Ukrainian victory over Russia is inevitable

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Russia finally went ahead and disconnected all the old Soviet Nuclear reactors from the grid in Ukraine last night. Slow moving missiles and drones took their time hitting substations over and over again, because Ukraine was entirely out of air-defense missiles.

Contrary to what some people posted a few days ago, Ukraine is closer to becoming uninhabited than it is to winning this conflict.


Your hyperbolic collapse narrative treats worst‑case speculation and Russian messaging as if they were structural facts. Yes, Ukraine is under strain, but none of the indicators of state failure are present: its government, command structure, logistics, and Western financial lifelines remain intact, and Europe has already shifted to long‑term defense production specifically to prevent a collapse scenario. Russia’s own position on the other hand is far weaker than the narrative suggests: its economy is smaller than Italy’s, its military is burning through equipment faster than it can replace it, and it is pulling troops from other borders because it lacks manpower, not because it is surging in strength.

Claims that Kyiv is being evacuated or that Ukraine is becoming “uninhabited” are stale, recycled online tropes that have been wrong since 2022. Yes, Ukraine faces a grinding, difficult war, but the idea that it is about to disintegrate while Russia somehow emerges strong is simply not supported by facts, by military capacity, by economic fundamentals, or the strategic posture of Europe.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Russia finally went ahead and disconnected all the old Soviet Nuclear reactors from the grid in Ukraine last night. Slow moving missiles and drones took their time hitting substations over and over again, because Ukraine was entirely out of air-defense missiles.

Contrary to what some people posted a few days ago, Ukraine is closer to becoming uninhabited than it is to winning this conflict.


Your hyperbolic collapse narrative treats worst‑case speculation and Russian messaging as if they were structural facts. Yes, Ukraine is under strain, but none of the indicators of state failure are present: its government, command structure, logistics, and Western financial lifelines remain intact, and Europe has already shifted to long‑term defense production specifically to prevent a collapse scenario. Russia’s own position on the other hand is far weaker than the narrative suggests: its economy is smaller than Italy’s, its military is burning through equipment faster than it can replace it, and it is pulling troops from other borders because it lacks manpower, not because it is surging in strength.

Claims that Kyiv is being evacuated or that Ukraine is becoming “uninhabited” are stale, recycled online tropes that have been wrong since 2022. Yes, Ukraine faces a grinding, difficult war, but the idea that it is about to disintegrate while Russia somehow emerges strong is simply not supported by facts, by military capacity, by economic fundamentals, or the strategic posture of Europe.


If anything is collapsing, it's Russia's force projection around the world. Russia’s retreat has accelerated on every front: in Syria, Assad’s fall and the new government’s alignment with Iran and Turkey pushed Russian forces out of most bases and stripped Moscow of its last meaningful Middle Eastern foothold; in the South Caucasus, Armenia severed security ties, expelled Russian troops, and pivoted fully to Europe after Moscow failed to stop Azerbaijan’s offensives; across Africa, Russia’s Africa Corps lost key positions in Libya, was rolled back by jihadist groups in the Sahel, and saw juntas replace Russian advisors with Chinese, Turkish, and Gulf partners; in Venezuela, Maduro’s collapse erased Moscow’s political leverage and left Russian military and economic presence irrelevant; in Central Asia, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan openly rejected Moscow’s security guarantees and deepened ties with the EU, Turkey, and China. The pattern is uniform: since the Ukraine invasion, Russia has been forced into a broad, accelerating geopolitical retreat, losing influence in every region where it once claimed strategic reach.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Russia finally went ahead and disconnected all the old Soviet Nuclear reactors from the grid in Ukraine last night. Slow moving missiles and drones took their time hitting substations over and over again, because Ukraine was entirely out of air-defense missiles.

Contrary to what some people posted a few days ago, Ukraine is closer to becoming uninhabited than it is to winning this conflict.


Your hyperbolic collapse narrative treats worst‑case speculation and Russian messaging as if they were structural facts. Yes, Ukraine is under strain, but none of the indicators of state failure are present: its government, command structure, logistics, and Western financial lifelines remain intact, and Europe has already shifted to long‑term defense production specifically to prevent a collapse scenario. Russia’s own position on the other hand is far weaker than the narrative suggests: its economy is smaller than Italy’s, its military is burning through equipment faster than it can replace it, and it is pulling troops from other borders because it lacks manpower, not because it is surging in strength.

Claims that Kyiv is being evacuated or that Ukraine is becoming “uninhabited” are stale, recycled online tropes that have been wrong since 2022. Yes, Ukraine faces a grinding, difficult war, but the idea that it is about to disintegrate while Russia somehow emerges strong is simply not supported by facts, by military capacity, by economic fundamentals, or the strategic posture of Europe.


