Why Are We in Ukraine?

412,367 Views | 6266 Replies | Last: 1 hr ago by Redbrickbear
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
muddybrazos said:

Redbrickbear said:

whiterock said:

muddybrazos said:



I find myself agreeing with most all of what this dude has to say. I think he would be a great VP choice for Trump.
He is making a valid point, an actual strategic benefit from settling the Russo-Ukrainian War. It does, however, sound a little bit like......."well, let's cut this deal now....Yes, it's a lot less than we hoped for, but if we take a small win today, we can chase a grander objective tomorrow."

Ever heard that one before, Republicans?.....anyone?....



Why is cutting a deal framed as a bad thing?

Geo-politics requires cutting deals.

Especially when the alternative is a long drawn out war that is destroying the future of Ukraine to ever be a prosperous nation....not to mention killing lots of people.
Oh dont you worry, Blackrock & the WEF are going to rebuild Ukraine with all new Ukrainians from Africa and the middle east.


In the small defense of blackrock and the WEF….where else or they going to get the new citizens they will need to rebuild?

With a fertility rate well below replacement and at East Asian levels…along with a decades long steady stream of out migration to Western Europe…the demographic situation was already grim pre-war. Hard to guess how bad it is now.




whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Doc Holliday said:

We're gonna find out whose right.

If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.

BTW none of this is going as planned:

Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.

Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.

Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.

Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Doc Holliday
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

We're gonna find out whose right.

If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.

BTW none of this is going as planned:

Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.

Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.

Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.

Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Wouldn't flooding deny Ukraine an opportunity to launch an offensive along the 100kms from the dam to the ocean and free up thousands of Russian soldiers to deploy along this front to reinforce their lines further north?
sombear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

We're gonna find out whose right.

If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.

BTW none of this is going as planned:

Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.

Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.

Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.

Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Interesting. I know you have deep knowledge and solid sources. But the tactical experts I follow and my company's briefing are highly confident this was Russia (either intentional or neglect) and it very much hinders Ukraine's offensive.
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

We're gonna find out whose right.

If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.

BTW none of this is going as planned:

Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.

Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.

Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.

Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Wouldn't flooding deny Ukraine an opportunity to launch an offensive along the 100kms from the dam to the ocean and free up thousands of Russian soldiers to deploy along this front to reinforce their lines further north?
Yes. I think that is the most important fact to focus on. The flooding is a SHORT TERM benefit to Russia. The lake will take many days to drain and weeks to dry out enough to traverse the bed, and there still is a river flowing thru it, so it remains a formidable obstacle for now. And the flooding downstream eliminates the small Ukrainian toehold on the western side of the Dnieper, as well as rendering any river crossings effectively impossible. But all of that is short-term benefit. By Labor Day, certainly next winter, the loss of the lake is a strategic detriment for Russia, as it does make the former lake portion of their left flank just as vulnerable as the pre-flood lower Dnieper. ALL of it, lower Dnieper AND the former lake becomes tactically crossable. So Russia gets a 12 week breather to redeploy troops eastwards, but by Thanksgiving, they will need MORE troops on the western flank than they had when the dam blew up. And all their fortifications on both the Kherson and the Zapo fronts are angled assuming the Lake is there as a secure flank. So now, Russia has to add fortifications to plan for crossings thru the old lake bed. and they have to do those fortifications without all the troops they're going to redeploy eastwards. (Ex: Masada was impregnable, until Rome built a massive earthen ramp right up to the top of the existing fortifications at the rim of the mesa. Then it was indefensible, without additional fortifications the defending Zealots did not have the manpower to build or defend.)

I would assume most of Russian troops to be redeployed from Kherson front eastward will be headed to the Russian portion of the front, given the partisan activity going on there. That is a threat to the stability of Russia itself.

The list of short/long term pros/cons for Russia blowing up the dam is long.
The list of short/long term pros/cons for Ukraine blowing up the dam is long.
The way to wade thru the two lists it is to understand there is a hot war going on. Both sides are dead set on victory. Russia is all in...no reserves. Ukraine is about to throw its reserves into the fray. This is a desperate moment - a massive Russian offensive culminated in an army shattering zero-gain stalemate so disappointing that we are seeing skirmishes between Russian units and Russian mercenaries. A plucky Ukraine has tremendous opportunity it might not be able to fully exploit due to limitations on supply, but they're going to sally forth anyway, hoping luck and skill can overcome all. Whether it turns out like Lord Nelson at Trafalgar or Lord Cardigan at Balaclava remains to be seen. NEITHER side can afford to give much weight to long term considerations. Decisions are made to affect outcomes of battles going on right now. And in that calculus, the benefits to blowing the dam all flow to Russia.

