Asked and answered previously.
MR Online: Zelensky admits he never intended to implement Minsk agreements
https://mronline.org/2023/02/11/zelensky-admits-he-never-intended-to-implement-minsk-agreements/
Why do you refer to it as a special military operation instead of a war? Do you not think it's a war?movielover said:
Special Military Operation.
Asked and answered previously.
MR Online: Zelensky admits he never intended to implement Minsk agreements
https://mronline.org/2023/02/11/zelensky-admits-he-never-intended-to-implement-minsk-agreements/
oski003 said:Cal88 said:dimitrig said:movielover said:
Puppet Scott Ritter estimated kill rates from a podcast today:
- 30 Russias KIA per day / ('200 a week')
- 100 American KIA in Vietnam / a day
- 1,000 Ukrainians KIA / a day
Do you really believe 1000 Ukrainians are being killed every day but only 30 Russians?
Is that soldiers or just old women and children?
The kill ratio has been heavily lopsided, that much is certain, though it's hard to ascertain with precision how lopsided it has been, it's anywhere between 5 to 1 to 8 to 1 overall.
This being said, the current situation in Bakhmut has been one where complete noobs conscripts have been taken from the streets of Kharkov, Odessa, Dnipro etc and sent to the "meat grinder" to plug gaps, by the thousands, going against hardened, well-organized Wagner squads, with no air support, artillery support, not even mortars, just light weapons they barely know how to use. This is where we have kill ratios well above 10 to 1.
In cases where Wagner is going against more hardened troops in Bakhmut like the 94th and special forces, like the battle for the metalworks industrial zone in the north of the city, the loss ratio still favors Russia, as they have far greater artillery and air support resources, because the Ukrainians are heavily constrained in their supply lines to that front, and they start with far smaller resources (down to only 300 artillery pieces for the whole front, with something like 10 shells/day available per canon). But that ratio is somewhere around 5 to 1 in favor of the Russians, vs up to 30 to 1 against the untrained, panicky "bunnies", poor souls that are being sacrificed by the tens of thousands in the last few months.
I would refer you to the recent WaPo article, which is a rare candid account of what is really going on in a sea of MSM propaganda:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/03/13/ukraine-casualties-pessimism-ammunition-shortage/
"On the front lines, however, the mood is dark.
Kupol, who consented to having his photograph taken and said he understood he could face personal blowback for giving a frank assessment, described going to battle with newly drafted soldiers who had never thrown a grenade, who readily abandoned their positions under fire and who lacked confidence in handling firearms.
His unit withdrew from Soledar in eastern Ukraine in the winter after being surrounded by Russian forces who later captured the city. Kupol recalled how hundreds of Ukrainian soldiers in units fighting alongside his battalion simply abandoned their positions, even as fighters for Russia's Wagner mercenary group pressed ahead.
After a year of war, Kupol, a lieutenant colonel, said his battalion is unrecognizable. Of about 500 soldiers, roughly 100 were killed in action and another 400 wounded, leading to complete turnover. Kupol said he was the sole military professional in the battalion, and he described the struggle of leading a unit composed entirely of inexperienced troops.
"I get 100 new soldiers," Kupol said. "They don't give me any time to prepare them. They say, 'Take them into the battle.' They just drop everything and run. That's it. Do you understand why? Because the soldier doesn't shoot. I ask him why, and he says, 'I'm afraid of the sound of the shot.' And for some reason, he has never thrown a grenade."
So yes, I do believe that the kill ratio in a fight between Wagner squads and Ukrainian conscripts who are literally afraid of the sound of their AKs is going to be somewhere around 30 to 1.
This also really shows how cruel and pointless this war is, it is a wholesale massacre of a generation (or two) of Ukrainian men being forcibly sent to their deaths by the tens of thousands.
There is no military solution for Ukraine, this is something I have been repeating for a year, and now this reality is only starting to emerge through the wartime propaganda.
Fair enough, but why has Russia been trying to take Bakhmut for six months? Shouldn't they have taken it months ago if what you are saying is true? Are you saying that Ukraine has been holding Bakhmut for half a year despite being low on ammo and taking 5 to 1 losses? If Bakhmut is virtually surrounded, how is Ukraine still sending the amount of reinforcements in that would cover these massive losses?
