Why Are We in Ukraine?

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whiterock
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Redbrickbear said:

trey3216 said:

Redbrickbear said:

trey3216 said:

https://defence-blog.com/russia-faces-artillery-barrel-shortage/





The mighty Russian military menace that we must all be scared of and who might run wild on Poland at any moment.

(*yet they rely on just 2 machines- made in Austria- for their critical artillery components

And apparently Moscow has been relying on imported machine tech since the 1930s...first from the USA and then from post war German? lol)


Guys this just proves we need to spend another 100 trillion dollars on European defense...

I was told on here that sanctions aren't working....

Sounds like they have structural problems that existed 80 years before the sanctions started....and have never been the massive military threat they have been made out to be.

(*And people on here are just reporting what the Media says....our own Western align Media saying the sanctions have not worked on consumer goods because they can just import in cheap knock off stuff from China into their malls and shops and keep going....but do work on the military hardware since they can get it from the West-like Austria in this case)

https://www.brookings.edu/events/sanctions-on-russia-whats-working-whats-not/

1.5 long talk about sanctions for a source you would not dismiss....sounds like a mixed bag of success and non success

Daleep Singh, Deputy Direct National Security advisor on International economics- "We were initially trying to induce as much Capital flight as possible, in our initial polices on Feb 26 we were trying to engineer a free fall in the ruble. That would case inflation to spike, which would crush purchasing power of Russian consumers, and cause the Central Bank to raise interest rates to emergency levels and drive away investment and then create a negative feedback loop...he [Putin] arrested that with Capital controls. Can you over come those Capital controls and return Russia to that vicious feedback loop? If you can that would be something to look into but I am doubtful that you can in the Russian economy as currently built"

beware the implicit false dilemma in your argument - the assumptions that sanctions by themselves accomplish policy objectives. Sanctions rarely force decisive outcomes. That's not their intent. Sanctions complicate things for the country sanctioned. They increase the costs of things. They force reallocations of resources that create limitations elsewhere. They reduce a country's ability to field troops & weapons at full capacity.

Saying that Russia can still produce arty barrels despite sanctions, so sanctions aren't working drastically misses the point. Sanctions have SEVERELY limited Russian ability to product arty barrels, which of course has significantly affected the accuracy of their fires, and increasingly so over time. Without sanctions, Russia could simply buy all the equipment it needed to make all the barrels it needed. Sanctions increase the cost of field artillery, which limits the production of field artillery, just as surely as the bombing of arty factories would. In fact, sanctions are arguably MORE effective. Without sanctions, Russia could simply rebuild a bombed out arty barrel plant. But with sanctions, Russia has severe limitations on restoring or increasing any arty barrel production at all.

Meanwhile, Ukraine is being delivered ever more capable new arty equipment.........
FLBear5630
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trey3216 said:

https://defence-blog.com/russia-faces-artillery-barrel-shortage/



Didn't Whiterock call that a few weeks ago?
whiterock
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FLBear5630 said:

trey3216 said:

https://defence-blog.com/russia-faces-artillery-barrel-shortage/



Didn't Whiterock call that a few weeks ago?
yeah but that's been a pretty bright light on the porch for over a year. Lots & lots of knowledgeable folks are talking about it. War opponents just ignore it because it's inconvenient to their worldview (which is rooted in ironclad faith of Russian invincibility).

Wars of attrition stretch all across the spectrum of supplies, from the obvious stuff like soldiers and ammo, to important stuff like fuel, lubes, tires, engines, ball bearings, acetylene gas, and water pumps, to less obvious things that armies require like leather, textiles, zippers, buttons, bandages, etc..... Shortages or low-quality supplies all along the chain impact combat effectiveness. It's usually not any one thing, but the cumulative effect of lots of things proliferating across the spectrum.

Hemingway's old Law of Motion adage applies....first, things fail slowly. Then they fail suddenly. Offensives culminate because enough things start to strain the overall effort enough that the whole offensive bogs down & requires reorganization. Mobilizations are like that too. You can drastically spike up production all across the range of needs. But then you hit the point of diminishing marginal returns.......and later, slack & shortages & low quality start to pressure the production curves downward. you struggle & fight and stave off collapse. and then, one day, so many things are weighing down the effort, that the first domino falls. And you react & stop the chain reaction. and then something else cracks & the dominoes start falling again.... Eventually, the octopus doesn't have enough arms to handle everything. The chain of falling dominoes cannot be stopped and the whole thing grinds to a halt.

We're not close to that yet. At least 12 months out before we'll be on watch for that.

An escalation of supply by Nato is something Russia will not be able to match.............

Doc Holliday
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whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

Redbrickbear said:

Looks like Vance might not be such a fan of proxy war and regime change operations.....


[Here is my take on J.D. Vance's convention speech, published in The European Conservative. Excerpt:
Quote:

J.D. Vance's speech last night at the Republican National Convention was a landmark in American politics. It sealed the realignment of American politics. When Vance said the GOP henceforth would be not on the side of Wall Street, but of the "working man," in one sense, he effectively announced the end of Reaganism.

But that's not quite true. In his era, forty years ago, Reagan spoke for the common man, and won the common man's allegiance. Reagan stood for old-fashioned American patriotism, and for advocating common sense values against an out-of-touch elite in both the Democratic Party and among country-club Republicans. Reagan was the right man for his time.

Times have changed. American needed Reagan's free market entrepreneurialism and his robust, confrontational foreign policy to break the spell of statist sclerosis and national paralysis. The problems America faced in 1980 are very different from the problems it faces today. As Vance recalled, the free-trade fundamentalism ended up creating globalism, and with it the collapse of America's industrial might. It also allowed Wall Street to run wildabetted, please note, by the Clinton Democratswreaking havoc on the stability of working-class lives.

The Democrats had no real response to this. Nor did the standard-issue Republicans. The Democrats committed themselves to a left-wing cultural revolution, while doing relatively little to address the material conditions of American life. The Republicans fell back on Zombie Reaganism, as if the solutions of 1980 were evergreen truths. And both parties, especially the GOP, became devotees of permanent war, both hard and soft. The Republicans acted under the guise of 'spreading democracy' as a cover for naked U.S. hegemony; the Democrats did too, adding cultural leftism to the mix (e.g., pressuring other countries to accept LGBT dogmas).

That's over now. Donald Trump knocked holes in the wall of complacency and denial in 2016, and stands to clear even more ground if he is re-elected. And given his brilliant choice of Vance, Trump has not only chosen the most articulate and credible possible advocate of his sensibilities, but laid the groundwork for the permanent restructuring not only of American conservatism, but of America itself. Because Trump chose J.D. Vance, Trumpism will long outlast its founder. Trump resisted the pleas of media mogul Rupert Murdoch to choose someone tamer and more controllable as his running mate, and in so doing, passed the torch to a fighting tribune of the new MAGA generation.

Last night in Milwaukee, Vance emerged as the Ronald Reagan of the Millennials. He came across as patriotic and optimistic, but not sentimental. The anecdotes he shared about his rough childhood were not only factually true, but told mythical truths about what America is, and what she might be again.


He's echoed exactly what I've been saying about this war in that it's designed to be long and expensive, not designed to wrap up quickly.

It's frustrating that the pro war guys on here aren't realizing or don't care that the regime that's occupied DC that they're against are the same people running the Ukraine war.
Wars of attrition wrap up when one side runs out of gas.

Do not be disappointed when our aid to Ukraine continues after Trump is inaugurated. Trump, remember, is a guy famous for berating "losers" and promising to "win so much you'll get tired of winning."

ZERO chance Trump gives Putin what he wants in Ukraine just to stop the war.
My position is either help Ukraine wrap this up quickly or pull out. Either we supply them with enough to absolutely curb stomp Russia quickly or we stop altogether.

This very slow, long forever war mentality is what I'm against.
yes. democratic societies typically are not in favor of the long-war models.

The argument against the rapid escalation model you suggest is, of course, one that's been made here often by many - Russia is a nuclear capable adversary, so seeking escalation dominance has a frightful worst case scenario if one overplays one's hand. valid concern. obviously. but Biden has been waaaay too cautious.
Situation now, though, is that Russia is vulnerable to escalation = they can't. They are fully committed and unable to break the deadlock. So small, rapid escalations can have enhanced impacts.

Trump did not mention Ukraine last night in any policy detail. Neither does the platform. But there is prominent, consistent messaging about "rebuilding our military." Trump is going to use his pen to write purchase orders to drastically increase production on weapons systems. That is a signal to Russia and China that we are not going to be outproduced, that we are not going to allow supply chain constraints to drive policy. In other words, we will not be facing the clear constraint we have now of having to constantly balance support for Ukraine against the need to retain capability to defend Taiwan.

Trump will increase ordnance production lines and release many of the constraints on Ukrainian use of Nato-supplied weapons, then float a Bill in Congress for a massive lend-lease program for Ukraine. Then he'll call Vladimir and tell him something like - you can have the eastern half of the Donbas and you can retain basing rights at Sebastopol, and we'll give you 90 days to quietly withdraw from the rest of Ukraine as a gesture of good will. Otherwise, I'll have to sign that bill. Then the negotiations start.

Russia has already completely withdrawn their fleet from Sebasopol. Not sustainable.


Who knows, Trump might use my proposal to demil the Black Sea. It'll make him look like a peacemaker.....
I can see the angle to hurt Russia to the benefit of the west, but major players in the west also benefit by allowing as many Ukrainians to die as possible in the process. If carefully planned they can pull off both.

The west wants Ukraine cleared of all the natives and then handed over to the mega corps and their own interests. It's being Native American'ized and it's very obvious. I mean hell the capital is already committed.

If you're for that or just don't really care because it allows us to downgrade Russia then we really need to stop discussing this war as a noble cause for Ukrainians. It's a high casualty war for western market share and global hegemony.
whiterock
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Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

Redbrickbear said:

Looks like Vance might not be such a fan of proxy war and regime change operations.....


[Here is my take on J.D. Vance's convention speech, published in The European Conservative. Excerpt:
Quote:

J.D. Vance's speech last night at the Republican National Convention was a landmark in American politics. It sealed the realignment of American politics. When Vance said the GOP henceforth would be not on the side of Wall Street, but of the "working man," in one sense, he effectively announced the end of Reaganism.

But that's not quite true. In his era, forty years ago, Reagan spoke for the common man, and won the common man's allegiance. Reagan stood for old-fashioned American patriotism, and for advocating common sense values against an out-of-touch elite in both the Democratic Party and among country-club Republicans. Reagan was the right man for his time.

Times have changed. American needed Reagan's free market entrepreneurialism and his robust, confrontational foreign policy to break the spell of statist sclerosis and national paralysis. The problems America faced in 1980 are very different from the problems it faces today. As Vance recalled, the free-trade fundamentalism ended up creating globalism, and with it the collapse of America's industrial might. It also allowed Wall Street to run wildabetted, please note, by the Clinton Democratswreaking havoc on the stability of working-class lives.

The Democrats had no real response to this. Nor did the standard-issue Republicans. The Democrats committed themselves to a left-wing cultural revolution, while doing relatively little to address the material conditions of American life. The Republicans fell back on Zombie Reaganism, as if the solutions of 1980 were evergreen truths. And both parties, especially the GOP, became devotees of permanent war, both hard and soft. The Republicans acted under the guise of 'spreading democracy' as a cover for naked U.S. hegemony; the Democrats did too, adding cultural leftism to the mix (e.g., pressuring other countries to accept LGBT dogmas).

That's over now. Donald Trump knocked holes in the wall of complacency and denial in 2016, and stands to clear even more ground if he is re-elected. And given his brilliant choice of Vance, Trump has not only chosen the most articulate and credible possible advocate of his sensibilities, but laid the groundwork for the permanent restructuring not only of American conservatism, but of America itself. Because Trump chose J.D. Vance, Trumpism will long outlast its founder. Trump resisted the pleas of media mogul Rupert Murdoch to choose someone tamer and more controllable as his running mate, and in so doing, passed the torch to a fighting tribune of the new MAGA generation.

Last night in Milwaukee, Vance emerged as the Ronald Reagan of the Millennials. He came across as patriotic and optimistic, but not sentimental. The anecdotes he shared about his rough childhood were not only factually true, but told mythical truths about what America is, and what she might be again.


He's echoed exactly what I've been saying about this war in that it's designed to be long and expensive, not designed to wrap up quickly.

It's frustrating that the pro war guys on here aren't realizing or don't care that the regime that's occupied DC that they're against are the same people running the Ukraine war.
Wars of attrition wrap up when one side runs out of gas.

Do not be disappointed when our aid to Ukraine continues after Trump is inaugurated. Trump, remember, is a guy famous for berating "losers" and promising to "win so much you'll get tired of winning."

ZERO chance Trump gives Putin what he wants in Ukraine just to stop the war.
My position is either help Ukraine wrap this up quickly or pull out. Either we supply them with enough to absolutely curb stomp Russia quickly or we stop altogether.

This very slow, long forever war mentality is what I'm against.
yes. democratic societies typically are not in favor of the long-war models.

The argument against the rapid escalation model you suggest is, of course, one that's been made here often by many - Russia is a nuclear capable adversary, so seeking escalation dominance has a frightful worst case scenario if one overplays one's hand. valid concern. obviously. but Biden has been waaaay too cautious.
Situation now, though, is that Russia is vulnerable to escalation = they can't. They are fully committed and unable to break the deadlock. So small, rapid escalations can have enhanced impacts.

Trump did not mention Ukraine last night in any policy detail. Neither does the platform. But there is prominent, consistent messaging about "rebuilding our military." Trump is going to use his pen to write purchase orders to drastically increase production on weapons systems. That is a signal to Russia and China that we are not going to be outproduced, that we are not going to allow supply chain constraints to drive policy. In other words, we will not be facing the clear constraint we have now of having to constantly balance support for Ukraine against the need to retain capability to defend Taiwan.

Trump will increase ordnance production lines and release many of the constraints on Ukrainian use of Nato-supplied weapons, then float a Bill in Congress for a massive lend-lease program for Ukraine. Then he'll call Vladimir and tell him something like - you can have the eastern half of the Donbas and you can retain basing rights at Sebastopol, and we'll give you 90 days to quietly withdraw from the rest of Ukraine as a gesture of good will. Otherwise, I'll have to sign that bill. Then the negotiations start.

Russia has already completely withdrawn their fleet from Sebasopol. Not sustainable.


Who knows, Trump might use my proposal to demil the Black Sea. It'll make him look like a peacemaker.....
I can see the angle to hurt Russia to the benefit of the west, but major players in the west also benefit by allowing as many Ukrainians to die as possible in the process. If carefully planned they can pull off both.

The west wants Ukraine cleared of all the natives and then handed over to the mega corps and their own interests. It's being Native American'ized and it's very obvious. I mean hell the capital is already committed.

If you're for that or just don't really care because it allows us to downgrade Russia then we really need to stop discussing this war as a noble cause for Ukrainians. It's a high casualty war for western market share and global hegemony.
I'd dispute that part in bold. Nato is harmed by loss of Ukrainians UNLESS Ukraine loses and is subsumed into the Russian state.

One of the non-major themes of war critics is that western economic interests are driving war policy.....that Blackrock, et al see an opportunity to "own" an economy and are pushing war to create markets. For markets to work, there has to be consumers. In simple macroeconomic modeling terms, the larger the Ukrainian population, the larger the Ukrainian economy. That smacks hard against the premise of your argument.

Corporations need customers.......

Realitybites
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whiterock said:

Corporations need customers.......



No one will ever accuse you of being dishonest about your causus belli, I guess.
FLBear5630
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Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

Redbrickbear said:

Looks like Vance might not be such a fan of proxy war and regime change operations.....


[Here is my take on J.D. Vance's convention speech, published in The European Conservative. Excerpt:
Quote:

J.D. Vance's speech last night at the Republican National Convention was a landmark in American politics. It sealed the realignment of American politics. When Vance said the GOP henceforth would be not on the side of Wall Street, but of the "working man," in one sense, he effectively announced the end of Reaganism.

But that's not quite true. In his era, forty years ago, Reagan spoke for the common man, and won the common man's allegiance. Reagan stood for old-fashioned American patriotism, and for advocating common sense values against an out-of-touch elite in both the Democratic Party and among country-club Republicans. Reagan was the right man for his time.

Times have changed. American needed Reagan's free market entrepreneurialism and his robust, confrontational foreign policy to break the spell of statist sclerosis and national paralysis. The problems America faced in 1980 are very different from the problems it faces today. As Vance recalled, the free-trade fundamentalism ended up creating globalism, and with it the collapse of America's industrial might. It also allowed Wall Street to run wildabetted, please note, by the Clinton Democratswreaking havoc on the stability of working-class lives.

The Democrats had no real response to this. Nor did the standard-issue Republicans. The Democrats committed themselves to a left-wing cultural revolution, while doing relatively little to address the material conditions of American life. The Republicans fell back on Zombie Reaganism, as if the solutions of 1980 were evergreen truths. And both parties, especially the GOP, became devotees of permanent war, both hard and soft. The Republicans acted under the guise of 'spreading democracy' as a cover for naked U.S. hegemony; the Democrats did too, adding cultural leftism to the mix (e.g., pressuring other countries to accept LGBT dogmas).