Russia did it.
(Tucker Carlson is wrong).
Russia did it to free up troops to go staunch the bleeding in Belgorod and beef up the Russian portion of the Ukrainian border.

Desperate?
Yep.
Russia is now in the realm of cutting off fingers to save the hand.

whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
sombear said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

We're gonna find out whose right.

If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.

BTW none of this is going as planned:

Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.

Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.

Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.

Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Interesting. I know you have deep knowledge and solid sources. But the tactical experts I follow and my company's briefing are highly confident this was Russia (either intentional or neglect) and it very much hinders Ukraine's offensive.
Imprecise wording on my part. See post above.
Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

We're gonna find out whose right.

If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.

BTW none of this is going as planned:

Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.

Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.

Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.

Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Wouldn't flooding deny Ukraine an opportunity to launch an offensive along the 100kms from the dam to the ocean and free up thousands of Russian soldiers to deploy along this front to reinforce their lines further north?
Russia is all in...no reserves.
Far from it. They only committed about half their troops to begin with, and they've been actively replenishing reserves for almost a year.
Harrison Bergeron
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Like the pipeline ... it was definitely Ukraine.
ron.reagan
How long do you want to ignore this user?
What did they use to do it?
trey3216
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

We're gonna find out whose right.

If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.

BTW none of this is going as planned:

Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.

Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.

Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.

Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Wouldn't flooding deny Ukraine an opportunity to launch an offensive along the 100kms from the dam to the ocean and free up thousands of Russian soldiers to deploy along this front to reinforce their lines further north?
Russia is all in...no reserves.
Far from it. They only committed about half their troops to begin with, and they've been actively replenishing reserves for almost a year.
Replenishing with people off the streets with less than zero training, people fresh out of prison, and others.

I hope they commit more of their troops, because they're already having trouble defending their own borders against disgruntled breakaway Russian groups. Can you imagine how SOL they'd be if they committed more of their troops in their fruitless, failed campaign of conquest!?!?

Go for it Vlad!!
Mr. Treehorn treats objects like women, man.
Harrison Bergeron
How long do you want to ignore this user?
ron.reagan said:

What did they use to do it?
Jewish Space Lazer?
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
trey3216 said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

We're gonna find out whose right.

If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.

BTW none of this is going as planned:

Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.

Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.

Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.

Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Wouldn't flooding deny Ukraine an opportunity to launch an offensive along the 100kms from the dam to the ocean and free up thousands of Russian soldiers to deploy along this front to reinforce their lines further north?
Russia is all in...no reserves.
Far from it. They only committed about half their troops to begin with, and they've been actively replenishing reserves for almost a year.
Replenishing with people off the streets with less than zero training, people fresh out of prison, and others.


At this point that is literally both Russia and Ukraine.
Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
trey3216 said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

We're gonna find out whose right.

If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.

BTW none of this is going as planned:

Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.

Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.

Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.

Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Wouldn't flooding deny Ukraine an opportunity to launch an offensive along the 100kms from the dam to the ocean and free up thousands of Russian soldiers to deploy along this front to reinforce their lines further north?
Russia is all in...no reserves.
Far from it. They only committed about half their troops to begin with, and they've been actively replenishing reserves for almost a year.
Replenishing with people off the streets with less than zero training, people fresh out of prison, and others.
As of last fall, sure. They'd be reasonably well trained by now.
ron.reagan
How long do you want to ignore this user?
A laser would me the safest way to cut a hole in it without compromising structural integrity. If you got the first pillar to crumble the laser would be useless for the other 5 now covered with water. Additionally, the laser couldn't damage the turbines without first burning through the concrete roof.
trey3216
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

trey3216 said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

We're gonna find out whose right.

If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.

BTW none of this is going as planned:

Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.

Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.

Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.

Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Wouldn't flooding deny Ukraine an opportunity to launch an offensive along the 100kms from the dam to the ocean and free up thousands of Russian soldiers to deploy along this front to reinforce their lines further north?
Russia is all in...no reserves.
Far from it. They only committed about half their troops to begin with, and they've been actively replenishing reserves for almost a year.
Replenishing with people off the streets with less than zero training, people fresh out of prison, and others.
As of last fall, sure. They'd be reasonably well trained by now.
Lol. Many of them were killed in Bakhmut.
Mr. Treehorn treats objects like women, man.
trey3216
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Redbrickbear said:

trey3216 said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

We're gonna find out whose right.

If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.

BTW none of this is going as planned:

Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.

Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.

Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.

Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Wouldn't flooding deny Ukraine an opportunity to launch an offensive along the 100kms from the dam to the ocean and free up thousands of Russian soldiers to deploy along this front to reinforce their lines further north?
Russia is all in...no reserves.
Far from it. They only committed about half their troops to begin with, and they've been actively replenishing reserves for almost a year.
Replenishing with people off the streets with less than zero training, people fresh out of prison, and others.


At this point that is literally both Russia and Ukraine.
Not really. Ukraine has had 10's of thousands of troops in places all over Europe training with NATO troops on their way back home right now. 14 brigades worth from the latest numbers I've seen.
Mr. Treehorn treats objects like women, man.
Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
trey3216 said:

Sam Lowry said:

trey3216 said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

We're gonna find out whose right.

If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.

BTW none of this is going as planned:

Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.

Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.

Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.

Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Wouldn't flooding deny Ukraine an opportunity to launch an offensive along the 100kms from the dam to the ocean and free up thousands of Russian soldiers to deploy along this front to reinforce their lines further north?
Russia is all in...no reserves.
Far from it. They only committed about half their troops to begin with, and they've been actively replenishing reserves for almost a year.
Replenishing with people off the streets with less than zero training, people fresh out of prison, and others.
As of last fall, sure. They'd be reasonably well trained by now.
Lol. Many of them were killed in Bakhmut.
Most of them have yet to set foot in Ukraine. Getting killed in Bakhmut was Wagner's job.
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

trey3216 said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

We're gonna find out whose right.

If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.

BTW none of this is going as planned:

Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.

Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.

Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.

Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Wouldn't flooding deny Ukraine an opportunity to launch an offensive along the 100kms from the dam to the ocean and free up thousands of Russian soldiers to deploy along this front to reinforce their lines further north?
Russia is all in...no reserves.
Far from it. They only committed about half their troops to begin with, and they've been actively replenishing reserves for almost a year.
Replenishing with people off the streets with less than zero training, people fresh out of prison, and others.


At this point that is literally both Russia and Ukraine.
Not really. Ukraine has had 10's of thousands of troops in places all over Europe training with NATO troops on their way back home right now. 14 brigades worth from the latest numbers I've seen.


Certainly the Ukrainian troops are being trained better..no doubt about that.

But if reports are to be believed both sides are literally picking up/abducting men off the street and forcing/"encouraging" prisoners to fight.
muddybrazos
How long do you want to ignore this user?
ron.reagan said:

A laser would me the safest way to cut a hole in it without compromising structural integrity. If you got the first pillar to crumble the laser would be useless for the other 5 now covered with water. Additionally, the laser couldn't damage the turbines without first burning through the concrete roof.
Jewish space lasers arent actually lasers. They're giant tungsten rods the size of a telephone pole that are blasted from space that come down in a fireball. Go read about the Rods of God. It's probably cheaper and easier to just fire off an ICBM though.
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

We're gonna find out whose right.

If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.

BTW none of this is going as planned:

Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.

Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.

Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.

Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Wouldn't flooding deny Ukraine an opportunity to launch an offensive along the 100kms from the dam to the ocean and free up thousands of Russian soldiers to deploy along this front to reinforce their lines further north?
Russia is all in...no reserves.
Far from it. They only committed about half their troops to begin with, and they've been actively replenishing reserves for almost a year.
That other half is not reserves for the Ukraine operation. It's mostly deployed elsewhere inside Russia to defend borders and domestic threats. That's why they did the "partial" mobilization 0f 300k last year.

Of the 450K troops committed to Ukraine, they've suffered 225k casualties. Ergo why we see Ukraine sponsoring auxiliary action inside Russia - the Russian lines are already thinly defended and Putin simply does not have enough troops to extend the line further.


whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
ron.reagan said:

What did they use to do it?
Exactly. Deep diving gear, techy ordnance, etc....... Ukrainian hands may have touched the pipeline, but "others" were in the water, too.....
Porteroso
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

Porteroso said:

Sam Lowry said:

ATL Bear said:

Sam Lowry said:

ATL Bear said:

RMF5630 said:

Sam Lowry said:

RMF5630 said:

Sam Lowry said:

RMF5630 said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

trey3216 said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

RMF5630 said:

Redbrickbear said:

RMF5630 said:

Redbrickbear said:

RMF5630 said:

Redbrickbear said:





You think there is more reason to expand NATO into the east today than in 1990? What?

