• mozz
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    5910 months ago

    Dude you’ve been doing this for 2 years and the front line is still a 30 minute drive from the border.

    Who can say what might happen if Trump wins, but while a stalemate followed by a peace agreement where Ukraine still loses Crimea and etc seems possible, a complete military victory over all of Ukraine seems like pure fantasy. Y’all can prepare the Russian people for whatever you want, but if you can’t take the land, it’s not gonna help.

    • Brave Little Hitachi Wand
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      1410 months ago

      Remember, this was supposed to be the easy part of his plan. If he conquers and stays, he will face a determined insurgency. If he installs a puppet and leaves, they will be quickly deposed. If he thinks to keep only part, he will have to keep fighting for it.

    • @Mihies@programming.dev
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      710 months ago

      Yeah, who knows. When Biden stopped sending support for six months, Ukraine had it rough, they were backtracking (they still are one some fronts), lost Avdivka and other fronts. Germany announced they will halve the support, fascism in EU is also rising, which means less support. It’s a battle of attrition and if enough support is withdrawn, it doesn’t bode well for Ukraine. On the other hand, if there is substantial support for years to come, Russia might have big problems. In any case, a bigger breakthrough on some front might make a huge difference and tip the special operation in one’s favor.

        • @Mihies@programming.dev
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          310 months ago

          Yeah, minor stuff. I’m not saying Biden is at fault, it was clearly GOP. It merely happened during his time.

      • @Ooops@feddit.org
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        1010 months ago

        Germany announced they will halve the support

        No. While that is a popular narrative in media living of enragement bait and doom scrolling, Germany has announced nothing the like. They have a premilinary budget plan with a fixed 4 billion reserved for Ukraine, the exact same amount that was in the preliminary budget last year. That is with a higher budget for their military from which a lot of Ukraine support came directly and with Ukraine now getting 50 billion covered by the interests of Russian money frozen.

  • @Aurenkin@sh.itjust.works
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    5010 months ago

    Damn and I thought my estimates were bad. Going from 3 days to 10 years is a pretty big difference and that’s assuming they can even achieve their objectives in 10 years which seems doubtful.

    • massive_bereavement
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      2510 months ago

      “When will you be done with the report?” “I guess by next Friday.”

      Ten years later…

    • @Rusty@lemmy.ca
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      310 months ago

      Putin needs to work on his time management skills. I’ve heard there’s a good place in the Hague that can help him with that, it’s called ICJ.

  • @Lewo@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    some outrageous crazy statement about the war

    it’s from Medvedev, as usual

    Can the press just stop paying attention to him? He doesn’t hold any power, he gets to make no decisions, he was chosen to be Putin’s seat-warmer in 2008 because he was considered to be a safe choice, with no real ambitions and was extremely easy to reel in. His position on the “security council” means nothing, he was put there specifically so he’d be in a hostile environment, being a random guy between the military, the FSB and the intelligence service. Not that the council itself is much more than a Putin’s puppet. He became the biggest hawk as soon as the war started just in case anyone recalls some of his more “liberal” initiatives. In reality, there’s only 3 things he’s in charge of: a bottle, a shot glass and his telegram account.

    • @broken_chatbot@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Couldn’t agree more. Medvedev is just a miserable ex-“liberal” (and is probably now-an-alcoholic) trying to find his place in the Putin’s wartime system after his reputation was killed by Putin’s “castling” in 2012 and the film “He Is Not Dimon to You” in 2017. Nobody takes him seriously anymore in Russia.

  • @Burstar@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    4010 months ago

    Laughable really. Russia has at most 2 years at the going rate of net depletion before completely running out of armour stores. Thinking you’d last another 8 without tanks, APCs, or artillery is crazy.

    IMO this is them trying to manipulate a better peace deal and boy are they going to be disappointed.

    • @runiq@feddit.org
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      310 months ago

      I mean, this is Medvedev talking. Anything coming out of his mouth, the only thing you can reasonably do is to mop it up.

  • Doom
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    2310 months ago

    What was it? Special Weekend Operation?

    • Che Banana
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      310 months ago

      3 days to take Kiev, if I remember correctly…sine it’s been a bit longer than 3 days .

  • MentalEdge
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    1810 months ago

    “let’s go Morty, just a quick ten-year in-and-out military operation”

  • @uebquauntbez@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    “Mankind must put an end to war, or war will put an end to mankind” –John F. Kennedy

    “In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends.” – Martin Luther King

    • ALERT
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      10 months ago

      “Arguments and Facts”. A newspaper name.

    • @realitista@lemm.ee
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      1010 months ago

      Depends a lot on what NATO does. If Trump pulls out like he says then it could easily happen.

      • @IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz
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        310 months ago

        I wouldn’t say easily. If the russians were crazy enough to try that they’d find out that EU itself has pretty decent armed forces combined and should they attack on any EU country, let’s say Estonia, they’d find out pretty fast on what it means when there’s no political bullshit limiting on attacks to the russian soil. One of Putins villas is 30 minutes (give or take) away for handful of countries to pay a visit with a very modern fighter jet. To Moscow that’s a bit less.

        They just don’t have the hardware to protect their troops, command sites, service locations and everything else needed to even attempt anything.