That's over now. Donald Trump knocked holes in the wall of complacency and denial in 2016, and stands to clear even more ground if he is re-elected. And given his brilliant choice of Vance, Trump has not only chosen the most articulate and credible possible advocate of his sensibilities, but laid the groundwork for the permanent restructuring not only of American conservatism, but of America itself. Because Trump chose J.D. Vance, Trumpism will long outlast its founder. Trump resisted the pleas of media mogul Rupert Murdoch to choose someone tamer and more controllable as his running mate, and in so doing, passed the torch to a fighting tribune of the new MAGA generation.

Last night in Milwaukee, Vance emerged as the Ronald Reagan of the Millennials. He came across as patriotic and optimistic, but not sentimental. The anecdotes he shared about his rough childhood were not only factually true, but told mythical truths about what America is, and what she might be again.


He's echoed exactly what I've been saying about this war in that it's designed to be long and expensive, not designed to wrap up quickly.

It's frustrating that the pro war guys on here aren't realizing or don't care that the regime that's occupied DC that they're against are the same people running the Ukraine war.
Wars of attrition wrap up when one side runs out of gas.

Do not be disappointed when our aid to Ukraine continues after Trump is inaugurated. Trump, remember, is a guy famous for berating "losers" and promising to "win so much you'll get tired of winning."

ZERO chance Trump gives Putin what he wants in Ukraine just to stop the war.
My position is either help Ukraine wrap this up quickly or pull out. Either we supply them with enough to absolutely curb stomp Russia quickly or we stop altogether.

This very slow, long forever war mentality is what I'm against.
yes. democratic societies typically are not in favor of the long-war models.

The argument against the rapid escalation model you suggest is, of course, one that's been made here often by many - Russia is a nuclear capable adversary, so seeking escalation dominance has a frightful worst case scenario if one overplays one's hand. valid concern. obviously. but Biden has been waaaay too cautious.
Situation now, though, is that Russia is vulnerable to escalation = they can't. They are fully committed and unable to break the deadlock. So small, rapid escalations can have enhanced impacts.

Trump did not mention Ukraine last night in any policy detail. Neither does the platform. But there is prominent, consistent messaging about "rebuilding our military." Trump is going to use his pen to write purchase orders to drastically increase production on weapons systems. That is a signal to Russia and China that we are not going to be outproduced, that we are not going to allow supply chain constraints to drive policy. In other words, we will not be facing the clear constraint we have now of having to constantly balance support for Ukraine against the need to retain capability to defend Taiwan.

Trump will increase ordnance production lines and release many of the constraints on Ukrainian use of Nato-supplied weapons, then float a Bill in Congress for a massive lend-lease program for Ukraine. Then he'll call Vladimir and tell him something like - you can have the eastern half of the Donbas and you can retain basing rights at Sebastopol, and we'll give you 90 days to quietly withdraw from the rest of Ukraine as a gesture of good will. Otherwise, I'll have to sign that bill. Then the negotiations start.

Russia has already completely withdrawn their fleet from Sebasopol. Not sustainable.


Who knows, Trump might use my proposal to demil the Black Sea. It'll make him look like a peacemaker.....
I can see the angle to hurt Russia to the benefit of the west, but major players in the west also benefit by allowing as many Ukrainians to die as possible in the process. If carefully planned they can pull off both.

The west wants Ukraine cleared of all the natives and then handed over to the mega corps and their own interests. It's being Native American'ized and it's very obvious. I mean hell the capital is already committed.

If you're for that or just don't really care because it allows us to downgrade Russia then we really need to stop discussing this war as a noble cause for Ukrainians. It's a high casualty war for western market share and global hegemony.
I am not seeing that. What I am seeing is a fight between WHO owns Ukraine, Eastern Ethnicities tied to a Russian economy and control OR the West - European Ethnicities tied to the EU.

By the way, I see this as the canary in the Coal Mine for Russia. Ukraine is small relative to Russia, but this fight is coming for ALL of Russia. West of the Urals they see themselves as European. East of the Urals they see them selves as Oriental. In the Middle, Siberia sees it self tied more to the Steppes.

Putin HAS to come away with something here or he risks those other 2 groups breaking away. There are already splinder groups wanting this type of autonomy. So much so that you are starting to see Novels writing about those story lines. There are tectonic shifts occuring in Russia watch Siberia and the East. All three see themselves as ancestors from different Leaders that are not linked to Peter the Great...
whiterock
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FLBear5630 said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

Redbrickbear said:

Looks like Vance might not be such a fan of proxy war and regime change operations.....


[Here is my take on J.D. Vance's convention speech, published in The European Conservative. Excerpt:
Quote:

J.D. Vance's speech last night at the Republican National Convention was a landmark in American politics. It sealed the realignment of American politics. When Vance said the GOP henceforth would be not on the side of Wall Street, but of the "working man," in one sense, he effectively announced the end of Reaganism.

But that's not quite true. In his era, forty years ago, Reagan spoke for the common man, and won the common man's allegiance. Reagan stood for old-fashioned American patriotism, and for advocating common sense values against an out-of-touch elite in both the Democratic Party and among country-club Republicans. Reagan was the right man for his time.

Times have changed. American needed Reagan's free market entrepreneurialism and his robust, confrontational foreign policy to break the spell of statist sclerosis and national paralysis. The problems America faced in 1980 are very different from the problems it faces today. As Vance recalled, the free-trade fundamentalism ended up creating globalism, and with it the collapse of America's industrial might. It also allowed Wall Street to run wildabetted, please note, by the Clinton Democratswreaking havoc on the stability of working-class lives.

The Democrats had no real response to this. Nor did the standard-issue Republicans. The Democrats committed themselves to a left-wing cultural revolution, while doing relatively little to address the material conditions of American life. The Republicans fell back on Zombie Reaganism, as if the solutions of 1980 were evergreen truths. And both parties, especially the GOP, became devotees of permanent war, both hard and soft. The Republicans acted under the guise of 'spreading democracy' as a cover for naked U.S. hegemony; the Democrats did too, adding cultural leftism to the mix (e.g., pressuring other countries to accept LGBT dogmas).

That's over now. Donald Trump knocked holes in the wall of complacency and denial in 2016, and stands to clear even more ground if he is re-elected. And given his brilliant choice of Vance, Trump has not only chosen the most articulate and credible possible advocate of his sensibilities, but laid the groundwork for the permanent restructuring not only of American conservatism, but of America itself. Because Trump chose J.D. Vance, Trumpism will long outlast its founder. Trump resisted the pleas of media mogul Rupert Murdoch to choose someone tamer and more controllable as his running mate, and in so doing, passed the torch to a fighting tribune of the new MAGA generation.

Last night in Milwaukee, Vance emerged as the Ronald Reagan of the Millennials. He came across as patriotic and optimistic, but not sentimental. The anecdotes he shared about his rough childhood were not only factually true, but told mythical truths about what America is, and what she might be again.


He's echoed exactly what I've been saying about this war in that it's designed to be long and expensive, not designed to wrap up quickly.

It's frustrating that the pro war guys on here aren't realizing or don't care that the regime that's occupied DC that they're against are the same people running the Ukraine war.
Wars of attrition wrap up when one side runs out of gas.

Do not be disappointed when our aid to Ukraine continues after Trump is inaugurated. Trump, remember, is a guy famous for berating "losers" and promising to "win so much you'll get tired of winning."

ZERO chance Trump gives Putin what he wants in Ukraine just to stop the war.
My position is either help Ukraine wrap this up quickly or pull out. Either we supply them with enough to absolutely curb stomp Russia quickly or we stop altogether.

This very slow, long forever war mentality is what I'm against.
yes. democratic societies typically are not in favor of the long-war models.

The argument against the rapid escalation model you suggest is, of course, one that's been made here often by many - Russia is a nuclear capable adversary, so seeking escalation dominance has a frightful worst case scenario if one overplays one's hand. valid concern. obviously. but Biden has been waaaay too cautious.
Situation now, though, is that Russia is vulnerable to escalation = they can't. They are fully committed and unable to break the deadlock. So small, rapid escalations can have enhanced impacts.

Trump did not mention Ukraine last night in any policy detail. Neither does the platform. But there is prominent, consistent messaging about "rebuilding our military." Trump is going to use his pen to write purchase orders to drastically increase production on weapons systems. That is a signal to Russia and China that we are not going to be outproduced, that we are not going to allow supply chain constraints to drive policy. In other words, we will not be facing the clear constraint we have now of having to constantly balance support for Ukraine against the need to retain capability to defend Taiwan.

Trump will increase ordnance production lines and release many of the constraints on Ukrainian use of Nato-supplied weapons, then float a Bill in Congress for a massive lend-lease program for Ukraine. Then he'll call Vladimir and tell him something like - you can have the eastern half of the Donbas and you can retain basing rights at Sebastopol, and we'll give you 90 days to quietly withdraw from the rest of Ukraine as a gesture of good will. Otherwise, I'll have to sign that bill. Then the negotiations start.

Russia has already completely withdrawn their fleet from Sebasopol. Not sustainable.


Who knows, Trump might use my proposal to demil the Black Sea. It'll make him look like a peacemaker.....
I can see the angle to hurt Russia to the benefit of the west, but major players in the west also benefit by allowing as many Ukrainians to die as possible in the process. If carefully planned they can pull off both.

The west wants Ukraine cleared of all the natives and then handed over to the mega corps and their own interests. It's being Native American'ized and it's very obvious. I mean hell the capital is already committed.

If you're for that or just don't really care because it allows us to downgrade Russia then we really need to stop discussing this war as a noble cause for Ukrainians. It's a high casualty war for western market share and global hegemony.
I am not seeing that. What I am seeing is a fight between WHO owns Ukraine, Eastern Ethnicities tied to a Russian economy and control OR the West - European Ethnicities tied to the EU.

By the way, I see this as the canary in the Coal Mine for Russia. Ukraine is small relative to Russia, but this fight is coming for ALL of Russia. West of the Urals they see themselves as European. East of the Urals they see them selves as Oriental. In the Middle, Siberia sees it self tied more to the Steppes.

Putin HAS to come away with something here or he risks those other 2 groups breaking away. There are already splinder groups wanting this type of autonomy. So much so that you are starting to see Novels writing about those story lines. There are tectonic shifts occuring in Russia watch Siberia and the East. All three see themselves as ancestors from different Leaders that are not linked to Peter the Great...
the integrity of the Russian empire is definitely part of the dynamic here. The longer this goes on, the greater the threats you describe become. Putin knows this and must factor it into his calculations.

The more likely places to break away are closer to home, from the Russian perspective - the Caucus and Lower Volga. Whenever the Ukraine War ends, Russia will have to start dealing with those threats (again).
whiterock
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Realitybites said:

whiterock said:

Corporations need customers.......



No one will ever accuse you of being dishonest about your causus belli, I guess.
the causus belli includes a lot of things, foremost of which is stopping Russian imperialism as manifested by their invasion of the largest country in Europe.
Doc Holliday
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whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

Redbrickbear said:

Looks like Vance might not be such a fan of proxy war and regime change operations.....


[Here is my take on J.D. Vance's convention speech, published in The European Conservative. Excerpt:
Quote:

J.D. Vance's speech last night at the Republican National Convention was a landmark in American politics. It sealed the realignment of American politics. When Vance said the GOP henceforth would be not on the side of Wall Street, but of the "working man," in one sense, he effectively announced the end of Reaganism.

But that's not quite true. In his era, forty years ago, Reagan spoke for the common man, and won the common man's allegiance. Reagan stood for old-fashioned American patriotism, and for advocating common sense values against an out-of-touch elite in both the Democratic Party and among country-club Republicans. Reagan was the right man for his time.

Times have changed. American needed Reagan's free market entrepreneurialism and his robust, confrontational foreign policy to break the spell of statist sclerosis and national paralysis. The problems America faced in 1980 are very different from the problems it faces today. As Vance recalled, the free-trade fundamentalism ended up creating globalism, and with it the collapse of America's industrial might. It also allowed Wall Street to run wildabetted, please note, by the Clinton Democratswreaking havoc on the stability of working-class lives.

The Democrats had no real response to this. Nor did the standard-issue Republicans. The Democrats committed themselves to a left-wing cultural revolution, while doing relatively little to address the material conditions of American life. The Republicans fell back on Zombie Reaganism, as if the solutions of 1980 were evergreen truths. And both parties, especially the GOP, became devotees of permanent war, both hard and soft. The Republicans acted under the guise of 'spreading democracy' as a cover for naked U.S. hegemony; the Democrats did too, adding cultural leftism to the mix (e.g., pressuring other countries to accept LGBT dogmas).

That's over now. Donald Trump knocked holes in the wall of complacency and denial in 2016, and stands to clear even more ground if he is re-elected. And given his brilliant choice of Vance, Trump has not only chosen the most articulate and credible possible advocate of his sensibilities, but laid the groundwork for the permanent restructuring not only of American conservatism, but of America itself. Because Trump chose J.D. Vance, Trumpism will long outlast its founder. Trump resisted the pleas of media mogul Rupert Murdoch to choose someone tamer and more controllable as his running mate, and in so doing, passed the torch to a fighting tribune of the new MAGA generation.

Last night in Milwaukee, Vance emerged as the Ronald Reagan of the Millennials. He came across as patriotic and optimistic, but not sentimental. The anecdotes he shared about his rough childhood were not only factually true, but told mythical truths about what America is, and what she might be again.


He's echoed exactly what I've been saying about this war in that it's designed to be long and expensive, not designed to wrap up quickly.

It's frustrating that the pro war guys on here aren't realizing or don't care that the regime that's occupied DC that they're against are the same people running the Ukraine war.
Wars of attrition wrap up when one side runs out of gas.

Do not be disappointed when our aid to Ukraine continues after Trump is inaugurated. Trump, remember, is a guy famous for berating "losers" and promising to "win so much you'll get tired of winning."

ZERO chance Trump gives Putin what he wants in Ukraine just to stop the war.
My position is either help Ukraine wrap this up quickly or pull out. Either we supply them with enough to absolutely curb stomp Russia quickly or we stop altogether.

This very slow, long forever war mentality is what I'm against.
yes. democratic societies typically are not in favor of the long-war models.

The argument against the rapid escalation model you suggest is, of course, one that's been made here often by many - Russia is a nuclear capable adversary, so seeking escalation dominance has a frightful worst case scenario if one overplays one's hand. valid concern. obviously. but Biden has been waaaay too cautious.
Situation now, though, is that Russia is vulnerable to escalation = they can't. They are fully committed and unable to break the deadlock. So small, rapid escalations can have enhanced impacts.

Trump did not mention Ukraine last night in any policy detail. Neither does the platform. But there is prominent, consistent messaging about "rebuilding our military." Trump is going to use his pen to write purchase orders to drastically increase production on weapons systems. That is a signal to Russia and China that we are not going to be outproduced, that we are not going to allow supply chain constraints to drive policy. In other words, we will not be facing the clear constraint we have now of having to constantly balance support for Ukraine against the need to retain capability to defend Taiwan.

Trump will increase ordnance production lines and release many of the constraints on Ukrainian use of Nato-supplied weapons, then float a Bill in Congress for a massive lend-lease program for Ukraine. Then he'll call Vladimir and tell him something like - you can have the eastern half of the Donbas and you can retain basing rights at Sebastopol, and we'll give you 90 days to quietly withdraw from the rest of Ukraine as a gesture of good will. Otherwise, I'll have to sign that bill. Then the negotiations start.

Russia has already completely withdrawn their fleet from Sebasopol. Not sustainable.


Who knows, Trump might use my proposal to demil the Black Sea. It'll make him look like a peacemaker.....
I can see the angle to hurt Russia to the benefit of the west, but major players in the west also benefit by allowing as many Ukrainians to die as possible in the process. If carefully planned they can pull off both.

The west wants Ukraine cleared of all the natives and then handed over to the mega corps and their own interests. It's being Native American'ized and it's very obvious. I mean hell the capital is already committed.

If you're for that or just don't really care because it allows us to downgrade Russia then we really need to stop discussing this war as a noble cause for Ukrainians. It's a high casualty war for western market share and global hegemony.
I'd dispute that part in bold. Nato is harmed by loss of Ukrainians UNLESS Ukraine loses and is subsumed into the Russian state.

One of the non-major themes of war critics is that western economic interests are driving war policy.....that Blackrock, et al see an opportunity to "own" an economy and are pushing war to create markets. For markets to work, there has to be consumers. In simple macroeconomic modeling terms, the larger the Ukrainian population, the larger the Ukrainian economy. That smacks hard against the premise of your argument.

Corporations need customers.......


Its about farmland and minerals for export. Not about the domestic economy.

If you follow the money it spells a completely different picture. Read this: https://www.adamtownsend.me/ukraine/#CHAPTER_9_UKRAINIAN_AGRICULTURE_AND_THE_TRAIL_OF_TEARS
FLBear5630
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whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

Redbrickbear said:

Looks like Vance might not be such a fan of proxy war and regime change operations.....


[Here is my take on J.D. Vance's convention speech, published in The European Conservative. Excerpt:
Quote:

J.D. Vance's speech last night at the Republican National Convention was a landmark in American politics. It sealed the realignment of American politics. When Vance said the GOP henceforth would be not on the side of Wall Street, but of the "working man," in one sense, he effectively announced the end of Reaganism.

But that's not quite true. In his era, forty years ago, Reagan spoke for the common man, and won the common man's allegiance. Reagan stood for old-fashioned American patriotism, and for advocating common sense values against an out-of-touch elite in both the Democratic Party and among country-club Republicans. Reagan was the right man for his time.