Unit2Sucks said:
Whatever happened to the devastating offensive that Russia was preparing? So far it looks like it consisted of Vuhledar, where they got smoked, Soledar which didn't matter (and took 5 months) and Bakhmut, which they still haven't managed to take in 8 months despite constant shelling and sacrificing tens of thousands of Russian ex-cons, I mean troops. Putin, of course, considers their losses to be zero because Russian lives have no value to him.
And now Russia's offensive operations are slowing down because they may be running out of manpower. I wonder why Russian state media hasn't told their BI useful idiots that story yet?
Here's reporting from Al Jazeera: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/3/17/wagner-advance-in-bakhmut-as-russian-offensive-appears-to-weaken
As Russian offensive power seemed to peter out across Ukraine's eastern front, mercenary forces from Russia's Wagner Group doubled down on attacks against the Ukrainian defenders of Bakhmut city in the Donetsk region during the 55th week of the war.
Ukrainian Colonel Oleksiy Dmytrashkivskyi said Russian ground attacks had decreased over the past week across the front from a high of up to 100 per day to below 30 per day, while there were between two and nine attacks at night. Dmytrashkivskyi believed Russian forces had suffered significant manpower and equipment losses.
…
Wagner Group mercenaries, who have led Russia's fight in Bakhmut for months, tried in February to encircle the city first from the south then from the north in an attempt to choke off supplies to the Ukrainian defenders. But they have so far failed to do so.
We are now in the 55th week of Putin'a 3 day war and yet there are people who would have us believe that everything is going to plan for Russia and that they intended to perform this poorly for this long.
Unit2Sucks said:
Whatever happened to the devastating offensive that Russia was preparing? So far it looks like it consisted of Vuhledar, where they got smoked, Soledar which didn't matter (and took 5 months) and Bakhmut, which they still haven't managed to take in 8 months despite constant shelling and sacrificing tens of thousands of Russian ex-cons, I mean troops. Putin, of course, considers their losses to be zero because Russian lives have no value to him.
And now Russia's offensive operations are slowing down because they may be running out of manpower. I wonder why Russian state media hasn't told their BI useful idiots that story yet?
Here's reporting from Al Jazeera: https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/3/17/wagner-advance-in-bakhmut-as-russian-offensive-appears-to-weaken
movielover said:
Ouch. The would lose the valuable east and Black Sea access. Will Poland absorb them?
The NY Times finally acknowledges Bakhmut has been a military folly, depleting Ukrainian munitions stocks and reducing the likelihood of a successful Spring offensive.
— Max Blumenthal (@MaxBlumenthal) March 17, 2023
But not before cheerleading the battle for months like a local sports columnist. https://t.co/h1qW1CeOtd
Typical Western opinion: Russia still trying to capture Bakhmut after eight months. Therefore, Russia is failing.
— Chebureki Man (@CheburekiMan) March 17, 2023
Is it not the perfect setup? Bakhmut attracts an endless stream of Ukrainians and funnels them right into the hands of the Russians.
By assigning Bakhmut such… https://t.co/c3OAP4k6H5
movielover said:
Ouch. The would lose the valuable east and Black Sea access. Will Poland absorb them?
I hope some day that Trump and all the MAGA children can get their head around this concept: "hating you, what you stand for, what you are capable of, what you have done to the country, and what you still want to do to the country, is NOT the same as hating the country, it's just hating you."bearister said:
Trump says 'USA-hating people' bigger threat than Russia to U.S.
oski003 said:movielover said:
Ouch. The would lose the valuable east and Black Sea access. Will Poland absorb them?
This is a jerk comment, and NATO won't let this happen. Please bear in mind that there are people here of Ukranian descent whose relatives' homes are being attacked by an invading country.
MUST WATCH: After the Ukrainian president was overthrown 2014, the people in Donbass thought they can also do a revolution. Just happen in Kiev, so why not here too?
— Lord Bebo (@MyLordBebo) March 16, 2023
-> But the new regime in Ukraine was not as nice. The Army came to Donbass and shot them! … Then the war started! pic.twitter.com/Kk5QA6NnpO
On May 2, 2014, dozens of ethnic Russians were burned alive in Odessa.
