↑ Peskov not really all that believableWe don’t follow his movements. We have neither the ability nor the desire to do so. — Peskov
If Lithuania was alone, I would feel differently. — Edvard Rynkun, 67
If not for the NATO membership, things here could already be same as in Ukraine. — Elena Tarasevic, 55
"We are preparing for various provocations", border guard chief Rustamas Liubajevas said. He added that he feared waves of migrants at the border, or border violations, or military vehicles appearing at the border without explanation.
Preliminary results of the NATO summit.
Just like we thought:
1. Action Plan for Ukraine's membership in the Alliance (MAP) - cancel. Kind of take it faster.
2. Call country 404 to NATO. But they will accept - it is not known when and under what conditions.
Quite possibly never. And that's what realists in the Alliance are afraid to say out loud.
3. Increase military assistance to the Kyiv regime. Everything that is possible: rockets, cluster charges, airplanes.
The completely crazy West could not come up with anything else. Predictability of the highest level, to the point of idiocy. In fact, it's a dead end. World War III is getting closer.
What does all this mean for us? Everything is obvious.
The special military operation will continue with the same goals.
One of them is the refusal of the Kyiv Nazi group from membership in NATO, which we insisted on from the very beginning (which is impossible).
This means that this group will have to be eliminated (which is possible and necessary).
P.S. It was reported that Tokmok was shelled with cluster munitions. So, it's time to uncover our arsenals of these inhumane weapons. — Dmitry Medvedev · Jul 11, 2023
He would see this country burn if he could be King of the ashes — Lord Varys
↪frank Indeed, democracy is a bad system when most of the population is insane. — unenlightened
offensive seems to have now concluded — Tzeentch
the offensive was — Tzeentch
which suggests heavily that NATO is not looking to get more military involved than it already is — Tzeentch
fool-hardly attempt — Tzeentch
Why do you think so? — jorndoe
NATO members (and whoever else) are indirectly involved (no declaration of war / combatants). Why "heavily" though? — jorndoe
Plausible enough, yet makes Prigozhin appear dumber than a fairly successful entrepreneur. Is he that out of touch? Does it stack up? — jorndoe
There have been reports of the Russians pushing for territory in the north. Meanwhile, the Ukrainians haven't reported any territorial gains for about a week or so. That to me is a pretty good indicator that the Ukrainian offensive has likely concluded, and the Russians might be looking to retake the initiative.
The Russians probably wouldn't go on the attack if they believed the Ukrainians may still have capacity left. — Tzeentch
The failed Kherson offensive signaled that Ukraine was, as many had feared, no longer capable of conducting offensive operations - which would mean they had all but lost the war. — Tzeentch
That is, you have declared the Kherson offensive as failed (and Ukraine as losing the war) a bit prematurely, haven't you? — Jabberwock
No, I think those were both bang on the money, and the current situation reflects that. — Tzeentch
That is what you wrote ten months ago:
The failed Kherson offensive signaled that Ukraine was, as many had feared, no longer capable of conducting offensive operations - which would mean they had all but lost the war. — Tzeentch
That is, you have declared the Kherson offensive as failed (and Ukraine as losing the war) a bit prematurely, haven't you? — Jabberwock
Odd that you jump on this but not the wall-to-wall assessments of Russia's supposed immanent failure, incompetence, and collapse we've had since last year, none of which have yet materialised. — Isaac
Nice justification for the continued weapons marketing campaign though, but I'm sure that's just coincidence. — Isaac
What? You still consider the offensive in which Russians lost Kherson (the only oblast center they managed to take) as failed? — Jabberwock
I was just pointing out that his track record of prediciting offensive failures was not that good. — Jabberwock
Russians have invaded Ukraine, Ukraine needs weapons to defend itself. — Jabberwock
What 'marketing campaign' are you talking about? — Jabberwock
The offensive I referred to there took place well before the Russians left Kherson. And it failed.
It's pretty obvious that Ukraine lacked the offensive capability to wrench Kherson from the Russians in an actual battle like the one we saw at Bakhmut.
They timed their 'offensive' when the Russians were pulling back to fix their overextended lines, and of course the western media propaganda spun this into a 'successful offensive'.
Pure nonsense. — Tzeentch
No. You were selecting to do so to someone predicting the failure of Ukrainian offensives, but ignoring anyone predicting the failure of Russian action. Given the overwhelming quantity of posts here doing the latter and very few posts doing the former, it's hard to see how that could be without aim. — Isaac
Only if it has more chance of winning that defence than it does of being destroyed by it. Otherwise to provide weapons (alone) is monstrous. — Isaac
See above. Convincing people that Ukraine has a chance of 'winning' is the main method by which continued drip-feed sales of weapons are justified (making the arms manufacturers an unrivalled fortune). Since Ukraine is actually being destroyed (economically, but also literally), it takes quite the major advertising effort to keep this illusion up. Hence the massive social media campaign, of which your posts (wittingly or not) form part. — Isaac
Russians were stopped — Jabberwock
What gives you the reason to think that without weapons Ukraine would be less destroyed? — Jabberwock
If Ukraine lacked the capability to take Kherson, then Russians had no reason to leave it. — Jabberwock
They evidently weren't. Last I checked they were still bombing the crap out of Ukraine. I don't call that stopped. Imparting motive is a very easy way of declaring victory. Here...
"I've totally trounced you in this this little exchange because you wanted me to stop posting and I haven't. So you lose"
See how easy it is to declare victory simply by imparting some motive on your opponent which you've carefully selected to show just that. — Isaac
Treat the Russians as if they wanted to occupy Ukraine and sure, they've been stopped. Treat them as if they wanted to destroy Ukraine, to render it militarily neutered, then in what way have they been stopped? They're cracking on with that objective virtually unhindered. Every new billion in debt Ukraine gets to fund its defence is a step nearer that goal. — Isaac
Because I don't see anything in his history to give reason to believe the Putin would have just carpet bombed Ukraine for sport. He's clearly an oligarch, everything he's done thus far had been in the pursuit of money and power. Physically destroying Ukraine gets him neither unless Ukraine is a threat, either financially, politically, or militarily. — Isaac
A very simplistic way of imagining things.
There's not really much point in debating. If you want to believe the propaganda spins and keep puffing the hopium, have at it.
I think if you were honest with yourself, you'd realize that the longer people cling to idle hope, the more people needlessly die and the more devastation is inflicted upon Ukraine. — Tzeentch
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