Times have changed. American needed Reagan's free market entrepreneurialism and his robust, confrontational foreign policy to break the spell of statist sclerosis and national paralysis. The problems America faced in 1980 are very different from the problems it faces today. As Vance recalled, the free-trade fundamentalism ended up creating globalism, and with it the collapse of America's industrial might. It also allowed Wall Street to run wildabetted, please note, by the Clinton Democratswreaking havoc on the stability of working-class lives.

The Democrats had no real response to this. Nor did the standard-issue Republicans. The Democrats committed themselves to a left-wing cultural revolution, while doing relatively little to address the material conditions of American life. The Republicans fell back on Zombie Reaganism, as if the solutions of 1980 were evergreen truths. And both parties, especially the GOP, became devotees of permanent war, both hard and soft. The Republicans acted under the guise of 'spreading democracy' as a cover for naked U.S. hegemony; the Democrats did too, adding cultural leftism to the mix (e.g., pressuring other countries to accept LGBT dogmas).

That's over now. Donald Trump knocked holes in the wall of complacency and denial in 2016, and stands to clear even more ground if he is re-elected. And given his brilliant choice of Vance, Trump has not only chosen the most articulate and credible possible advocate of his sensibilities, but laid the groundwork for the permanent restructuring not only of American conservatism, but of America itself. Because Trump chose J.D. Vance, Trumpism will long outlast its founder. Trump resisted the pleas of media mogul Rupert Murdoch to choose someone tamer and more controllable as his running mate, and in so doing, passed the torch to a fighting tribune of the new MAGA generation.

Last night in Milwaukee, Vance emerged as the Ronald Reagan of the Millennials. He came across as patriotic and optimistic, but not sentimental. The anecdotes he shared about his rough childhood were not only factually true, but told mythical truths about what America is, and what she might be again.


He's echoed exactly what I've been saying about this war in that it's designed to be long and expensive, not designed to wrap up quickly.

It's frustrating that the pro war guys on here aren't realizing or don't care that the regime that's occupied DC that they're against are the same people running the Ukraine war.
Wars of attrition wrap up when one side runs out of gas.

Do not be disappointed when our aid to Ukraine continues after Trump is inaugurated. Trump, remember, is a guy famous for berating "losers" and promising to "win so much you'll get tired of winning."

ZERO chance Trump gives Putin what he wants in Ukraine just to stop the war.
My position is either help Ukraine wrap this up quickly or pull out. Either we supply them with enough to absolutely curb stomp Russia quickly or we stop altogether.

This very slow, long forever war mentality is what I'm against.
yes. democratic societies typically are not in favor of the long-war models.

The argument against the rapid escalation model you suggest is, of course, one that's been made here often by many - Russia is a nuclear capable adversary, so seeking escalation dominance has a frightful worst case scenario if one overplays one's hand. valid concern. obviously. but Biden has been waaaay too cautious.
Situation now, though, is that Russia is vulnerable to escalation = they can't. They are fully committed and unable to break the deadlock. So small, rapid escalations can have enhanced impacts.

Trump did not mention Ukraine last night in any policy detail. Neither does the platform. But there is prominent, consistent messaging about "rebuilding our military." Trump is going to use his pen to write purchase orders to drastically increase production on weapons systems. That is a signal to Russia and China that we are not going to be outproduced, that we are not going to allow supply chain constraints to drive policy. In other words, we will not be facing the clear constraint we have now of having to constantly balance support for Ukraine against the need to retain capability to defend Taiwan.

Trump will increase ordnance production lines and release many of the constraints on Ukrainian use of Nato-supplied weapons, then float a Bill in Congress for a massive lend-lease program for Ukraine. Then he'll call Vladimir and tell him something like - you can have the eastern half of the Donbas and you can retain basing rights at Sebastopol, and we'll give you 90 days to quietly withdraw from the rest of Ukraine as a gesture of good will. Otherwise, I'll have to sign that bill. Then the negotiations start.

Russia has already completely withdrawn their fleet from Sebasopol. Not sustainable.


Who knows, Trump might use my proposal to demil the Black Sea. It'll make him look like a peacemaker.....
I can see the angle to hurt Russia to the benefit of the west, but major players in the west also benefit by allowing as many Ukrainians to die as possible in the process. If carefully planned they can pull off both.

The west wants Ukraine cleared of all the natives and then handed over to the mega corps and their own interests. It's being Native American'ized and it's very obvious. I mean hell the capital is already committed.

If you're for that or just don't really care because it allows us to downgrade Russia then we really need to stop discussing this war as a noble cause for Ukrainians. It's a high casualty war for western market share and global hegemony.
I am not seeing that. What I am seeing is a fight between WHO owns Ukraine, Eastern Ethnicities tied to a Russian economy and control OR the West - European Ethnicities tied to the EU.

By the way, I see this as the canary in the Coal Mine for Russia. Ukraine is small relative to Russia, but this fight is coming for ALL of Russia. West of the Urals they see themselves as European. East of the Urals they see them selves as Oriental. In the Middle, Siberia sees it self tied more to the Steppes.

Putin HAS to come away with something here or he risks those other 2 groups breaking away. There are already splinder groups wanting this type of autonomy. So much so that you are starting to see Novels writing about those story lines. There are tectonic shifts occuring in Russia watch Siberia and the East. All three see themselves as ancestors from different Leaders that are not linked to Peter the Great...
the integrity of the Russian empire is definitely part of the dynamic here. The longer this goes on, the greater the threats you describe become. Putin knows this and must factor it into his calculations.

The more likely places to break away are closer to home, from the Russian perspective - the Caucus and Lower Volga. Whenever the Ukraine War ends, Russia will have to start dealing with those threats (again).
Don't underestimate Siberia. There are already economic articles on Siberia and its ties to the Stans resources.
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

Redbrickbear said:

Looks like Vance might not be such a fan of proxy war and regime change operations.....


[Here is my take on J.D. Vance's convention speech, published in The European Conservative. Excerpt:
Quote:

J.D. Vance's speech last night at the Republican National Convention was a landmark in American politics. It sealed the realignment of American politics. When Vance said the GOP henceforth would be not on the side of Wall Street, but of the "working man," in one sense, he effectively announced the end of Reaganism.

But that's not quite true. In his era, forty years ago, Reagan spoke for the common man, and won the common man's allegiance. Reagan stood for old-fashioned American patriotism, and for advocating common sense values against an out-of-touch elite in both the Democratic Party and among country-club Republicans. Reagan was the right man for his time.

Times have changed. American needed Reagan's free market entrepreneurialism and his robust, confrontational foreign policy to break the spell of statist sclerosis and national paralysis. The problems America faced in 1980 are very different from the problems it faces today. As Vance recalled, the free-trade fundamentalism ended up creating globalism, and with it the collapse of America's industrial might. It also allowed Wall Street to run wildabetted, please note, by the Clinton Democratswreaking havoc on the stability of working-class lives.

The Democrats had no real response to this. Nor did the standard-issue Republicans. The Democrats committed themselves to a left-wing cultural revolution, while doing relatively little to address the material conditions of American life. The Republicans fell back on Zombie Reaganism, as if the solutions of 1980 were evergreen truths. And both parties, especially the GOP, became devotees of permanent war, both hard and soft. The Republicans acted under the guise of 'spreading democracy' as a cover for naked U.S. hegemony; the Democrats did too, adding cultural leftism to the mix (e.g., pressuring other countries to accept LGBT dogmas).

That's over now. Donald Trump knocked holes in the wall of complacency and denial in 2016, and stands to clear even more ground if he is re-elected. And given his brilliant choice of Vance, Trump has not only chosen the most articulate and credible possible advocate of his sensibilities, but laid the groundwork for the permanent restructuring not only of American conservatism, but of America itself. Because Trump chose J.D. Vance, Trumpism will long outlast its founder. Trump resisted the pleas of media mogul Rupert Murdoch to choose someone tamer and more controllable as his running mate, and in so doing, passed the torch to a fighting tribune of the new MAGA generation.

Last night in Milwaukee, Vance emerged as the Ronald Reagan of the Millennials. He came across as patriotic and optimistic, but not sentimental. The anecdotes he shared about his rough childhood were not only factually true, but told mythical truths about what America is, and what she might be again.


He's echoed exactly what I've been saying about this war in that it's designed to be long and expensive, not designed to wrap up quickly.

It's frustrating that the pro war guys on here aren't realizing or don't care that the regime that's occupied DC that they're against are the same people running the Ukraine war.
Wars of attrition wrap up when one side runs out of gas.

Do not be disappointed when our aid to Ukraine continues after Trump is inaugurated. Trump, remember, is a guy famous for berating "losers" and promising to "win so much you'll get tired of winning."

ZERO chance Trump gives Putin what he wants in Ukraine just to stop the war.
My position is either help Ukraine wrap this up quickly or pull out. Either we supply them with enough to absolutely curb stomp Russia quickly or we stop altogether.

This very slow, long forever war mentality is what I'm against.
yes. democratic societies typically are not in favor of the long-war models.

The argument against the rapid escalation model you suggest is, of course, one that's been made here often by many - Russia is a nuclear capable adversary, so seeking escalation dominance has a frightful worst case scenario if one overplays one's hand. valid concern. obviously. but Biden has been waaaay too cautious.
Situation now, though, is that Russia is vulnerable to escalation = they can't. They are fully committed and unable to break the deadlock. So small, rapid escalations can have enhanced impacts.

Trump did not mention Ukraine last night in any policy detail. Neither does the platform. But there is prominent, consistent messaging about "rebuilding our military." Trump is going to use his pen to write purchase orders to drastically increase production on weapons systems. That is a signal to Russia and China that we are not going to be outproduced, that we are not going to allow supply chain constraints to drive policy. In other words, we will not be facing the clear constraint we have now of having to constantly balance support for Ukraine against the need to retain capability to defend Taiwan.

Trump will increase ordnance production lines and release many of the constraints on Ukrainian use of Nato-supplied weapons, then float a Bill in Congress for a massive lend-lease program for Ukraine. Then he'll call Vladimir and tell him something like - you can have the eastern half of the Donbas and you can retain basing rights at Sebastopol, and we'll give you 90 days to quietly withdraw from the rest of Ukraine as a gesture of good will. Otherwise, I'll have to sign that bill. Then the negotiations start.

Russia has already completely withdrawn their fleet from Sebasopol. Not sustainable.


Who knows, Trump might use my proposal to demil the Black Sea. It'll make him look like a peacemaker.....
I can see the angle to hurt Russia to the benefit of the west, but major players in the west also benefit by allowing as many Ukrainians to die as possible in the process. If carefully planned they can pull off both.

The west wants Ukraine cleared of all the natives and then handed over to the mega corps and their own interests. It's being Native American'ized and it's very obvious. I mean hell the capital is already committed.

If you're for that or just don't really care because it allows us to downgrade Russia then we really need to stop discussing this war as a noble cause for Ukrainians. It's a high casualty war for western market share and global hegemony.
I am not seeing that. What I am seeing is a fight between WHO owns Ukraine, Eastern Ethnicities tied to a Russian economy and control OR the West - European Ethnicities tied to the EU.

By the way, I see this as the canary in the Coal Mine for Russia. Ukraine is small relative to Russia, but this fight is coming for ALL of Russia. West of the Urals they see themselves as European. East of the Urals they see them selves as Oriental. In the Middle, Siberia sees it self tied more to the Steppes.

Putin HAS to come away with something here or he risks those other 2 groups breaking away. There are already splinder groups wanting this type of autonomy. So much so that you are starting to see Novels writing about those story lines. There are tectonic shifts occuring in Russia watch Siberia and the East. All three see themselves as ancestors from different Leaders that are not linked to Peter the Great...
the integrity of the Russian empire is definitely part of the dynamic here. The longer this goes on, the greater the threats you describe become. Putin knows this and must factor it into his calculations.

The more likely places to break away are closer to home, from the Russian perspective - the Caucus and Lower Volga. Whenever the Ukraine War ends, Russia will have to start dealing with those threats (again).
Don't underestimate Siberia. There are already economic articles on Siberia and its ties to the Stans resources.
yeah, for sure it's got it's own set of interests, but it's demography is small (45m or so) and overwhelmingly slavic....85% and mostly Russian. That plus being surrounded by Stans & Asiatics tends to tie it back to Moscow, culturally. it can't stand on its own at this time, particularly against China.

Some of the smaller oblasts which are more monolithically non-Russian, though, might want to break off & join elsewhere.
Redbrickbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

Redbrickbear said:

Looks like Vance might not be such a fan of proxy war and regime change operations.....


[Here is my take on J.D. Vance's convention speech, published in The European Conservative. Excerpt:
Quote:

J.D. Vance's speech last night at the Republican National Convention was a landmark in American politics. It sealed the realignment of American politics. When Vance said the GOP henceforth would be not on the side of Wall Street, but of the "working man," in one sense, he effectively announced the end of Reaganism.

But that's not quite true. In his era, forty years ago, Reagan spoke for the common man, and won the common man's allegiance. Reagan stood for old-fashioned American patriotism, and for advocating common sense values against an out-of-touch elite in both the Democratic Party and among country-club Republicans. Reagan was the right man for his time.

Times have changed. American needed Reagan's free market entrepreneurialism and his robust, confrontational foreign policy to break the spell of statist sclerosis and national paralysis. The problems America faced in 1980 are very different from the problems it faces today. As Vance recalled, the free-trade fundamentalism ended up creating globalism, and with it the collapse of America's industrial might. It also allowed Wall Street to run wildabetted, please note, by the Clinton Democratswreaking havoc on the stability of working-class lives.

The Democrats had no real response to this. Nor did the standard-issue Republicans. The Democrats committed themselves to a left-wing cultural revolution, while doing relatively little to address the material conditions of American life. The Republicans fell back on Zombie Reaganism, as if the solutions of 1980 were evergreen truths. And both parties, especially the GOP, became devotees of permanent war, both hard and soft. The Republicans acted under the guise of 'spreading democracy' as a cover for naked U.S. hegemony; the Democrats did too, adding cultural leftism to the mix (e.g., pressuring other countries to accept LGBT dogmas).

That's over now. Donald Trump knocked holes in the wall of complacency and denial in 2016, and stands to clear even more ground if he is re-elected. And given his brilliant choice of Vance, Trump has not only chosen the most articulate and credible possible advocate of his sensibilities, but laid the groundwork for the permanent restructuring not only of American conservatism, but of America itself. Because Trump chose J.D. Vance, Trumpism will long outlast its founder. Trump resisted the pleas of media mogul Rupert Murdoch to choose someone tamer and more controllable as his running mate, and in so doing, passed the torch to a fighting tribune of the new MAGA generation.

Last night in Milwaukee, Vance emerged as the Ronald Reagan of the Millennials. He came across as patriotic and optimistic, but not sentimental. The anecdotes he shared about his rough childhood were not only factually true, but told mythical truths about what America is, and what she might be again.


He's echoed exactly what I've been saying about this war in that it's designed to be long and expensive, not designed to wrap up quickly.

It's frustrating that the pro war guys on here aren't realizing or don't care that the regime that's occupied DC that they're against are the same people running the Ukraine war.
Wars of attrition wrap up when one side runs out of gas.

Do not be disappointed when our aid to Ukraine continues after Trump is inaugurated. Trump, remember, is a guy famous for berating "losers" and promising to "win so much you'll get tired of winning."

ZERO chance Trump gives Putin what he wants in Ukraine just to stop the war.
My position is either help Ukraine wrap this up quickly or pull out. Either we supply them with enough to absolutely curb stomp Russia quickly or we stop altogether.

This very slow, long forever war mentality is what I'm against.
yes. democratic societies typically are not in favor of the long-war models.

The argument against the rapid escalation model you suggest is, of course, one that's been made here often by many - Russia is a nuclear capable adversary, so seeking escalation dominance has a frightful worst case scenario if one overplays one's hand. valid concern. obviously. but Biden has been waaaay too cautious.
Situation now, though, is that Russia is vulnerable to escalation = they can't. They are fully committed and unable to break the deadlock. So small, rapid escalations can have enhanced impacts.

Trump did not mention Ukraine last night in any policy detail. Neither does the platform. But there is prominent, consistent messaging about "rebuilding our military." Trump is going to use his pen to write purchase orders to drastically increase production on weapons systems. That is a signal to Russia and China that we are not going to be outproduced, that we are not going to allow supply chain constraints to drive policy. In other words, we will not be facing the clear constraint we have now of having to constantly balance support for Ukraine against the need to retain capability to defend Taiwan.

Trump will increase ordnance production lines and release many of the constraints on Ukrainian use of Nato-supplied weapons, then float a Bill in Congress for a massive lend-lease program for Ukraine. Then he'll call Vladimir and tell him something like - you can have the eastern half of the Donbas and you can retain basing rights at Sebastopol, and we'll give you 90 days to quietly withdraw from the rest of Ukraine as a gesture of good will. Otherwise, I'll have to sign that bill. Then the negotiations start.

Russia has already completely withdrawn their fleet from Sebasopol. Not sustainable.


Who knows, Trump might use my proposal to demil the Black Sea. It'll make him look like a peacemaker.....
I can see the angle to hurt Russia to the benefit of the west, but major players in the west also benefit by allowing as many Ukrainians to die as possible in the process. If carefully planned they can pull off both.

The west wants Ukraine cleared of all the natives and then handed over to the mega corps and their own interests. It's being Native American'ized and it's very obvious. I mean hell the capital is already committed.

