The Official Russian Invasion of Ukraine Thread

916,030 Views | 10122 Replies | Last: 3 hrs ago by movielover
tequila4kapp
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Cal88 said:




People said the same thing before WW2. Germany declared war on the U.S. So did Japan. Isolationism is just absolutely wrong.
movielover
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If we only kept our word to Gorby, "Not one inch Eastward".
movielover
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tequila4kapp
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Biden forgives almost 5B in loans given to Ukraine. This is bull*****
Cal88
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There is no way Ukraine is going to pay its war debt. Their currency and economy has only been propped by western capital, once the flow is reduced their currency is going to collapse. The reason the Hrivna is being propped is that Ukrainians would move to the Russian-held parts which will be functional, especially pensioners and retirees.

Blackrock and co. pushed for loans to Ukraine with the understanding that they would be repaid with Ukrainian arable land, minerals, mining rights and other assets. This is going to be a big problem politically speaking, as Ukrainians are not going to like having their assets stripped on top of a depleted male population and a destroyed economy.

They will try to appropriate seized Russian billions to remedy their situation, but the Russians will require a return of their assets as a basic condition for an end to the war, where they have had the upper hand and their advantage is only going to get wider.

So bottom line, we have to eat Ukrainian debt, it's the least we could do knowing that we have pushed Ukraine to fight a war they cannot win.
Big C
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I hate "debt forgiveness". It's like the student-loan thing. What about the people that didn't take out loans? An easy compromise is to defer the debts over a long period, but don't forgive them.
sycasey
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The Ukrainian economy is going to collapse after Trump pulls support, allows Russia to take a bunch of territory, and the country is left as one constantly under threat of further Russian takeover. Foreign businesses won't want to invest time or resources there, under those conditions.
bearister
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Cancel my subscription to the Resurrection
Send my credentials to the House of Detention
I got some friends inside
Cal88
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Big C said:


I hate "debt forgiveness". It's like the student-loan thing. What about the people that didn't take out loans? An easy compromise is to defer the debts over a long period, but don't forgive them.

It's our debt, we pushed for this war. Ukraine has already paid an exorbitant price for having been used to conduct this stupid war, 600,000-700,000 soldiers killed, more than a million injured, I think that's enough.
bearister
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The compassionate Conservatives in this thread sure have a lot of pity for them poor Ukrainian lads forced to fight and die for their Homeland.

Even though they don't express it here, them being so compassionate and all, I assume they also silently cry for them Russkie boys gettin' meat grinded as foreign invaders…..and maybe a spare tear for them North Korean boys, so far from home, fightin' the good fight.
Cancel my subscription to the Resurrection
Send my credentials to the House of Detention
I got some friends inside
Cal88
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bearister said:

The compassionate Conservatives in this thread sure have a lot of pity for them poor Ukrainian lads forced to fight and die for their Homeland.

Even though they don't express it here, them being so compassionate and all, I assume they also silently cry for them Russkie boys gettin' meat grinded as foreign invaders…..and maybe a spare tear for them North Korean boys, so far from home, fightin' the good fight.


The Norks haven't been on the frontline to date, they are being trained in 21st century warfare 6-7 time zones away at the other end of Russia.

The Russians haven't been dying in large number, the stuff you read in the British press, like the recent blurb you've posted about 2,000 soldiers dying in a day is Orwell-grade propaganda. Mediazona has been reporting fewer than a 100 Russian KIA daily. There are significantly more people dying every day from gun violence in the US than Russian soldiers being killed in Ukraine, see the timeline chart here:

https://en.zona.media/article/2022/05/20/casualties_eng

Most of the Ukrainians being drafted today don't want to go to the meat grinder, the war is starting to resemble late stage WW1, a bloody war of attrition where the outcome is no longer in doubt. We need to pull the plug on this.
movielover
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And we're gonna pay to rebuild them, defend them, and more.
bear2034
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bearister said:

The compassionate Conservatives in this thread sure have a lot of pity for them poor Ukrainian lads forced to fight and die for their Homeland.

Even though they don't express it here, them being so compassionate and all, I assume they also silently cry for them Russkie boys gettin' meat grinded as foreign invaders…..and maybe a spare tear for them North Korean boys, so far from home, fightin' the good fight.

