Because everyone is just standing in line to attack Belarus. :D
What's the play here? — jorndoe
This is something I have to degree with. The objective seems to prevent Russia from gaining an all out victory, but Ukraine not having the ability to defeat the Russians. And likely after this year, it will be far harder for Ukraine to succeed as Russia will likely get it's wartime manufacturing running.Most importantly, Western policy is to drip feed weapons into Ukraine enough to prop up the Ukrainian military but remotely not enough to threaten Russian defeat in Ukraine, much less on Russian soil. — boethius
Actually, nobody in the West believed that Ukraine could defend itself as well it has. Likely outcome that was seen was that Ukraine has to fight with insurgency, hence that it's not capable of stopping Russian attacks towards the capital.For, at the start of the war, no one wanted to escalate into a full scale war we have now where tanks and planes and so on need to be poured into Ukraine, so it was essential to believe that Javelins and other man portable arms (and the "pluckiness" Isaac definitely found the right word for) could somehow defeat Russia in military terms ... — boethius
The fact is that Soviet Union lost the Afghan war, just as the US lost Vietnam and Afghanistan. That they withdrew (with Soviet Union in a less humiliating way than the US from Afghanistan) doesn't change the reality. Neither Moscow or Washington DC were in peril.There are few, if any, examples of the proxy force simply winning in direct military terms, and in the case of the larger force leaving (Soviets in Afghanistan or US in Vietnam ... or US in Afghanistan) usually terrain and logistics favour guerrilla and insurgency tactics and the value of the land to the larger power is relatively low, quickly becoming a pride thing rather than making any military sense to continue fighting, none of which is the case in Ukraine. — boethius
It seems it will have little impact on the war maybe now Russians have confidence and confirmation to retreat. — invicta
It seems it will have little impact on the war maybe now Russians have confidence and confirmation to retreat. — invicta
Putin if he doesn’t feel the noose tightening round his neck will at least change it for a looser fitting noose for now. — invicta
This is something I have to degree with. The objective seems to prevent Russia from gaining an all out victory, but Ukraine not having the ability to defeat the Russians. — ssu
And likely after this year, it will be far harder for Ukraine to succeed as Russia will likely get it's wartime manufacturing running.
This war is simply a conventional war and the Western military industry isn't geared up or willing to commit to a war. It's been optimized to fight basically "colonial wars" with very costly weapon systems with low production quantities. Not to increase production on a huge scale. The only huge commitments we have seen are investments in the energy sector to replace the Russian exports. There actually for example Germany could act rather quickly. — ssu
The fact is that Soviet Union lost the Afghan war, just as the US lost Vietnam and Afghanistan. That they withdrew (with Soviet Union in a less humiliating way than the US from Afghanistan) doesn't change the reality. Neither Moscow or Washington DC were in peril. — ssu
If you would consider the Arab-Israeli conflict also a proxy war, there's the example of winning in direct military terms. But then both sides could be argued as being proxies. — ssu
It was one of Sarah Bils' (aka "Donbass Devushka") social media accounts that disseminated the classified documents leaked by Jack Teixeira. Insider reported that the documents posted by Bils were doctored versions of the ones initially posted on Discord.
One possible outcome is that the border will be at the Dniepr river. This basically would mean a Russian victory as then they have obtained from this a secure landbridge to Crimea. This also would be quite devastating for Ukraine: there would be the possibility that the war could erupt again, hence nobody would invest in the country afterwards.I think in basic military terms it's certainly possible, as even if lines collapse in Donbas, Ukraine has lot's of fall back positions including a giant river. — boethius
At least what is certain that they wouldn't try it as they did last year.Russia would need another go at Kiev for a chance at all out victory, which certainly doesn't feel likely but who knows. — boethius
Lack of equipment or ammo means just one thing: no large operations, but the WW1 trench stalemate continues.If it's policy, then my best guess is that it was calculated that Ukraine simply cannot sustain their operation beyond a certain date (in terms of casualties and all sorts of other supplies such as AA missiles) and there was therefore no use in increasing production of shells. — boethius
The military-industrial complex has adapted to World where the focus has been fighting terrorists or dirt poor insurgents in the mountains and making very expensive, limited production weapon systems and materiel. These intended for quick limited wars. Nobody has had the idea of building up huge stockpiles of ammo for a long, big conventional war. And once when you have downsized, it's not easy increase production, especially when your country isn't at war. Best example of this is Germany: the Bundeschancellor promised huge increases in military spending, but the German military industrial complex, even if it does make nice high end products, simply cannot change instantly.This whole running low of ammunition is honestly a confusing part of the situation. It doesn't seem possible as an oversight, and that it's industrially impossible for the entire West to produce more shells seems implausible, and if it's a deliberate decision then it's difficult to make sense of. — boethius
While it seems clear the goal is to prop up Ukraine and never negotiate, the commitment to that long term seems low, as ramping up production of munitions doesn't happen and sooner the better and simply maintaining the status quo on the front requires constant supply of munitions.
There's report now of batteries simply running out of shells and having no resupply for days, and very little when it comes in. One counter narrative is the shells are being saved for the big counter offensive, which I guess is possible but is still not a good position to be in.
It seems to just be taken for granted by Western powers that they can't produce all that many shells.
This whole running low of ammunition is honestly a confusing part of the situation. It doesn't seem possible as an oversight, and that it's industrially impossible for the entire West to produce more shells seems implausible, and if it's a deliberate decision then it's difficult to make sense of. If it's policy, then my best guess is that it was calculated that Ukraine simply cannot sustain their operation beyond a certain date (in terms of casualties and all sorts of other supplies such as AA missiles) and there was therefore no use in increasing production of shells. Or then maybe it's all a ruse. — boethius
My guess is that the situation is a lot more dire than western sources are letting on, and that even copious amounts of ammunition would not make any significant difference on the battlefield.
A lot of folks seem to believe the Ukrainian forces have "ground the Russians to a halt", but I think that's wrong. — Tzeentch
This was likely their plan from the start, since the threat of a Ukrainian insurgency was ever-present, and taking too much territory that they couldn't effectively control and pacify would be a guarantee for such an insurgency to materialize. — Tzeentch
If the West refuses, either because the US strongarms the EU, or because the EU remains ignorant, likely more Russian aggression will follow. Though even then it remains to be seen whether their aim is to take all of Ukraine, or only those areas which are strategically relevant - it's even possible that what they hold now is all they intend to take. — Tzeentch
Note that the US doesn't care about instability in Eastern Europe - it in fact believes it to be instrumental to their goals among which are unity and remilitarization of Europe. Ironically, Europe seems to be the key to peace. — Tzeentch
However, this contradicts the apparent policy to prop up Ukraine as long as possible without ever negotiating. — boethius
I agree that there was never a plan to occupy more territory than the Russian speaking regions they currently have, but I'd also agree with ssu that plan A was a negotiated resolution with Kiev. The purpose of encircling Kiev to bring the war to the capital and put the diplomatic pressure for a negotiation, and if not, then it occupies the large majority of Ukrainian forces (i.e. is also a giant fixing operation, as the capital is always the priority) while the Southern regions are occupied and pacified. — boethius
Well, the people in the Pentagon aren't dummies either. My guess is by now they have fully realized Russia's plans to take it as slowly as it needs to in order to avoid an insurgency. Perhaps the Pentagon even understood this before the war fully got underway. If we can conceive of these ideas, so can they. — Tzeentch
If they knew Russia was going for a 'bite-sized chunks' approach, then they don't have to do much in order for Ukraine to hold out for a long time, since it's already baked into the Russian strategy. I imagine the pacification of the occupied areas may take months, perhaps even years. — Tzeentch
I don't want to toot my own horn, but the advance on Kiev having been a dual-purpose operation is a theory I've been sharing here for close to a year now. (And I still believe it is true, so we're in agreement there). — Tzeentch
Nice read. An analysis that is both rational and not corrupted by the typical cartoon narratives that immerse all our collective sources of information. — yebiga
But why stop short of following your own rational arguments to their logical conclusion?
Not only was this war against Russia never ever winnable but...
The only conceivable path to some kind of victory for the USA was a vague hope that the combination of kinetic war and economic sanctions might cause a coup in Moscow and a coup that by chance was compliant to western demands.
This theoretical possibility was always a reckless gamble. And yet, this calculus was the singular rational idea underpinning the western strategy in this war. But by May/June of 2022 it was clear that there was not going to be any coup that might favour western interests. The Russian public was not only not in revolt but had displayed a distinctly anti-western fervour - so that even if a coup did occur it would likely be something hardline and more militaristic. — yebiga
It was game over as soon as Russia was in a position to annex the contested territories because NATO won't go to war against Russia for Ukraine, which would be the only conceivable way to reclaim them. It's not a movie. The bad guys win sometimes. The challenge now is for the West to engineer a situation where this doesn't look like an abject loss. I stick to my idea that a reduced Ukraine gaining NATO membership is this compromise. Russia gets its land bridge and NATO gets to fully hem it in. Ukraine gets to sacrifice just its arms and its legs rather than its head too. Sad, but... — Baden
I see a way for Ukraine to still emerge victorious but having to concede territory only short term and momentarily and in so doing joins NATO aka US army branch in Europe. — invicta
This is the only way and they must be brought to reason to do so and that is the collective will of the Ukrainian people to do this. — invicta
What I think is important for Europeans and Ukrainians to consider, is that the more adversarial our stance towards Russia becomes, the greater their territorial ambitions will become. — Tzeentch
The problem is NATO doesn't let Ukraine in ... which they could have done any day since 2008, or even 1991. — boethius
This sounds like speculation at this point, NATO’s stance is flexible especially during this conflict. As the Russians are clearly playing dirty then NATO expansion in this front seems the only logical step at this point. — invicta
From a trade perspective a Ukraine that will bounce back and flourish once more in farming and other agricultural industries is not just better for the whole of Europe but beyond and could prove to be fertile in other areas too. — invicta
From a military POV the Russian move that occurred will set Russian back decades as they will be unable to modernise technologically and so militarily for years to come but only relying on its nuclear deterrent as defence. — invicta
Noting that NATO has not let Ukraine join for decades is not speculation. — boethius
I’m talking about future plans of course and I’m not denying the historical rejection of Ukraine’s NATO membership. — invicta
NATO or No Europe and US will support and supply as long as the Ukrainians are willing to fight for their land and go to toe with this foxlike enemy that Putin really is. — invicta
I think the most significant player on the scene now is neither the US nor Russia. It's China. Russia is now dependent on China. The way Xi behaved when he visited Russia broadcast his domination of the whole region. — frank
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