If you're for that or just don't really care because it allows us to downgrade Russia then we really need to stop discussing this war as a noble cause for Ukrainians. It's a high casualty war for western market share and global hegemony.
I am not seeing that. What I am seeing is a fight between WHO owns Ukraine, Eastern Ethnicities tied to a Russian economy and control OR the West - European Ethnicities tied to the EU.

By the way, I see this as the canary in the Coal Mine for Russia. Ukraine is small relative to Russia, but this fight is coming for ALL of Russia. West of the Urals they see themselves as European. East of the Urals they see them selves as Oriental. In the Middle, Siberia sees it self tied more to the Steppes.

Putin HAS to come away with something here or he risks those other 2 groups breaking away. There are already splinder groups wanting this type of autonomy. So much so that you are starting to see Novels writing about those story lines. There are tectonic shifts occuring in Russia watch Siberia and the East. All three see themselves as ancestors from different Leaders that are not linked to Peter the Great...
the integrity of the Russian empire is definitely part of the dynamic here. The longer this goes on, the greater the threats you describe become. Putin knows this and must factor it into his calculations.

The more likely places to break away are closer to home, from the Russian perspective - the Caucus and Lower Volga. Whenever the Ukraine War ends, Russia will have to start dealing with those threats (again).


And they have shown that they will fight those separatist movements (like in Dagestan and Chechnya)

Plus Ethnic Russians form the majority of the pop. at least in the areas that matter and are populated.

Doubtful we see a successful secessionist moved come about given those issues







whiterock
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An example of how sanctions influence things.....

Sam Lowry
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FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

you've got to escape genetic fallacy.

Here's an Economist article on the stark situation with Russian war production. If you read between the lines, it's clear that their military spending is at 8% of GDP but the majority of it is devoted to conversion and fusion of old equipment. Once their stocks are gone, likely in 24 months or less, their gross output in equipment will plummet.

Also embedded but poorly explained in the article is perhaps the most important factor of all - arty tubes. Their production of arty rounds is impressive. But their inability to produce new tubes as fast as they wear out means the accuracy of most of their barrages is quite low. So that 5:1 superiority in fires really overstates the effectiveness. So what if you're firing 5x your opponent, if you aren't hitting anything...... Remember, arty is accounting for approx 70% of casualties in this war. As accuracy of fires degrades, the ability to inflict casualty fades as well. Accuracy is quite important for the attacker = he's got to drop fires right over the trenches to inflict casualties. a few yards short or long.....limited effect. But pinpoint accuracy is less important for the defender, who is shooting at highly vulnerable troops advancing out in the open. (again, illustrating the dynamics for why Ukrainian casualties are so much lower than Russian casualties.)



In case article is paywalled:

---------------------------------------------

Russia's vast stocks of Soviet-era weaponry are running out
It may have to scale back its offensive in Ukraine

Jul 16th 2024

For a long time, it seemed that a war of attrition between Ukraine and a Russia with five times its population could only end one way. But the much-vaunted Russian offensive against Kharkiv in the north that started in May is fizzling out. Its advances elsewhere along the line, especially in the Donbas region, have been both strategically trivial and achieved only at huge cost. The question now is less whether Ukraine can stay in the fight and more how long can Russia maintain its current tempo of operations.

The key issue is not manpower. Russia seems able to go on finding another 25,000 or so soldiers each month to maintain numbers at the front of around 470,000, although it is paying more for them. Production of missiles to strike Ukrainian infrastructure is also surging. But for all the talk about Russia having become a war economy, with some 8% of its gdp devoted to military spending, it is able to replace its staggering losses of tanks, armoured infantry vehicles and artillery only by drawing out of storage and refurbishing stocks built up in the Soviet era. Huge though these stocks are, they are not infinite.

According to most intelligence estimates, after the first two years of the war Russia had lost about 3,000 tanks and 5,000 other armoured vehicles. Oryx, a Dutch open-source intelligence site, puts the number of Russian tank losses for which it has either photo or videographic evidence currently at 3,235, but suggests the actual number is "significantly higher".

Aleksandr Golts, an analyst at the Stockholm Centre for Eastern European Studies, says that Vladimir Putin has the old Politburo to thank for the huge stockpiles of weapons that were built up during the cold war. He says that Soviet leaders knew that Western military kit was much more advanced than their own, so they opted for mass, churning out thousands of armoured vehicles in peacetime in case of war. Before its demise, says Mr Golts, the Soviet Union had as many armoured vehicles as the rest of the world put together.

When the then defence minister, Sergei Shoigu, boasted in December 2023 that 1,530 tanks had been delivered in the course of the year, he omitted to say that nearly 85% of them, according to an assessment by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a London think-tank, were not new tanks but old ones (mainly t-72s, also t-62s and even some t-55s dating from just after the second world war) that had been taken out of storage and given a wash and brush-up.

Since the invasion, about 175 reasonably modern t-90m tanks have been sent to the front line. The iiss estimates that annual production this year could be approaching 90. However, Michael Gjerstad, an analyst with the iiss, argues that most of the t-90ms are actually upgrades of older t-90as. As those numbers dwindle, production of newly built t-90ms this year might be no more than 28. Pavel Luzin, an expert on Russian military capacity at the Washington-based Centre for European Policy Analysis, reckons that Russia can build only 30 brand-new tanks a year. When the Ukrainians captured a supposedly new t-90m last year, they found that its gun was produced in 1992.

Mr Luzin reckons that Russia's ability to build new tanks or infantry fighting vehicles, or even to refurbish old ones, is hampered by the difficulty of getting components. Stores of components for tank production that before the war were intended for use in 2025 have already been raided, while crucial equipment, such as fuel-heaters for diesel engines, high-voltage electrical systems and infrared thermal imaging to identify targets, were all previously imported from Europe and their sale is now blocked by sanctions. The lack of high-quality ball bearings is also a constraint. Chinese alternatives are sometimes available, but are said not to meet former quality standards.

Furthermore, the old Soviet armaments supply chain no longer exists. Ukraine, Georgia and East Germany were all important centres of weapons and components manufacture. Ironically, Kharkiv was the main producer of turrets for t-72 tanks. The number of workers in the military-industrial complex has also fallen dramatically, says Mr Luzin, from about 10m to 2m, without any offsetting step-change in automation.

Another major concern is artillery-barrel production. For now, with the help of North Korea, Russia appears to have enough shells, probably about 3m this yearsufficient to outgun the Ukrainians until recently by at least 5:1 and sometimes by much more. But the downside of such high rates of fire has been the wear and tear on barrels. In some highly contested areas, the barrels of howitzers need replacing after only a few months.
Yet, says Mr Luzin, there are only two factories that have the sophisticated Austrian-made rotary forging machines (the last one was imported in 2017) needed to make the barrels. They can each produce only around 100 barrels a year, compared with the thousands needed. Russia has never made its own forging machines; they imported them from America in the 1930s and looted them from Germany after the war.

The solution has been to cannibalise the barrels from old towed artillery and fit them to self-propelled howitzers. Richard Vereker, an open-source analyst, thinks that by the start of this year about 4,800 barrels had been swapped out. How long the Russians can carry on doing this depends on the condition of the 7,000 or so that may be left. Mr Gjerstad says that with multi-launch rocket systems, such as the tos-1a, eking out barrel life has already meant much shorter bursts of fire.

But the biggest emerging problem is with tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, which are still crucial to any offensive ground operations at scale. Although the iiss estimated that in February of this year Russia may have had about 3,200 tanks in storage to draw on, Mr Gjerstad says up to 70% of them "have not moved an inch since the beginning of the war". A large proportion of the t-72s have been stored uncovered since the early 1990s and are probably in very poor condition. Both Mr Golts and Mr Luzin reckon that at current rates of attrition, Russian tank and infantry vehicle refurbishment from storage will have reached a "critical point of exhaustion" by the second half of next year.

Unless something changes, before the end of this year Russian forces may have to adjust their posture to one that is much more defensive, says Mr Gjerstad. It could even become apparent before the end of summer. Expect Mr Putin's interest in agreeing a temporary ceasefire to increase.


T-72s will not fare well on the modern battlefield.
This isn't a "modern" battlefield. T-72s and T-90s happen to be rather well suited to it. There's also a reason the West is belatedly trending toward smooth bore barrels. But we do love our fancy toys, even if they've never won us a war.
Sam Lowry
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whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

whiterock said:

Doc Holliday said:

Redbrickbear said:

Looks like Vance might not be such a fan of proxy war and regime change operations.....


[Here is my take on J.D. Vance's convention speech, published in The European Conservative. Excerpt:
Quote:

J.D. Vance's speech last night at the Republican National Convention was a landmark in American politics. It sealed the realignment of American politics. When Vance said the GOP henceforth would be not on the side of Wall Street, but of the "working man," in one sense, he effectively announced the end of Reaganism.

But that's not quite true. In his era, forty years ago, Reagan spoke for the common man, and won the common man's allegiance. Reagan stood for old-fashioned American patriotism, and for advocating common sense values against an out-of-touch elite in both the Democratic Party and among country-club Republicans. Reagan was the right man for his time.

Times have changed. American needed Reagan's free market entrepreneurialism and his robust, confrontational foreign policy to break the spell of statist sclerosis and national paralysis. The problems America faced in 1980 are very different from the problems it faces today. As Vance recalled, the free-trade fundamentalism ended up creating globalism, and with it the collapse of America's industrial might. It also allowed Wall Street to run wildabetted, please note, by the Clinton Democratswreaking havoc on the stability of working-class lives.

The Democrats had no real response to this. Nor did the standard-issue Republicans. The Democrats committed themselves to a left-wing cultural revolution, while doing relatively little to address the material conditions of American life. The Republicans fell back on Zombie Reaganism, as if the solutions of 1980 were evergreen truths. And both parties, especially the GOP, became devotees of permanent war, both hard and soft. The Republicans acted under the guise of 'spreading democracy' as a cover for naked U.S. hegemony; the Democrats did too, adding cultural leftism to the mix (e.g., pressuring other countries to accept LGBT dogmas).

That's over now. Donald Trump knocked holes in the wall of complacency and denial in 2016, and stands to clear even more ground if he is re-elected. And given his brilliant choice of Vance, Trump has not only chosen the most articulate and credible possible advocate of his sensibilities, but laid the groundwork for the permanent restructuring not only of American conservatism, but of America itself. Because Trump chose J.D. Vance, Trumpism will long outlast its founder. Trump resisted the pleas of media mogul Rupert Murdoch to choose someone tamer and more controllable as his running mate, and in so doing, passed the torch to a fighting tribune of the new MAGA generation.

Last night in Milwaukee, Vance emerged as the Ronald Reagan of the Millennials. He came across as patriotic and optimistic, but not sentimental. The anecdotes he shared about his rough childhood were not only factually true, but told mythical truths about what America is, and what she might be again.


He's echoed exactly what I've been saying about this war in that it's designed to be long and expensive, not designed to wrap up quickly.

It's frustrating that the pro war guys on here aren't realizing or don't care that the regime that's occupied DC that they're against are the same people running the Ukraine war.
Wars of attrition wrap up when one side runs out of gas.

Do not be disappointed when our aid to Ukraine continues after Trump is inaugurated. Trump, remember, is a guy famous for berating "losers" and promising to "win so much you'll get tired of winning."

ZERO chance Trump gives Putin what he wants in Ukraine just to stop the war.
My position is either help Ukraine wrap this up quickly or pull out. Either we supply them with enough to absolutely curb stomp Russia quickly or we stop altogether.

This very slow, long forever war mentality is what I'm against.
Situation now, though, is that Russia is vulnerable to escalation = they can't. They are fully committed and unable to break the deadlock. So small, rapid escalations can have enhanced impacts.
Completely untrue of course. They're advancing ever more quickly, and with relatively few troops, while holding large numbers in reserve.
FLBear5630
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Sam Lowry said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

you've got to escape genetic fallacy.

Here's an Economist article on the stark situation with Russian war production. If you read between the lines, it's clear that their military spending is at 8% of GDP but the majority of it is devoted to conversion and fusion of old equipment. Once their stocks are gone, likely in 24 months or less, their gross output in equipment will plummet.

Also embedded but poorly explained in the article is perhaps the most important factor of all - arty tubes. Their production of arty rounds is impressive. But their inability to produce new tubes as fast as they wear out means the accuracy of most of their barrages is quite low. So that 5:1 superiority in fires really overstates the effectiveness. So what if you're firing 5x your opponent, if you aren't hitting anything...... Remember, arty is accounting for approx 70% of casualties in this war. As accuracy of fires degrades, the ability to inflict casualty fades as well. Accuracy is quite important for the attacker = he's got to drop fires right over the trenches to inflict casualties. a few yards short or long.....limited effect. But pinpoint accuracy is less important for the defender, who is shooting at highly vulnerable troops advancing out in the open. (again, illustrating the dynamics for why Ukrainian casualties are so much lower than Russian casualties.)



In case article is paywalled:

---------------------------------------------

Russia's vast stocks of Soviet-era weaponry are running out
It may have to scale back its offensive in Ukraine

Jul 16th 2024

For a long time, it seemed that a war of attrition between Ukraine and a Russia with five times its population could only end one way. But the much-vaunted Russian offensive against Kharkiv in the north that started in May is fizzling out. Its advances elsewhere along the line, especially in the Donbas region, have been both strategically trivial and achieved only at huge cost. The question now is less whether Ukraine can stay in the fight and more how long can Russia maintain its current tempo of operations.

The key issue is not manpower. Russia seems able to go on finding another 25,000 or so soldiers each month to maintain numbers at the front of around 470,000, although it is paying more for them. Production of missiles to strike Ukrainian infrastructure is also surging. But for all the talk about Russia having become a war economy, with some 8% of its gdp devoted to military spending, it is able to replace its staggering losses of tanks, armoured infantry vehicles and artillery only by drawing out of storage and refurbishing stocks built up in the Soviet era. Huge though these stocks are, they are not infinite.

According to most intelligence estimates, after the first two years of the war Russia had lost about 3,000 tanks and 5,000 other armoured vehicles. Oryx, a Dutch open-source intelligence site, puts the number of Russian tank losses for which it has either photo or videographic evidence currently at 3,235, but suggests the actual number is "significantly higher".

Aleksandr Golts, an analyst at the Stockholm Centre for Eastern European Studies, says that Vladimir Putin has the old Politburo to thank for the huge stockpiles of weapons that were built up during the cold war. He says that Soviet leaders knew that Western military kit was much more advanced than their own, so they opted for mass, churning out thousands of armoured vehicles in peacetime in case of war. Before its demise, says Mr Golts, the Soviet Union had as many armoured vehicles as the rest of the world put together.

When the then defence minister, Sergei Shoigu, boasted in December 2023 that 1,530 tanks had been delivered in the course of the year, he omitted to say that nearly 85% of them, according to an assessment by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a London think-tank, were not new tanks but old ones (mainly t-72s, also t-62s and even some t-55s dating from just after the second world war) that had been taken out of storage and given a wash and brush-up.

Since the invasion, about 175 reasonably modern t-90m tanks have been sent to the front line. The iiss estimates that annual production this year could be approaching 90. However, Michael Gjerstad, an analyst with the iiss, argues that most of the t-90ms are actually upgrades of older t-90as. As those numbers dwindle, production of newly built t-90ms this year might be no more than 28. Pavel Luzin, an expert on Russian military capacity at the Washington-based Centre for European Policy Analysis, reckons that Russia can build only 30 brand-new tanks a year. When the Ukrainians captured a supposedly new t-90m last year, they found that its gun was produced in 1992.

Mr Luzin reckons that Russia's ability to build new tanks or infantry fighting vehicles, or even to refurbish old ones, is hampered by the difficulty of getting components. Stores of components for tank production that before the war were intended for use in 2025 have already been raided, while crucial equipment, such as fuel-heaters for diesel engines, high-voltage electrical systems and infrared thermal imaging to identify targets, were all previously imported from Europe and their sale is now blocked by sanctions. The lack of high-quality ball bearings is also a constraint. Chinese alternatives are sometimes available, but are said not to meet former quality standards.

Furthermore, the old Soviet armaments supply chain no longer exists. Ukraine, Georgia and East Germany were all important centres of weapons and components manufacture. Ironically, Kharkiv was the main producer of turrets for t-72 tanks. The number of workers in the military-industrial complex has also fallen dramatically, says Mr Luzin, from about 10m to 2m, without any offsetting step-change in automation.

Another major concern is artillery-barrel production. For now, with the help of North Korea, Russia appears to have enough shells, probably about 3m this yearsufficient to outgun the Ukrainians until recently by at least 5:1 and sometimes by much more. But the downside of such high rates of fire has been the wear and tear on barrels. In some highly contested areas, the barrels of howitzers need replacing after only a few months.
Yet, says Mr Luzin, there are only two factories that have the sophisticated Austrian-made rotary forging machines (the last one was imported in 2017) needed to make the barrels. They can each produce only around 100 barrels a year, compared with the thousands needed. Russia has never made its own forging machines; they imported them from America in the 1930s and looted them from Germany after the war.

The solution has been to cannibalise the barrels from old towed artillery and fit them to self-propelled howitzers. Richard Vereker, an open-source analyst, thinks that by the start of this year about 4,800 barrels had been swapped out. How long the Russians can carry on doing this depends on the condition of the 7,000 or so that may be left. Mr Gjerstad says that with multi-launch rocket systems, such as the tos-1a, eking out barrel life has already meant much shorter bursts of fire.