Prolonging the war is compassionate?
Cal88
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bear2034 said:

bearister said:

The compassionate Conservatives in this thread sure have a lot of pity for them poor Ukrainian lads forced to fight and die for their Homeland.

Even though they don't express it here, them being so compassionate and all, I assume they also silently cry for them Russkie boys gettin' meat grinded as foreign invaders…..and maybe a spare tear for them North Korean boys, so far from home, fightin' the good fight.

Prolonging the war is compassionate?

"It's about money" Lindsey Graham

movielover
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Part right, part kooky?

What will Biden's Blackrock say?
Cal88
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I don't think the lines in Paris or London will be very long for that tour.

movielover
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Haloski
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Cal88 said:

bear2034 said:

bearister said:

The compassionate Conservatives in this thread sure have a lot of pity for them poor Ukrainian lads forced to fight and die for their Homeland.

Even though they don't express it here, them being so compassionate and all, I assume they also silently cry for them Russkie boys gettin' meat grinded as foreign invaders…..and maybe a spare tear for them North Korean boys, so far from home, fightin' the good fight.

Prolonging the war is compassionate?

"It's about money" Lindsey Graham




Look, I know you've already been truly very critical of Putin a few (but not many) times in this thread, but this is another situation where your sharp criticism is due. It's about money for all of them, at least partially. This needs to be another instance of you being critical of Putin for being unsympathetic to the lives lost in the name of Russian imperialism.
Zippergate
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They say elections have consequences. Biden should hold an emergency draft with preferential selection for anyone who voted for him. They can serve alongside these fighting machines. Normies have been fighting US wars for centuries. It's time to be more inclusive and give the DEI crowd their share of combat. Russia has no defense for this.



BearGoggles
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Cal88 said:

I don't think the lines in Paris or London will be very long for that tour.


Aside from the fact that Macgregor has been wrong about so many things, this seems highly unlikely. I know you simply disseminate anything that supports your view, but what is the evidence for this?
Cal88
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Edited By Staff said:

Cal88 said:

I don't think the lines in Paris or London will be very long for that tour.


Nothing would accelerate the unpopularity of the war like Europe finally having to get their own skin in the game for supporting American empire.



Oh, and congrats to Aunbear89 for his timeout expiring.


In all fairness, the Russians have mined their frontlines on a massive scale (they have a huge inventory of mines) particularly on their southern defense lines. The quantities used dwarf those to be delivered by the Biden administration. I hope the Russians have carefully surveyed their mining operations for future removal.
Cal88
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Haloski said:

Cal88 said:

bear2034 said:

bearister said:

The compassionate Conservatives in this thread sure have a lot of pity for them poor Ukrainian lads forced to fight and die for their Homeland.

Even though they don't express it here, them being so compassionate and all, I assume they also silently cry for them Russkie boys gettin' meat grinded as foreign invaders…..and maybe a spare tear for them North Korean boys, so far from home, fightin' the good fight.

Prolonging the war is compassionate?

"It's about money" Lindsey Graham




Look, I know you've already been truly very critical of Putin a few (but not many) times in this thread, but this is another situation where your sharp criticism is due. It's about money for all of them, at least partially. This needs to be another instance of you being critical of Putin for being unsympathetic to the lives lost in the name of Russian imperialism.


I find it hard to criticize Putin here because the Russians did try to avoid this war. Bear in mind as well that on the Russian political map, Putin is a moderate, who has received a lot of domestic criticism for not having intervened earlier and not responding more aggressively to Ukrainian attacks within Russia proper.

Also bear in mind that the great majority of the populations within the areas currently held by the Russians are ethnic Russians and pro-Russian, especially in Crimea and the Donetsk/Luhansk oblasts. A bit less so towards Kherson and Zaporizhia, where it's closer to 50-50. The western third (Galicia) are hardcore anti-Russian.



