability of nuclear war. Now, its mostly about the inevitability of direct involvement of US troops. Worst of all, opponents typically misread the situation on the ground because of a general lack of familiarity with the subject material.

One really has to work hard to remain in the shadow of obtusity not to see the wisdom of US support for Ukraine this particular proxy war. Proxy wars have happened for millennia in the past, and will happen for millennia in the future. We do not have a stake in most of them. But this one we do, for reasons that are rather obvious unless one is hidebound determined to ignore them.
Can we at least agree that the pricing that the military industrial complex is charging for weapons which is purchased by US tax dollars is way too damn high and we should work on that? They're charging tenfold, if not a hundredfold their cost of production and our government is more than willing to go along with it because they get a piece of it back for their campaigns and under the table deals. It's shifting middle class taxes to giant corporations that are hardly trickling it back into the economy.

A recent POGO analysis, for instance, documented the malfeasance of TransDigm, a military parts supplier that the Department of Defense's inspector general caught overcharging the Pentagon by as much as 3,800 percent!

https://jacobin.com/2022/02/us-pentagon-budget-military-spending-f-35-nuclear-weapons

Its not so much that I'm against the reason for this war. It's the means by which it is being carried out which I consider extremely corrupt.

Our ruling class isn't taking care of our people. They aren't taking care of our borders, our schools are god awful, our infrastructure is ghetto...but we can drop trillions on war?

I'm at the point where I'm like "no you can't have your war until you fix sh it at home".
I had dinner with the CEO of a manufacturer a few weeks ago and, in a brainstorming discussion about possibilities, asked him about the cost of a potential new product as a substitute (an innovative one, at that) for an existing one. He said...."well, that depends on how much we can produce. If we can open up the plant and run it 24/7, it will be priced where you need it to be. If not....well, it will not."

That's not rocket science, just an current example.

Arms manufacturers work silo'd with R&D and production, and really only have a single customer (since that customer has to approve exports elsewhere on anything really sexy.). Purchase orders are intermittent, and limited. The initial price of the first unit is always the one quoted by critics, never the costs of the last few on a multi-year run. And on and on. And it's almost always the $900 toilet seat that gets held up as a typical example, when it is anything but. Make 900k of those particular toilet seats designed for the single head in the captain's quarters and they cost about 2-3x what the sexiest model at Home Depot costs. And, yes, the manufacturers do gouge a bit on some items, as pricing is constrained on others, and or overall plant capacity is limited to small percentages of capacity Overall, Lockheed/Martin is not making 3800% on a delivered F-35. Newport News is not going to make 3800% on the USS Doris Miller. And most assuredly, the tax returns for those companies do not show a net taxable profit of 3800%.

Please. We are educated and informed adults here on this board........

Since you're educated and can explain, how is it that with Russia's $66b defense budget and NATO's $1t defense budget, the West is running out of weapons and equipment to transfer to Ukraine?
Firstly it's the definition of "running out." Nato is running out of inventory to transfer, not running out of production capacity. Beyond inventory levels there is the question of mobiliziation of existing capacity. Production in Europe largely has not been ramped up to meet Ukrainian needs, while in USA it has been substantially increased. I understand conventional artillery round production in the US, for example, has ramped up to current max capacity. And that is all within context of peace-time capabilities. We have not mobilized our industries for war-time production.

Russia has. And is under severe sanctions that effectively cut off its ability to produce it's most technologically advanced systems. So it's pretty much limited to the supply chain it has right now, and fighting with Vietnam War era technology. It is almost impossible to innovate while fighting a war. The Axis started WWII with superior aircraft, and Germany even developed the jet fighter before war-end. But the supply chain demands of training pilots and building existing airframes to stave off an invader......made impossible to deploy that superior technology in battle at scale. It would have required industrial capacity Germany did not and could not employ. The only way they could have done it was to have secured a 1 year truce and use the breathing room to rearm and redeploy. (that story is a direct analog for this war; no truce to allow Russia to rearm, resupply, reform practices.....make them struggle to keep up with what they have.....while we keep upping the ante with new systems for Ukraine....the longer it goes, the worse that equation pressures Russia).

So Russia is facing an even worse and more daunting proposition than it did when Reagan ramped up military spending. Our economy has enjoyed continued growth, built upon a broadening foundation of population growth. Russia, on the other hand, has less than half the population it did during the Cold War, and considerably lower manufacturing and resource levels to draw upon PLUS a population already old and in decline. The demo of young men of "military age" in Russia is approaching half the number it was 40 years ago. Russia cannot afford to let this war drag on indefinitely. It needs to force a quick end. And it cannot. It is not built to do that, and it can neither ramp up nor modernize the way it needs to do that.

For Nato? It's merely a question of how much we're willing to spend to make Russia squirm. We have the resources to bury them, if we want to. Sure, everyone is shocked at the rate at which munitions are being expanded. Current production capacity is inadequate to keep up with it. Which means we'd have to mobilize over to war-time footing. That still would probably not allow us to fire all the rounds we could aim at everything we'd need to shoot at, but it'd be 100x what Russia could manage, so it would be enough.

Most war critics focus too much on Russia's POTENTIAL and not enough on their ability. Yes, they have enormous advantages in manpower and resources. But their ability to deliver what they have at their disposal is pitifully inadequate, as we see on display in Ukraine. A nation they should have been able to roll over in a few days is likely going to win the war on favorable terms. But they can't, because they are still trying to fight with a logistics system that is in some respects essentially 19th century technology.

No one has questioned the economic and production power of the USA-EU

Combined population is 778 million and nominal GDP of the USA is 23 trillion and the EU is 17 trillion.

The issue is that Ukraine is running out of men and does not have the manpower to push Russia out of Donbas...much less Crimea.
They don't have to push Russia out of Crimea. They take Melitopol down to Sea of Azov and blow the Kerch Bridge and Russia can't supply it's military in Crimea. Ukraine shuts the water supply off up river and starves the army out. Russian military in Crimea is forced to surrender.
Wonder what odds Las Vegas would give on such a fantasy ?




Probably decent since they almost pulled off taking out the bridge last year.
800 - 1 at best .
I would take out a HELOC on my house if they'd give me those odds.
Better ask your wife first .

No chance in the world Ukraine kicks Russia out of the Crimea .

Putin would sacrifice every Russian soldier if necessary .
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