PR stunt.
movielover said:
Larry Johnson claimed it was only 1-2 battalions (2-4,000 men), and Russia responded quickly, killing 1500 the first day after their incursion.
PR stunt.
Cal88 said:
It was a big coup for Ukraine to have managed to have operational surprise over the Russians, who were caught with their pants down. NATO ISR helped identify the weakest spot along the Russian border and they went for it. There is a Polish and French contingent among the 5k-8k troops that made the breakthrough.
It was also a much-needed win for Ukraine after a long string of losses that started in Bakhmut last year, their morale had been seriously weakened, and now the focus is shifted away from the main fronts in the Donbas where Ukraine has been constantly ceding ground.
This being said, it's going to be hard for Ukraine to hold on to these territories without any air cover and once the Russians fully invest that region, as this is going to be a high priority for Russia going forward, and the Ukrainian supply lines are going to be stretched thin, Ukraine will have to make the same decision they have faced in Bakhmut, whether to take heavy losses in an attempt to hold on or to retreat from these positions in the Fall and live another day.
bearister said:
Putin's greatest fear is coming true with the Ukraine incursion and he's panicking | The Independent
https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/kursk-ukraine-russia-kyiv-zelensky-win-b2594019.html
*I doubt Putin will go nuclear. He has waged war in the Ukraine like the US waged war in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan (and the Soviets did there) with handcuffs on…..all wars that could have been won quickly with mass killing of civilians and tactical nukes (in Vietnam bombing the dams in the North). This is warfare where the Super Power bleeds out against a grossly inferior enemy because it doesn't want to start World War III, and it is facing an enemy that won't quit.
bearister said:
Putin's greatest fear is coming true with the Ukraine incursion and he's panicking | The Independent
https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/kursk-ukraine-russia-kyiv-zelensky-win-b2594019.html
*I doubt Putin will go nuclear. He has waged war in the Ukraine like the US waged war in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan (and the Soviets did there) with handcuffs on…..all wars that could have been won quickly with mass killing of civilians and tactical nukes (in Vietnam bombing the dams in the North). This is warfare where the Super Power bleeds out against a grossly inferior enemy because it doesn't want to start World War III, and it is facing an enemy that won't quit.
sycasey said:
What does it take to convince Putin that this war is not worth the effort and expense?
I didn't ask, "What gives Putin whatever he wants?"Cal88 said:sycasey said:
What does it take to convince Putin that this war is not worth the effort and expense?
Abiding by Minsk I, Minsk II, the Istanbul peace agreement, and working towards a settlement that sees Ukraine as a neutral state?
The ultimate goal of this war, as clearly stated by leading NATO strategists like Brzezinski or the recent Rand Institute whitepaper on Russia ("Overextending and Unbalancing Russia"), or statements from leading European diplomats like Kaja Kalas and from EU/US think tanks, the ultimate goal is to break up Russia and get to its huge pools of resources, the world's largest.
NATO got its hands on that wealth in the 1990s, when in collusion with local oligarchs they've sucked off Russian resources and heavy industry and destroyed the Russian state, putting Yeltsin, a Biden-like decrepit figure at the top of the country and inflicting enormous misery on its people, levels of poverty and misery unprecedented in Russia since the pre-war Bolchevik genocidal reign of terror.
Jeffrey Sachs, who was in the center of that era in the 90s, as an advisor to Yeltsin and an economic planner documented that process of Russian economic and social collapse, engineered by NATO.
During these crisis times of the 1990s, Putin moonlighted as a cab driver in St Petersburg, as his fixed income KGB salary vaporized through hyperinflation. His entire outlook and policies today are geared towards preserving Russian sovereignty and economic welfare.
I'm gonna say we're a little bit past that now.movielover said:
What convinces NATO (USA) their war provocations and efforts aren't worth it?
sycasey said:I'm gonna say we're a little bit past that now.movielover said:
What convinces NATO (USA) their war provocations and efforts aren't worth it?
Regardless, this whole thing seems like a waste of time and resources for Russia, doesn't it? How long are they going to persist with this invasion?Cal88 said:sycasey said:I'm gonna say we're a little bit past that now.movielover said:
What convinces NATO (USA) their war provocations and efforts aren't worth it?
It's not NATO doing most of the dying so no skin off their back, and Blackrock, Graham and co don't want to give up on all this lithium and black earth in eastern Ukraine.
sycasey said:Regardless, this whole thing seems like a waste of time and resources for Russia, doesn't it? How long are they going to persist with this invasion?Cal88 said:sycasey said:I'm gonna say we're a little bit past that now.movielover said:
What convinces NATO (USA) their war provocations and efforts aren't worth it?
It's not NATO doing most of the dying so no skin off their back, and Blackrock, Graham and co don't want to give up on all this lithium and black earth in eastern Ukraine.
only one vote matters, so until glorious leader has some other divine inspiration, or ascends to heavensycasey said:Regardless, this whole thing seems like a waste of time and resources for Russia, doesn't it? How long are they going to persist with this invasion?Cal88 said:sycasey said:I'm gonna say we're a little bit past that now.movielover said:
What convinces NATO (USA) their war provocations and efforts aren't worth it?
It's not NATO doing most of the dying so no skin off their back, and Blackrock, Graham and co don't want to give up on all this lithium and black earth in eastern Ukraine.
Cal88 said:sycasey said:Regardless, this whole thing seems like a waste of time and resources for Russia, doesn't it? How long are they going to persist with this invasion?Cal88 said:sycasey said:I'm gonna say we're a little bit past that now.movielover said:
What convinces NATO (USA) their war provocations and efforts aren't worth it?
It's not NATO doing most of the dying so no skin off their back, and Blackrock, Graham and co don't want to give up on all this lithium and black earth in eastern Ukraine.
The military situation is untenable for Ukraine, I would guess a year or two.
golden sloth said:Cal88 said:sycasey said:Regardless, this whole thing seems like a waste of time and resources for Russia, doesn't it? How long are they going to persist with this invasion?Cal88 said:sycasey said:I'm gonna say we're a little bit past that now.movielover said:
What convinces NATO (USA) their war provocations and efforts aren't worth it?
It's not NATO doing most of the dying so no skin off their back, and Blackrock, Graham and co don't want to give up on all this lithium and black earth in eastern Ukraine.
The military situation is untenable for Ukraine, I would guess a year or two.
Eh, you said it would be a month or two back in spring of 2022.
Also notice how he didn't answer the question.golden sloth said:Cal88 said:sycasey said:Regardless, this whole thing seems like a waste of time and resources for Russia, doesn't it? How long are they going to persist with this invasion?Cal88 said:sycasey said:I'm gonna say we're a little bit past that now.movielover said:
What convinces NATO (USA) their war provocations and efforts aren't worth it?
It's not NATO doing most of the dying so no skin off their back, and Blackrock, Graham and co don't want to give up on all this lithium and black earth in eastern Ukraine.
The military situation is untenable for Ukraine, I would guess a year or two.
Eh, you said it would be a month or two back in spring of 2022.
golden sloth said:Cal88 said:sycasey said:Regardless, this whole thing seems like a waste of time and resources for Russia, doesn't it? How long are they going to persist with this invasion?Cal88 said:sycasey said:I'm gonna say we're a little bit past that now.movielover said:
What convinces NATO (USA) their war provocations and efforts aren't worth it?
It's not NATO doing most of the dying so no skin off their back, and Blackrock, Graham and co don't want to give up on all this lithium and black earth in eastern Ukraine.
The military situation is untenable for Ukraine, I would guess a year or two.
Eh, you said it would be a month or two back in spring of 2022.
sycasey said:Also notice how he didn't answer the question.golden sloth said:Cal88 said:sycasey said:Regardless, this whole thing seems like a waste of time and resources for Russia, doesn't it? How long are they going to persist with this invasion?Cal88 said:sycasey said:I'm gonna say we're a little bit past that now.movielover said:
What convinces NATO (USA) their war provocations and efforts aren't worth it?
It's not NATO doing most of the dying so no skin off their back, and Blackrock, Graham and co don't want to give up on all this lithium and black earth in eastern Ukraine.
The military situation is untenable for Ukraine, I would guess a year or two.
Eh, you said it would be a month or two back in spring of 2022.
Quote:
sycasey said:
Regardless, this whole thing seems like a waste of time and resources for Russia, doesn't it? How long are they going to persist with this invasion?
So if Ukraine is really going to be this stubborn about fighting back to maintain their territory, in your mind there is no way to convince Russia that the fight simply is not worth it for them. Russia just has to have that territory, that's what you're saying.Cal88 said:sycasey said:Also notice how he didn't answer the question.golden sloth said:Cal88 said:sycasey said:Regardless, this whole thing seems like a waste of time and resources for Russia, doesn't it? How long are they going to persist with this invasion?Cal88 said:sycasey said:I'm gonna say we're a little bit past that now.movielover said:
What convinces NATO (USA) their war provocations and efforts aren't worth it?
It's not NATO doing most of the dying so no skin off their back, and Blackrock, Graham and co don't want to give up on all this lithium and black earth in eastern Ukraine.
The military situation is untenable for Ukraine, I would guess a year or two.
Eh, you said it would be a month or two back in spring of 2022.
I did provide a writeup on the important context and background of Russian motivations in this war, which you have ignored.Quote:
sycasey said:
Regardless, this whole thing seems like a waste of time and resources for Russia, doesn't it? How long are they going to persist with this invasion?
The other point here is that Russia has offered several proposals for a settlement, which would have been decent starting points for a negotiated settlement, and which Ukraine has completely rejected. Ukraine's only starting point for negotiation is a complete withdrawal of Russia from the Donbas and Crimea, which is never going to happen.
Ukraine's government has assassinated one of their own negotiators in the recent past, their KGB taking him out mafia-style with a shot to the head on a city street, and they have formally banned any attempt at negotiation with Russia, going as far as enshrining this ban in their constitution. Ukraine is going to keep fighting and keep bombing Russian positions in Crimea, so Russia is not going to stop either.
Your question ignores these basic premises.
MORE - German authorities are looking for "Wolodymyr Z.", a Ukrainian who is said to have last been in Poland.
— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) August 14, 2024
If Ukraine attacked Germany when this guy blew up Nord Stream 2, isn't that a non-NATO member attacking a NATO member in an act of war?
— Jack Poso 🇺🇸 (@JackPosobiec) August 14, 2024
bear2034 said:MORE - German authorities are looking for "Wolodymyr Z.", a Ukrainian who is said to have last been in Poland.
— Disclose.tv (@disclosetv) August 14, 2024
Quote:
JEFFREY SACHS:
"The whole point of American behavior is that we never ask the questionever: How would we react on the other side?
The whole point of American foreign policy is the belief by these officials that we can do what we want with impunity, against any norm, standard, international law, principle, vote of the UN, UN Security Council resolution, treaty, or anything else that we would say would limit the behavior of others.
After all, the most basic point that the United States has made for 201 years, since the enunciation of the Monroe Doctrine, is to the rest of the world: stay out of the Western Hemisphere.
We regard any incursion in the Western Hemisphereanywhere from the southern tip of Tierra del Fuego to our immediate neighborhoodas an infringement on U.S. security.
But when we say, 'Of course, we have the right to push NATO right up to Russia's borders, put in missile systems wherever we want, and engage Georgia in the Caucasus region as a "North Atlantic partner" as part of NATO,' that's our right.
Everything about American foreign policy is built on hypocrisy from beginning to end.
And then we can't understand why that's just a little bit annoying to others and why it gets us into perpetual war."
🇺🇸JEFFREY SACHS:
— Sony Thang (@nxt888) August 14, 2024
"The whole point of American behavior is that we never ask the question—ever: How would we react on the other side?
The whole point of American foreign policy is the belief by these officials that we can do what we want with impunity, against any norm,… pic.twitter.com/PtIbL8Zf4n
Cal88 said:Quote:
JEFFREY SACHS:
"The whole point of American behavior is that we never ask the questionever: How would we react on the other side?
The whole point of American foreign policy is the belief by these officials that we can do what we want with impunity, against any norm, standard, international law, principle, vote of the UN, UN Security Council resolution, treaty, or anything else that we would say would limit the behavior of others.
After all, the most basic point that the United States has made for 201 years, since the enunciation of the Monroe Doctrine, is to the rest of the world: stay out of the Western Hemisphere.
We regard any incursion in the Western Hemisphereanywhere from the southern tip of Tierra del Fuego to our immediate neighborhoodas an infringement on U.S. security.
But when we say, 'Of course, we have the right to push NATO right up to Russia's borders, put in missile systems wherever we want, and engage Georgia in the Caucasus region as a "North Atlantic partner" as part of NATO,' that's our right.
Everything about American foreign policy is built on hypocrisy from beginning to end.
And then we can't understand why that's just a little bit annoying to others and why it gets us into perpetual war."🇺🇸JEFFREY SACHS:
— Sony Thang (@nxt888) August 14, 2024
"The whole point of American behavior is that we never ask the question—ever: How would we react on the other side?
The whole point of American foreign policy is the belief by these officials that we can do what we want with impunity, against any norm,… pic.twitter.com/PtIbL8Zf4n
🇺🇦ZELENSKY APPROVED PLAN TO BLOW UP NORD STREAM PIPELINES
— Mario Nawfal (@MarioNawfal) August 15, 2024
Despite the mainstream media saying for months that Russia blew up the pipelines, the Wall Street Journal has now revealed it was planned and executed by Ukraine at a cost of $300,000.
When the CIA learned of the plan… pic.twitter.com/toNZ3xwGRf
bearister said:
Putin scrambles as Ukraine claims more territory inside Russia
Mediazona confirms identities of over 61,800 Russian soldiers killed in Ukraine
MEARSHEIMER: THE KURSK OFFENSIVE IS A FOOLISH MOVE
— David Sacks (@DavidSacks) August 15, 2024
"Ukraine’s invasion (of Kursk) was a major strategic blunder, which will accelerate its defeat. The key determinant of success in a war of attrition is the casualty-exchange ratio, not capturing territory, which Western…