^This is a good and fairly neutral recap of the Ukrainian allegiance picture, source of the above map:
https://www.geocurrents.info/blog/tag/novorossiya/

I think Putin would have actually preferred to have a large, neutral Ukraine on his border with a big Russian/pro-Russian minority population as leverage, but that is not going to happen at this point after nearly a decade of civil war. I see the following possible outcomes for Russia and Ukraine:

1- A conflict freeze along the current borders, or close to it (including the small remainders of the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts)

2- Russia keeps moving west and takes more territory on the left bank of the Dniepr, including Zaporizhia (about half of the cream-colored region in the above map)

3- The war keeps going for another year plus, the frontline collapses and Russia moves further in and annexes Kharkov, Odessa and the entirety of "Novorossiya" (green region below).



(2) is the most likely outcome, Putin has hinted that he would use Odessa and access to the Black Sea as bargaining chips for Ukraine becoming neutral and demilitarizing in a long-term settlement.

(1) is only possible if Trump forces Ukraine towards a settlement early next year, that is really the best outcome for all parties IMHO in terms of stopping the bloodshed. Putin would be under some pressure to accept those terms from the global community (countries like India, Brazil and even China).
Cal88
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BearGoggles said:

Cal88 said:

I don't think the lines in Paris or London will be very long for that tour.


Aside from the fact that Macgregor has been wrong about so many things, this seems highly unlikely. I know you simply disseminate anything that supports your view, but what is the evidence for this?


Macgregor has been right on nearly all the more important aspects of the Ukraine war.

The subject of putting French and British boots on the ground in Ukraine has recently been breached in earnest with Macron leading the talk:

https://www.lemonde.fr/en/international/article/2024/11/25/discussions-over-sending-french-and-british-troops-to-ukraine-reignited_6734041_4.html#

Quote:

'Not ruling out any option'

These are comments in line with those made by the French foreign minister, Jean-Nol Barrot, on a visit to London on November 22. In an interview with the BBC on November 23, he called on Western allies to "not set and express red lines" in their support for Ukraine. When asked about the possibility of sending French troops into the field, he declared: "We do not discard any option."



("Orcs" = pejorative term for Russians)

I would also add here that France and Russia have been involved in proxy wars all across the Sahel this decade (Niger, Chad, Burkina Faso), with France having been on the losing end, that is an important aspect in the Ukraine war here.
sycasey
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Cal88 said:

I find it hard to criticize Putin here because the Russians did try to avoid this war.
LOL you have got to be kidding.
Cal88
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sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

I find it hard to criticize Putin here because the Russians did try to avoid this war.
LOL you have got to be kidding.

https://bearinsider.com/forums/6/topics/107414/replies/2420622
sycasey
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Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

I find it hard to criticize Putin here because the Russians did try to avoid this war.
LOL you have got to be kidding.

https://bearinsider.com/forums/6/topics/107414/replies/2420622
"Trying to avoid this war" would mean not sending troops in. This is not complicated.
Cal88
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sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

I find it hard to criticize Putin here because the Russians did try to avoid this war.
LOL you have got to be kidding.

https://bearinsider.com/forums/6/topics/107414/replies/2420622
"Trying to avoid this war" would mean not sending troops in. This is not complicated.

Ukraine was about to overrun the Donbas and take over Donetsk in the winter of '22, with 60,000 troops massed near the frontline, and Crimea as their next goal. Any Russian leader would have intervened, there is no way they would have allowed Crimea to fall back to a hostile Kiev government. As well defending Crimea would have been a lot more challenging for Russia without the land bridge north of the Sea of Azov.
movielover
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I think you meant (2) Russia keeps moving west, not east.
Haloski
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Cal88 said:

Haloski said:

Cal88 said:

bear2034 said:

bearister said:

The compassionate Conservatives in this thread sure have a lot of pity for them poor Ukrainian lads forced to fight and die for their Homeland.

Even though they don't express it here, them being so compassionate and all, I assume they also silently cry for them Russkie boys gettin' meat grinded as foreign invaders…..and maybe a spare tear for them North Korean boys, so far from home, fightin' the good fight.

Prolonging the war is compassionate?

"It's about money" Lindsey Graham




Look, I know you've already been truly very critical of Putin a few (but not many) times in this thread, but this is another situation where your sharp criticism is due. It's about money for all of them, at least partially. This needs to be another instance of you being critical of Putin for being unsympathetic to the lives lost in the name of Russian imperialism.


