Sam Lowry said:Or it's a sign that he's studied American wargames and heeded the results. And lo and behold...events on the battlefield are proving him right.whiterock said:Martyanov's quote in bold is your sign that he's off in the weeds of Russian propaganda, with the faulty premise that victory/defeat is a battlefield question. In reality, war is a logistics problem. And that is Russia's weakness. The Russian economy cannot sustain its current war footing. Nato can.Redbrickbear said:
[Sleepwalking To Apocalypse:
Would it kill me to be more cheerful today? Probably not, but I gotta share with you this piercing essay by an Irish journalist, Ciaran O'Regan, who is gobsmacked by the fact that we are not talking about the risks of nuclear war over the Russia-Ukraine war. I had read that Putin recently changed Russian military doctrine to allow for use of nuclear weapons in extraordinary conventional circumstances. I had not realized that Biden did the same thing two years ago. Excerpt:Quote:
This nuclear posturing is very concerning to those of us who would rather not have mankind made extinct. In the final chapter of his unbelievably prescient 2018 book, Losing Military Supremacy, Andrei Martyanov argues that short of a nuclear exchange, the United States cannot defeat Russia in its immediate geographic vicinity. He also argues that the US had gotten accustomed to easily and quickly overcoming weak opposition with overwhelming technological and matriel superiority, but that we all "remain under the threat of a massive American miscalculation" as it relates to a military peer such as Russia something Martyanov saw as highly probable due to the "incompetence and delusion of the American establishment". He sees this kind of miscalculation as leading toward "uncontrolled escalation to a very dangerous nuclear threshold", to which the United States will be forced to move closer, "in an attempt to save her own dwindling reputation". Martyanov goes on to say that this might happen in the case of a "serious scale humiliation" in relation to Ukraine.
And in his recently published book, America's Final War, he comes back to the "massive American miscalculation" he had predicted six years prior:
By effectively annihilating several iterations of the Armed Forces of Ukraine (AFU), including the bulk of NATO's "volunteers" and Western military hardware, which for the first time faced an opponent with extremely advanced armed forces, a massive industrial economy, and a strategy which was birthed by arguably the greatest military school and thought in history, Russia's Real Revolution in Military Affairs drove a paradigm shift in warfare.
This proverbial 800-pound gorilla in the room which can no longer be ignored the West's miscalculation of Russia is one of epic proportions is driven by utterly incompetent elites, most of whom have no background in warfare, diplomacy or economics. They built the empire of lies and now they cannot do anything to stop the West's degeneration into a dystopia of whatever passes for suicidal policies. I warned of this crisis in my previous three books and now it is upon us and not going to end well for the combined West.
Martyanov goes on to suggest that Russia does not have anyone they can trust in "the West, which has become a euphemism for the United States, which has already turned European states into its lapdogs, and, possibly, into cannon fodder". This final point was echoed by Russian foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, in his September 28, 2024, speech at the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA), when he invoked the secret plan by the US and UK from the 1940s to destroy the Soviet Union. But now, according to Lavrov, they are openly trying to inflict "strategic defeat" on Russia:
The current Anglo-Saxon strategists are not hiding their ideas. For now they do, it's true, hope to defeat Russia using the illegitimate neo-Nazi Kyiv regime, but they're already preparing Europe for it to also throw itself into this suicidal escapade.
American disregard for European interest is nothing new. "**** the EU": so said former US ambassador to the United Nations, Victoria Nuland, during a phone call that was leaked in early February 2014, in which she and US ambassador to Ukraine, Geoffrey Pyatt, selected the new Ukrainian government, more than two weeks before the US-backed coups against president Yanukovych.
In another piece about Lavrov's UNGA speech, the Guardian writes: "Putin said that if attacked by any country supported by a nuclear-armed nation, Russia will consider that a joint attack". The piece goes on to tell us that in describing his country's new doctrine, Putin "stressed that Russia could use nuclear weapons in response to a conventional assault that posed a "critical threat to our sovereignty"." Unlike Colonel Baud above, however, the Guardian does not remind its readers that the US has changed its own nuclear doctrine nearly two and a half years ago, and did so to deter even "cyberattacks".
We are in a madhouse. An escalation toward nuclear war between the US and Russia would mean that pretty much everyone in both countries, and probably most people in the Northern hemisphere, would either be vaporised or starved to death in famine under skies blackened by particulate matter which will block out the sun for a decade. Most absurdly, this looming risk to the lives of billions of people and possibly to the existence of humanity at large if the nuclear winter is severe enough is occurring despite the fact that Ukraine has no hope of defeating Russia on the battlefield.
Read it all. It's important. You might get to the end and wonder: Why aren't we having these discussions in the West? Why don't we read pieces like this in our media, given the unsurpassable gravity of the issue? And then you start to understand how European powers sleepwalked into World War I, drunk on their own illusions.
Come to think of it, this story too is one of the dissolution of hierarchy and authority. Do you trust our leadership class to make the right decisions regarding that war? Do you really trust them, or do you trust them simply because the alternative is unthinkable? With me, the truth is that across a number of fronts, I trust elite leadership only because the alternative is not something I am prepared to confront. I feel like I can see more clearly than many people, but that's a matter of being a one-eyed man in a land of the blind.]
the constant saber rattling of nuclear armageddon is just a Russian attempt to get western powers to self-deter
Not really.