But the biggest emerging problem is with tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, which are still crucial to any offensive ground operations at scale. Although the iiss estimated that in February of this year Russia may have had about 3,200 tanks in storage to draw on, Mr Gjerstad says up to 70% of them "have not moved an inch since the beginning of the war". A large proportion of the t-72s have been stored uncovered since the early 1990s and are probably in very poor condition. Both Mr Golts and Mr Luzin reckon that at current rates of attrition, Russian tank and infantry vehicle refurbishment from storage will have reached a "critical point of exhaustion" by the second half of next year.

Unless something changes, before the end of this year Russian forces may have to adjust their posture to one that is much more defensive, says Mr Gjerstad. It could even become apparent before the end of summer. Expect Mr Putin's interest in agreeing a temporary ceasefire to increase.


T-72s will not fare well on the modern battlefield.
This isn't a "modern" battlefield. T-72s and T-90s happen to be rather well suited to it. There's also a reason the West is belatedly trending toward smooth bore weapons. But we do love our fancy toys, even if they've never won us a war.
The question is if the T-72's are modernized. I have no idea. I know the modern M60s would give it a hell of a go. I don't see how it would hold up against Challengers, Leopards and Abrams that can outshoot it.
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

Sam Lowry said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

you've got to escape genetic fallacy.

Here's an Economist article on the stark situation with Russian war production. If you read between the lines, it's clear that their military spending is at 8% of GDP but the majority of it is devoted to conversion and fusion of old equipment. Once their stocks are gone, likely in 24 months or less, their gross output in equipment will plummet.

Also embedded but poorly explained in the article is perhaps the most important factor of all - arty tubes. Their production of arty rounds is impressive. But their inability to produce new tubes as fast as they wear out means the accuracy of most of their barrages is quite low. So that 5:1 superiority in fires really overstates the effectiveness. So what if you're firing 5x your opponent, if you aren't hitting anything...... Remember, arty is accounting for approx 70% of casualties in this war. As accuracy of fires degrades, the ability to inflict casualty fades as well. Accuracy is quite important for the attacker = he's got to drop fires right over the trenches to inflict casualties. a few yards short or long.....limited effect. But pinpoint accuracy is less important for the defender, who is shooting at highly vulnerable troops advancing out in the open. (again, illustrating the dynamics for why Ukrainian casualties are so much lower than Russian casualties.)



In case article is paywalled:

---------------------------------------------

Russia's vast stocks of Soviet-era weaponry are running out
It may have to scale back its offensive in Ukraine

Jul 16th 2024

For a long time, it seemed that a war of attrition between Ukraine and a Russia with five times its population could only end one way. But the much-vaunted Russian offensive against Kharkiv in the north that started in May is fizzling out. Its advances elsewhere along the line, especially in the Donbas region, have been both strategically trivial and achieved only at huge cost. The question now is less whether Ukraine can stay in the fight and more how long can Russia maintain its current tempo of operations.

The key issue is not manpower. Russia seems able to go on finding another 25,000 or so soldiers each month to maintain numbers at the front of around 470,000, although it is paying more for them. Production of missiles to strike Ukrainian infrastructure is also surging. But for all the talk about Russia having become a war economy, with some 8% of its gdp devoted to military spending, it is able to replace its staggering losses of tanks, armoured infantry vehicles and artillery only by drawing out of storage and refurbishing stocks built up in the Soviet era. Huge though these stocks are, they are not infinite.

According to most intelligence estimates, after the first two years of the war Russia had lost about 3,000 tanks and 5,000 other armoured vehicles. Oryx, a Dutch open-source intelligence site, puts the number of Russian tank losses for which it has either photo or videographic evidence currently at 3,235, but suggests the actual number is "significantly higher".

Aleksandr Golts, an analyst at the Stockholm Centre for Eastern European Studies, says that Vladimir Putin has the old Politburo to thank for the huge stockpiles of weapons that were built up during the cold war. He says that Soviet leaders knew that Western military kit was much more advanced than their own, so they opted for mass, churning out thousands of armoured vehicles in peacetime in case of war. Before its demise, says Mr Golts, the Soviet Union had as many armoured vehicles as the rest of the world put together.

When the then defence minister, Sergei Shoigu, boasted in December 2023 that 1,530 tanks had been delivered in the course of the year, he omitted to say that nearly 85% of them, according to an assessment by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a London think-tank, were not new tanks but old ones (mainly t-72s, also t-62s and even some t-55s dating from just after the second world war) that had been taken out of storage and given a wash and brush-up.

Since the invasion, about 175 reasonably modern t-90m tanks have been sent to the front line. The iiss estimates that annual production this year could be approaching 90. However, Michael Gjerstad, an analyst with the iiss, argues that most of the t-90ms are actually upgrades of older t-90as. As those numbers dwindle, production of newly built t-90ms this year might be no more than 28. Pavel Luzin, an expert on Russian military capacity at the Washington-based Centre for European Policy Analysis, reckons that Russia can build only 30 brand-new tanks a year. When the Ukrainians captured a supposedly new t-90m last year, they found that its gun was produced in 1992.

Mr Luzin reckons that Russia's ability to build new tanks or infantry fighting vehicles, or even to refurbish old ones, is hampered by the difficulty of getting components. Stores of components for tank production that before the war were intended for use in 2025 have already been raided, while crucial equipment, such as fuel-heaters for diesel engines, high-voltage electrical systems and infrared thermal imaging to identify targets, were all previously imported from Europe and their sale is now blocked by sanctions. The lack of high-quality ball bearings is also a constraint. Chinese alternatives are sometimes available, but are said not to meet former quality standards.

Furthermore, the old Soviet armaments supply chain no longer exists. Ukraine, Georgia and East Germany were all important centres of weapons and components manufacture. Ironically, Kharkiv was the main producer of turrets for t-72 tanks. The number of workers in the military-industrial complex has also fallen dramatically, says Mr Luzin, from about 10m to 2m, without any offsetting step-change in automation.

Another major concern is artillery-barrel production. For now, with the help of North Korea, Russia appears to have enough shells, probably about 3m this yearsufficient to outgun the Ukrainians until recently by at least 5:1 and sometimes by much more. But the downside of such high rates of fire has been the wear and tear on barrels. In some highly contested areas, the barrels of howitzers need replacing after only a few months.
Yet, says Mr Luzin, there are only two factories that have the sophisticated Austrian-made rotary forging machines (the last one was imported in 2017) needed to make the barrels. They can each produce only around 100 barrels a year, compared with the thousands needed. Russia has never made its own forging machines; they imported them from America in the 1930s and looted them from Germany after the war.

The solution has been to cannibalise the barrels from old towed artillery and fit them to self-propelled howitzers. Richard Vereker, an open-source analyst, thinks that by the start of this year about 4,800 barrels had been swapped out. How long the Russians can carry on doing this depends on the condition of the 7,000 or so that may be left. Mr Gjerstad says that with multi-launch rocket systems, such as the tos-1a, eking out barrel life has already meant much shorter bursts of fire.

But the biggest emerging problem is with tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, which are still crucial to any offensive ground operations at scale. Although the iiss estimated that in February of this year Russia may have had about 3,200 tanks in storage to draw on, Mr Gjerstad says up to 70% of them "have not moved an inch since the beginning of the war". A large proportion of the t-72s have been stored uncovered since the early 1990s and are probably in very poor condition. Both Mr Golts and Mr Luzin reckon that at current rates of attrition, Russian tank and infantry vehicle refurbishment from storage will have reached a "critical point of exhaustion" by the second half of next year.

Unless something changes, before the end of this year Russian forces may have to adjust their posture to one that is much more defensive, says Mr Gjerstad. It could even become apparent before the end of summer. Expect Mr Putin's interest in agreeing a temporary ceasefire to increase.


T-72s will not fare well on the modern battlefield.
This isn't a "modern" battlefield. T-72s and T-90s happen to be rather well suited to it. There's also a reason the West is belatedly trending toward smooth bore weapons. But we do love our fancy toys, even if they've never won us a war.
The question is if the T-72's are modernized. I have no idea. I know the modern M60s would give it a hell of a go. I don't see how it would hold up against Challengers, Leopards and Abrams that can outshoot it.

every battle field is modern. It's the war you have, and most nations fight them with the hardware they used to win the prior war, then adjust. That adjustment is a strain on logistics......the resources needed to get stuff issued to your soldiers TODAY competing with resources needed to develop new stuff, and more importantly the industrial base to make the new stuff while maintaining supply of the old stuff. Herculean challenge. Germans couldn't handle it in WWII.

T-72 is a cold war design which can be upgraded in some ways. T-80 is a T-72 with factory upgrades, and it is is outclassed by front line western equipment, particularly in crew survival. Russian stuff really, really sucks on crew survival. Most crews don't make it. The opposite is true with western vehicles.


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

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

you've got to escape genetic fallacy.

Here's an Economist article on the stark situation with Russian war production. If you read between the lines, it's clear that their military spending is at 8% of GDP but the majority of it is devoted to conversion and fusion of old equipment. Once their stocks are gone, likely in 24 months or less, their gross output in equipment will plummet.

Also embedded but poorly explained in the article is perhaps the most important factor of all - arty tubes. Their production of arty rounds is impressive. But their inability to produce new tubes as fast as they wear out means the accuracy of most of their barrages is quite low. So that 5:1 superiority in fires really overstates the effectiveness. So what if you're firing 5x your opponent, if you aren't hitting anything...... Remember, arty is accounting for approx 70% of casualties in this war. As accuracy of fires degrades, the ability to inflict casualty fades as well. Accuracy is quite important for the attacker = he's got to drop fires right over the trenches to inflict casualties. a few yards short or long.....limited effect. But pinpoint accuracy is less important for the defender, who is shooting at highly vulnerable troops advancing out in the open. (again, illustrating the dynamics for why Ukrainian casualties are so much lower than Russian casualties.)



In case article is paywalled:

---------------------------------------------

Russia's vast stocks of Soviet-era weaponry are running out
It may have to scale back its offensive in Ukraine

Jul 16th 2024

For a long time, it seemed that a war of attrition between Ukraine and a Russia with five times its population could only end one way. But the much-vaunted Russian offensive against Kharkiv in the north that started in May is fizzling out. Its advances elsewhere along the line, especially in the Donbas region, have been both strategically trivial and achieved only at huge cost. The question now is less whether Ukraine can stay in the fight and more how long can Russia maintain its current tempo of operations.

The key issue is not manpower. Russia seems able to go on finding another 25,000 or so soldiers each month to maintain numbers at the front of around 470,000, although it is paying more for them. Production of missiles to strike Ukrainian infrastructure is also surging. But for all the talk about Russia having become a war economy, with some 8% of its gdp devoted to military spending, it is able to replace its staggering losses of tanks, armoured infantry vehicles and artillery only by drawing out of storage and refurbishing stocks built up in the Soviet era. Huge though these stocks are, they are not infinite.

According to most intelligence estimates, after the first two years of the war Russia had lost about 3,000 tanks and 5,000 other armoured vehicles. Oryx, a Dutch open-source intelligence site, puts the number of Russian tank losses for which it has either photo or videographic evidence currently at 3,235, but suggests the actual number is "significantly higher".

Aleksandr Golts, an analyst at the Stockholm Centre for Eastern European Studies, says that Vladimir Putin has the old Politburo to thank for the huge stockpiles of weapons that were built up during the cold war. He says that Soviet leaders knew that Western military kit was much more advanced than their own, so they opted for mass, churning out thousands of armoured vehicles in peacetime in case of war. Before its demise, says Mr Golts, the Soviet Union had as many armoured vehicles as the rest of the world put together.

When the then defence minister, Sergei Shoigu, boasted in December 2023 that 1,530 tanks had been delivered in the course of the year, he omitted to say that nearly 85% of them, according to an assessment by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a London think-tank, were not new tanks but old ones (mainly t-72s, also t-62s and even some t-55s dating from just after the second world war) that had been taken out of storage and given a wash and brush-up.

Since the invasion, about 175 reasonably modern t-90m tanks have been sent to the front line. The iiss estimates that annual production this year could be approaching 90. However, Michael Gjerstad, an analyst with the iiss, argues that most of the t-90ms are actually upgrades of older t-90as. As those numbers dwindle, production of newly built t-90ms this year might be no more than 28. Pavel Luzin, an expert on Russian military capacity at the Washington-based Centre for European Policy Analysis, reckons that Russia can build only 30 brand-new tanks a year. When the Ukrainians captured a supposedly new t-90m last year, they found that its gun was produced in 1992.

Mr Luzin reckons that Russia's ability to build new tanks or infantry fighting vehicles, or even to refurbish old ones, is hampered by the difficulty of getting components. Stores of components for tank production that before the war were intended for use in 2025 have already been raided, while crucial equipment, such as fuel-heaters for diesel engines, high-voltage electrical systems and infrared thermal imaging to identify targets, were all previously imported from Europe and their sale is now blocked by sanctions. The lack of high-quality ball bearings is also a constraint. Chinese alternatives are sometimes available, but are said not to meet former quality standards.

Furthermore, the old Soviet armaments supply chain no longer exists. Ukraine, Georgia and East Germany were all important centres of weapons and components manufacture. Ironically, Kharkiv was the main producer of turrets for t-72 tanks. The number of workers in the military-industrial complex has also fallen dramatically, says Mr Luzin, from about 10m to 2m, without any offsetting step-change in automation.

Another major concern is artillery-barrel production. For now, with the help of North Korea, Russia appears to have enough shells, probably about 3m this yearsufficient to outgun the Ukrainians until recently by at least 5:1 and sometimes by much more. But the downside of such high rates of fire has been the wear and tear on barrels. In some highly contested areas, the barrels of howitzers need replacing after only a few months.
Yet, says Mr Luzin, there are only two factories that have the sophisticated Austrian-made rotary forging machines (the last one was imported in 2017) needed to make the barrels. They can each produce only around 100 barrels a year, compared with the thousands needed. Russia has never made its own forging machines; they imported them from America in the 1930s and looted them from Germany after the war.

The solution has been to cannibalise the barrels from old towed artillery and fit them to self-propelled howitzers. Richard Vereker, an open-source analyst, thinks that by the start of this year about 4,800 barrels had been swapped out. How long the Russians can carry on doing this depends on the condition of the 7,000 or so that may be left. Mr Gjerstad says that with multi-launch rocket systems, such as the tos-1a, eking out barrel life has already meant much shorter bursts of fire.

But the biggest emerging problem is with tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, which are still crucial to any offensive ground operations at scale. Although the iiss estimated that in February of this year Russia may have had about 3,200 tanks in storage to draw on, Mr Gjerstad says up to 70% of them "have not moved an inch since the beginning of the war". A large proportion of the t-72s have been stored uncovered since the early 1990s and are probably in very poor condition. Both Mr Golts and Mr Luzin reckon that at current rates of attrition, Russian tank and infantry vehicle refurbishment from storage will have reached a "critical point of exhaustion" by the second half of next year.

Unless something changes, before the end of this year Russian forces may have to adjust their posture to one that is much more defensive, says Mr Gjerstad. It could even become apparent before the end of summer. Expect Mr Putin's interest in agreeing a temporary ceasefire to increase.


T-72s will not fare well on the modern battlefield.
This isn't a "modern" battlefield. T-72s and T-90s happen to be rather well suited to it. There's also a reason the West is belatedly trending toward smooth bore barrels. But we do love our fancy toys, even if they've never won us a war.
You are decades behind, my friend. the Rheinmetal 120mm smoothbore went into production in 1974. US adopted it in 1986 and by 1992 had built 5000 units armed with it. The Leopard 2 went into production in 1979 and was fitted with the 120mm smoothbore. The LeClerc went into production in the 1980s with a 120mm smoothbore. Yes, the Brits still use a rifled barrel and their tank is considered by many to be a peer or better to the Leopard/Abrahms/LeClerc.

with your every post you show the limits of your understanding of the subject material
Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

you've got to escape genetic fallacy.

Here's an Economist article on the stark situation with Russian war production. If you read between the lines, it's clear that their military spending is at 8% of GDP but the majority of it is devoted to conversion and fusion of old equipment. Once their stocks are gone, likely in 24 months or less, their gross output in equipment will plummet.

Also embedded but poorly explained in the article is perhaps the most important factor of all - arty tubes. Their production of arty rounds is impressive. But their inability to produce new tubes as fast as they wear out means the accuracy of most of their barrages is quite low. So that 5:1 superiority in fires really overstates the effectiveness. So what if you're firing 5x your opponent, if you aren't hitting anything...... Remember, arty is accounting for approx 70% of casualties in this war. As accuracy of fires degrades, the ability to inflict casualty fades as well. Accuracy is quite important for the attacker = he's got to drop fires right over the trenches to inflict casualties. a few yards short or long.....limited effect. But pinpoint accuracy is less important for the defender, who is shooting at highly vulnerable troops advancing out in the open. (again, illustrating the dynamics for why Ukrainian casualties are so much lower than Russian casualties.)



In case article is paywalled:

---------------------------------------------

Russia's vast stocks of Soviet-era weaponry are running out
It may have to scale back its offensive in Ukraine

Jul 16th 2024

For a long time, it seemed that a war of attrition between Ukraine and a Russia with five times its population could only end one way. But the much-vaunted Russian offensive against Kharkiv in the north that started in May is fizzling out. Its advances elsewhere along the line, especially in the Donbas region, have been both strategically trivial and achieved only at huge cost. The question now is less whether Ukraine can stay in the fight and more how long can Russia maintain its current tempo of operations.