You think modern Russia is more of a threat than the super power that was the USSR?
Why does Russia have to be a threat for NATO to add nations that are like minded, want to join the EU and want freedom that security brings? Is Russia being a threat the only reason NATO can add? Or a nation that wants t o join NATO can join?

What common values and "like mindedness" do you think Britain, France, Albania, Canada, Romania, Portugal, Croatia, Turkey, Estonia, Greece, and the USA have?

The "liked mindedness" idea becomes even more hilarious when you look at the government of Turkey and its neo-Ottoman/semi-Islamist autocratic leader Erdogan and the post-national liberal governments of places like Canada.
And what was Turkey's Government like when they joined? Turkey is also a top 20ish economy and very Capitalist. Even if not, what is wrong with joining for security? You know the real world is not just meet all three or NO.

In 1952 Turkey had a Kemalist government (same type of guys who mass murdered the Christian Armenians and Assyrian Christians during world war I)

Also committed the anti-Greek Christian pogroms that destroyed the native Greeks of Istanbul who had been there since the time of Constantine the great.


[In 67 September 1955 an anti-Greek pogrom was orchestrated in Istanbul by the Turkish military's Tactical Mobilization Group. The events were triggered by the news that the Turkish consulate in Thessaloniki, north Greece the house where Mustafa Kemal Atatrk was born in 1881 had been bombed the day before. A bomb planted by a Turkish usher of the consulate, who was later arrested and confessed, incited the events. The Turkish press conveying the news in Turkey was silent about the arrest and instead insinuated that Greeks had set off the bomb. Over a dozen people died during or after the pogrom as a result of beatings and arson. Jews, Armenians and others were also harmed. In addition to commercial targets, the mob clearly targeted property owned or administered by the Greek Orthodox Church. 73 churches and 23 schools were vandalized, burned or destroyed, as were 8 asperses and 3 monasteries.

The pogrom greatly accelerated emigration of ethnic Greeks from Turkey, and the Istanbul region in particular. The Greek population of Turkey declined from 119,822 persons in 1927, to about 7,000 by 1978. In Istanbul alone, the Greek population decreased from 65,108 to 49,081 between 1955 and 1960.]

So Turkey should be out. The Baltics? Out. Finland, Sweden, Poland, Czech, Eastern Part of Germany, Australia, Romania... Basically, all of NATO should be disbanded and the US maybe pay reparations to most of the world while we are at it? How about adding Texas, NM, AZ and CA to give back to Mexico? Would giving AK to the Russians make up for all the harm we have done? HI needs to be reverted to a Kingdom, throw in the 7th Fleet to make up. That cover it? I am sure if you think about it there is someone else the US has harmed that we can pay. Maybe just dissolve the US. Would that suffice?


There is absolutely NOT ONE THING that NATO and US has done well according to you guys.

Well of course that is a lie and no one on this thread ever said that.

NATO was a necessary military alliance to stop the spread of Communism and the massive socialist empire called the USSR. The communists being backed up by the Red Army that had 400 division stationed in Europe, 25,000 tanks, and 45,000 nukes. Along with 8 other Warsaw pact countries under communist rule with their armies.

The USSR and the Warsaw pact are now long long gone.

https://www.foreignexchanges.news/p/nato-has-outlived-its-usefulness
[In many ways, NATO was wildly successful in its time. But that time is over, and now it should be dismantled...

The decision to keep NATO operating after the Cold War ensured that it functioned as support for the US hegemon. During the Cold War, as NATO's website proudly affirms, the organization's "forces were not involved in a single military engagement." Instead, to borrow the historian Walter LaFeber's phrasing, NATO was mainly used "as a means to deal with more immediate problems [than a Soviet invasion]the integration of the Federal Republic of Germany into the West, the easing of Franco-German hatreds, the anchoring of a Great Britain tossed between continental and Atlantic-Commonwealth interests," and other intra-North Atlantic concerns. It was primarily a tool of integration.

