tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8304928500646903522.post3980582406735128025..comments2024-03-28T18:32:05.933-04:00Comments on bensozia: Ukraine's Million Man ArmyJohnhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01037215533094998996noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8304928500646903522.post-24107700246171352122022-05-16T09:17:50.940-04:002022-05-16T09:17:50.940-04:00Good read: https://the-culture-shocks.blogspot.com...Good read: https://the-culture-shocks.blogspot.com/2022/03/evaluation-of-russia-by-finish.html<br /><br />Kennan wrote: "Russia is deaf to the logic of reason but very sensitive to the logic of power." Lenin once said: "Try it with a bayonet, if it's soft, push. If it's hard, leave." In other words, if we treat Russia in the Sea of Azov and in Crimea and in eastern Ukraine as before, by only resenting without doing anything else, there will always be more stitches coming from Russia.<br />Susihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/08491909280925749677noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8304928500646903522.post-28181715049017319062022-05-16T00:19:19.966-04:002022-05-16T00:19:19.966-04:002/2
You worry about the Russians digging in and t...2/2<br /><br />You worry about the Russians digging in and the casualty ratio reversing - but I don't know how big a risk that actually is. The Russians are not just losing so many men because they're attacking against defenders - there are other major factors at play that are also dramatically multiplying Ukrainian lethality, which have nothing to do with offense and defense.<br /><br />The entire Russian war-making effort is deeply flawed; their whole military is wildly dysfunctional; their objectives muddy at best and wholly infeasible at worst; their troops poorly trained and equipped; their leaders are dying like flies with the survivors bickering bitterly among themselves; morale everywhere is in the toilet. The levels of arrogance and incompetence on display have been staggering, and have resulted in far more deaths than can be attributed merely to the difficulties of offense versus defense.<br /><br />It's that very level of incompetence that leads me to believe the Russians will struggle massively to mount anything like a competent defense.<br /><br />This is the military that didn't know enough not to occupy Chernobyl - that ordered its troops to dig trenches and crude bunkers in the contaminated soil, dooming every soldier who manned a shovel or who slept in the dugouts to a grisly death in the next few months. This is the military has failed to establish air superiority despite massive numerical advantage in aircraft. This is the military that sent raw conscripts over the border without telling there where they were going or what they were doing, and without proper communications gear, resulting in numerous cases of Russian soldiers surrendering simply because they were lost and couldn't get in contact with their superiors after roaming the Ukrainian countryside.<br /><br />This is the military that has thrown away countless tanks through failing to provide even the most basic of infantry support for them, a foundational doctrine of modern warfare. This is the military that has lost countless other vehicles through failing to perform basic maintenance on their tires. This is the military that is abandoning even more vehicles of all types without even facing combat, simply because they can't operate basic supply lines to keep them fueled. This is the military that failed to predict and account for the Rasputitsa, despite the phenomenon also occurring in Russia itself and it bearing a Russian name!<br /><br />Idiocy is lethal in warfare, and the Russians have demonstrated nothing but. Meanwhile, the Ukrainians have proven they are both incredibly thoughtful and clever. Unless those factors change, I don't see much hope for a Russian defense of any kind, so long as Ukraine retains enough weapons and equipment to keep their war machine moving.<br /><br />My hope is that we've already seen play out a miniature (and far less competent) version of what occurred in Europe in World War II - a surprise invasion, Blitzkrieg occupation, then the surge of aggression grinding to a halt, losses becoming unsustainable, until partial retreat gives way in an avalanche to total retreat that simply never stops. The Eastern Front hit a turning point on January 31, 1943, and for the next twenty months the Germans were in continuous retreat until the very end of the war. There was no reversal of fortune once they were on the defense, rather than the offense - they never got their feet back under them, and stayed off balance and impotent until they had no option but to give up the fight.G. Verlorennoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8304928500646903522.post-79998242815548410742022-05-16T00:17:57.822-04:002022-05-16T00:17:57.822-04:001/2
In literally every single bit of film and med...1/2<br /><br />In literally every single bit of film and media I've come across regarding the war, every single Ukrainian commenting on how they believe the war will go has said with utter confidence and zero hesitation that they will absolutely win.<br /><br />For good or for ill, Ukraine has set into motion their own form of propaganda - and it's highly effective propaganda at that. It's not quite state mandated propaganda, although there is some of that going on as well. It's a collective societal propaganda. They are telling both the world and themselves that they will not rest until the crimes against them have been punished - and that's a pretty damn strong and compelling narrative, even when you're aware that it's propagandic in nature and that reality might end up deviating substantially.<br /><br />Not all propaganda is bad. This narrative has emboldened the Ukrainians themselves to possess the very "doggedness" that seems to be making a critical difference in the war effort for them. But it has also emboldened the rest of the world to finally take a long overdue stand against Russia's monstrous behavior, and to render massive amounts of material aid which are also making their own critical difference. And it's all backed up by a cause which is about as uncomplicated and just as they ever manage to come in war. It's quite an incredible thing.<br /><br />Is there a risk of the war turning evil? Of course - what war doesn't have that risk? But it's incredible enough, in my opinion, that the war didn't <i>start</i> evil, as so many do; and even moreso that we've seen no actual evidence to suggest that it <i>will</i> trend that way. The Ukrainians know the value of their moral high ground, and they seem deeply reluctant to abandon it.G. Verlorennoreply@blogger.com