• Buffalox@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    As the war dragged on, minor issues in 2022 became glaring problems by 2025. Ukraine’s professional military core eroded, replaced by mobilized teachers, drivers, farmers, and IT workers.

    What?

    Three years later, these issues expose systemic failures to adapt, not mere growing pains.

    Also What??

    Honest discussion about these issues is essential, without downplaying or ignoring their existence.

    That’s what a liar propagandist would say, isn’t it?

    World War II proved large wars can’t be won by motivated volunteers alone:

    WTF?!?!
    Oh boy this is just one big straw-man argument, I can’t endure any more, read at your own peril.

    • Tar_Alcaran@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      In 2024, Russia took 4200 square kilometers. That’s about 12 square kilometers per day. Ukraine is 603,000 square kilometers. So if they keep going, they win in 2162.

      Russia is also losing some 1000 troops per day (low estimate). So when they’ve finally won in 2162, there will be 50 million dead russias

      Loosely translated: ukrain isn’t losing much territory.

      • bluGill@fedia.io
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        7 hours ago

        Most of those 1000 troops per day are not dead. Most of them just get serious injury - they are not dead, but they might have lost an arm or something.

    • Carmakazi@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      I want Ukraine to have a definite and permanent victory, but lionizing the UAF at every level is the propaganda line, not admitting their shortcomings. Its been over 2 years, they’ve put up a very admirable fight and done a lot of damage to Russia but they’ve suffered a lot of damage as well. It’s a meat grinder for everyone, with minimal to no gains and no end in sight. I am not at all surprised by news of desertions, draft dodging, and generally low morale.

      • endeavor@sopuli.xyz
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        18 hours ago

        If it was russia vs china, id agree.

        But this is worlds second superpower with worlds top 5 or 10 everything depleting its economy and inheritance from back when it had talented occupied areas do everything for them. A country that even people the most pessimistic about russias capabilites absolutely thought the 3day smo would be a week the most. Now remember they are fighting europes poorest nation recovering from 2014, without full support of nations who promised full boots on ground allegiance and fighting with scraps and one hand behind their back for most of the war.

        You can’t make this shit up how well Ukraine is doing despite how little enemies of russia and allies of Ukraine are helping ukraine.

      • Doom@ttrpg.network
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        2 days ago

        Absolutely not true.

        If a fifth grader and a lion got in a fight and after an hour both parties had lost an eye but still fighting

        You’re not going to look at that and go “wow that fifth grader is doing really bad” you’re going to be like what the fuck is wrong with that lion? Shit was supposed to be over 1000 days ago.

        Russia is absolutely losing. A middle school football team is crushing the Lakers in basketball.

      • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        It’s a meat grinder for everyone,

        False equivalence

        no end in sight.

        Russia is definitely collapsing as we “speak”, the war chest is empty, so although we can’t say exactly when, Russia will not be able to continue for much longer.

        • bluGill@fedia.io
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          7 hours ago

          Russia has the materials and man power to continue for at least another year. Their economy might cause a revolution from within, but if that doesn’t happen Russia is in for at least the next two years.

          • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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            4 hours ago

            Yes they do, it all depends on what level of losses and economic pain they are willing to endure.
            I’m estimating Russians have lost at least 10% of their purchasing power in 2024, but this year will be worse. Construction and investments in production will come to an almost complete halt, so lost productivity cannot be renewed, and prices on energy, food and housing will all increase dramatically.
            Most Russians are not very rich, so they will feel it pretty bad.

            • bluGill@fedia.io
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              40 minutes ago

              Unless they force a revolution most Russians don’t matter at all. The elites that matter have a very different situation.

    • Milk_Sheikh@lemm.ee
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      2 days ago

      Blind faith is what led to the 2023 counteroffensive being such a failure in terms of objectives, throwing the best equipped and freshest troops into the maw and getting chewed up in insanely dense minefields and a surprising breadth of Russian treeline positions lying in wait.

      Bahkmut, Kursk, and the dogged bridgehead across the Dnipro by ZPP in 2023-2024 are just a few examples of moves that cost an outsized quantity of SF/men and materiel in general, NATO equipment and elite units, and marines respectively, while delivering mixed to ‘not worth it’ results imo

      Ukraine has definitely had a large quantity of their highly trained and elite troops attrited and eroded - why else do we see so many recruitment openings for the more kinetic units like Azov and SF?

      Retreats like from Avdiivka hurt to see, but that is the game they should be playing of defense in depth while abusing and assaulting Ru weak points as they are found.

      • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Blind faith is what led to the 2023 counteroffensive being such a failure

        That is more than a year ago, and the lesson was absolutely learned.