The key issue is not manpower. Russia seems able to go on finding another 25,000 or so soldiers each month to maintain numbers at the front of around 470,000, although it is paying more for them. Production of missiles to strike Ukrainian infrastructure is also surging. But for all the talk about Russia having become a war economy, with some 8% of its gdp devoted to military spending, it is able to replace its staggering losses of tanks, armoured infantry vehicles and artillery only by drawing out of storage and refurbishing stocks built up in the Soviet era. Huge though these stocks are, they are not infinite.

According to most intelligence estimates, after the first two years of the war Russia had lost about 3,000 tanks and 5,000 other armoured vehicles. Oryx, a Dutch open-source intelligence site, puts the number of Russian tank losses for which it has either photo or videographic evidence currently at 3,235, but suggests the actual number is "significantly higher".

Aleksandr Golts, an analyst at the Stockholm Centre for Eastern European Studies, says that Vladimir Putin has the old Politburo to thank for the huge stockpiles of weapons that were built up during the cold war. He says that Soviet leaders knew that Western military kit was much more advanced than their own, so they opted for mass, churning out thousands of armoured vehicles in peacetime in case of war. Before its demise, says Mr Golts, the Soviet Union had as many armoured vehicles as the rest of the world put together.

When the then defence minister, Sergei Shoigu, boasted in December 2023 that 1,530 tanks had been delivered in the course of the year, he omitted to say that nearly 85% of them, according to an assessment by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a London think-tank, were not new tanks but old ones (mainly t-72s, also t-62s and even some t-55s dating from just after the second world war) that had been taken out of storage and given a wash and brush-up.

Since the invasion, about 175 reasonably modern t-90m tanks have been sent to the front line. The iiss estimates that annual production this year could be approaching 90. However, Michael Gjerstad, an analyst with the iiss, argues that most of the t-90ms are actually upgrades of older t-90as. As those numbers dwindle, production of newly built t-90ms this year might be no more than 28. Pavel Luzin, an expert on Russian military capacity at the Washington-based Centre for European Policy Analysis, reckons that Russia can build only 30 brand-new tanks a year. When the Ukrainians captured a supposedly new t-90m last year, they found that its gun was produced in 1992.

Mr Luzin reckons that Russia's ability to build new tanks or infantry fighting vehicles, or even to refurbish old ones, is hampered by the difficulty of getting components. Stores of components for tank production that before the war were intended for use in 2025 have already been raided, while crucial equipment, such as fuel-heaters for diesel engines, high-voltage electrical systems and infrared thermal imaging to identify targets, were all previously imported from Europe and their sale is now blocked by sanctions. The lack of high-quality ball bearings is also a constraint. Chinese alternatives are sometimes available, but are said not to meet former quality standards.

Furthermore, the old Soviet armaments supply chain no longer exists. Ukraine, Georgia and East Germany were all important centres of weapons and components manufacture. Ironically, Kharkiv was the main producer of turrets for t-72 tanks. The number of workers in the military-industrial complex has also fallen dramatically, says Mr Luzin, from about 10m to 2m, without any offsetting step-change in automation.

Another major concern is artillery-barrel production. For now, with the help of North Korea, Russia appears to have enough shells, probably about 3m this yearsufficient to outgun the Ukrainians until recently by at least 5:1 and sometimes by much more. But the downside of such high rates of fire has been the wear and tear on barrels. In some highly contested areas, the barrels of howitzers need replacing after only a few months.
Yet, says Mr Luzin, there are only two factories that have the sophisticated Austrian-made rotary forging machines (the last one was imported in 2017) needed to make the barrels. They can each produce only around 100 barrels a year, compared with the thousands needed. Russia has never made its own forging machines; they imported them from America in the 1930s and looted them from Germany after the war.

The solution has been to cannibalise the barrels from old towed artillery and fit them to self-propelled howitzers. Richard Vereker, an open-source analyst, thinks that by the start of this year about 4,800 barrels had been swapped out. How long the Russians can carry on doing this depends on the condition of the 7,000 or so that may be left. Mr Gjerstad says that with multi-launch rocket systems, such as the tos-1a, eking out barrel life has already meant much shorter bursts of fire.

But the biggest emerging problem is with tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, which are still crucial to any offensive ground operations at scale. Although the iiss estimated that in February of this year Russia may have had about 3,200 tanks in storage to draw on, Mr Gjerstad says up to 70% of them "have not moved an inch since the beginning of the war". A large proportion of the t-72s have been stored uncovered since the early 1990s and are probably in very poor condition. Both Mr Golts and Mr Luzin reckon that at current rates of attrition, Russian tank and infantry vehicle refurbishment from storage will have reached a "critical point of exhaustion" by the second half of next year.

Unless something changes, before the end of this year Russian forces may have to adjust their posture to one that is much more defensive, says Mr Gjerstad. It could even become apparent before the end of summer. Expect Mr Putin's interest in agreeing a temporary ceasefire to increase.


T-72s will not fare well on the modern battlefield.
This isn't a "modern" battlefield. T-72s and T-90s happen to be rather well suited to it. There's also a reason the West is belatedly trending toward smooth bore barrels. But we do love our fancy toys, even if they've never won us a war.
You are decades behind, my friend. the Rheinmetal 120mm smoothbore went into production in 1974. US adopted it in 1986 and by 1992 had built 5000 units armed with it. The Leopard 2 went into production in 1979 and was fitted with the 120mm smoothbore. The LeClerc went into production in the 1980s with a 120mm smoothbore. Yes, the Brits still use a rifled barrel and their tank is considered by many to be a peer or better to the Leopard/Abrahms/LeClerc.
Not any more. The Brits announced the switch to smooth bore in 2021.
Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

trey3216 said:

https://defence-blog.com/russia-faces-artillery-barrel-shortage/



Didn't Whiterock call that a few weeks ago?
yeah but that's been a pretty bright light on the porch for over a year. Lots & lots of knowledgeable folks are talking about it. War opponents just ignore it because it's inconvenient to their worldview (which is rooted in ironclad faith of Russian invincibility).
We tend to ignore it because we've been hearing it non-stop for two years. As a reminder of just how wrong war supporters have been, here's an article on Russia's supply problems reaching a "breaking point." In 2022.

https://breakingdefense.com/2022/09/russias-military-facing-steep-artillery-import-challenges-six-months-into-invasion/
Sam Lowry
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German reporter Julian Ropcke follows battlefield events daily and has been one of Ukraine's biggest cheerleaders. Even he's beginning to accept reality:

Doc Holliday
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Even Zelensky wants this war to end ASAP.

boognish_bear
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whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

you've got to escape genetic fallacy.

Here's an Economist article on the stark situation with Russian war production. If you read between the lines, it's clear that their military spending is at 8% of GDP but the majority of it is devoted to conversion and fusion of old equipment. Once their stocks are gone, likely in 24 months or less, their gross output in equipment will plummet.

Also embedded but poorly explained in the article is perhaps the most important factor of all - arty tubes. Their production of arty rounds is impressive. But their inability to produce new tubes as fast as they wear out means the accuracy of most of their barrages is quite low. So that 5:1 superiority in fires really overstates the effectiveness. So what if you're firing 5x your opponent, if you aren't hitting anything...... Remember, arty is accounting for approx 70% of casualties in this war. As accuracy of fires degrades, the ability to inflict casualty fades as well. Accuracy is quite important for the attacker = he's got to drop fires right over the trenches to inflict casualties. a few yards short or long.....limited effect. But pinpoint accuracy is less important for the defender, who is shooting at highly vulnerable troops advancing out in the open. (again, illustrating the dynamics for why Ukrainian casualties are so much lower than Russian casualties.)



In case article is paywalled:

---------------------------------------------

Russia's vast stocks of Soviet-era weaponry are running out
It may have to scale back its offensive in Ukraine

Jul 16th 2024

For a long time, it seemed that a war of attrition between Ukraine and a Russia with five times its population could only end one way. But the much-vaunted Russian offensive against Kharkiv in the north that started in May is fizzling out. Its advances elsewhere along the line, especially in the Donbas region, have been both strategically trivial and achieved only at huge cost. The question now is less whether Ukraine can stay in the fight and more how long can Russia maintain its current tempo of operations.

The key issue is not manpower. Russia seems able to go on finding another 25,000 or so soldiers each month to maintain numbers at the front of around 470,000, although it is paying more for them. Production of missiles to strike Ukrainian infrastructure is also surging. But for all the talk about Russia having become a war economy, with some 8% of its gdp devoted to military spending, it is able to replace its staggering losses of tanks, armoured infantry vehicles and artillery only by drawing out of storage and refurbishing stocks built up in the Soviet era. Huge though these stocks are, they are not infinite.

According to most intelligence estimates, after the first two years of the war Russia had lost about 3,000 tanks and 5,000 other armoured vehicles. Oryx, a Dutch open-source intelligence site, puts the number of Russian tank losses for which it has either photo or videographic evidence currently at 3,235, but suggests the actual number is "significantly higher".

Aleksandr Golts, an analyst at the Stockholm Centre for Eastern European Studies, says that Vladimir Putin has the old Politburo to thank for the huge stockpiles of weapons that were built up during the cold war. He says that Soviet leaders knew that Western military kit was much more advanced than their own, so they opted for mass, churning out thousands of armoured vehicles in peacetime in case of war. Before its demise, says Mr Golts, the Soviet Union had as many armoured vehicles as the rest of the world put together.

When the then defence minister, Sergei Shoigu, boasted in December 2023 that 1,530 tanks had been delivered in the course of the year, he omitted to say that nearly 85% of them, according to an assessment by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a London think-tank, were not new tanks but old ones (mainly t-72s, also t-62s and even some t-55s dating from just after the second world war) that had been taken out of storage and given a wash and brush-up.

Since the invasion, about 175 reasonably modern t-90m tanks have been sent to the front line. The iiss estimates that annual production this year could be approaching 90. However, Michael Gjerstad, an analyst with the iiss, argues that most of the t-90ms are actually upgrades of older t-90as. As those numbers dwindle, production of newly built t-90ms this year might be no more than 28. Pavel Luzin, an expert on Russian military capacity at the Washington-based Centre for European Policy Analysis, reckons that Russia can build only 30 brand-new tanks a year. When the Ukrainians captured a supposedly new t-90m last year, they found that its gun was produced in 1992.

Mr Luzin reckons that Russia's ability to build new tanks or infantry fighting vehicles, or even to refurbish old ones, is hampered by the difficulty of getting components. Stores of components for tank production that before the war were intended for use in 2025 have already been raided, while crucial equipment, such as fuel-heaters for diesel engines, high-voltage electrical systems and infrared thermal imaging to identify targets, were all previously imported from Europe and their sale is now blocked by sanctions. The lack of high-quality ball bearings is also a constraint. Chinese alternatives are sometimes available, but are said not to meet former quality standards.

Furthermore, the old Soviet armaments supply chain no longer exists. Ukraine, Georgia and East Germany were all important centres of weapons and components manufacture. Ironically, Kharkiv was the main producer of turrets for t-72 tanks. The number of workers in the military-industrial complex has also fallen dramatically, says Mr Luzin, from about 10m to 2m, without any offsetting step-change in automation.

Another major concern is artillery-barrel production. For now, with the help of North Korea, Russia appears to have enough shells, probably about 3m this yearsufficient to outgun the Ukrainians until recently by at least 5:1 and sometimes by much more. But the downside of such high rates of fire has been the wear and tear on barrels. In some highly contested areas, the barrels of howitzers need replacing after only a few months.
Yet, says Mr Luzin, there are only two factories that have the sophisticated Austrian-made rotary forging machines (the last one was imported in 2017) needed to make the barrels. They can each produce only around 100 barrels a year, compared with the thousands needed. Russia has never made its own forging machines; they imported them from America in the 1930s and looted them from Germany after the war.

The solution has been to cannibalise the barrels from old towed artillery and fit them to self-propelled howitzers. Richard Vereker, an open-source analyst, thinks that by the start of this year about 4,800 barrels had been swapped out. How long the Russians can carry on doing this depends on the condition of the 7,000 or so that may be left. Mr Gjerstad says that with multi-launch rocket systems, such as the tos-1a, eking out barrel life has already meant much shorter bursts of fire.

But the biggest emerging problem is with tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, which are still crucial to any offensive ground operations at scale. Although the iiss estimated that in February of this year Russia may have had about 3,200 tanks in storage to draw on, Mr Gjerstad says up to 70% of them "have not moved an inch since the beginning of the war". A large proportion of the t-72s have been stored uncovered since the early 1990s and are probably in very poor condition. Both Mr Golts and Mr Luzin reckon that at current rates of attrition, Russian tank and infantry vehicle refurbishment from storage will have reached a "critical point of exhaustion" by the second half of next year.

Unless something changes, before the end of this year Russian forces may have to adjust their posture to one that is much more defensive, says Mr Gjerstad. It could even become apparent before the end of summer. Expect Mr Putin's interest in agreeing a temporary ceasefire to increase.


T-72s will not fare well on the modern battlefield.
This isn't a "modern" battlefield. T-72s and T-90s happen to be rather well suited to it. There's also a reason the West is belatedly trending toward smooth bore barrels. But we do love our fancy toys, even if they've never won us a war.
You are decades behind, my friend. the Rheinmetal 120mm smoothbore went into production in 1974. US adopted it in 1986 and by 1992 had built 5000 units armed with it. The Leopard 2 went into production in 1979 and was fitted with the 120mm smoothbore. The LeClerc went into production in the 1980s with a 120mm smoothbore. Yes, the Brits still use a rifled barrel and their tank is considered by many to be a peer or better to the Leopard/Abrahms/LeClerc.
Not any more. The Brits announced the switch to smooth bore in 2021.
LOL so now the Brits are "the West?"

Fact is, "the West" has been using smoothbore guns for decades. The Swedes use a smoothbore in their version of the Leopard 2 designed jointly with Germany (replacing their older indigenously designed Strindsvagen 103 - a defacto tank destroyer which also had a smoothbore gun). The Turks use a smoothbore gun in their indigenous tank design. The Merkava has a smoothbore gun. The South Korean K2 ((used by Turkey and Poland) has a smoothbore gun.

Quit reading Russian propaganda!!!
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

you've got to escape genetic fallacy.

Here's an Economist article on the stark situation with Russian war production. If you read between the lines, it's clear that their military spending is at 8% of GDP but the majority of it is devoted to conversion and fusion of old equipment. Once their stocks are gone, likely in 24 months or less, their gross output in equipment will plummet.

Also embedded but poorly explained in the article is perhaps the most important factor of all - arty tubes. Their production of arty rounds is impressive. But their inability to produce new tubes as fast as they wear out means the accuracy of most of their barrages is quite low. So that 5:1 superiority in fires really overstates the effectiveness. So what if you're firing 5x your opponent, if you aren't hitting anything...... Remember, arty is accounting for approx 70% of casualties in this war. As accuracy of fires degrades, the ability to inflict casualty fades as well. Accuracy is quite important for the attacker = he's got to drop fires right over the trenches to inflict casualties. a few yards short or long.....limited effect. But pinpoint accuracy is less important for the defender, who is shooting at highly vulnerable troops advancing out in the open. (again, illustrating the dynamics for why Ukrainian casualties are so much lower than Russian casualties.)



In case article is paywalled:

---------------------------------------------

Russia's vast stocks of Soviet-era weaponry are running out
It may have to scale back its offensive in Ukraine

Jul 16th 2024

For a long time, it seemed that a war of attrition between Ukraine and a Russia with five times its population could only end one way. But the much-vaunted Russian offensive against Kharkiv in the north that started in May is fizzling out. Its advances elsewhere along the line, especially in the Donbas region, have been both strategically trivial and achieved only at huge cost. The question now is less whether Ukraine can stay in the fight and more how long can Russia maintain its current tempo of operations.

The key issue is not manpower. Russia seems able to go on finding another 25,000 or so soldiers each month to maintain numbers at the front of around 470,000, although it is paying more for them. Production of missiles to strike Ukrainian infrastructure is also surging. But for all the talk about Russia having become a war economy, with some 8% of its gdp devoted to military spending, it is able to replace its staggering losses of tanks, armoured infantry vehicles and artillery only by drawing out of storage and refurbishing stocks built up in the Soviet era. Huge though these stocks are, they are not infinite.

According to most intelligence estimates, after the first two years of the war Russia had lost about 3,000 tanks and 5,000 other armoured vehicles. Oryx, a Dutch open-source intelligence site, puts the number of Russian tank losses for which it has either photo or videographic evidence currently at 3,235, but suggests the actual number is "significantly higher".

Aleksandr Golts, an analyst at the Stockholm Centre for Eastern European Studies, says that Vladimir Putin has the old Politburo to thank for the huge stockpiles of weapons that were built up during the cold war. He says that Soviet leaders knew that Western military kit was much more advanced than their own, so they opted for mass, churning out thousands of armoured vehicles in peacetime in case of war. Before its demise, says Mr Golts, the Soviet Union had as many armoured vehicles as the rest of the world put together.

When the then defence minister, Sergei Shoigu, boasted in December 2023 that 1,530 tanks had been delivered in the course of the year, he omitted to say that nearly 85% of them, according to an assessment by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a London think-tank, were not new tanks but old ones (mainly t-72s, also t-62s and even some t-55s dating from just after the second world war) that had been taken out of storage and given a wash and brush-up.