But once the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, NATO rapidly became an arm of the US Empire. Or as NATO's website benignly puts it, with "changing conditions came new responsibilities. From being an exclusively defensive alliance for nearly half a century, NATO began to assume an increasingly proactive role within the international community." It participated in the Gulf War; the conflicts that rent the former Yugoslavia; the War on Terror; the Afghanistan War; and the Iraq War, to name only a few of its contributions. Indeed, by early 2021, NATO was partaking in operations in Afghanistan, Kosovo, the Mediterranean, Africa, and elsewhere.

The alliance has also grown to thirty members, and now includes many nations that were once in the Soviet sphere of influence, like Albania, Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Romania. Unsurprisingly, the organization's wanton expansion into Eastern Europe has provoked Russia imagine how US decision-makers would have felt had Canada or Mexico joined the Warsaw Pact and NATO has been a useful foil for Russian President Vladimir Putin, helping him justify his revanchist foreign policy.

As this all suggests, there are significant drawbacks to NATO's continuing existence.]
Doesn't the Russian invasion of Ukraine demonstrate that oldest Russian desires for empire are alive and well?
No, not really. Russia's position isn't what it was during the time of the czars or the empire. It's not even what it was during the Cold War, when their forces were massed across from NATO with clear paths of attack. To say Russia will always do such-and-such because that's what they did centuries ago is meaningless. It's just another way of saying you don't like or trust Russia.

The explanation for the Ukraine war is in recent history, and it's all too obvious. They're doing what any great power would do in their situation.

They literally ****ing did it 16 months ago and you're in here saying they're not in the same position. My good man, you're a special kind of special
We should get Sam to point to a time in history of the last 500 years when Russia was NOT playing the expansion game to secure strategic depth as a way to compensate for indefensible borders, insofar as their budgets allowed.
It would be more accurate to say Russia and western Europe have been in competition for most of that time. Of course we know seeking strategic depth is only imperialistic when the Russians do it.
There is one difference that you always overlook. NATO and the EU are voluntary organizations that nations can leave at their own desire. Russia, not so much. Unless, you are strong enough to cause them pain, see agreements with China. China can come and go as they see fit. The Stans, no.
The -stans and the rest of the Soviet republics all left Russia in 1991. The Baltics and most of the Warsaw Pact countries joined NATO and the EU as well.
Yeah, free... Didn't same thing happen with Russia pulling the same thing in Kazakhstan that they are defending the "ethnic-Russians"? Sort of a trial run before Ukraine?


Russia was defending the legitimate government of Kazakhstan, which has been a close ally despite their differences. What would you have done?
Of course, legitimate Govt. Is there anything Russia does that you disagree with?
It's uncanny. The US is hegemonic, but Russia is protecting "legitimate governments".
I said it was legitimate, not Democratic.
Form of government is irrelevant. Your disdain of US hegemony and championing of Russian is the oddity many of us see.
Both Russia and the US expect their zones of security under the post-war order. The big difference is that we're the ones doing the encroaching. Putin's view is closer in that sense to the letter and spirit of NATO.

You have to know how skewed your perspective is when you start saying Russia is acting in the spirit of NATO as it reclaims former Soviet territory.

You have taken the obvious, that the US is not pure good, and run with it across the half court and scored in your own basket. You scored but it doesn't mean what you think it does.

Yes, we are the good guys in protecting Ukraine. Russia is the bad guys. It really is that simple.
Let me say it again. It's the United States, and not Russia, that has rejected the international order.

What order? We were still bound by treaty to defend Ukraine from nuclear powers. Not that we normally care for such treaties.
trey3216
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Harrison Bergeron said:

Like the pipeline ... it was definitely Ukraine.
https://kyivindependent.com/they-are-destroying-us-people-plea-to-escape-flooded-russian-occupied-areas/

"...the Russians allegedly destroyed people's means of escape. Serhiy's parents told him the Russians went through the town and rounded up or destroyed all the boats they could find in the weeks before triggering the explosion that caused Ukraine's most lurid catastrophe in decades.
"They stole the boats before all this... all the landings, they carried out all the boats," said Serhiy, paraphrasing what his parents told him. "It's like they were preparing for this to specially create a situation so that no one could escape."
"We thought they were looting. Now I understand that there was a specific command to remove all means of flotation so that people couldn't save themselves."
Oleh said that his aunt told him a similar story.
"They (the boats) were taken away," he said, quoting her. "People whose houses were locked kept their boats. The ones on the pier were smashed, shot up, or taken away."
Mr. Treehorn treats objects like women, man.
trey3216
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Mr. Treehorn treats objects like women, man.
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Porteroso said:

Sam Lowry said:

Porteroso said:

Sam Lowry said:

ATL Bear said:

Sam Lowry said:

ATL Bear said:

RMF5630 said:

Sam Lowry said:

RMF5630 said:

Sam Lowry said:

RMF5630 said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

trey3216 said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Redbrickbear said:

RMF5630 said:

Redbrickbear said:

RMF5630 said:

Redbrickbear said:

RMF5630 said:

Redbrickbear said:





You think there is more reason to expand NATO into the east today than in 1990? What?

You think modern Russia is more of a threat than the super power that was the USSR?
Why does Russia have to be a threat for NATO to add nations that are like minded, want to join the EU and want freedom that security brings? Is Russia being a threat the only reason NATO can add? Or a nation that wants t o join NATO can join?

What common values and "like mindedness" do you think Britain, France, Albania, Canada, Romania, Portugal, Croatia, Turkey, Estonia, Greece, and the USA have?

The "liked mindedness" idea becomes even more hilarious when you look at the government of Turkey and its neo-Ottoman/semi-Islamist autocratic leader Erdogan and the post-national liberal governments of places like Canada.
And what was Turkey's Government like when they joined? Turkey is also a top 20ish economy and very Capitalist. Even if not, what is wrong with joining for security? You know the real world is not just meet all three or NO.

In 1952 Turkey had a Kemalist government (same type of guys who mass murdered the Christian Armenians and Assyrian Christians during world war I)

Also committed the anti-Greek Christian pogroms that destroyed the native Greeks of Istanbul who had been there since the time of Constantine the great.


[In 67 September 1955 an anti-Greek pogrom was orchestrated in Istanbul by the Turkish military's Tactical Mobilization Group. The events were triggered by the news that the Turkish consulate in Thessaloniki, north Greece the house where Mustafa Kemal Atatrk was born in 1881 had been bombed the day before. A bomb planted by a Turkish usher of the consulate, who was later arrested and confessed, incited the events. The Turkish press conveying the news in Turkey was silent about the arrest and instead insinuated that Greeks had set off the bomb. Over a dozen people died during or after the pogrom as a result of beatings and arson. Jews, Armenians and others were also harmed. In addition to commercial targets, the mob clearly targeted property owned or administered by the Greek Orthodox Church. 73 churches and 23 schools were vandalized, burned or destroyed, as were 8 asperses and 3 monasteries.

The pogrom greatly accelerated emigration of ethnic Greeks from Turkey, and the Istanbul region in particular. The Greek population of Turkey declined from 119,822 persons in 1927, to about 7,000 by 1978. In Istanbul alone, the Greek population decreased from 65,108 to 49,081 between 1955 and 1960.]

So Turkey should be out. The Baltics? Out. Finland, Sweden, Poland, Czech, Eastern Part of Germany, Australia, Romania... Basically, all of NATO should be disbanded and the US maybe pay reparations to most of the world while we are at it? How about adding Texas, NM, AZ and CA to give back to Mexico? Would giving AK to the Russians make up for all the harm we have done? HI needs to be reverted to a Kingdom, throw in the 7th Fleet to make up. That cover it? I am sure if you think about it there is someone else the US has harmed that we can pay. Maybe just dissolve the US. Would that suffice?


There is absolutely NOT ONE THING that NATO and US has done well according to you guys.

Well of course that is a lie and no one on this thread ever said that.

NATO was a necessary military alliance to stop the spread of Communism and the massive socialist empire called the USSR. The communists being backed up by the Red Army that had 400 division stationed in Europe, 25,000 tanks, and 45,000 nukes. Along with 8 other Warsaw pact countries under communist rule with their armies.

The USSR and the Warsaw pact are now long long gone.

https://www.foreignexchanges.news/p/nato-has-outlived-its-usefulness
[In many ways, NATO was wildly successful in its time. But that time is over, and now it should be dismantled...