I find it hard to criticize Putin here because the Russians did try to avoid this war. Bear in mind as well that on the Russian political map, Putin is a moderate, who has received a lot of domestic criticism for not having intervened earlier and not responding more aggressively to Ukrainian attacks within Russia proper.

Also bear in mind that the great majority of the populations within the areas currently held by the Russians are ethnic Russians and pro-Russian, especially in Crimea and the Donetsk/Luhansk oblasts. A bit less so towards Kherson and Zaporizhia, where it's closer to 50-50. The western third (Galicia) are hardcore anti-Russian.



^This is a good and fairly neutral recap of the Ukrainian allegiance picture, source of the above map:
https://www.geocurrents.info/blog/tag/novorossiya/

I think Putin would have actually preferred to have a large, neutral Ukraine on his border with a big Russian/pro-Russian minority population as leverage, but that is not going to happen at this point after nearly a decade of civil war. I see the following possible outcomes for Russia and Ukraine:

1- A conflict freeze along the current borders, or close to it (including the small remainders of the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts)

2- Russia keeps moving east and takes more territory on the left bank of the Dniepr, including Zaporizhia (about half of the cream-colored region in the above map)

3- The war keeps going for another year plus, the frontline collapses and Russia moves further in and annexes Kharkov, Odessa and the entirety of "Novorossiya" (green region below).



(2) is the most likely outcome, Putin has hinted that he would use Odessa and access to the Black Sea as bargaining chips for Ukraine becoming neutral and demilitarizing in a long-term settlement.

(1) is only possible if Trump forces Ukraine towards a settlement early next year, that is really the best outcome for all parties IMHO in terms of stopping the bloodshed. Putin would be under some pressure to accept those terms from the global community (countries like India, Brazil and even China).


But you HAVE been highly critical of Putin at times, almost going as far as suggesting that he step down. As such, it's not that difficult for you. You were very critical of his callousness and disregard for the lives of his citizens.
Eastern Oregon Bear
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Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

sycasey said:

Cal88 said:

I find it hard to criticize Putin here because the Russians did try to avoid this war.
LOL you have got to be kidding.

https://bearinsider.com/forums/6/topics/107414/replies/2420622
"Trying to avoid this war" would mean not sending troops in. This is not complicated.

Ukraine was about to overrun the Donbas and take over Donetsk in the winter of '22, with 60,000 troops massed near the frontline, and Crimea as their next goal. Any Russian leader would have intervened, there is no way they would have allowed Crimea to fall back to a hostile Kiev government. As well defending Crimea would have been a lot more challenging for Russia without the land bridge north of the Sea of Azov.
It looked like he was going to punch me, so I shot him before he did anything.
Cal88
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movielover said:

I think you meant (2) Russia keeps moving west, not east.
Right, thanks.
sycasey
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Haloski said:

Cal88 said:

Haloski said:

Cal88 said:

bear2034 said:

bearister said:

The compassionate Conservatives in this thread sure have a lot of pity for them poor Ukrainian lads forced to fight and die for their Homeland.

Even though they don't express it here, them being so compassionate and all, I assume they also silently cry for them Russkie boys gettin' meat grinded as foreign invaders…..and maybe a spare tear for them North Korean boys, so far from home, fightin' the good fight.

Prolonging the war is compassionate?

"It's about money" Lindsey Graham




Look, I know you've already been truly very critical of Putin a few (but not many) times in this thread, but this is another situation where your sharp criticism is due. It's about money for all of them, at least partially. This needs to be another instance of you being critical of Putin for being unsympathetic to the lives lost in the name of Russian imperialism.


I find it hard to criticize Putin here because the Russians did try to avoid this war. Bear in mind as well that on the Russian political map, Putin is a moderate, who has received a lot of domestic criticism for not having intervened earlier and not responding more aggressively to Ukrainian attacks within Russia proper.

Also bear in mind that the great majority of the populations within the areas currently held by the Russians are ethnic Russians and pro-Russian, especially in Crimea and the Donetsk/Luhansk oblasts. A bit less so towards Kherson and Zaporizhia, where it's closer to 50-50. The western third (Galicia) are hardcore anti-Russian.



