Cal88 said:Unit2Sucks said:
tl; dr anyone who isn't willing to acknowledge that Putin is a bad guy and that Russia is in the wrong here is not worth engaging in civil discourse.
Zelensky's net worth is somewhere in the mid to high nine figures. He's right up there as the richest comedian of all time with Seinfeld, and he's not nearly as funny as Jerry.
Ukraine has been the European hub for all sorts of sordid traffics, arms, women, children, babies, human organs, drugs, with most of the money being siphoned off by oligarchs. Russia has reined in its oligarchs, taken back its national resources stolen from them in the neoliberal "shock doctrine" 1990s, nationalizing its oil and gas industries. Other eastern blocks like Hungary and Poland have also done considerable progress in reducing corruption. Ukraine has not.
This level of corruption is the main reason why only 30% of weapon shipments to Ukraine are making it to the front, most of it is sold off on the black market and ends up fuelling wars in Africa, the Middle East etc. Here's the recent testimony of a British volunteer fighter in a Ukrainian brigade, he states that in their military convoy, two trucks loaded with munitions and various weapons like Javelins simply vanished, and that's in an area where there is a military checkpoint every few miles...
The whole interview is very interesting, it confirms many of the points I was making about the war, including:
-hardly anyone is getting killed by bullets, the casualties are almost exclusively the result of artillery fire (in his own words,, "If you're fighting the Russians, you're gonna get shelled. No one gets the Call of Duty experience")
-rampant corruption and nepotism among Ukrainian army ranks, with higher ups being involved in arms traffic, as was the case in this British volunteer's company.
-extreme conditions in Ukrainian trenches, with poor layout and sanitation, with soldiers being malnourished and exposed to disease. [Often there is no floor built at the bottom of the trench, so soldiers are constantly wading in dirty water, which leads to foot/toe infections that if untreated could result in foot amputations]
-Ukrainian positions under constant shelling, tents/encampments have to be very spread out. He describes one instance were a company tents were pitched in the same field and got all incinerated by barometric shells in one Russian salvo.
-Ukrainian troops have zero air support, and have a shortage of ammunition, and are getting outgunned by a very high ratio.
Those are some of the facts that explain the large discrepancy in casualty figures between Russians and Ukrainian forces. It looks like the actual figures of total Ukrainian KIA/MIA is in the 120,000-150,000 range, while Russian total KIAs & MIAs are around 20,000-25,000. As well a disproportionate number of Russian KIAs came in the early stage of the war when a lot of their troops and columns were exposed in their "biig arrow" maneuvers.
https://en.zona.media/article/2022/05/11/casualties_eng