I have some thoughts:
1. Crimea will eventually be retaken by Ukraine.
2. Russia will be pushed out of the Donbas.
3. An insurgency will advance in Belgorod.
4. One or more additional coups will be launched against Moscow.
5. Inevitable Civil War may befall the Russian Federation.
Inflammatory, I know. What are your thoughts?
1. Crimea will eventually be retaken by Ukraine.
2. Russia will be pushed out of the Donbas.
3. An insurgency will advance in Belgorod.
4. One or more additional coups will be launched against Moscow.
5. Inevitable Civil War may befall the Russian Federation.
Inflammatory, I know. What are your thoughts?
As we approach the 18 month horizon of Vladimir Putin's botched invasion of >
So what does Russia's defeat look like?
I have some thoughts:
1. Crimea will eventually be retaken by Ukraine.
2. Russia will be pushed out of the Donbas.
3. An insurgency will advance in Belgorod.
4. One or more additional coups will be launched against Moscow.
5. Inevitable Civil War may befall the Russian Federation.
Inflammatory, I know. What are your thoughts?
_____
-=: Kaelon :=-
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Trump wanted to kill the alliance, which triggered all this madness in
the first place. If Biden stays for the next round, all above may be secured > If new president will be more like Trump regarding NATO, it may flip the tab >
-h1
... Xerox Alto was the thing. Anything after we use is just a mere copy.
Which is to mean they won't take a significant portion of territory (because they lack resources for that) but can render Ukraine into a pseudo-failed state, just because they have superior firepower and can produce more cheap gear faster. Wars of attrition get lost by the party who runs out of people or weapons faster and so far Ukraine is bleeding out population and the NATO powers are getting disarmed themselves to supply Ukraine with gear.
My guess is Ukraine will end up as a Mark between the West and Russia just because Ukraine itself won't have resources left to be anybody's ally after thedeal is done. We will have Cold War II because Russians won't trust the West after the Minsk backstab and the West won't trust the Russians after trashing an ally.
- I believe this war will continue for the next 2 years toward losing at least significant part of what they have conquered in Donieck and Zaporoznia, maybe the rest of Donbas, I don't believe it will be easy to win back Crimea, but I'd say this is important to Ukraine to try and destroy as much as possible all the strategic advance Russia thinks it has in the Black Sea... that must continue after the war
- With or without losing any land, Ukraine will never surrender until it secures its ambition to be connected with NATO/EU through various direct alliances or intermediate moves that will get it close to be part of these alliances
- Above will bring influx of money to Ukraine in after the war and it must be secured by NATO military presence as conditions that will create an obvious threat in Belarus, which will be surrended by NATO forces and with an example of Ukraine that rebelling against regimes and puppet govs is possible..
- Cold war continues as Russia cannot afford losing Belarus now.. In the long run, all depends on China, as if it wakes up to test NATO/USA in a risk for an open conflic in Pacific area, Russians for sure would like to use it to come back to Ukraine and to destabilize EU.
Chess game continues.
If Belarus gets more involved on the Russian side, or if Russia does something to bait the US or other countries into the fight more directly on the Ukrainian side, there could be a few other outcomes. If it is the latter, I suspect those outcomes will be more drawn-out, costly, and deadly.
I think the whole point of this was not to take all of Ukraine but to take enough land to create a land bridge of Russian territory between the Ukranian break-away areas and Crimea. I am not even certain they will manage that without help.
I definitely agree that this has been a war sparked in part by Russia's demo > bly, you are correct, that the party who runs out of people or weapons faste > defections) have led to a neutering of the Russian population advantage.
If anything, it is demonstrated that Europe is America's doormat at this point and I don't think many USAn politicians would like this status to change anytime soon.
Now that Russia is certainly not ascendant, and
China's future becomes increasingly cloudy, I think we're in store for some very interesting and scary times. _____
Europe has a bad track record when it comes to supporting members of the Union.Everything is songs and parties and praises to the big European family until
something like the 2008 crisis hits and then it is everybody on his own. Greezeis an example people likes to bring to the table.
Agreed with all but Belarus. Huge chance that of course that Union will happen as some shallow warranty that Putin/Russia owns it. But...
For the scary times.. well to some degree yes, but also it's already known to past generations what's gonna happen and western world lived through it in prosperity.. it was called Cold War and stood still for 40 years, until USSR collapsed.
