Roger A. Shrubber
Well-Known Member
from all accounts, he can't spend the manpower or the money to secure the country, all he can do is thrash around and do as much damage as possible till he runs out of men, money, and time. he needs a certain number to maintain and defend internally, and he already has men in belarus helping maintain order and arrest protestors. he doesn't really have anywhere else to recruit or conscript from, which is why he was trying to recruit mercenaries, i would assume.I completely agree.
Not giving voice to the nutjobs, trolls or agents posting crap about "bad 'merica because Cuba so why be mad about Ukraine now?" and other lunacy. But your post caused me to turn the mirror around and imagine this is how people looked upon the US when we went into Vietnam or overstayed in Afghanistan by about 18 years too long or sent drone strikes that killed civilians. As a person who lives in the US and have always been ashamed of those actions I never saw it from with an outsider's perspective.
Not trying to equate anything with Putin's inhumanity. Just sharing a recent shift in my perspective.
All indications are that Russia will not prosper from this action, nor will he be able to hold Ukraine, much less invade other countries ever again. I don't think this is going to end well or any time soon unless Vlad goes nuclear. But then again, I didn't think Putin would invade, so I'm not predicting anything, just preparing for the worst.
https://www.consultancy.eu/news/7433/research-ukraine-war-costs-russian-military-20-billion-per-day
that article was written 8 days ago, i can't find a more current one at the moment, but it cost the russians 7B for the first 4 days, how long can he afford to lose men and money at the rate he is? with the sanctions startingto bite, and the people getting nervous about being able to buy potatoes, cabbage, and vodka?