        • @realitista@lemm.ee
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          410 months ago

          NATO without the US is barely bigger than Russia’s military. And if some portion of the countries held back forces for their own defense, it’s very possible that Russia could pick countries off one at a time as it has a vastly bigger military than any single NATO country outside of the US, especially the ones it would likely want to start with in the Baltics.

          So it all comes down to how unified NATO is and how strong the response is from all together. It’s not a foregone conclusion with many of the right wing pro-putin governments coming into power around Europe and potentially soon in the US.

          • @IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz
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            510 months ago

            Bullshit. My country has fewer people in total than many of the metropols in western europe and still we have the most powerful artillery in the western europe. Finland traditional artillery, on own our land, is almost close enough to hit Moscow and we have enough barrels and trained personnel to use them to cover pretty much for the whole 1300km of our border. Estonia isn’t far behind of us.

            That combined with the very capable air force form Finland, Sweden and Estonia covers the northmost corner of the map, marines included. Below that is Poland who aren’t fucking around either and next to them is Ukraine. We’ve already had this fight in the 1940s, other countries a bit later, and there’s absolutely no question if there’s enough manpower to keep the border where it is right now.

            There’s no way Russia could gain any land north of Poland borders even without any EU-wide co-operation and should Germany, France and UK join the fight the chances are pretty much nonexistent. They might take a village or two close to the border after turning it into rubble, but full scale war in EU wouldn’t last too long.

            Current situation in Ukraine is a complex matter on many fronts, politics very much included, but it’s vastly different from a direct attack on any of EU members. The hardware alone is vastly superior on whatever Soviet remains we’ve seen on Ukraine for the last couple of years.

            Just based on the numbers on the play it’s just stupid to spread the propaganda. Maybe you get paid for it, maybe you’re just playing as a devil’s advocate, but the reality just doesn’t align with russia attacking on the parts of global west europe.

            • @realitista@lemm.ee
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              110 months ago

              I’m not going to argue with you, Finland is pretty badass, and hence probably not one of Putin’s first targets. But I can promise you that Putin has more artillery units than you. I know this because they have more than all of NATO excluding the USA. They have more aircraft, more tanks, more everything than you. Now the last time you guys went head to head, you inflicted 10:1 losses on them… Which means you have a good chance if it happens again… But like I said, I think Russia learned it’s lesson and will stick to the Baltics, Georgia, Moldova, until it gets strong enough to do Poland.

              • RubberDuck
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                110 months ago

                Whatever Russia does won’t happen in a vacuum. Of they would attack the Baltics everyone knows what’s up and it immediately becomes existential for all countries in Europe. Especially former warshaw pact countries.

              • @IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz
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                110 months ago

                Soviet Union had a pretty significant army on their disposal and they were a force to really pay attention to. Russia in it’s current state is a poor imitation of that. Current Russian military had 14 000 tanks (rough estimates) and 2/3 of them is currently rusting away on some field in Ukraine, most of that was ww2 era stuff, which is a sitting duck on a literal pair of fighters on a ATV with a javelin or similar as we’ve seen.

                On artillery russia has been shipping their own ammunition and barrels from the 40’s back to the front lines from North Korea. Depending on which source you’ll like to cite they’ve lost either almost all of what they got or everything they’ve had few times over. The picture is pretty similar across the board.

                Air force hasn’t really done anything on the front beyond bombing civil intrastructure and getting destroyed by a cardboard drones from the Ukraine. Of course any kind of mig or shukoi is a sever threat to anything operating on their reach, but their performance hasn’t really shined on the current front where the opponent has been either lacking resources or have had hands tied to polictics across the continent.

                Ukraine stopped the original attack with a handful of troops and they’ve been more and more successfull as the training with experience is getting more and more effective. If Russia can be stopped with pretty much with their own equipment from the soviet era what do you think will happen if they try to attack someone who’s been preparing on that since 1945?

                Current state in Europe is a very bad excuse on what we should have, but even that, with 60 years of preparation, is well enough to counter anything what former ghost of the Soviet Union has to throw against EU. China, India and the rest of global south are the real threat and if things escalate to global war then it’s a whole different scenario, but Russia taking over europe is not a part of that.

                • @realitista@lemm.ee
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                  10 months ago

                  All of this is true. But Russia is still outproducing the rest of Europe by a large margin. They are failing in Ukraine only because of extensive support from NATO (more than 70% of which is provided by the USA), starting long before the war began. Ukraine would not have been able to repel the invasion without it.

                  I don’t deny that a united NATO can stop Russia. But Russia can beat a divided one country by country if it’s allowed to happen. And there are many in Europe and the USA working towards that.

        • JayTreeman
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          110 months ago

          Russia’s great strength is also a big weakness. It’s size gives population, and resources, but also makes it very hard to defend.

          • @realitista@lemm.ee
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            10 months ago

            True, but given how timid NATO has been about attacking Russia so far, I doubt they’d have to defend their own territory much.

            • JayTreeman
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              310 months ago

              Nukes… It’s a big deterrent… they’re such a big deal that either every country should have them. Or no country should be allowed to have them… Everyone should be timid about attacking anyone that has nukes

    • @Squizzy@lemmy.world
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      910 months ago

      They are currently fucking radio signals in Kaliningrad affecting NATO country communications. They have also been found responsible for recent factory fires and localised attacks, not to mention the assassinations on NATO and EU soil.

      Having a 10 year plan does not preclude additional actions.