Europe has a bad track record when it comes to supporting members of the Union.Everything is songs and parties and praises to the big European family until
something like the 2008 crisis hits and then it is everybody on his own.
I genuinely think Ukraine, from a vast geopolitical perspective, was therial-
un or beta-test for the next World War. Much like the Spanish Civil War washe
practice round for the Axis vs. the Allies in World War II. And yet, unlikepa
n, the Ukrainian example has demonstrated that authoritarian regimes are fare
s stable than they have suggested, and that corruption and mismanagement have
aced their armed forces at a tremendous disadvantage. Remember: for China, who >as been watching with baited breath, they have never had a successful military >onflict with the West in their entire history. They need one to solidify their >scension to global superpower status.
What comes next for Russia is deeply problematic. I am genuinely surprisedhat
Putin has not been assassinated, or more likely "sent to a hospital iniberia"
and then replaced, because the string of failures Russia has encountered willussi
ad to the emboldened separatism of its many republics (states). Remember:
is not ethnically Russian, and the demographic collapse of the Russian Peoplea
and the Russian Federation as a whole, is largely existential. For Putin, he
the restoration of the Soviet Empire as a way to forstall this sociopoliticalumiliat
llapse. That's clearly no longer genuinely possible, and with Russia's
on, it has become a regional player for the balance of its modern existence.
The European Union is a problematic experiment, not least of which is the bu > quential rise of the Far Right in the Mediterranean, especially your nativeFar-Right influence in Spain after the collapse of the Phalanx is anecdotic. Politicians use the thread of the far-right the same way grandmothers use Halloween stories to scare children. The so-called Far-Right party here are essentially like US Republicans, and I think it is clear they have peaked as a third-in-line political power and won't ascend much further if at all.
The European Union is a problematic experiment, not least of which is the bu > quential rise of the Far Right in the Mediterranean, especially your native >By the way, I dare say that the existence of the European Union has pacified the Eurozone more than, say, the existence of NATO, by virtuoe of a known phenomenom: people who trade among each other is much less likely to start stabbing each other deliberatedly, because they make more profits from trading. On the other hand, despite all the cool advertisements on the contrary, it is quite clear that NATO is mostly the US sending soldiers to fight and die while the population of the other NATO members scream bloody murder because America is an imperialist power that must be destroyed, and their respective governments hold Uncle Sam's coat in the process. I dare say the push to stop contributing to the NATO in Spain is stronger than any Far-Right imaginary threat.
NATO, on the other hand, has been an enduring tool that has prevented the Co > European states ensure there is an economic pay-for-play to keep the engine > n NATO in the next 36 months, it's probably going to remain the governing gl
By the way, I dare say that the existence of the European Union has pacified the Eurozone more than, say, the existence of NATO, by virtuoe of a known phenomenom: people who trade among each other is much less likely to start stabbing each other deliberatedly, because they make more profits from trading.
On the other hand, despite all the cool advertisements on the
contrary, it is quite clear that NATO is mostly the US sending soldiers to fight and die while the population of the other NATO members scream bloody murder because America is an imperialist power that must be destroyed, and their respective governments hold Uncle Sam's coat in the process. I dare say the push to stop contributing to the NATO in Spain is stronger than any Far-Right imaginary threat.
I don't think this is the foundation of a strong alliance. It is an alliance that may hold together but it is feebler than it seems. One of the reasons why Trump gathered support was that he dennounced (and rightly so) that American soldiers were coming back in plastic bags while everybody else sat on their fatasses criticising. I have family in the Spanish army, and I have been told that, when they were deployed in the MIddle East, one of the directives they got
was to call for the Americans if anything happened.
By the way, I dare say that the existence of the European Union has pacified the Eurozone more than, say, the existence of NATO, by virtuoe
This is an interesting point. The Spanish Civil War was indeed a trial run for several of Germany's new war technologies and strategies. It is possible that Putin (or others) saw Ukraine as a similar test.
If this were the USSR days, I have no doubt that Putin would have been
moved aside by now. You bring up another interesting point, that much of the territory of Russia includes republics that are not ethnically Russian.
I have found some irony in this war in that one of Putin's supposedly most ardent supporters is the leader of Chechnya, which in the recent past had a strong separatist movement and is majority muslim. The current leadership has apparently gotten rich off of being an ally of Russia. Otherwise, I would expect that area to be the first to try to break away.