        Bahkmut, Kursk, and the dogged bridgehead across the Dnipro by ZPP in 2023-2024 are just a few examples of moves that cost an outsized quantity of SF/men and materiel

        Not true, Bakhmut cost Russians way more, and tactical retreat was done to avoid unnecessary losses. Kursk was a strategic crucial victory for many reasons.

        The situations are not comparable.

        • Milk_Sheikh@lemm.ee
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          2 days ago

          Not true, Bakhmut cost Russians way more, and tactical retreat was done to avoid unnecessary losses.

          Cost more numerically, yes. But if your opponent at Bahkmut is Wagner + armed convict meat waves, and it’s costing you regular and decently trained soldiers and mobilized personnel it is not a good trade, even at 5:1. When your opponent has a military aged male population of roughly 80 million, whilst you have at best 20 million MAMs, you need to be more selective in how you spend lives and materiel to attain objectives. Russia has almost entirely looted their Soviet inheritance of armor, and is hobbling together any shitbox tank, BMP, or MTB with drone cages and mine rollers to throw at the front - Ukraine should be (and this year has) obliging them, grinding away at the Russians and ceding territory slowly via defense in depth. Russia cannot maintain forever, even with DPRK support, whilst China largely sits this one out and gets an economic win.

          Kursk was a strategic crucial victory for many reasons

          Strategic how? It was a cultural and political victory, but like many of the prestige offensives, it has cost highly skilled and well equipped troops to capture mobliks and swelled the length of the frontline that ultimately needs defending. The much theorized hope that Kursk would force Russia to slow/stop their advances in the Donbas has not played out.

          • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            Strategic how?

            It was crucial to show the Russian people that they are not invulnerable, and expose the Russian war propaganda. It was a strategically clever move, which I myself thought looked like an opportunity before they did it, as Russia apparently were leaving areas seemingly relatively poorly defended, probably because they thought a Ukrainian attack into Russia was unthinkable under the conditions of western support.
            Another way it’s a good move IMO, is that for a period of time, a significant part of the war has been on Russian ground, which eases the pressure on Ukrainian land.

            Admittedly I thought the effect in Russia would have been bigger, but apparently Russian propaganda is quite effective despite being downright moronic at times.

            It’s very arrogant IMO to claim Ukrainian leadership is incompetent and flawed, considering they have managed to hold back a many times bigger force that had prepared for this war for years. And despite that they still hold after almost 3 years now, and it looks like Russia is the more likely to lose.

            it has cost highly skilled and well equipped troops

            Obviously, but how do you propose to defend against Russia without losses?
            Ukraine has done extremely well, way better than anyone could reasonably have expected.
            How do you imagine they could have done better? Surrender?

            • Milk_Sheikh@lemm.ee
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              2 days ago

              It was crucial to show the Russian people that they are not invulnerable, and expose the Russian war propaganda… Admittedly I thought the effect in Russia would have been bigger, but apparently Russian propaganda is quite effective

              That is because you fundamentally misunderstand the relationship average Russians have with their state. Russians know their leadership is corrupt, that Moscow takes the loot and leaves dirt for the provinces, that corruption is rife, and that they are largely on their own. As a nation with conscription, many get their taste of the state either via (the widespread practice) of bribing a doctor/officer to deem you unfit for service, or via the brutal hazing system inside the military - at age 18.

              This lesson of entrenched corruption is reinforced again in later life, over and over, until the idea of generals or politicians getting caught with huge dachas or suitcases of money is normalized - expected even. Why don’t they speak up or rebel? Because political engagement has proven to routinely be either controlled opposition kept impotent by the state, elections are overtly rigged - or like Navalny and many before him, personal involvement in a direct challenge is dangerous to your survival. Or they go Grozny, Bucha, Ossetia, etc on you if your locale tries to breakaway from Russian dominationz

              Russia apparently were leaving areas seemingly relatively poorly defended, probably because they thought a Ukrainian attack into Russia was unthinkable under the conditions of western support.

              What were Freedom of Russia raids then? What is the “banditry” Putin claimed as a rationale for the renewed offensive in the north in 2023-2024? The border was known as porous and lightly defended, but a Ukrainian counter-invasion was unseen because… it didn’t make sense. Even as a bargaining chip in the inevitable negotiated end, Russia still holds the big cards and they’re sympathetic as the whole of their strategic hand. The Donbas enables the land bridge to Crimea, Crimea gives the Black Sea Fleet an uncontested route in/out of the Sea of Azov, all of which keeps the mineral loot in the Donbas. The Russians have no wiggle room to negotiate territory, and keep their goals intact. And besides, we all saw how Russia honored the Minsk agreement with Ukraine, why negotiate in good faith with a bad actor?

