Russia Invades Ukraine XX

I saw this today and found it interesting.
I have worked with Estonians and I really like the ones I have met.
Smart, conscientious, focused.
It interests me that they are not Slavs, though surrounded by them. (There are many immigrant Russians living there, whom I read wish to be identified as Estonian, not Russian.) They are like double first cousins to the Finns...
 
Kashin is not optimistic and is urging those calling for Russia to "fight really hard" and keep tossing men into the meatgrinder are not being realistic.
Where do you see the Ukraine - Russia War ending?

I’m conflicted.

On one hand, I could see an end where Russia keeps conquered territory in the east. Those regions never wanted to be in Ukraine in the first place. So let them go into the tender arms of Putin and a disastrous demographic situation.

On the other, that gives the Russians respite, a chance to regroup, re-arm and come back stronger and harder in a few years.

Then there’s their demographic situation. They already don’t have anywhere near enough young people to be sustainable and are compounding that problem by killing off a bunch of potential fathers. How many? Who knows? The numbers they admit to are damning, and they lie about all their numbers.

So I wonder whether Russia would be able to mount another military campaign in a few years.

Like I said, I’m conflicted.

Do you have any thoughts.
 
Those calling for more men into the meatgrinder need to meet the fate of the Romanovs.
And they may yet. Putin knows well the fates of Russian dictators who fail at war. After this many years and lives, he's managed to take, I think I read 18%, of Ukraine. Hard to define that as "success"...
 
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Where do you see the Ukraine - Russia War ending?

I’m conflicted.

On one hand, I could see an end where Russia keeps conquered territory in the east. Those regions never wanted to be in Ukraine in the first place. So let them go into the tender arms of Putin and a disastrous demographic situation.

On the other, that gives the Russians respite, a chance to regroup, re-arm and come back stronger and harder in a few years.

Then there’s their demographic situation. They already don’t have anywhere near enough young people to be sustainable and are compounding that problem by killing off a bunch of potential fathers. How many? Who knows? The numbers they admit to are damning, and they lie about all their numbers.

So I wonder whether Russia would be able to mount another military campaign in a few years.

Like I said, I’m conflicted.

Do you have any thoughts.
As for the eastern regions, you need to be very specific. Portions of Donetsk and Lugansk Oblasts had a significant population that wanted to pursue policies more closely aligned with the Kremlin than with the EU. Since 2022, Russia has occupied much of the rest of Donetsk and all of Lugansk, and much of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia (but not all of them).

Also, Russian-speaking does not equal "pro-Kremlin."

There is a process of ethnic cleansing going on. When the Russians occupied Donetsk and Lugansk in 2014, most pro-Kyiv Ukrainians (both Russian speakers and Ukrainian speakers) bugged out. (Yes, some were simply murdered by the Russians, but most left to escape) What was left was the very old and the pro-Kremlin.
For Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, there were even fewer pro-Kremlin people in 2013, but more of the pro-Kyiv left before the Russians got there in 2022. Kherson and Zaporizhzhia became overwhelmingly pro-Kremlin (just like the pro-Union voters in West Virginia in 1863). I am not at all sure those regions, in a fair vote, would want to join Russia. In fact, I seriously doubt Kherson and Zaporizhzhia would.

Russia has a severe demographic problem and the war has made it worse as young Russians left to dodge the draft.

If the war ends without Russia retaining the conquered territory, I suspect Putin would fall out of a window and Russian will get a new Chekist head of state. If he retains the currently occupied land, he can claim a victory of some kind and probably weather the storm (until the Grim Reaper takes him).

Once the war ends, it will take a decade or more for the Russian armed forces to recover, and once rebuilt, the Russian military will be smaller, leaner, but of higher quality (because all the old junk has been used/destroyed). This means Russia will rely on hybrid warfare (non-overt, non-military) means to pursue objectives in the West: criminal activity, propaganda, intelligence activities/active measures. But Russia will still pursue foreign policy objectives, nevertheless.
 
As for the eastern regions, you need to be very specific. Portions of Donetsk and Lugansk Oblasts had a significant population that wanted to pursue policies more closely alined with the Kremlin than with the EU. Since 2022, Russia has occupied much of the rest of Donetsk and all of Lugansk, and much of Kherson and Zaporizhzhia (but not all of them).

Also, Russian-speaking does not equal "pro-Kremlin."

There is a process of ethnic cleansing going on. When the Russians occupied Donetsk and Lugansk, most pro-Kyiv Ukrainians (both Russian speakers and Ukrainian speakers) bugged out. (Yes, some were simply murdered by the Russians, but most left to escape) What was left was the very old and the pro-Kremlin.
For Kherson and Zaporizhzhia, there were even fewer pro-Kremlin people in 2013, but more of the pro-Kyiv left before the Russians got there in 2022. Kherson and Zaporizhzhia became overwhelmingly pro-Kremlin (just like the pro-Union voters in West Virginia in 1863). I am not at all sure those regions, in a fair vote, would want to join Russia. In fact, I seriously doubt Kherson and Zaporizhzhia would.

Russia has a severe demographic problem and the war has made it worse as young Russians left to dodge the draft.

If the war ends without Russia retaining the conquered territory, I suspect Putin would fall out of a window and Russian will get a new Chekist head of state. If he retains the currently occupied land, he can claim a victory of some kind and probably weather the storn (until the Grim Reaper takes him).

Once the war ends, it will take a decade or more for the Russian armed forces to recover, and once rebuilt, the Russian military will be smaller, leaner, but of higher quality (because all the old junk has been used/destroyed). This means Russia will rely on hybrid warfare (non-overt, non-military) means to pursue objectives in the West: criminal activity, propaganda, intelligence activities.
Thanks for the perspective.

Do you think they will have maintained or rehabbed their nuclear capabilities?

Why or why not?
 
Thanks for the perspective.

Do you think they will have maintained or rehabbed their nuclear capabilities?

Why or why not?
Well, they have a habit of not being prepared or maintaining their mothballed stuff. Nuclear is some of the highest maintenance stuff around, so it's good bet theirs is in disrepair. However, I'm sure there's enough left to worry about...
 
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Something is jamming GPS signals over Europe.
An interesting piece of digital sleuthing. Worth a watch if you have the time (34 minutes).
Spoiler alert: it appears to be the Russians.
The questions remains:
If this was a test of a real GPS jamming system (but offset slightly from the main GPS freq, which this one was), why do it over and over during peacetime? If you are Russia, you will have shown your hand. No, you test it once to see if it works, then shut the jammer down for later use.

Next, this program, if this really is jamming, shows Russian prep now for possible use in a real conflict with the West. What other "sleeper" capabilities is the Kremlin developing (or has already developed)?
 
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Ukrainian attacks prompt Russian-held Crimea to halt civilian gasoline sales​

Officials in Russia-occupied Crimea suspended civilian gasoline sales Sunday as Ukraine ramped up attacks on fuel supplies on the Black Sea peninsula.

Gov. Sergey Aksyonov, the Kremlin-appointed head o Crimea, said that overnight Ukrainian strikes killed four people and wounded 28 others. He did not specify the target of the attack.
“Fuel will be sold only to government agencies that ensure the functioning and security of the Republic of Crimea,” Aksyonov said. “I ask everyone to remain calm and to only trust official sources of information.”

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in a statement Sunday that a Crimean oil depot, as well as an oil transport facility in Russia’s southern Krasnodar region were among the targets. He described the attacks as part of Ukraine’s “long-range sanctions” against Russia’s energy infrastructure.
 

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