^This is a good and fairly neutral recap of the Ukrainian allegiance picture, source of the above map:
https://www.geocurrents.info/blog/tag/novorossiya/

I think Putin would have actually preferred to have a large, neutral Ukraine on his border with a big Russian/pro-Russian minority population as leverage, but that is not going to happen at this point after nearly a decade of civil war. I see the following possible outcomes for Russia and Ukraine:

1- A conflict freeze along the current borders, or close to it (including the small remainders of the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts)

2- Russia keeps moving east and takes more territory on the left bank of the Dniepr, including Zaporizhia (about half of the cream-colored region in the above map)

3- The war keeps going for another year plus, the frontline collapses and Russia moves further in and annexes Kharkov, Odessa and the entirety of "Novorossiya" (green region below).



(2) is the most likely outcome, Putin has hinted that he would use Odessa and access to the Black Sea as bargaining chips for Ukraine becoming neutral and demilitarizing in a long-term settlement.

(1) is only possible if Trump forces Ukraine towards a settlement early next year, that is really the best outcome for all parties IMHO in terms of stopping the bloodshed. Putin would be under some pressure to accept those terms from the global community (countries like India, Brazil and even China).


But you HAVE been highly critical of Putin at times, almost going as far as suggesting that he step down. As such, it's not that difficult for you. You were very critical of his callousness and disregard for the lives of his citizens.

I don't think I've ever seen Cal88 be this critical of Putin. When did this happen?
Haloski
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sycasey said:

Haloski said:

Cal88 said:

Haloski said:

Cal88 said:

bear2034 said:

bearister said:

The compassionate Conservatives in this thread sure have a lot of pity for them poor Ukrainian lads forced to fight and die for their Homeland.

Even though they don't express it here, them being so compassionate and all, I assume they also silently cry for them Russkie boys gettin' meat grinded as foreign invaders…..and maybe a spare tear for them North Korean boys, so far from home, fightin' the good fight.

Prolonging the war is compassionate?

"It's about money" Lindsey Graham




Look, I know you've already been truly very critical of Putin a few (but not many) times in this thread, but this is another situation where your sharp criticism is due. It's about money for all of them, at least partially. This needs to be another instance of you being critical of Putin for being unsympathetic to the lives lost in the name of Russian imperialism.


I find it hard to criticize Putin here because the Russians did try to avoid this war. Bear in mind as well that on the Russian political map, Putin is a moderate, who has received a lot of domestic criticism for not having intervened earlier and not responding more aggressively to Ukrainian attacks within Russia proper.

Also bear in mind that the great majority of the populations within the areas currently held by the Russians are ethnic Russians and pro-Russian, especially in Crimea and the Donetsk/Luhansk oblasts. A bit less so towards Kherson and Zaporizhia, where it's closer to 50-50. The western third (Galicia) are hardcore anti-Russian.



^This is a good and fairly neutral recap of the Ukrainian allegiance picture, source of the above map:
https://www.geocurrents.info/blog/tag/novorossiya/

I think Putin would have actually preferred to have a large, neutral Ukraine on his border with a big Russian/pro-Russian minority population as leverage, but that is not going to happen at this point after nearly a decade of civil war. I see the following possible outcomes for Russia and Ukraine:

1- A conflict freeze along the current borders, or close to it (including the small remainders of the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts)

2- Russia keeps moving east and takes more territory on the left bank of the Dniepr, including Zaporizhia (about half of the cream-colored region in the above map)

3- The war keeps going for another year plus, the frontline collapses and Russia moves further in and annexes Kharkov, Odessa and the entirety of "Novorossiya" (green region below).



(2) is the most likely outcome, Putin has hinted that he would use Odessa and access to the Black Sea as bargaining chips for Ukraine becoming neutral and demilitarizing in a long-term settlement.

(1) is only possible if Trump forces Ukraine towards a settlement early next year, that is really the best outcome for all parties IMHO in terms of stopping the bloodshed. Putin would be under some pressure to accept those terms from the global community (countries like India, Brazil and even China).


But you HAVE been highly critical of Putin at times, almost going as far as suggesting that he step down. As such, it's not that difficult for you. You were very critical of his callousness and disregard for the lives of his citizens.

I don't think I've ever seen Cal88 be this critical of Putin. When did this happen?


It's happened on a few occasions. I think they've outright called for Putin's removal once for how incompetent it was of him to think they'd just steamroll Ukraine in a couple of weeks. He said that it was completely incompetent of Putin to not foresee the protracted battle he mired Russia in and the thousands of Russian souls Putin sent to graves.
sycasey
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Haloski said:

sycasey said:

Haloski said:

Cal88 said:

Haloski said:

Cal88 said:

bear2034 said:

bearister said:

The compassionate Conservatives in this thread sure have a lot of pity for them poor Ukrainian lads forced to fight and die for their Homeland.

Even though they don't express it here, them being so compassionate and all, I assume they also silently cry for them Russkie boys gettin' meat grinded as foreign invaders…..and maybe a spare tear for them North Korean boys, so far from home, fightin' the good fight.

Prolonging the war is compassionate?

"It's about money" Lindsey Graham




Look, I know you've already been truly very critical of Putin a few (but not many) times in this thread, but this is another situation where your sharp criticism is due. It's about money for all of them, at least partially. This needs to be another instance of you being critical of Putin for being unsympathetic to the lives lost in the name of Russian imperialism.


I find it hard to criticize Putin here because the Russians did try to avoid this war. Bear in mind as well that on the Russian political map, Putin is a moderate, who has received a lot of domestic criticism for not having intervened earlier and not responding more aggressively to Ukrainian attacks within Russia proper.

Also bear in mind that the great majority of the populations within the areas currently held by the Russians are ethnic Russians and pro-Russian, especially in Crimea and the Donetsk/Luhansk oblasts. A bit less so towards Kherson and Zaporizhia, where it's closer to 50-50. The western third (Galicia) are hardcore anti-Russian.



^This is a good and fairly neutral recap of the Ukrainian allegiance picture, source of the above map:
https://www.geocurrents.info/blog/tag/novorossiya/

I think Putin would have actually preferred to have a large, neutral Ukraine on his border with a big Russian/pro-Russian minority population as leverage, but that is not going to happen at this point after nearly a decade of civil war. I see the following possible outcomes for Russia and Ukraine:

1- A conflict freeze along the current borders, or close to it (including the small remainders of the Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts)

2- Russia keeps moving east and takes more territory on the left bank of the Dniepr, including Zaporizhia (about half of the cream-colored region in the above map)

3- The war keeps going for another year plus, the frontline collapses and Russia moves further in and annexes Kharkov, Odessa and the entirety of "Novorossiya" (green region below).



(2) is the most likely outcome, Putin has hinted that he would use Odessa and access to the Black Sea as bargaining chips for Ukraine becoming neutral and demilitarizing in a long-term settlement.

(1) is only possible if Trump forces Ukraine towards a settlement early next year, that is really the best outcome for all parties IMHO in terms of stopping the bloodshed. Putin would be under some pressure to accept those terms from the global community (countries like India, Brazil and even China).


But you HAVE been highly critical of Putin at times, almost going as far as suggesting that he step down. As such, it's not that difficult for you. You were very critical of his callousness and disregard for the lives of his citizens.

I don't think I've ever seen Cal88 be this critical of Putin. When did this happen?


It's happened on a few occasions. I think they've outright called for Putin's removal once for how incompetent it was of him to think they'd just steamroll Ukraine in a couple of weeks. He said that it was completely incompetent of Putin to not foresee the protracted battle he mired Russia in and the thousands of Russian souls Putin sent to graves.
Well, that would be one thing we can agree on!
movielover
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Been busy. Has anyone here noted Russia's new Mach 11 missile with 6 sub-missiles, each carrying 6 programmable warheads?

Supposedly we can't shoot down this hypersonic, possibly low-flying missile. Russia just used the first version against a Ukranian military target (factory). It supposedly can reach all of tye EU.

This was used in response to the West giving Ukraine medium-range missiles. This missile can also be outfitted w nukes. Scott Ritter calls it a game changer.

Biden has given Ukraine land mines, and a Navy Rear Admiral has talked about 'winning' a nuclear war. ThexWest has also talked about giving UKR nukes. Crazy talk. Many think the Left and MIC want to rock the apple cart for Trump.
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