If anything is collapsing, it's Russia's force projection around the world. Russia’s retreat has accelerated on every front: in Syria, Assad’s fall and the new government’s alignment with Iran and Turkey pushed Russian forces out of most bases and stripped Moscow of its last meaningful Middle Eastern foothold; in the South Caucasus, Armenia severed security ties, expelled Russian troops, and pivoted fully to Europe after Moscow failed to stop Azerbaijan’s offensives; across Africa, Russia’s Africa Corps lost key positions in Libya, was rolled back by jihadist groups in the Sahel, and saw juntas replace Russian advisors with Chinese, Turkish, and Gulf partners; in Venezuela, Maduro’s collapse erased Moscow’s political leverage and left Russian military and economic presence irrelevant; in Central Asia, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan openly rejected Moscow’s security guarantees and deepened ties with the EU, Turkey, and China. The pattern is uniform: since the Ukraine invasion, Russia has been forced into a broad, accelerating geopolitical retreat, losing influence in every region where it once claimed strategic reach.


Russia has nothing left. They have a GDP per person below that of Cuba and it’s based on oil. There is a huge glut of oil on the world market because oil has reached peaked demand.

Russia is a very poor country with no future.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Russia finally went ahead and disconnected all the old Soviet Nuclear reactors from the grid in Ukraine last night. Slow moving missiles and drones took their time hitting substations over and over again, because Ukraine was entirely out of air-defense missiles.

Contrary to what some people posted a few days ago, Ukraine is closer to becoming uninhabited than it is to winning this conflict.


Your hyperbolic collapse narrative treats worst‑case speculation and Russian messaging as if they were structural facts. Yes, Ukraine is under strain, but none of the indicators of state failure are present: its government, command structure, logistics, and Western financial lifelines remain intact, and Europe has already shifted to long‑term defense production specifically to prevent a collapse scenario. Russia’s own position on the other hand is far weaker than the narrative suggests: its economy is smaller than Italy’s, its military is burning through equipment faster than it can replace it, and it is pulling troops from other borders because it lacks manpower, not because it is surging in strength.

Claims that Kyiv is being evacuated or that Ukraine is becoming “uninhabited” are stale, recycled online tropes that have been wrong since 2022. Yes, Ukraine faces a grinding, difficult war, but the idea that it is about to disintegrate while Russia somehow emerges strong is simply not supported by facts, by military capacity, by economic fundamentals, or the strategic posture of Europe.


If anything is collapsing, it's Russia's force projection around the world. Russia’s retreat has accelerated on every front: in Syria, Assad’s fall and the new government’s alignment with Iran and Turkey pushed Russian forces out of most bases and stripped Moscow of its last meaningful Middle Eastern foothold; in the South Caucasus, Armenia severed security ties, expelled Russian troops, and pivoted fully to Europe after Moscow failed to stop Azerbaijan’s offensives; across Africa, Russia’s Africa Corps lost key positions in Libya, was rolled back by jihadist groups in the Sahel, and saw juntas replace Russian advisors with Chinese, Turkish, and Gulf partners; in Venezuela, Maduro’s collapse erased Moscow’s political leverage and left Russian military and economic presence irrelevant; in Central Asia, Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan openly rejected Moscow’s security guarantees and deepened ties with the EU, Turkey, and China. The pattern is uniform: since the Ukraine invasion, Russia has been forced into a broad, accelerating geopolitical retreat, losing influence in every region where it once claimed strategic reach.


Russia has nothing left. They have a GDP per person below that of Cuba and it’s based on oil. There is a huge glut of oil on the world market because oil has reached peaked demand.

Russia is a very poor country with no future.


Ukrainian victory is nigh, comrades! Soon Russia will be forced to retreat from every inch of Ukrainian territory and Ukraine will resume its rightful place as a bastion of freedom and democracy!
Anonymous
Anonymous
Anonymous
The inevitable Ukrainian Victory becomes more inevitable every day. I can't wait for "spring offensive" season again.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:


except that isn't what trump/putin want, so it won't happen
Anonymous
Putin is offering Trump $12 Trillion to bail on Ukraine.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Putin is offering Trump $12 Trillion to bail on Ukraine.


Which would be quite the magic trick since Russia's GDP is only $2.5 trillion. Texas alone has a higher GDP.
Anonymous
UK reveals that Navalny was poisoned by Putin using toxin from a poison dart frog.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2026/02/14/russia-killed-navalny-with-frog-poison-britain-reveals/

Pro-Putin Republicans, Russia apologists and propagandists can go to hell. This is not acceptable in America.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Putin is offering Trump $12 Trillion to bail on Ukraine.


Putin does not have that kind of money.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Putin is offering Trump $12 Trillion to bail on Ukraine.


Which would be quite the magic trick since Russia's GDP is only $2.5 trillion. Texas alone has a higher GDP.


Cuba has a higher gdp per capita.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Putin is offering Trump $12 Trillion to bail on Ukraine.


Putin does not have that kind of money.

There’s been speculation for years that he’s the richest man in the world, but no one has that kind of money.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Putin is offering Trump $12 Trillion to bail on Ukraine.


Putin does not have that kind of money.

There’s been speculation for years that he’s the richest man in the world, but no one has that kind of money.


Putin basically behaves like everything that Russia has is his but even so, there's no way he could come up with anything even close to $12 trillion.
post reply Forum Index » Political Discussion
Message Quick Reply
Go to: