I don’t think so.Have the Russian army never got rid of any equipment?
Have the Russian army never got rid of any equipment?
A friend of mine who lived in Russia for some years told me that he was told that the Russian armed forces had thousands of vintage tanks covered in oil in bunkers and warehouses. I have no idea about the oil thing. Probably helps them not rust.I know that some pieces of hardware can sure have extreme longevity and that Syrian rebels were seen using the first successful assault rifle from WW2. But seriously, I don't think I would want to want to drag hardware and ordnance out the Smithsonian if I had to fight against a foreign enemy.
So how does this work then, they grab a random civilian for this newsreel? Or actor?
The ussr was hoarding stuff for the mother of all wars .Have the Russian army never got rid of any equipment?
I'm not sure if Ukraine accession into NATO in 2008 was realistic regardless of what western countries did. All the former Eastern Bloc countries that joined NATO after 1990, as far as I can find it, had overwhelming public support for it, while Ukrainian public was consistently against it.All these "important thinkers" fail to consider that Russia invaded Ukraine exactly because Ukraine did not join NATO! That was the main failure of the West, that Germany and France did not accept Ukraine into NATO. If Ukraine had joined NATO in 2008, we would never have a war, as we did not have a war in the Baltic States that also have a lot of Russians in their population.
I know that some pieces of hardware can sure have extreme longevity and that Syrian rebels were seen using the first successful assault rifle from WW2. But seriously, I don't think I would want to want to drag hardware and ordnance out of the Smithsonian if I had to fight against a foreign enemy.
I'm not sure if Ukraine accession into NATO in 2008 was realistic regardless of what western countries did. All the former Eastern Bloc countries that joined NATO after 1990, as far as I can find it, had overwhelming public support for it, while Ukrainian public was consistently against it.
I see the end game here as Ukraine taking everything back with russia still having the official position that the four regions are still theres.
Really unlikely Russia uses nuclear weapons even when they lose crimea.
Of course Ukraine could stop at Crimea if pressured by the west however I think the west want them to take Crimea as-well because Zelensky’s rhetoric on Crimea has changed massively since the start of the war when he wanted Russian troops to withdraw to pre February boundaries.
It’s all or nothing here.
It's gives them richer flavour, we also do the same with pickles.A friend of mine who lived in Russia for some years told me that he was told that the Russian armed forces had thousands of vintage tanks covered in oil in bunkers and warehouses. I have no idea about the oil thing. Probably helps them not rust.
Freedom of speech.Can someone explain to me how those sick pro-Kremlin fecks dare to show their faces when almost all of Europe are hating their guts at the moment?
Because in 2003 Lithuanian public was supporting NATO accession, while in 2008 Ukrainian public was against it. Finding primary sources from that period is a bit of a pain, since most links to press releases are dead, but this RAND testimony quotes a 75% support in Lithuania at the time and Wikipedia has a set of polls gauging the Ukrainian sentiment and it's never positive before 2014.Why was it realistic for Lithuania and not for Ukraine? In my opinion, (in retrospect of course), Ukraine joining NATO in 2008 would have saved us from many deaths, destruction and economic problems today. Bush, Obama, McCain all supported it. Merkel and Sarkozy did not want it.
Pretty remarkable that citizens respect that right in these situations.Can someone explain to me how those sick pro-Kremlin fecks dare to show their faces when almost all of Europe are hating their guts at the moment?
Not that it matters much but some interesting votes nonetheless.
Looks like they’re going big on trench warfare
If they are just going with big straight line trenches then that is suicidal. That's a tactic that was abandoned early in WW1. Just drop some Fuel Air explosive and watch it roll down the line.
If they want to sit in those trenches you would be right. But to me it looks more like they do this to block the way, especially for fast and light vehicles. Ukrainian special forces use those to get behind the Russian lines and wreak havoc there, making them stop and a point where the Russians can detect them and open fire is actually the right thing to do.If they are just going with big straight line trenches then that is suicidal. That's a tactic that was abandoned early in WW1. Just drop some Fuel Air explosive and watch it roll down the line.
In the first one I think there’s a zig zag trench in the top left. That large ditch is 100% to stop vehicles and concentrate them on any crossings they build. Russia seem a woeful army but they aren’t completely insane to build long, wide and straight open trenches.If they want to sit in those trenches you would be right. But to me it looks more like they do this to block the way, especially for fast and light vehicles. Ukrainian special forces use those to get behind the Russian lines and wreak havoc there, making them stop and a point where the Russians can detect them and open fire is actually the right thing to do.
Can someone explain to me how those sick pro-Kremlin fecks dare to show their faces when almost all of Europe are hating their guts at the moment?
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/12/world/europe/russia-ukraine-war.html
Ukraine Offensive Will Push Through Winter, U.S. Defense Chief Says
The “deliberate cruelty” of Russia’s latest bombardment has made the West more determined to help Ukraine, Defense Secretary Lloyd J. Austin III said.