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Ukraine and the Russian invasion, 2022-24

i appreciate you answering in good faith but
I think it makes it more real to the Russian public which realistically is one of the main ways the war will come to an end.
I'm all for looking at this realistically but the Russian public are realistically last in the list of stopping this war. Everyone who dared put their head modestly above the parapet are in jail for their bravery. Im happy to call Russia a fascist regime. The Russian public are fucked. This incursion changes next to nothing for the Russian public.
I guess we just differ in our interpretations of how to best bring a return to peace about.
yes...we do.
 
i appreciate you answering in good faith but

I'm all for looking at this realistically but the Russian public are realistically last in the list of stopping this war. Everyone who dared put their head modestly above the parapet are in jail for their bravery. Im happy to call Russia a fascist regime. The Russian public are fucked. This incursion changes next to nothing for the Russian public.

yes...we do.

Same probably could have been said in 1915 in Russia and look how that turned out.
 
I don’t know what that is, and googling it returns a website that is “Fusing Spirituality With Activism: A publication designed to sharpen the minds of higher thinkers.” I doubt that’s what you had in mind.

Dave Spart. Occasional Private Eye column.
 
soon come :D
reminiscent of this
language-web.jpg


WHY DO BRITISH PEOPLE LIE SO MUCH!!??


back to back regimes even
This is flattering. I mean it luv
 
The incursion looks quite like a political project rather than a military one. Something to wave at the backers.

War is a political project. The Russian invasion three years ago was an act of political policy; clearly not one that succeeded in its initial objectives. I've no idea what current Ukranian objectives are, or to what extent they will succeed. I don't imagine that you or the fans of the Ukrainian regime really do either.

All I see is more people who live in the wrong place at the wrong time being murdered or turned into refugees.
 

Russian military correspondent Aleksandr Kharchenko observed Ukrainian forces digging trenches in Kursk on Sunday. He described it as “the worst thing that can happen,” according to a translation of his missive by Estonian analyst War Translated.

Ukrainian sources have spotted industrial excavators at work on both sides of the front line.

“Once the enemy picks up shovels, in two days it will be just as difficult to take the forest stands as it was near Avdiivka” in eastern Ukraine, Kharchenko added. It took the Russian military six months to roll back Ukrainian defenses in Avdiivka—and cost it tens of thousands of casualties.

Arguably, the Russians won the battle for Avdiivka in mid-February only because the Ukrainians ran out of ammunition following months of delays in U.S. aid to Ukraine orchestrated by Russia-friendly lawmakers in the U.S. Congress.

Now that U.S. aid is flowing again, Russian forces around the Kursk salient can’t count on the Ukrainian invasion corps running out of ammo. To push potentially thousands of Ukrainian troops out of Kursk, they’ll have to capture one trench at a time.

Russian columns “are met by Ukrainian sabotage and reconnaissance groups, drones and artillery,” wrote Artur Rehi, an Estonian soldier and analyst.

If and when it stabilizes, the Kursk salient could become another major front in Russia’s 29-month wider war on Ukraine.

The Ukrainians have already positioned potentially more than 10,000 troops in Kursk and the adjacent Ukrainian oblast, Sumy. And according to the Ukrainian Center for Defense Strategies, Russia’s Northern Grouping of Forces is trying to move 10 to 11 battalions to the front line—perhaps 4,000 troops in all.


Those 10 or so Russian battalions are just the initial echelon, however. On paper, the Northern Grouping of Forces oversees 48,000 troops. Many of them are bogged down in Vovchansk, the locus of Russia’s own attack across the Russia-Ukraine border that kicked off in May.

But if it gives up trying to advance in Vovchansk and other front-line towns and cities, the Russian military could shift significant forces to Kursk. Indeed, compelling the Russians to deplete their forces along other fronts may have been the Ukrainian invasion corps’ main objective.

Kyiv is probably trying to “divert some of the Russian attention and Russian troops stationed in the eastern parts of Ukraine,” France 24’s Emmanuelle Chaze noted, citing Ukrainian sources.

Once the trenches are complete, that diversion could become long-term—if not permanent.

If they can stay there, it does give them something to exchange in any negotiations :)
 
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