              Another way it’s a good move IMO, is that for a period of time, a significant part of the war has been on Russian ground, which eases the pressure on Ukrainian land.

              Yeah, how’s that working out chief? The Donbas is still slowly eroding, and those Strykers, Leopards, and Bradleys aren’t coming back. Nor are the well trained soldiers that were sent in the initial Kursk push.

              It’s very arrogant IMO to claim Ukrainian leadership is incompetent and flawed

              I didn’t, though I recognize the 3rd party political optics of “selling” the war/victory to western backers has curbed their choices, the role of politics on the battlefield has been hobbling. The prolonged defense of Bahkmut is a perfect example - though it may have directly lead to the Wagner coup and Putin further isolating and neutering his generals, that is an unforeseen boon, not a planned outcome. The propaganda/dick measuring of that city was needless for at least the last two months, given that Chasiv Yar is the actual linchpin on terrain and logistical reasons.

              considering they have managed to hold back a many times bigger force that had prepared for this war for years. And despite that they still hold after almost 3 years now, and it looks like Russia is the more likely to lose.

              Which will be lauded in history, probably for centuries. As they should be, to grow from of the ashes of Yanukovic’s puppet leadership and stand tall was, and is incredible. Zelenskyy gets his deserved flowers but Hostomel doesn’t get enough credit imo, that was where it was really blunted in the first hours.

              Obviously, but how do you propose to defend against Russia without losses? Ukraine has done extremely well, way better than anyone could reasonably have expected. How do you imagine they could have done better? Surrender?

              Eyyy there it is. Any criticism is defeatism/bad faith.

              I’m an internet commenter, not someone read in on US and Ukrainian state secrets. I don’t know if the Kharkiv offensive could have gone far further based on Russian strength or Ukrainian material on hand from allies, but I can see that the rear defenses were neglected after that ground was won because of over optimism. Same in Avdiivka last year, or the other example I gave of political and/or propaganda decisions instead of realism.

              Ultimately it’s our fault for not supplying everything, everywhere, all at once, but again - in the early days the US intelligence community felt that the actual use of nukes was a coin flip. Push Putin too hard, too fast and he’ll actually fall back on the trump card.

              • Cephalotrocity@biglemmowski.win
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                2 days ago

                but a Ukrainian counter-invasion was unseen because… it didn’t make sense.

                The counter-invasion makes sense for several reasons: It demonstrably shows how weak russia is, acts as a bargaining chip in potential negotiations, proves russia won’t go nuclear for something even as ‘egregious’ as boots on the ground in the motherland, and it did relieve pressure on other areas of Ukraine’s defence. It would have collapsed other russian fronts had it not been for NK reinforcements being brought in. An argument for NATO boots in Ukraine if ever I’ve heard one.

                IMO Kursk is critical to Trump’s reversal on forcing peace immediately. He doesn’t want to appear to support weakness and so won’t be caught standing next to a bully that just had pants pulled down around their ankles.

                As for Ukraine not reclaiming territory? That isn’t their strategy. They are fighting defensively to their advantage. This way it maximizes russian losses while minimizing their own. Don’t expect any territory to be liberated unless there is a huge weakness in russian lines that begs to be taken advantage of like with Kharkiv.

                • Milk_Sheikh@lemm.ee
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                  1 day ago

                  The counter-invasion makes sense for several reasons: It demonstrably shows how weak russia is, acts as a bargaining chip in potential negotiations, proves russia won’t go nuclear for something even as ‘egregious’ as boots on the ground in the motherland, and it did relieve pressure on other areas of Ukraine’s defence.

                  But - was it worth it? To use precious armor and elite units and put them there, to contest a decent amount of territory and replenish the exchange fund with mobliks? Swelling the line of contact and putting yourself on the logistical back foot - no longer able to abuse interior lines while defending a salient encirclement?

                  It would have collapsed other russian fronts had it not been for NK reinforcements being brought in.

                  I’m going to call citation needed on this, I never heard anything like that analysis from the sober voices like RUSI. Relieve pressure in the Donbas and force Russian attention sure, but never cause a Kharkiv style collapse.

                  IMO Kursk is critical to Trump’s reversal on forcing peace immediately. He doesn’t want to appear to support weakness and so won’t be caught standing next to a bully that just had pants pulled down around their ankles.

                  I buy the vibes argument somewhat - Trump has been all over the map on foreign policy without a discernible through-line, but he also took a reputation beating due to his former stance of capitulation. And he’s not exactly standing tall with unlimited support like Taiwan or Israel gets:

                  Trump himself had said on the campaign trail that he would get the fighting stopped within 24 hours of taking office, but when asked more recently how soon he could end the conflict said: “I hope to have six months. No, I would think, I hope long before six months.”