Since the invasion, about 175 reasonably modern t-90m tanks have been sent to the front line. The iiss estimates that annual production this year could be approaching 90. However, Michael Gjerstad, an analyst with the iiss, argues that most of the t-90ms are actually upgrades of older t-90as. As those numbers dwindle, production of newly built t-90ms this year might be no more than 28. Pavel Luzin, an expert on Russian military capacity at the Washington-based Centre for European Policy Analysis, reckons that Russia can build only 30 brand-new tanks a year. When the Ukrainians captured a supposedly new t-90m last year, they found that its gun was produced in 1992.

Mr Luzin reckons that Russia's ability to build new tanks or infantry fighting vehicles, or even to refurbish old ones, is hampered by the difficulty of getting components. Stores of components for tank production that before the war were intended for use in 2025 have already been raided, while crucial equipment, such as fuel-heaters for diesel engines, high-voltage electrical systems and infrared thermal imaging to identify targets, were all previously imported from Europe and their sale is now blocked by sanctions. The lack of high-quality ball bearings is also a constraint. Chinese alternatives are sometimes available, but are said not to meet former quality standards.

Furthermore, the old Soviet armaments supply chain no longer exists. Ukraine, Georgia and East Germany were all important centres of weapons and components manufacture. Ironically, Kharkiv was the main producer of turrets for t-72 tanks. The number of workers in the military-industrial complex has also fallen dramatically, says Mr Luzin, from about 10m to 2m, without any offsetting step-change in automation.

Another major concern is artillery-barrel production. For now, with the help of North Korea, Russia appears to have enough shells, probably about 3m this yearsufficient to outgun the Ukrainians until recently by at least 5:1 and sometimes by much more. But the downside of such high rates of fire has been the wear and tear on barrels. In some highly contested areas, the barrels of howitzers need replacing after only a few months.
Yet, says Mr Luzin, there are only two factories that have the sophisticated Austrian-made rotary forging machines (the last one was imported in 2017) needed to make the barrels. They can each produce only around 100 barrels a year, compared with the thousands needed. Russia has never made its own forging machines; they imported them from America in the 1930s and looted them from Germany after the war.

The solution has been to cannibalise the barrels from old towed artillery and fit them to self-propelled howitzers. Richard Vereker, an open-source analyst, thinks that by the start of this year about 4,800 barrels had been swapped out. How long the Russians can carry on doing this depends on the condition of the 7,000 or so that may be left. Mr Gjerstad says that with multi-launch rocket systems, such as the tos-1a, eking out barrel life has already meant much shorter bursts of fire.

But the biggest emerging problem is with tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, which are still crucial to any offensive ground operations at scale. Although the iiss estimated that in February of this year Russia may have had about 3,200 tanks in storage to draw on, Mr Gjerstad says up to 70% of them "have not moved an inch since the beginning of the war". A large proportion of the t-72s have been stored uncovered since the early 1990s and are probably in very poor condition. Both Mr Golts and Mr Luzin reckon that at current rates of attrition, Russian tank and infantry vehicle refurbishment from storage will have reached a "critical point of exhaustion" by the second half of next year.

Unless something changes, before the end of this year Russian forces may have to adjust their posture to one that is much more defensive, says Mr Gjerstad. It could even become apparent before the end of summer. Expect Mr Putin's interest in agreeing a temporary ceasefire to increase.


T-72s will not fare well on the modern battlefield.
This isn't a "modern" battlefield. T-72s and T-90s happen to be rather well suited to it. There's also a reason the West is belatedly trending toward smooth bore barrels. But we do love our fancy toys, even if they've never won us a war.
You are decades behind, my friend. the Rheinmetal 120mm smoothbore went into production in 1974. US adopted it in 1986 and by 1992 had built 5000 units armed with it. The Leopard 2 went into production in 1979 and was fitted with the 120mm smoothbore. The LeClerc went into production in the 1980s with a 120mm smoothbore. Yes, the Brits still use a rifled barrel and their tank is considered by many to be a peer or better to the Leopard/Abrahms/LeClerc.
Not any more. The Brits announced the switch to smooth bore in 2021.
LOL so now the Brits are "the West?"

Fact is, "the West" has been using smoothbore guns for decades. The Swedes use a smoothbore in their version of the Leopard 2 designed jointly with Germany (replacing their older indigenously designed Strindsvagen 103 - a defacto tank destroyer which also had a smoothbore gun). The Turks use a smoothbore gun in their indigenous tank design. The Merkava has a smoothbore gun. The South Korean K2 ((used by Turkey and Poland) has a smoothbore gun.

Quit reading Russian propaganda!!!
You are right on target, I have learned not to question your current military info! You are much better connected than me, I just read alot since the 90's...

My understanding, as the armor got thicker, the Sabot had to get longer and more unwieldy. HEAT use went up and the smoothbore is much better for HEAT. The rifling cause all sorts of issues, they can be overcome but very expensive. Smoothbore is the future of tanks, if there is another generation and drones haven't made the tank and tank formation we know, and love, a thing of the past. Will be interesting to see where it goes, it will change as it always does.
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

you've got to escape genetic fallacy.

Here's an Economist article on the stark situation with Russian war production. If you read between the lines, it's clear that their military spending is at 8% of GDP but the majority of it is devoted to conversion and fusion of old equipment. Once their stocks are gone, likely in 24 months or less, their gross output in equipment will plummet.

Also embedded but poorly explained in the article is perhaps the most important factor of all - arty tubes. Their production of arty rounds is impressive. But their inability to produce new tubes as fast as they wear out means the accuracy of most of their barrages is quite low. So that 5:1 superiority in fires really overstates the effectiveness. So what if you're firing 5x your opponent, if you aren't hitting anything...... Remember, arty is accounting for approx 70% of casualties in this war. As accuracy of fires degrades, the ability to inflict casualty fades as well. Accuracy is quite important for the attacker = he's got to drop fires right over the trenches to inflict casualties. a few yards short or long.....limited effect. But pinpoint accuracy is less important for the defender, who is shooting at highly vulnerable troops advancing out in the open. (again, illustrating the dynamics for why Ukrainian casualties are so much lower than Russian casualties.)



In case article is paywalled:

---------------------------------------------

Russia's vast stocks of Soviet-era weaponry are running out
It may have to scale back its offensive in Ukraine

Jul 16th 2024

For a long time, it seemed that a war of attrition between Ukraine and a Russia with five times its population could only end one way. But the much-vaunted Russian offensive against Kharkiv in the north that started in May is fizzling out. Its advances elsewhere along the line, especially in the Donbas region, have been both strategically trivial and achieved only at huge cost. The question now is less whether Ukraine can stay in the fight and more how long can Russia maintain its current tempo of operations.

The key issue is not manpower. Russia seems able to go on finding another 25,000 or so soldiers each month to maintain numbers at the front of around 470,000, although it is paying more for them. Production of missiles to strike Ukrainian infrastructure is also surging. But for all the talk about Russia having become a war economy, with some 8% of its gdp devoted to military spending, it is able to replace its staggering losses of tanks, armoured infantry vehicles and artillery only by drawing out of storage and refurbishing stocks built up in the Soviet era. Huge though these stocks are, they are not infinite.

According to most intelligence estimates, after the first two years of the war Russia had lost about 3,000 tanks and 5,000 other armoured vehicles. Oryx, a Dutch open-source intelligence site, puts the number of Russian tank losses for which it has either photo or videographic evidence currently at 3,235, but suggests the actual number is "significantly higher".

Aleksandr Golts, an analyst at the Stockholm Centre for Eastern European Studies, says that Vladimir Putin has the old Politburo to thank for the huge stockpiles of weapons that were built up during the cold war. He says that Soviet leaders knew that Western military kit was much more advanced than their own, so they opted for mass, churning out thousands of armoured vehicles in peacetime in case of war. Before its demise, says Mr Golts, the Soviet Union had as many armoured vehicles as the rest of the world put together.

When the then defence minister, Sergei Shoigu, boasted in December 2023 that 1,530 tanks had been delivered in the course of the year, he omitted to say that nearly 85% of them, according to an assessment by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a London think-tank, were not new tanks but old ones (mainly t-72s, also t-62s and even some t-55s dating from just after the second world war) that had been taken out of storage and given a wash and brush-up.

Since the invasion, about 175 reasonably modern t-90m tanks have been sent to the front line. The iiss estimates that annual production this year could be approaching 90. However, Michael Gjerstad, an analyst with the iiss, argues that most of the t-90ms are actually upgrades of older t-90as. As those numbers dwindle, production of newly built t-90ms this year might be no more than 28. Pavel Luzin, an expert on Russian military capacity at the Washington-based Centre for European Policy Analysis, reckons that Russia can build only 30 brand-new tanks a year. When the Ukrainians captured a supposedly new t-90m last year, they found that its gun was produced in 1992.

Mr Luzin reckons that Russia's ability to build new tanks or infantry fighting vehicles, or even to refurbish old ones, is hampered by the difficulty of getting components. Stores of components for tank production that before the war were intended for use in 2025 have already been raided, while crucial equipment, such as fuel-heaters for diesel engines, high-voltage electrical systems and infrared thermal imaging to identify targets, were all previously imported from Europe and their sale is now blocked by sanctions. The lack of high-quality ball bearings is also a constraint. Chinese alternatives are sometimes available, but are said not to meet former quality standards.

Furthermore, the old Soviet armaments supply chain no longer exists. Ukraine, Georgia and East Germany were all important centres of weapons and components manufacture. Ironically, Kharkiv was the main producer of turrets for t-72 tanks. The number of workers in the military-industrial complex has also fallen dramatically, says Mr Luzin, from about 10m to 2m, without any offsetting step-change in automation.

Another major concern is artillery-barrel production. For now, with the help of North Korea, Russia appears to have enough shells, probably about 3m this yearsufficient to outgun the Ukrainians until recently by at least 5:1 and sometimes by much more. But the downside of such high rates of fire has been the wear and tear on barrels. In some highly contested areas, the barrels of howitzers need replacing after only a few months.
Yet, says Mr Luzin, there are only two factories that have the sophisticated Austrian-made rotary forging machines (the last one was imported in 2017) needed to make the barrels. They can each produce only around 100 barrels a year, compared with the thousands needed. Russia has never made its own forging machines; they imported them from America in the 1930s and looted them from Germany after the war.

The solution has been to cannibalise the barrels from old towed artillery and fit them to self-propelled howitzers. Richard Vereker, an open-source analyst, thinks that by the start of this year about 4,800 barrels had been swapped out. How long the Russians can carry on doing this depends on the condition of the 7,000 or so that may be left. Mr Gjerstad says that with multi-launch rocket systems, such as the tos-1a, eking out barrel life has already meant much shorter bursts of fire.

But the biggest emerging problem is with tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, which are still crucial to any offensive ground operations at scale. Although the iiss estimated that in February of this year Russia may have had about 3,200 tanks in storage to draw on, Mr Gjerstad says up to 70% of them "have not moved an inch since the beginning of the war". A large proportion of the t-72s have been stored uncovered since the early 1990s and are probably in very poor condition. Both Mr Golts and Mr Luzin reckon that at current rates of attrition, Russian tank and infantry vehicle refurbishment from storage will have reached a "critical point of exhaustion" by the second half of next year.

Unless something changes, before the end of this year Russian forces may have to adjust their posture to one that is much more defensive, says Mr Gjerstad. It could even become apparent before the end of summer. Expect Mr Putin's interest in agreeing a temporary ceasefire to increase.


T-72s will not fare well on the modern battlefield.
This isn't a "modern" battlefield. T-72s and T-90s happen to be rather well suited to it. There's also a reason the West is belatedly trending toward smooth bore barrels. But we do love our fancy toys, even if they've never won us a war.
You are decades behind, my friend. the Rheinmetal 120mm smoothbore went into production in 1974. US adopted it in 1986 and by 1992 had built 5000 units armed with it. The Leopard 2 went into production in 1979 and was fitted with the 120mm smoothbore. The LeClerc went into production in the 1980s with a 120mm smoothbore. Yes, the Brits still use a rifled barrel and their tank is considered by many to be a peer or better to the Leopard/Abrahms/LeClerc.
Not any more. The Brits announced the switch to smooth bore in 2021.
LOL so now the Brits are "the West?"

Fact is, "the West" has been using smoothbore guns for decades. The Swedes use a smoothbore in their version of the Leopard 2 designed jointly with Germany (replacing their older indigenously designed Strindsvagen 103 - a defacto tank destroyer which also had a smoothbore gun). The Turks use a smoothbore gun in their indigenous tank design. The Merkava has a smoothbore gun. The South Korean K2 ((used by Turkey and Poland) has a smoothbore gun.

Quit reading Russian propaganda!!!
You are right on target, I have learned not to question your current military info! You are much better connected than me, I just read alot since the 90's...

My understanding, as the armor got thicker, the Sabot had to get longer and more unwieldy. HEAT use went up and the smoothbore is much better for HEAT. The rifling cause all sorts of issues, they can be overcome but very expensive. Smoothbore is the future of tanks, if there is another generation and drones haven't made the tank and tank formation we know, and love, a thing of the past. Will be interesting to see where it goes, it will change as it always does.

exactly. the rifling on the sabot robs velocity, which harms performance of the depleted uranium dart (M829), which has no explosive charge and depends on velocity to perforate armor, the non-explosive dart being the answer to the use of reactive armor.......no explosive charge on the M829 round means reactive armor doesn't "react." Off course you can up the powder charge to offset, but then, as you note, you get into chamber pressure issues, plus chamber headspacing issues and wear on barrel rifling over the longer term, etc..... Moreover, chamber pressure is not a constant. Ambient temperatures and elevation, among many factors, affects pressures a LOT. What works fine in winter might not work in summer. DItto for the Carpathians vs the Dutch lowlands. You have to load something that can work anywhere you might need to fight.

the argument for rifling is greater accuracy, but of course, reality is that tank vs tank combat is pretty rare. Most losses are to arty and mines.

rifled barrels are also a LOT harder to manufacture and wear out a lot quicker, which is a logistical consideration when preparing for a war of attrition.
Sam Lowry
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whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

you've got to escape genetic fallacy.

Here's an Economist article on the stark situation with Russian war production. If you read between the lines, it's clear that their military spending is at 8% of GDP but the majority of it is devoted to conversion and fusion of old equipment. Once their stocks are gone, likely in 24 months or less, their gross output in equipment will plummet.

Also embedded but poorly explained in the article is perhaps the most important factor of all - arty tubes. Their production of arty rounds is impressive. But their inability to produce new tubes as fast as they wear out means the accuracy of most of their barrages is quite low. So that 5:1 superiority in fires really overstates the effectiveness. So what if you're firing 5x your opponent, if you aren't hitting anything...... Remember, arty is accounting for approx 70% of casualties in this war. As accuracy of fires degrades, the ability to inflict casualty fades as well. Accuracy is quite important for the attacker = he's got to drop fires right over the trenches to inflict casualties. a few yards short or long.....limited effect. But pinpoint accuracy is less important for the defender, who is shooting at highly vulnerable troops advancing out in the open. (again, illustrating the dynamics for why Ukrainian casualties are so much lower than Russian casualties.)



In case article is paywalled:

---------------------------------------------

Russia's vast stocks of Soviet-era weaponry are running out
It may have to scale back its offensive in Ukraine

Jul 16th 2024

For a long time, it seemed that a war of attrition between Ukraine and a Russia with five times its population could only end one way. But the much-vaunted Russian offensive against Kharkiv in the north that started in May is fizzling out. Its advances elsewhere along the line, especially in the Donbas region, have been both strategically trivial and achieved only at huge cost. The question now is less whether Ukraine can stay in the fight and more how long can Russia maintain its current tempo of operations.

The key issue is not manpower. Russia seems able to go on finding another 25,000 or so soldiers each month to maintain numbers at the front of around 470,000, although it is paying more for them. Production of missiles to strike Ukrainian infrastructure is also surging. But for all the talk about Russia having become a war economy, with some 8% of its gdp devoted to military spending, it is able to replace its staggering losses of tanks, armoured infantry vehicles and artillery only by drawing out of storage and refurbishing stocks built up in the Soviet era. Huge though these stocks are, they are not infinite.

According to most intelligence estimates, after the first two years of the war Russia had lost about 3,000 tanks and 5,000 other armoured vehicles. Oryx, a Dutch open-source intelligence site, puts the number of Russian tank losses for which it has either photo or videographic evidence currently at 3,235, but suggests the actual number is "significantly higher".

Aleksandr Golts, an analyst at the Stockholm Centre for Eastern European Studies, says that Vladimir Putin has the old Politburo to thank for the huge stockpiles of weapons that were built up during the cold war. He says that Soviet leaders knew that Western military kit was much more advanced than their own, so they opted for mass, churning out thousands of armoured vehicles in peacetime in case of war. Before its demise, says Mr Golts, the Soviet Union had as many armoured vehicles as the rest of the world put together.

When the then defence minister, Sergei Shoigu, boasted in December 2023 that 1,530 tanks had been delivered in the course of the year, he omitted to say that nearly 85% of them, according to an assessment by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a London think-tank, were not new tanks but old ones (mainly t-72s, also t-62s and even some t-55s dating from just after the second world war) that had been taken out of storage and given a wash and brush-up.

Since the invasion, about 175 reasonably modern t-90m tanks have been sent to the front line. The iiss estimates that annual production this year could be approaching 90. However, Michael Gjerstad, an analyst with the iiss, argues that most of the t-90ms are actually upgrades of older t-90as. As those numbers dwindle, production of newly built t-90ms this year might be no more than 28. Pavel Luzin, an expert on Russian military capacity at the Washington-based Centre for European Policy Analysis, reckons that Russia can build only 30 brand-new tanks a year. When the Ukrainians captured a supposedly new t-90m last year, they found that its gun was produced in 1992.