— Richard (@ricwe123) March 13, 2023
Could this be a reason why Vladimir Putin did what he did?
🤔 pic.twitter.com/nWDLW0IM11
Cal88 said:
The real jerks here are those who have allowed this war to go on in the first place, and those who have let the Donbass war escalate since 2014.
not claiming you're an ai bot '88, no sir, but what a triumph of technology it'd be to deploy such for evil purpose all over sport bbs' net-wide. signed, senile bearoski003i said:
I am not of Ukrainian descent, but I do have close relatives whose home is in the line of fire, and who might soon be drafted and sent to the slaughter against their will and that of their family..
oski003 said:movielover said:
Ouch. The would lose the valuable east and Black Sea access. Will Poland absorb them?
This is a jerk comment, and NATO won't let this happen. Please bear in mind that there are people here of Ukranian descent whose relatives' homes are being attacked by an invading
country.
blungld said:I hope some day that Trump and all the MAGA children can get their head around this concept: "hating you, what you stand for, what you are capable of, what you have done to the country, and what you still want to do to the country, is NOT the same as hating the country, it's just hating you."bearister said:
Trump says 'USA-hating people' bigger threat than Russia to U.S.
We actually LOVE the country and all of the highest ideals that we actually mean rather than just say as rhetorical doublespeak and from which you want to drag us down to your tribal un-democratic autocratic kakocracy.
Because, Mr. Trump, you are not the country. You're just the POS swirling around in the cesspool of your brainwashed followers.
movielover said:
The Kiev Independent: "a Ukrainian soldier Volodymyr, 54, said he felt ill-prepared."
Why is Ukraine deploying an ill-prepared 54-year-old soldier?
Cal88 said:
The SMO designation is an effort on the part of the Russians to contain their invasion of Ukraine to a lower status of escalation. It`s a kind of self-imposed restraint for these internal and external political reasons:
-They want to show restraint in order to keep key neutrals like India, Brazil, Indonesia, Africans and even China in their camp
-They want to keep large reserves on the ready in order to dissuade NATO from piling in with boots on the ground and edging closer to a full-on conventional war with NATO.
-They want to keep a relative state of normalcy at home, reduce the psychological and economic impact of the invasion on their civilian population
-They want to limit their own losses, keeping the war to a high simmer level in protracted artillery duels where they can exploit their huge edge in firepower volume, inflicting disproportionate losses on Ukraine. Time is on Russia's side.
smh said:
> ..smo..
huh? [oldfort here] candidates found..
> The most popular definition is probably 'serious mode on'. People use it when they want to discuss a topic in a non-jokey way. Think 'real talk' and you're halfway there.
> It can also mean 'someone' or even 'shout me out', when someone wants to be tagged in something on Snapchat, Instagram or TikTok
bearister said:
Navalny (2022) - IMDb
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt17041964/
blungld said:I hope some day that Trump and all the MAGA children can get their head around this concept: "hating you, what you stand for, what you are capable of, what you have done to the country, and what you still want to do to the country, is NOT the same as hating the country, it's just hating you."bearister said:
Trump says 'USA-hating people' bigger threat than Russia to U.S.
We actually LOVE the country and all of the highest ideals that we actually mean rather than just say as rhetorical doublespeak and from which you want to drag us down to your tribal un-democratic autocratic kakocracy.
Because, Mr. Trump, you are not the country. You're just the POS swirling around in the cesspool of your brainwashed followers.
dimitrig said:Cal88 said:
The SMO designation is an effort on the part of the Russians to contain their invasion of Ukraine to a lower status of escalation. It`s a kind of self-imposed restraint for these internal and external political reasons:
-They want to show restraint in order to keep key neutrals like India, Brazil, Indonesia, Africans and even China in their camp
-They want to keep large reserves on the ready in order to dissuade NATO from piling in with boots on the ground and edging closer to a full-on conventional war with NATO.
-They want to keep a relative state of normalcy at home, reduce the psychological and economic impact of the invasion on their civilian population
-They want to limit their own losses, keeping the war to a high simmer level in protracted artillery duels where they can exploit their huge edge in firepower volume, inflicting disproportionate losses on Ukraine. Time is on Russia's side.