                  Defining a timeline just means Russia has to stretch themselves to be ‘winning’ on the face of things and look to have a strong negotiating position.

              • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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                1 day ago

                Well I don’t really disagree with anything you write here, but you must be aware that much of what you claim now, is contradictory to the article I criticized in many ways.

                It’s very arrogant IMO to claim Ukrainian leadership is incompetent and flawed

                I didn’t, though

                But this was the very first comment from the article I quoted:

                Ukraine’s professional military core eroded, replaced by mobilized teachers, drivers, farmers, and IT workers.

                That’s very demeaning of the Ukrtainian army and leadership.
                But now you apparently agree the criticism in the article is exaggerated?

                So what are we actually disagreeing on?
                The article is trash, and you show nothing to contradict that, seems like you just had a knee jerk reaction.

                • Milk_Sheikh@lemm.ee
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                  1 day ago

                  Ukraine’s professional military core eroded, replaced by mobilized teachers, drivers, farmers, and IT workers.

                  That’s very demeaning of the Ukrtainian army and leadership. But now you apparently agree the criticism in the article is exaggerated?

                  I mean, it’s not. Stop just looking at the ‘sexy’ units like 3rd Assault or the Davinci Wolves and pay attention to the regular guys in the trenches or manning the somewhat calm areas of the line - like the TDF. Middle aged men who were welders, bus drivers, famers, store clerks, etc wearing 2014 era digicam uniforms often still holding AK-74s, in poorly built fighting positions, with trash everywhere in the open - why? Poor supply and poor leadership. If you’re not fighting you should be sleeping or digging/improving your FP. Well trained and disciplined troops with NCOs on the line would not permit that.

                  So what are we actually disagreeing on? The article is trash, and you show nothing to contradict that, seems like you just had a knee jerk reaction.

                  The article (though heavily needing citation throughout) mostly fits with the informal conversation you can hear from the smaller Telegram channels run by actual soldiers, instead of PR arms of the state/brigades; we are tired of ineffective command treating our lives callously to cover their own failures/ineptitude. And that there is no exit from frontline except via death, crippling injury, or reassignment for the lucky.

                  This line was the kicker for me from the article, and is exactly the kind of blind hope that I initially started this conversation criticizing:

                  This fed a dangerous optimism about the upcoming counteroffensive – some even predicted it would end the war and push Russian forces out of Crimea.

                  Reality proved very different. When these ambitious goals proved impossible, the narrative had to change. Leaders started talking about capturing Tokmak instead – a much more modest objective.

                  This moment marked a turning point in Western support.

                  Emphasis mine. The meming of invincible Ukraine against fleeing Russians was foolish, overbuilt expectations, and when the 2023 counteroffensive fell on the Surovikin line, Western leaders had a much harder time selling support of the war domestically as an immediately winnable fight, instead of the protracted attritional conflict of industrial, financial, and manpower capacity that it is.

          • Doom@ttrpg.network
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            2 days ago

            Invading a country is way way harder. You need absolutely definitive victories Russia isn’t getting that

            Look at Vietnam, Korea, Afghanistan/Iraq. It’s far easier to defend your home than go attack someone else’s. Russia’s moral is shit and while they have more bodies, I’d rather have ten motivated fighters than a hundred miserable fuckers.

          • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            Seems you somehow skipped the 2nd part:

            and tactical retreat was done to avoid unnecessary losses.

            • Milk_Sheikh@lemm.ee
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              2 days ago

              I generally don’t pick apart someone when they’re mostly correct lol

              Yes, the Ukrainians didn’t say “not one step backwards, Stalingrad Bahkmut must hold” but let’s be real. They should have retreated to Chasiv Yar and other better defensive positions a lot sooner.

              • Buffalox@lemmy.world
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                1 day ago

                Maybe you are right, there was a lot of debate about it already at the time. They knew they would lose it, so I considered it an exploit of a good defensive position for as long as possible.
                Maybe they stayed a bit too long, but to be fair, we don’t see all the things they have to take into consideration. Maybe you are right that they could have done better. But they definitely also could have done a lot worse.

                • endeavor@sopuli.xyz
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                  17 hours ago

                  Bahkmut could have been optimized further but bahkmut was great. Not only it broke russians stationed there it also ended with the pie man almost couping moscow. Putin also showed russia there are 3 year old girls braver than him by fleeing and letting a country seen as the prison bitch solve russian inner affairs.

                  After that wagner was done for, russian presence in Syria collapsed and they are getting constantly wiped out everywhere they are. Putin has been weakened considerably. Sadly memory holing has begun, people are forgetting how humiliating it was for russia.