The decision to keep NATO operating after the Cold War ensured that it functioned as support for the US hegemon. During the Cold War, as NATO's website proudly affirms, the organization's "forces were not involved in a single military engagement." Instead, to borrow the historian Walter LaFeber's phrasing, NATO was mainly used "as a means to deal with more immediate problems [than a Soviet invasion]the integration of the Federal Republic of Germany into the West, the easing of Franco-German hatreds, the anchoring of a Great Britain tossed between continental and Atlantic-Commonwealth interests," and other intra-North Atlantic concerns. It was primarily a tool of integration.

But once the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, NATO rapidly became an arm of the US Empire. Or as NATO's website benignly puts it, with "changing conditions came new responsibilities. From being an exclusively defensive alliance for nearly half a century, NATO began to assume an increasingly proactive role within the international community." It participated in the Gulf War; the conflicts that rent the former Yugoslavia; the War on Terror; the Afghanistan War; and the Iraq War, to name only a few of its contributions. Indeed, by early 2021, NATO was partaking in operations in Afghanistan, Kosovo, the Mediterranean, Africa, and elsewhere.

The alliance has also grown to thirty members, and now includes many nations that were once in the Soviet sphere of influence, like Albania, Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Romania. Unsurprisingly, the organization's wanton expansion into Eastern Europe has provoked Russia imagine how US decision-makers would have felt had Canada or Mexico joined the Warsaw Pact and NATO has been a useful foil for Russian President Vladimir Putin, helping him justify his revanchist foreign policy.

As this all suggests, there are significant drawbacks to NATO's continuing existence.]
Doesn't the Russian invasion of Ukraine demonstrate that oldest Russian desires for empire are alive and well?
No, not really. Russia's position isn't what it was during the time of the czars or the empire. It's not even what it was during the Cold War, when their forces were massed across from NATO with clear paths of attack. To say Russia will always do such-and-such because that's what they did centuries ago is meaningless. It's just another way of saying you don't like or trust Russia.

The explanation for the Ukraine war is in recent history, and it's all too obvious. They're doing what any great power would do in their situation.

They literally ****ing did it 16 months ago and you're in here saying they're not in the same position. My good man, you're a special kind of special
We should get Sam to point to a time in history of the last 500 years when Russia was NOT playing the expansion game to secure strategic depth as a way to compensate for indefensible borders, insofar as their budgets allowed.
It would be more accurate to say Russia and western Europe have been in competition for most of that time. Of course we know seeking strategic depth is only imperialistic when the Russians do it.
There is one difference that you always overlook. NATO and the EU are voluntary organizations that nations can leave at their own desire. Russia, not so much. Unless, you are strong enough to cause them pain, see agreements with China. China can come and go as they see fit. The Stans, no.
The -stans and the rest of the Soviet republics all left Russia in 1991. The Baltics and most of the Warsaw Pact countries joined NATO and the EU as well.
Yeah, free... Didn't same thing happen with Russia pulling the same thing in Kazakhstan that they are defending the "ethnic-Russians"? Sort of a trial run before Ukraine?


Russia was defending the legitimate government of Kazakhstan, which has been a close ally despite their differences. What would you have done?
Of course, legitimate Govt. Is there anything Russia does that you disagree with?
It's uncanny. The US is hegemonic, but Russia is protecting "legitimate governments".
I said it was legitimate, not Democratic.
Form of government is irrelevant. Your disdain of US hegemony and championing of Russian is the oddity many of us see.
Both Russia and the US expect their zones of security under the post-war order. The big difference is that we're the ones doing the encroaching. Putin's view is closer in that sense to the letter and spirit of NATO.

You have to know how skewed your perspective is when you start saying Russia is acting in the spirit of NATO as it reclaims former Soviet territory.

You have taken the obvious, that the US is not pure good, and run with it across the half court and scored in your own basket. You scored but it doesn't mean what you think it does.

Yes, we are the good guys in protecting Ukraine. Russia is the bad guys. It really is that simple.
Let me say it again. It's the United States, and not Russia, that has rejected the international order.

What order? We were still bound by treaty to defend Ukraine from nuclear powers. Not that we normally care for such treaties.
That one is non-binding... But the not expand east is binding. The 1945 Bug River "comment" is binding.

Basically anything we have to do for Russia is binding. Anything that doesn't benefit Russia is not binding. Seems to be the rules.
trey3216
How long do you want to ignore this user?


