Redbrickbear said:
whiterock said:
Redbrickbear said:
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War will be over within 14 months ....on Putin's terms .
Never say never but highly doubtful. Why do you think that will be the case?
A. Russia has the advantage in troop numbers ,
B. Air superiority
C. Ukraine's infrastructure is being destroyed week by week.
D. Western Europeans are tired of the war's disruption in their daily lives.
E. Americans are tired of paying billions of dollars to Ukraine when they can barely afford their gas/rent/medical bills.
F. The NATO 'alliance' is a sham. France, Germany, Turkey and Italy all want to go back to 'business as usual'.
People on this site feel great that Washington war mongers have gotten 100,000 Ukrainians killed and most of the country ruined… $1 trillion dollars in damages.
And just like our utter failures in Afghanistan and Iraq…we won't have much to show for this new military adventure in Eastern Europe.
But hey a bunch of Lobbyists in DC and at the Pentagon got rich right?
I feel great that we have helped highly motivated people defend their country. The idea that we foisted it all on them is bull***** People make money on wars. That does not mean wars never need to be fought.
Kaibears list is alternate reality. Russia has not been able to take advantage of its superior population and gain a material advantage in troop numbers where it matters - on the battlefield. Neither do they have air superiority. There's actually not a lot going on in the air war on either side (meaning neither side has superiority) which is a win for Ukraine. Ukraine's infrastructure is being destroyed on the front lines, but not elsewhere. Yes, Europeans are tired of the war, but they are not out in the streets demanding it be stopped either. Quite the opposite. Americans are growing frustrated with what appears to be a never-ending conflict (thanks to poor leadership by the admin), but still on balance support the war. Nato not only remains committed (large amounts of aid still in pipeline), they are adding members. Reality is, Russia launched a big winter offensive with 300k new troops. It made such a splash that it took the world three weeks to realize the slight elevation in intensity was, in fact, the big offensive. That "big offensive" bogged down at the first town it came to and has been mired there ever since. Ukraine totally stymied the big offensive, which has clearly culminated. That has allowed Ukraine to keep troops in reserve and prepare for the big counteroffensive.
We can speculate that the Russian "big offensive" which actually did nothing at all might be a diversion, and most of the deployments were defensive, to protect the approaches to Crimea. I've seen some deployment maps prepared by inveterate bloggers which would be consistent with that. And those deployments clearly seem to anticipate exactly the kind of Ukrainian counter-offensive I've suggested.....a push toward the Sea of Azov and Crimean approaches which would threaten to cut off the entire Russian army along the Kherson front. If Ukraine can do that.....(and it's hardly impossible for them)......then this war will end quite a bit differently than you imagine. But regardless what Ukraine does, Russia is a spent force. Done. They can feed more troops into the maw, but their tactics and strategy and logistics and (the whole ball of wax) is not capable of winning the fight they're in. All Nato has to do is "not lose" and Russia will have no option but to sue for peace. Right now Ukraine is well ahead of benchmarks and has reasonable chances of regaining some/all of pre-2014 positions, assuming their offensive outperforms the Russian one we've been watching, which should be the case.
we will know a lot more in 60 days.
You're looking at lines on the map without paying enough attention to what's happening on the ground. Russia generally hasn't bothered to overrun cities with infantry. They're doing so now only because the cities on the front line, from Bakhmut in the north to Marinka in the south and west to Vuldehar, have spent years building underground fortifications that are invulnerable to light artillery. Zelensky, against our advice, has made holding Bakhmut his main priority and a rallying cry for the public. Meanwhile the Russians have surrounded the city and are steadily funneling Ukrainian forces into the grinder. It's a similar situation in Avdiivka to the south. While the US bleeds out the Russian army in Ukraine, Russia is doing the same to the Ukrainian army at key points along the front line. The longer it goes, the more the numbers favor Russia.
The Ukrainian command & general staff is running rings around their Russian counterparts.
So?
The Confederate command and general staff ran rings around their Union counterparts.
Average Confederate fighting men also just plain out fought Union conscripts on a man to man basis throughout the war.
In the end it did not matter. The superior economic power of the Union, the superior fleets, the greater amount of factories and rail-lines, the greater man power eventually lead to a total Confederate defeat.
Every year the war went on the South had less of a chance at a negotiated victory.
Ukraine is in the same boat. They can out fight the Russians to a stand still. They can even whip their armies for a while. But eventually the overwhelming difference in manpower is going to end up being decisive.
Ukraine needs what the South needed.....intervention by foreign ground troops.
Is the USA-EU going to do that?
false dilemma.
Ukraine does not need intervention by foreign ground troops. Ukraine is not the CSA in your analogy. Ukraine is the Union. Ukraine has the Union's advantage in supply, and the CSA's advantage in leadership on the battlefield.
You are really, really misreading this.
USA-EU is going to keep Ukraine supplied with better arms & equipment and funding than Russia enjoys.
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-AA1a8S7Uat five year lows:
https://tradingeconomics.com/russia/currencyEverything 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.