Mr Luzin reckons that Russia's ability to build new tanks or infantry fighting vehicles, or even to refurbish old ones, is hampered by the difficulty of getting components. Stores of components for tank production that before the war were intended for use in 2025 have already been raided, while crucial equipment, such as fuel-heaters for diesel engines, high-voltage electrical systems and infrared thermal imaging to identify targets, were all previously imported from Europe and their sale is now blocked by sanctions. The lack of high-quality ball bearings is also a constraint. Chinese alternatives are sometimes available, but are said not to meet former quality standards.

Furthermore, the old Soviet armaments supply chain no longer exists. Ukraine, Georgia and East Germany were all important centres of weapons and components manufacture. Ironically, Kharkiv was the main producer of turrets for t-72 tanks. The number of workers in the military-industrial complex has also fallen dramatically, says Mr Luzin, from about 10m to 2m, without any offsetting step-change in automation.

Another major concern is artillery-barrel production. For now, with the help of North Korea, Russia appears to have enough shells, probably about 3m this yearsufficient to outgun the Ukrainians until recently by at least 5:1 and sometimes by much more. But the downside of such high rates of fire has been the wear and tear on barrels. In some highly contested areas, the barrels of howitzers need replacing after only a few months.
Yet, says Mr Luzin, there are only two factories that have the sophisticated Austrian-made rotary forging machines (the last one was imported in 2017) needed to make the barrels. They can each produce only around 100 barrels a year, compared with the thousands needed. Russia has never made its own forging machines; they imported them from America in the 1930s and looted them from Germany after the war.

The solution has been to cannibalise the barrels from old towed artillery and fit them to self-propelled howitzers. Richard Vereker, an open-source analyst, thinks that by the start of this year about 4,800 barrels had been swapped out. How long the Russians can carry on doing this depends on the condition of the 7,000 or so that may be left. Mr Gjerstad says that with multi-launch rocket systems, such as the tos-1a, eking out barrel life has already meant much shorter bursts of fire.

But the biggest emerging problem is with tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, which are still crucial to any offensive ground operations at scale. Although the iiss estimated that in February of this year Russia may have had about 3,200 tanks in storage to draw on, Mr Gjerstad says up to 70% of them "have not moved an inch since the beginning of the war". A large proportion of the t-72s have been stored uncovered since the early 1990s and are probably in very poor condition. Both Mr Golts and Mr Luzin reckon that at current rates of attrition, Russian tank and infantry vehicle refurbishment from storage will have reached a "critical point of exhaustion" by the second half of next year.

Unless something changes, before the end of this year Russian forces may have to adjust their posture to one that is much more defensive, says Mr Gjerstad. It could even become apparent before the end of summer. Expect Mr Putin's interest in agreeing a temporary ceasefire to increase.


T-72s will not fare well on the modern battlefield.
This isn't a "modern" battlefield. T-72s and T-90s happen to be rather well suited to it. There's also a reason the West is belatedly trending toward smooth bore barrels. But we do love our fancy toys, even if they've never won us a war.
You are decades behind, my friend. the Rheinmetal 120mm smoothbore went into production in 1974. US adopted it in 1986 and by 1992 had built 5000 units armed with it. The Leopard 2 went into production in 1979 and was fitted with the 120mm smoothbore. The LeClerc went into production in the 1980s with a 120mm smoothbore. Yes, the Brits still use a rifled barrel and their tank is considered by many to be a peer or better to the Leopard/Abrahms/LeClerc.
Not any more. The Brits announced the switch to smooth bore in 2021.
LOL so now the Brits are "the West?"

Fact is, "the West" has been using smoothbore guns for decades. The Swedes use a smoothbore in their version of the Leopard 2 designed jointly with Germany (replacing their older indigenously designed Strindsvagen 103 - a defacto tank destroyer which also had a smoothbore gun). The Turks use a smoothbore gun in their indigenous tank design. The Merkava has a smoothbore gun. The South Korean K2 ((used by Turkey and Poland) has a smoothbore gun.

Quit reading Russian propaganda!!!
The British in particular, but the US and Germany also lagged throughout the 60s and 70s. The Leopard 2 didn't enter service until around 1980. The point is that smooth bore isn't necessarily a disadvantage as many assume.
Doc Holliday
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Whiterock, you're well aware of the globalist agenda, how corrupt DC is and especially democrats.
Do you question why you're in lockstep with them about this war?

Did you question the war on terror, Afghanistan/Iraq/Syria at the time or were you all for it like you are for this war?

Do you see any possibility that there are terrible ulterior motives in regards to this war?

Maybe we just have a different paradigm. I don't really see any 'Good guys' in politics or global hegemony post WW2. Maybe you do?
trey3216
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Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

you've got to escape genetic fallacy.

Here's an Economist article on the stark situation with Russian war production. If you read between the lines, it's clear that their military spending is at 8% of GDP but the majority of it is devoted to conversion and fusion of old equipment. Once their stocks are gone, likely in 24 months or less, their gross output in equipment will plummet.

Also embedded but poorly explained in the article is perhaps the most important factor of all - arty tubes. Their production of arty rounds is impressive. But their inability to produce new tubes as fast as they wear out means the accuracy of most of their barrages is quite low. So that 5:1 superiority in fires really overstates the effectiveness. So what if you're firing 5x your opponent, if you aren't hitting anything...... Remember, arty is accounting for approx 70% of casualties in this war. As accuracy of fires degrades, the ability to inflict casualty fades as well. Accuracy is quite important for the attacker = he's got to drop fires right over the trenches to inflict casualties. a few yards short or long.....limited effect. But pinpoint accuracy is less important for the defender, who is shooting at highly vulnerable troops advancing out in the open. (again, illustrating the dynamics for why Ukrainian casualties are so much lower than Russian casualties.)



In case article is paywalled:

---------------------------------------------

Russia's vast stocks of Soviet-era weaponry are running out
It may have to scale back its offensive in Ukraine

Jul 16th 2024

For a long time, it seemed that a war of attrition between Ukraine and a Russia with five times its population could only end one way. But the much-vaunted Russian offensive against Kharkiv in the north that started in May is fizzling out. Its advances elsewhere along the line, especially in the Donbas region, have been both strategically trivial and achieved only at huge cost. The question now is less whether Ukraine can stay in the fight and more how long can Russia maintain its current tempo of operations.

The key issue is not manpower. Russia seems able to go on finding another 25,000 or so soldiers each month to maintain numbers at the front of around 470,000, although it is paying more for them. Production of missiles to strike Ukrainian infrastructure is also surging. But for all the talk about Russia having become a war economy, with some 8% of its gdp devoted to military spending, it is able to replace its staggering losses of tanks, armoured infantry vehicles and artillery only by drawing out of storage and refurbishing stocks built up in the Soviet era. Huge though these stocks are, they are not infinite.

According to most intelligence estimates, after the first two years of the war Russia had lost about 3,000 tanks and 5,000 other armoured vehicles. Oryx, a Dutch open-source intelligence site, puts the number of Russian tank losses for which it has either photo or videographic evidence currently at 3,235, but suggests the actual number is "significantly higher".

Aleksandr Golts, an analyst at the Stockholm Centre for Eastern European Studies, says that Vladimir Putin has the old Politburo to thank for the huge stockpiles of weapons that were built up during the cold war. He says that Soviet leaders knew that Western military kit was much more advanced than their own, so they opted for mass, churning out thousands of armoured vehicles in peacetime in case of war. Before its demise, says Mr Golts, the Soviet Union had as many armoured vehicles as the rest of the world put together.

When the then defence minister, Sergei Shoigu, boasted in December 2023 that 1,530 tanks had been delivered in the course of the year, he omitted to say that nearly 85% of them, according to an assessment by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, a London think-tank, were not new tanks but old ones (mainly t-72s, also t-62s and even some t-55s dating from just after the second world war) that had been taken out of storage and given a wash and brush-up.

Since the invasion, about 175 reasonably modern t-90m tanks have been sent to the front line. The iiss estimates that annual production this year could be approaching 90. However, Michael Gjerstad, an analyst with the iiss, argues that most of the t-90ms are actually upgrades of older t-90as. As those numbers dwindle, production of newly built t-90ms this year might be no more than 28. Pavel Luzin, an expert on Russian military capacity at the Washington-based Centre for European Policy Analysis, reckons that Russia can build only 30 brand-new tanks a year. When the Ukrainians captured a supposedly new t-90m last year, they found that its gun was produced in 1992.

Mr Luzin reckons that Russia's ability to build new tanks or infantry fighting vehicles, or even to refurbish old ones, is hampered by the difficulty of getting components. Stores of components for tank production that before the war were intended for use in 2025 have already been raided, while crucial equipment, such as fuel-heaters for diesel engines, high-voltage electrical systems and infrared thermal imaging to identify targets, were all previously imported from Europe and their sale is now blocked by sanctions. The lack of high-quality ball bearings is also a constraint. Chinese alternatives are sometimes available, but are said not to meet former quality standards.

Furthermore, the old Soviet armaments supply chain no longer exists. Ukraine, Georgia and East Germany were all important centres of weapons and components manufacture. Ironically, Kharkiv was the main producer of turrets for t-72 tanks. The number of workers in the military-industrial complex has also fallen dramatically, says Mr Luzin, from about 10m to 2m, without any offsetting step-change in automation.

Another major concern is artillery-barrel production. For now, with the help of North Korea, Russia appears to have enough shells, probably about 3m this yearsufficient to outgun the Ukrainians until recently by at least 5:1 and sometimes by much more. But the downside of such high rates of fire has been the wear and tear on barrels. In some highly contested areas, the barrels of howitzers need replacing after only a few months.
Yet, says Mr Luzin, there are only two factories that have the sophisticated Austrian-made rotary forging machines (the last one was imported in 2017) needed to make the barrels. They can each produce only around 100 barrels a year, compared with the thousands needed. Russia has never made its own forging machines; they imported them from America in the 1930s and looted them from Germany after the war.

The solution has been to cannibalise the barrels from old towed artillery and fit them to self-propelled howitzers. Richard Vereker, an open-source analyst, thinks that by the start of this year about 4,800 barrels had been swapped out. How long the Russians can carry on doing this depends on the condition of the 7,000 or so that may be left. Mr Gjerstad says that with multi-launch rocket systems, such as the tos-1a, eking out barrel life has already meant much shorter bursts of fire.

But the biggest emerging problem is with tanks and infantry fighting vehicles, which are still crucial to any offensive ground operations at scale. Although the iiss estimated that in February of this year Russia may have had about 3,200 tanks in storage to draw on, Mr Gjerstad says up to 70% of them "have not moved an inch since the beginning of the war". A large proportion of the t-72s have been stored uncovered since the early 1990s and are probably in very poor condition. Both Mr Golts and Mr Luzin reckon that at current rates of attrition, Russian tank and infantry vehicle refurbishment from storage will have reached a "critical point of exhaustion" by the second half of next year.

Unless something changes, before the end of this year Russian forces may have to adjust their posture to one that is much more defensive, says Mr Gjerstad. It could even become apparent before the end of summer. Expect Mr Putin's interest in agreeing a temporary ceasefire to increase.


T-72s will not fare well on the modern battlefield.
This isn't a "modern" battlefield. T-72s and T-90s happen to be rather well suited to it. There's also a reason the West is belatedly trending toward smooth bore barrels. But we do love our fancy toys, even if they've never won us a war.
You are decades behind, my friend. the Rheinmetal 120mm smoothbore went into production in 1974. US adopted it in 1986 and by 1992 had built 5000 units armed with it. The Leopard 2 went into production in 1979 and was fitted with the 120mm smoothbore. The LeClerc went into production in the 1980s with a 120mm smoothbore. Yes, the Brits still use a rifled barrel and their tank is considered by many to be a peer or better to the Leopard/Abrahms/LeClerc.
Not any more. The Brits announced the switch to smooth bore in 2021.
LOL so now the Brits are "the West?"

Fact is, "the West" has been using smoothbore guns for decades. The Swedes use a smoothbore in their version of the Leopard 2 designed jointly with Germany (replacing their older indigenously designed Strindsvagen 103 - a defacto tank destroyer which also had a smoothbore gun). The Turks use a smoothbore gun in their indigenous tank design. The Merkava has a smoothbore gun. The South Korean K2 ((used by Turkey and Poland) has a smoothbore gun.

Quit reading Russian propaganda!!!
The British in particular, but the US and Germany also lagged throughout the 60s and 70s. The Leopard 2 didn't enter service until around 1980. The point is that smooth bore isn't necessarily a disadvantage as many assume.
Not as much as smooth brain, for sure. Tell us about those disadvantages seeing you have so much experience...
Mr. Treehorn treats objects like women, man.
boognish_bear
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FLBear5630
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boognish_bear said:


We better get a show of force somewhere Putin and Xi feel... This Joe situation is getting hot.

whiterock
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Doc Holliday said:

Whiterock, you're well aware of the globalist agenda, how corrupt DC is and especially democrats.
Do you question why you're in lockstep with them about this war?

Did you question the war on terror, Afghanistan/Iraq/Syria at the time or were you all for it like you are for this war?

Do you see any possibility that there are terrible ulterior motives in regards to this war?

Maybe we just have a different paradigm. I don't really see any 'Good guys' in politics or global hegemony post WW2. Maybe you do?
because I live in the real world, not a manichean world.
because the fundamentals of geopolitics don't change much.
because the realities of humanity don't change much.

Globalism (as a policy) is over, but we will always have trade and that is a good thing. And we will always have rich people trying to organize our lives to build them a brand new market,. To the extent that is entrepreneurship and not politics, that is a good thing. We will always have to find markets beyond our own for military hardware, to keep our military industrial base financially sound. So why would we NOT sell arms to people fighting wars? It's jobs. It's profits. It's tax base. I mean, we do want to be able manufacture fleets of ships and aircraft and tanks and arty and uniforms and (etc....) when we really DO need to fight a war, don't we? Surely you don't suggest that we shutter Lockheed and restart it from scratch if/when China lands troops on Baja California? Is it really "globalist" to suggest we are the wealthiest country on earth and for that reason there are a lot people out their with designs on our wealth and influence? Surely we do not have to re-sell the idea that nothing that happens outside our borders matter at all to us? I mean, what reading of history misses the panorama of one nation invading another in order enrich itself in some way? We do need an ally or three, don't we? Do we not have a lot in common with the democracies of the world? Does it not make sense to help them defend themselves against expansionist totalitarian regimes, so that the ideas which drive our prosperity are not isolated to us alone? We all would benefit from a liberal and democratic Russia, would we not? Wouldn't it be nice for none of Russia's neighbors to want to join an alliance to stop Russian invasion?

What war has not enriched those who win, those who sell stuff to the people who win?
What government enterprise has NOT suffered from inefficiency, fraud, etc.....?

During the Napoleonic era, Britain never executed a policy to control all of Europe; Britain executed a policy to make sure no one else controlled all of Europe. That was sound and allowed Britain to punch above its weight for centuries.
How is our policy in Ukraine any different?

The USA and the EU are HALF of the world's economy. How on earth does it benefit you or me or our kids or grandkids to let Russia have all of the WP back? That would diminish substantially the economic output of a big percentage of the EU, and it would put the rest of the EU under the threat of Russian domination, changing trade relations with the US. It would drive a wedge between the part of the world we need most (for a list of things too long to list here). So where we stop that? Kharkov? Kiev? Krakow? Karlsruhe?


I remember one of my grandpas telling me how the Roosevelt got us into a war with Japan by refusing to sell them oil and scrap metal.....how we cut them off and FORCED them to attack us. That's made about as much sense as what we here from the numbskulls who insist that Nato FORCED Russia to invade Ukraine. Both are equally preposterous bull**it. Russia invaded Ukraine because it was always going to invade Ukraine. That what Russia does. It invades its neighbors. Been doing it for 1000 years. And there's no sign that it is going to liberalize and democratize on its own. I mean, every time they get pieces of their anatomy handed to them in another lost war, they recognize they are behind and backward and need to modernize.....but somehow over the centuries it never happens. Russia as it is today is going to keep invading and destabilizing its neighbors to influence, control, or subsume its neighbors. That is not in anyone's interest. It's how great big world-wide wars get started. Stop it now, right where it is while its easy and cheap. Stop it now before our kids get involved. The premise of criticism of our Russo-Ukraine war policy is that our policy is forcing Russia to be Russia (to invade neighbors), so we should stop them from being Russia (to invade neighbors) by letting them be Russia (to invade neighbors). It really does make that much sense. At no point do war critics blame Russia for any agency at all in their actions. At no point do critics of war policy propose anything other than just letting Russia have whatever the hell it wants in the name of peace, because, after all, Russia is powerful and mighty and we are obligated to let them have whatever they want. Because they are Russia!. How dare we stand in the way of whatever hegemony Russia feels it needs!

If things go south in Ukraine, my daughter will be on the first wave of US aircraft to touch down in Romania. So you can rest assured I am not advocating anything that will start a war with Russia. I want to prevent a war with Russia. And the way you do that is to load Ukraine up with stuff it needs to win the war they're in. Make sure Russia gets such a thorough mauling it will take a century for them to forget the lesson and foolishly try again. I know that is at odds with the notion that Russia is fighting a Just War to stop Nato expansion. Problem with that is....it's a faulty premise. It's not a just war. It's just war.

boognish_bear
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boognish_bear
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