Mutiny feint? Russian aircraft shot down feint? The mutineer then killed feint? :roll: — ssu
If Prigozhin is indeed dead, then the cause of death is quite obvious: he thought he made a deal with Putin. — Jabberwock
Ah, you mean like Trump wasn't fumbling in his Presidency with his administration just waiting for the next thing he would say, but it all was just 4D Chess that we simply didn't figure out?It's all part of Baldrick's Putin's Cunning Plan.
to make us misunderestimate him. — unenlightened
It was the age old trick of separating your military to different competing parties in order to avoid an other power center than you emerging. First the division of Russian Armed Forces and the National Guard (which is headed by former bodyguard and friend of Putin) and then the use of private armies (which actually there are more than just the Wagner) when you want deniability.Maybe Putin will try to install a trusted ruthless gangster somehow. As long as they can get fighting and money going. — jorndoe
Russia's fragmentation has begun. In the near future, a lot of interesting things will happen there. Let's wait and see. You shouldn't touch something when it's that hot. We should wait until it cools down a bit. Then we'll understand all the events that took place. Prigozhin wasn't crazy. The people who gave him the order to march on Moscow finally stopped him. — Oleksiy Danilov (Aug 26, 2023)
The first time was when I phoned him and negotiations (were taking) place while they were marching on Moscow. I told him: ‘Yevgeny, do you understand that you will doom your people and will perish yourself?’ He had just come back from the front. On an impulse he said: ‘I will die then, damn it![’] — Alexander Lukashenko (Aug 26, 2023)
The Belarusian leader said that during second time he spoke with Prigozhin he warned him “in no uncertain terms to watch it.” — Alex Stambaugh, Katharina Krebs, Heather Chen · CNN · Aug 26, 2023
I said: ‘If you are afraid of something, I will talk to President (Vladimir) Putin and we will extract you to Belarus. We guarantee full security to you in Belarus.’ And credit where credit is due, Yevgeny Prigozhin has never asked me to separately pay attention to security matters. — Alexander Lukashenko (Aug 26, 2023)
Putin's introduction of a mandatory oath for employees of Wagner and other private military contractors was a clear move to bring such groups under tighter state control. The decree, published on the Kremlin website, obliges anyone carrying out work on behalf of the military or supporting what Moscow calls its "special military operation" in Ukraine to swear a formal oath of allegiance to Russia. Described in the decree as a step to forge the spiritual and moral foundations of the defence of Russia, the wording of the oath includes a line in which those who take it promise to strictly follow the orders of commanders and senior leaders.
[...]
Russia's Baza news outlet, which has good sources among law enforcement agencies, has reported that investigators are focusing on a theory that one or two bombs may have been planted on board the plane.
Ah, That then solves it! With that mandatory oath, everything is fine now, I guess... :smirk:Putin's introduction of a mandatory oath for employees of Wagner and other private military contractors was a clear move to bring such groups under tighter state control.
In Feb 2014, the Russo-Ukrainian war started, and Russia grabbed Crimea.Protesters opposed what they saw as widespread government corruption, abuse of power, human rights violations,[ 91 ] and the influence of oligarchs.[ 92 ]
The media you keep linking — Tzeentch
FMI, do you mean GlobalFirepower? ISW? FOCUS online? Another one? — jorndoe
Some rough estimates of troop sizes ... — jorndoe
The Russian forces now outnumber the Ukrainians significantly. That should tell you enough about the current balance of power. — Tzeentch
vastly larger manpower pool — Tzeentch
Anyway, I haven't seen indications that there are significantly more Russian than Ukrainian fighters in Ukraine at the moment. — jorndoe
But the Kremlin has spent a significant amount of shells and rockets (and troops) in 17 or 18 months of warring. Reports suggest much more unity among Ukrainians (and hate towards the invaders). — jorndoe
The Russian forces now outnumber the Ukrainians significantly. That should tell you enough about the current balance of power. — Tzeentch
vastly larger manpower pool — Tzeentch
the Russians have vastly more firepower than the Ukrainians — Tzeentch
How many Russian and Ukrainian troops do you think there are in Ukraine at the moment? — jorndoe
There's that vastly again, though about firepower this time: — jorndoe
The Russian military indeed enjoys very strong numerical superiority.
Russia's numerical superiority, and its endless munitions stock, the result of decades of Soviet production, have had a devastating effect on the course of the war.
The disproportion between the number of Russian and Ukrainian pieces deployed to a particular front line area can go as far as 10 to 1.
That the Russians enjoy a large artillery advantage is accepted fact at this point, and a matter of common sense as well based on the indicators I named earlier. Mearsheimer often cites the 5-10:1 artillery advantage. — Tzeentch
Cybersecurity researchers say they are believed to be in Russia and/or other former Soviet states
the far-flung mostly Russian-speaking criminals
cybersecurity experts have traced its roots to a murky ecosystem of Russian cybercriminals
the experts said the group appeared to belong to a coterie of Russian hacktivist collectives with names such as KillNet and UserSec
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