War

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
CNN military analyst: 'This is just war criminality'

CNN Pentagon correspondent Barbara Starr reports the US government is currently assembling evidence to potentially present a war crimes case in an international court. CNN military analyst Maj. Gen. James "Spider" Marks (Ret.) breaks down the current strategy of the Russian armed forces, arguing it can only be described as "war criminality."
 

Polly Wog

Well-Known Member
Gets bad when you run over your colonel.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Watching the pros and reading the tea leaves! ;-) I really don't think the cavalry is going to be too late, late to the show, but not the battle. They will get the weapons they need.
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Why Putin's Options In Ukraine Are 'Extremely Limited'


Ret. Gen. Barry McCaffrey joins Morning Joe to discuss the latest developments in the Russian invasion of Ukraine and why he says Vladimir Putin's conventional options in Ukraine are limited.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
They should folly that trail of tank crumbs all the way to Russia like an angry Hansell and Grettle
They will try to get ahead of them and block the highways as far north as they can and they don't need an armored column to do it these days. Those farther south will be cut off from resupply and eventually surrender, saving lives and bagging valuable prisoners. Vlad kidnapped Ukrainian civilian hostages and took them to Russia, they will need Russian prisoners to get them back from and embarrass Vlad.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
what did ya think was gonna happen....sheesh

Wait till he sees the reparations and compensation paid to Ukraine from Russian money, including the millions he had stashed abroad. They won't ask the Russians to pay them, they will take the seized money to cover the expenses of the war, both for themselves and the Ukrainians. There is easily a trillion, maybe two of oligarch and Russian government money seized or will be.
 
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BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
Wait till he sees the reparations and compensation paid to Ukraine from Russian money, including the millions he had stashed abroad. They won't be asked the Russians to pay them, they will take the seized money to cover the expenses of the war, both for themselves and the Ukrainians. There is easily a trillion, maybe two of oligarch and Russian government money seized or will be.
they haven't seen anything yet, wait till that happens and also the Hague get a hold of them too.....
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
they haven't seen anything yet, wait till that happens and also the Hague get a hold of them too.....
Vlad might use hostages to get prisoners back, but I doubt he will be able to do it with generals and others sent to the Hague, once they get there. They won't trade hostages for criminals with an incited war criminal, which Vlad will be. That kinda shit is hard to spin, even with the folks back home, it is the world court and these are crimes against humanity. I don't believe the Ukrainians will kill all the Russian generals, they will want to keep the stupid ones around (they monitor communications and have files on them all) and bag the war criminals if they can.
 

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
Vlad might use hostages to get prisoners back, but I doubt he will be able to do it with generals and others sent to the Hague, once they get there. They won't trade hostages for criminals with an incited war criminal, which Vlad will be. That kinda shit is hard to spin, even with the folks back home, it is the world court and these are crimes against humanity. I don't believe the Ukrainians will kill all the Russian generals, they will want to keep the stupid ones around (they monitor communications and have files on them all) and bag the war criminals if they can.
think i have a strange feeling Ukrainian POW's prolly don't wanna go back...i dunno we'll see.....
 

injinji

Well-Known Member
. . . . . . . America has been giving arms through NATO countries, until they could line up the ducks politically back home and I'm pretty sure black budget money was spent too. . . . . . .
I'm guessing that as much as 5% of the $778B goes into a slush fund. They make sure there is lots of built in wiggle room.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Is Russia losing?
Russia’s offensive is stalled. It has taken massive casualties. We are, according to one expert, “seeing a country militarily implode.”

It has been a little over three weeks since Russia initially invaded Ukraine. And by most accounts, the Russian war effort has been a disaster.

The initial Russian invasion plan, a lightning march aimed at conquering Kyiv, collapsed within days. Since then, the Russians have adjusted to a more gradual advance backed by heavy artillery fire, an approach that has allowed them to make some noticeable territorial gains.

But these advances appear to have been halted, at least temporarily. On Thursday, the UK Defense Intelligence Agency assessed that Russia’s offensive “has largely stalled on all fronts,” a judgment echoed by open source analysts tracking developments on the ground. The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday that Ukrainian forces have even managed to mount a counteroffensive around Kyiv.

Russian casualties have been horrifically high. It’s hard to get accurate information in a war zone, but one of the more authoritative estimates of Russian war dead — from the US Defense Department — finds that over 7,000 Russian soldiers have been killed in the first three weeks of fighting, a figure about three times as large as the total US service members dead in all 20 years of fighting in Afghanistan.

“We’re seeing a country militarily implode,” says Robert Farley, a professor at the University of Kentucky who studies air power.

This is not how the war was supposed to go. On virtually any quantifiable metric of military strength, from defense spending to the size of the respective air forces, Russia’s forces vastly outnumber and outgun Ukraine’s. In early February, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs Mark Milley told members of Congress that Kyiv could fall within 72 hours of a Russian invasion.

But Russia’s military has proven more incompetent, and Ukraine’s more capable, than nearly anyone anticipated.

“Having spent a chunk of my professional career [working] with the Ukrainians: Nobody, myself included and themselves included, had all that high an estimation of their military capacity,” says Olga Oliker, the program director for Europe and Central Asia at the International Crisis Group.

There are many reasons things have turned out this way. Generally speaking, it appears that pre-war analyses overrated Russia’s hardware advantage and underrated less tangible factors — including logistical capacity and the morale of the front-line combat troops on both sides.

Morale in particular “is a very significant factor in Russian combat effectiveness, and one that’s being ignored by many military observers,” argues Michael Kofman, director of Russia studies at the CNA think tank.

All that said, it is still far too early to conclude that Ukraine is going to win the war. Ukrainians have suffered significant losses, too; Russia’s numerical and technological advantages remain and could yet prove decisive, allowing the Russians to besiege Ukraine’s major cities and starve them into submission.

But right now, based on the publicly available evidence we have, the momentum is clearly going the other way. An unqualified Russian victory, which once seemed almost inevitable, is looking increasingly less likely.

Russia’s gains have been real — but are stalling out
On paper, Russia’s military vastly outstrips Ukraine’s. Russia spends over 10 times as much on defense annually as Ukraine; the Russian military has a little under three times as much artillery as Ukraine and roughly 10 times as many fixed-wing aircraft.

Given this disparity, Russia was bound to be able to make some inroads into Ukrainian territory. And as you can see on the following map from the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), Russia had seized control of notable chunks of Ukrainian territory by March 9 — especially in the south, where it controls the cities of Melitopol and Kherson:



Map of Russian-controlled territory in Ukraine on March 9, 2022. Institute for the Study

But these advances were not necessarily the sole result of Russian battlefield supremacy. Ukraine, Kofman explains, made the tactical decision to trade “space for time”: to withdraw strategically rather than fight for every inch of Ukrainian land, fighting the Russians on the territory and at the time of their choosing.

As the fighting continued, the nature of the Ukrainian choice became clearer. Instead of getting into pitched large-scale battles with Russians on open terrain, where Russia’s numerical advantages would prove decisive, the Ukrainians instead decided to engage in a series of smaller-scale clashes.
continued...
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
what did ya think was gonna happen....sheesh

This is an indication that the sanctions are working. Squeeze the bastards white. I’m not for assassination or cruelty toward them, but bankrupt them. Dishonor them in public. Deny them trade and travel. Hurt them for this, but in a way that if the people suffer it is the deed, responsibility and problem of the notional leaders of Russian society.
 
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