These are all valid points except for the last one.
Time is not on Russia's side. Time is against Russia. War is expensive. The longer this goes on the more it will cost them.
Also, Russia is economically inferior to the NATO nations. Once NATO ramps up production of arms it will be very difficult for Russia to keep up.
It is in Russia's best interests for this SMO to conclude as quickly as possible.
Also, I want to mention that firepower doesn't win wars. The US pounded the snot out of the Vietnamese with artillery and helicopters and carpet bombing. We killed a lot of people in the process, but still lost the war. If Russia is hoping they can bomb Ukraine into submission that is a tactic doomed to fail.
Cal88 said:dimitrig said:Cal88 said:
The SMO designation is an effort on the part of the Russians to contain their invasion of Ukraine to a lower status of escalation. It`s a kind of self-imposed restraint for these internal and external political reasons:
-They want to show restraint in order to keep key neutrals like India, Brazil, Indonesia, Africans and even China in their camp
-They want to keep large reserves on the ready in order to dissuade NATO from piling in with boots on the ground and edging closer to a full-on conventional war with NATO.
-They want to keep a relative state of normalcy at home, reduce the psychological and economic impact of the invasion on their civilian population
-They want to limit their own losses, keeping the war to a high simmer level in protracted artillery duels where they can exploit their huge edge in firepower volume, inflicting disproportionate losses on Ukraine. Time is on Russia's side.
These are all valid points except for the last one.
Time is not on Russia's side. Time is against Russia. War is expensive. The longer this goes on the more it will cost them.
Also, Russia is economically inferior to the NATO nations. Once NATO ramps up production of arms it will be very difficult for Russia to keep up.
It is in Russia's best interests for this SMO to conclude as quickly as possible.
Also, I want to mention that firepower doesn't win wars. The US pounded the snot out of the Vietnamese with artillery and helicopters and carpet bombing. We killed a lot of people in the process, but still lost the war. If Russia is hoping they can bomb Ukraine into submission that is a tactic doomed to fail.
The Russians have a window of a year or two before NATO can scale up its ammunition production and source cheap effective drones like Iran`s highly effective Shaheds in quantities large enough to have an impact on the war. I can see NATO sourcing out copies of Shaheds from the few places left in the NATO orbit like South Korea which still have an efficient, viable lower-cost high volume industrial production capability. Germany has been kneecapped by the US blowing up Nordstream, their production costs for steel and other high-energy items like fertilizer/explosives are through the roof.
Ukraine is going to run out of men, artillery tubes/tanks or shells at some point before NATO will have scaled up their production. At that point, the Russians' huge edge in the number of casualties inflicted and/or ammo are going to translate into big territorial gains. Ukraine is down to its last 300 artillery tubes, Russia has thousands left, and thousands of drones to take out Ukraine`s remaining pieces.
NATO is now publicly admitting to 100k-120k Ukrainian KIAs, somewhere around half the real figure, for a casualty total in the neighborhood of half a million. Ukraine`s "breaking point" is most likely below 1 million. Unless a truce is put in place, that figure will be reached by the summer of 24 at the latest. In the end Ukraine will have to negotiate the end of the war, the real tragedy of this war is that this inevitable outcome could have been reached well before the carnage accrued to world war-like figures.
China is not even in the picture right now, in terms of heavy-duty military hardware, but they`ve provided Russia with chips and other vital inputs for Russian production of missiles, tank systems and avionics. But you have to figure that they are now producing "flying doritos" by the tens of thousands.
DiabloWags said:
Oil Sanctions are CRUSHING Mother Russia.
In February, Russian oil exports fell by 500,000 barrels to 7.5 million barrels a day.
Income from oil exports slumped to $11.6 billion, which is roughly HALF the $22.1 billion Moscow was earning on its oil exports in March 2022.
3....2.....1...... before a French Frog comes to Russia's defense with more Putin Propaganda.
On the Place de la Concorde in #Paris, opposition supporters clash with the regime police. The government has with legal trickery & circumventing the parliament increased the retirement age.
— Mats Nilsson (@mazzenilsson) March 16, 2023
No money for the French citizenry? Apparently, all the money went for weapons for the… https://t.co/zn3vqgnVQU pic.twitter.com/ZD3KsriBy1
This is awesome, informative and entertaining all at once. She fell for it hook, line and sinker...
