Anonymous wrote:Meh.....they sent in a bunch of teenagers and early 20s somethings (kids) conscripts with crappy supplies and weapons to serves as fresh meat to be turned into ground beef. They were used to soften up the Ukraine. Russia's advanced weaponry and elite divisions till haven't really been deployed yet. People shouldn't get confident at all that Russia has been 'struggling'. They are just getting warmed up, so I wouldn't extract a whole lot from the first week of combat.
Anonymous wrote:The Russians have lost about 5,000 and the heavy fighting has not started. Ukraine has about 200k regular plus 500k reserves. I imagine they will push this number to 2-3 million by the end of the month.
The 150k the Russians have sent in are not all combat units. Once it’s kicks off the Russians will not have a safe place anywhere in the country- IED, suicide bombings, snipers, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Putin will use thermobaric weapons to slaughter civilians in Ukraine - especially in the cities.
The entire remaining population of Ukraine WILL fight.
Remember the grandma with sunflower seeds? She is coming back.
Only this time she will stab a kitchen knife into the neck of that Russian soldier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Russia would get crushed by the US in a conventional war. Mainly due to our logistics and ability to hit them from Allied bases with air power and cruise missiles.
Russia would quickly resort to nuclear options and then It really depends on how quick we can find their subs and how many of their icbms actually launch and are accurate.
Our missile defense systems may knock out some but there are simply too many offensive weapons for the defense systems to hit them all.
I think we have learned that if their conventional equipment is not maintained what are they doing on the nuclear side. Those weapons systems are way more expensive to maintain.
Maybe that is where they are spending their money; or maybe only 50% of their nuclear inventory is actually useable.
Russia is not the USSR. Not even close. In a real shooting war NATO will likely have air supremacy in a week. That is because there is a limit to how much air they could bring from other parts of Russia and because their planes are several generations behind ours. Once we have that, there is no more Russian logistics. Army seems ill-trained (as an aside this is why we are not having a draft army ever again). Equipment is just pasty 1990s levels. Logistics is the most important thing. The US plans logistics ahead of operations. Russia seemed to think this was not needed.
Will they win in Ukraine? Of course. Just a matter of time. Will they learn and get better? To a point. But the investment that is needed based on what we saw, they do not have. They are probably a trillion dollars away from having a US level force. They do not have a trillion extra and are not likely to ever get it.
Nukes are the real issue and the only real source of their power. Their nukes do not really work but you only need a few so it is a real threat we have to deal with.
Anonymous wrote:Russia would get crushed by the US in a conventional war. Mainly due to our logistics and ability to hit them from Allied bases with air power and cruise missiles.
Russia would quickly resort to nuclear options and then It really depends on how quick we can find their subs and how many of their icbms actually launch and are accurate.
Our missile defense systems may knock out some but there are simply too many offensive weapons for the defense systems to hit them all.
I think we have learned that if their conventional equipment is not maintained what are they doing on the nuclear side. Those weapons systems are way more expensive to maintain.
Maybe that is where they are spending their money; or maybe only 50% of their nuclear inventory is actually useable.
Anonymous wrote:I hope this can remain a separate thread. Has anyone read the Newsweek article about what the US is learning from watching Russia’s strategy here? I don’t think the same approach would apply if there was direct US/Russian combat so I’m curious what we are truly learning from this that could actually help us.