Yep. It was certainly Ukraine who blew the dam. Terrorist tactics 101. Perform a gruesome act that brings people out, wait for the responders/rescuers to get there, and then perform the true act of terror.

What a ****hole and ****heel country/society they are.
Mr. Treehorn treats objects like women, man.
Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

We're gonna find out whose right.

If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.

BTW none of this is going as planned:

Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.

Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.

Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.

Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Wouldn't flooding deny Ukraine an opportunity to launch an offensive along the 100kms from the dam to the ocean and free up thousands of Russian soldiers to deploy along this front to reinforce their lines further north?
Russia is all in...no reserves.
Far from it. They only committed about half their troops to begin with, and they've been actively replenishing reserves for almost a year.
That other half is not reserves for the Ukraine operation. It's mostly deployed elsewhere inside Russia to defend borders and domestic threats. That's why they did the "partial" mobilization 0f 300k last year.

Of the 450K troops committed to Ukraine, they've suffered 225k casualties. Ergo why we see Ukraine sponsoring auxiliary action inside Russia - the Russian lines are already thinly defended and Putin simply does not have enough troops to extend the line further.



At the one-year mark, they had over 300K in Ukraine and as many as 500K for the Ukraine operation altogether, according to Ukrainian officials. That's well over twice the initial commitment of 200K (I don't know where you got the 450K number). The partial mobilization contributed to that both directly and through domestic deployments. And it was only the beginning. They've continued to train more both in Russia and Belarus (they were training 250K reservists a year in peacetime). Most recently they've announced a 50 percent increase in the total size of forces. So not all in...by a long way.
Doc Holliday
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Doc Holliday said:


And?
ron.reagan
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Better late than never
Doc Holliday
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

Doc Holliday said:


And?
And War continues to escalate.
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
ron.reagan
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Imagine getting fined $1000 and people on the other side of the world talking about it
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

We're gonna find out whose right.

If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.

BTW none of this is going as planned:

Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.

Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.

Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.

Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Wouldn't flooding deny Ukraine an opportunity to launch an offensive along the 100kms from the dam to the ocean and free up thousands of Russian soldiers to deploy along this front to reinforce their lines further north?
Russia is all in...no reserves.
Far from it. They only committed about half their troops to begin with, and they've been actively replenishing reserves for almost a year.
That other half is not reserves for the Ukraine operation. It's mostly deployed elsewhere inside Russia to defend borders and domestic threats. That's why they did the "partial" mobilization 0f 300k last year.

Of the 450K troops committed to Ukraine, they've suffered 225k casualties. Ergo why we see Ukraine sponsoring auxiliary action inside Russia - the Russian lines are already thinly defended and Putin simply does not have enough troops to extend the line further.



At the one-year mark, they had over 300K in Ukraine and as many as 500K for the Ukraine operation altogether, according to Ukrainian officials. That's well over twice the initial commitment of 200K (I don't know where you got the 450K number). The partial mobilization contributed to that both directly and through domestic deployments. And it was only the beginning. They've continued to train more both in Russia and Belarus (they were training 250K reservists a year in peacetime). Most recently they've announced a 50 percent increase in the total size of forces. So not all in...by a long way.
150k on the invasion, plus 300k for the "partial mobilization" = 450k. From that you have to deduct 225k battlefield casualties. Plus, Russia now has to guard the entire Finland border, to include the portion near St. Petersburg quite heavily. That will soak up a big percentage of any new recruits.

But let's take your 500K number for giggles and do some more math. The front in Ukraine is approx six-hundred miles long. That works out to 833 troops per mile. Is that enough to defend the line? not well. But it's worse than that. Russia is having to garrison every town it captures. It also has bases to maintain in Crimea. And it has a defense in depth structure.....several lines of trenches between Zapo and the Sea of Azov, and several lines of trenches in Crimea all they way back down to Sebastopol So it's not 833 troops per mile along the front. Closer to half that.

And that's before we get to the Russia/Ukraine border outside the war zone. There is at least one line of fortifications there, too, so it's not a 600mi front. It's a 1000mi front (which is why we see action by irregular forces in Belgorad). When you rework the math, Russia has something closer to 200 troops per mile along the front.

THAT is why Russia is are blowing dams to flood valleys.

whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
ron.reagan said:

Better late than never
ATACMS munitions will fit inside the tubes of the already delivered HIMARS system. So the impact would be almost immediate.
First Page Last Page
Page 8 of 180
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.