— GraphicW (@GraphicW5) March 18, 2023
Full video prank with European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde
In a conversation with our «Zelensky», Ms. Lagarde complained that sanctions against Russia had failed,… https://t.co/hV0UL5wo7n pic.twitter.com/pmfaMTxejM
movielover said:Cal88 said:dimitrig said:Cal88 said:
The SMO designation is an effort on the part of the Russians to contain their invasion of Ukraine to a lower status of escalation. It`s a kind of self-imposed restraint for these internal and external political reasons:
-They want to show restraint in order to keep key neutrals like India, Brazil, Indonesia, Africans and even China in their camp
-They want to keep large reserves on the ready in order to dissuade NATO from piling in with boots on the ground and edging closer to a full-on conventional war with NATO.
-They want to keep a relative state of normalcy at home, reduce the psychological and economic impact of the invasion on their civilian population
-They want to limit their own losses, keeping the war to a high simmer level in protracted artillery duels where they can exploit their huge edge in firepower volume, inflicting disproportionate losses on Ukraine. Time is on Russia's side.
These are all valid points except for the last one.
Time is not on Russia's side. Time is against Russia. War is expensive. The longer this goes on the more it will cost them.
Also, Russia is economically inferior to the NATO nations. Once NATO ramps up production of arms it will be very difficult for Russia to keep up.
It is in Russia's best interests for this SMO to conclude as quickly as possible.
Also, I want to mention that firepower doesn't win wars. The US pounded the snot out of the Vietnamese with artillery and helicopters and carpet bombing. We killed a lot of people in the process, but still lost the war. If Russia is hoping they can bomb Ukraine into submission that is a tactic doomed to fail.
The Russians have a window of a year or two before NATO can scale up its ammunition production and source cheap effective drones like Iran`s highly effective Shaheds in quantities large enough to have an impact on the war. I can see NATO sourcing out copies of Shaheds from the few places left in the NATO orbit like South Korea which still have an efficient, viable lower-cost high volume industrial production capability. Germany has been kneecapped by the US blowing up Nordstream, their production costs for steel and other high-energy items like fertilizer/explosives are through the roof.
Ukraine is going to run out of men, artillery tubes/tanks or shells at some point before NATO will have scaled up their production. At that point, the Russians' huge edge in the number of casualties inflicted and/or ammo are going to translate into big territorial gains. Ukraine is down to its last 300 artillery tubes, Russia has thousands left, and thousands of drones to take out Ukraine`s remaining pieces.
NATO is now publicly admitting to 100k-120k Ukrainian KIAs, somewhere around half the real figure, for a casualty total in the neighborhood of half a million. Ukraine`s "breaking point" is most likely below 1 million. Unless a truce is put in place, that figure will be reached by the summer of 24 at the latest. In the end Ukraine will have to negotiate the end of the war, the real tragedy of this war is that this inevitable outcome could have been reached well before the carnage accrued to world war-like figures.
China is not even in the picture right now, in terms of heavy-duty military hardware, but they`ve provided Russia with chips and other vital inputs for Russian production of missiles, tank systems and avionics. But you have to figure that they are now producing "flying doritos" by the tens of thousands.
I read another few articles in the Kiev Independent. Of note:
- article with a soldier who last served in the military 30 years ago - i.e., another soldier at least in his 50s. They may already be at a personnel breaking point.
- different article, a large portion dealing with the legendary mud. They expect Russian attacks to intensify when the ground solidifies, and hints / hopes Ukraine will also go on offense.
- they feel they'd have a fighting chance with 700-800 new tanks - more than two times what the Ukrainian General asked for.
- big problems with old tanks; worries that they won't be able to service modern tanks w electronics in the
field.
- I thought I read China 'handed off' some military 'surplus' after joint exercises w Russia.
How do you know the size of Russias artillery stockpile?
I'm increasingly worried that Avdivka could become the next Bakhmut if Ukrainian Commanders along that Front don't “Play their Cards right." pic.twitter.com/YNRm4TN24l
— OMTMilitaryTrackr (@trackrmilitary) March 12, 2023