I have not kept up recently with other areas of unrest in the Federation.
IIRC, the Crimea is more ethnically Russian than Ukrainian. Crimea was moved under the Ukraine SSR by Moscow sometime during the Cold War.
Define pacify? No more "Hitler alike" ignited war flaming the continent?
Current European conflicts of interests may be dangerous (and even threatening at an existential level) but won't cause EU countries to invade other EU countries.
Similarly, Russia may have made a financially catastrophic miscalculation in > orks and cryptocurrency to survive, but it has achieved / restored economic >
This is a problem I have with the modern Western style in general: we think we are the center of the world and we believe we can destroy somebody just by refusing to be their friend.
Current European conflicts of interests may be dangerous (and even threatening at an existential level) but won't cause EU countries to invade other EU countries.
This is certainly the hope, but I think we've seen signs that Eastern European countries, but especially Hungary, and even potentially Poland (with its Law and Justice party), are being pushed out of the European mainstream given that their behavior is rightly judged as
anti-democratic. Remember that Austria, Romania, and Bulgaria all had
Putinism, in essence, is a cult of personality similar to Hitlerism in the Thi
Reich. In many ways, Vladimir Putin clearly has modeled his confrontation str
egy after the Fuhrer's. It's surprising given just how unsuccessful the underl
ng strategy was. It goes like this:
1. Value loyalty over competence, always.
2. Nurture acolytes willing to protect you (i.e., take the blame).
3. Deploy thugs to manufacture cassus belli and/or chaos to control the securi
narrative.
4. War.
I don't think this is the foundation of a strong alliance. It is an alliance that may hold together but it is feebler than it seems. One of the reasons why
Trump gathered support was that he dennounced (and rightly so) that American soldiers were coming back in plastic bags while everybody else sat on their fa
sses criticising.
This is certainly the hope, but I think we've seen signs that Eastern Europe > ghtly judged as anti-democratic. Remember that Austria, Romania, and Bulgari > of the Union.
The next logical step behind a lot of this, in my view, is that as the Easte > manner. NATO is really the only safeguard against this happening, which is > _____
NATO becomes unpopular among jingoistic circles and among pacifists, but it > ts guarantees for its sovereignty and simultaneous participation in the US/E > hat -- in the next 24-36 months.
Poland is not authoritharian but ruled by conservatives who live more with AYou know, the problem with the EU is, in my opinion, that it has stopped being a trade agreement and started being a trans-national government.
That, and that other countries were supposedly not paying their fair share of the cost to maintain NATO.
Your case is that it is beneficial for Europe and other satellite countries to pay protection to the USA so the rest of the countries can be Socialistic. In other words, the claim is that becoming a protectorate is good for the protectees.
It is certainly a surprise that he would model Hitler as you suggest. One or two reasons he might do so:
1. He thinks he learned from the Nazi mistakes and can do it better (which could also mean he is crazy)
2. If you study the early roots of the Russian Revolution, and what Stalin was up to in those years (thugs and chaos), it is possible he believes he is employing Stalinism rather than Hitlerism. Point #4 would then be covered by Putin's own dissappointment that the USSR was disolved and, as you pointed out, many of the USSR's best and brightest came from Ukraine so it makes sense to try to bring them back into the fold first.
You know, the problem with the EU is, in my opinion, that it has stopped being a trade agreement and started being a trans-national government.
It would not be *that* bad if European institutions weren't the place where National political parties park their failed politicians. Bonus points because many agencies within the European Union are composed of unelected officers, so you end up having a bunch of unelected people generating proposals and directives for EU members, and people tends not to like that.
Re: NATO
By: Arelor to Kaelon on Wed Aug 02 2023 01:00 pm
Your case is that it is beneficial for Europe and other satellite countri > > to pay protection to the USA so the rest of the countries can be
Socialistic. In other words, the claim is that becoming a protectorate is > > good for the protectees.
The problem with legacy protectorate models is that contributing to these sy > ent and this fiscal burden largely builds resentment among populations and a >
NATO, and the Marshal Plan that (re-)built Europe after the War, is very dif > me sort of classic protectorate model really belies its intended purpose: a >
In the United States, significant deficit spending (and the world's largest > military revenues for the U.S. military. The system works so long as it rema >
If NATO ceases to be a thing, or even worse, if the U.S. pulls out of the re > elfare states, and fund costly militaries to thwart Chinese, Russian, and Ne > _____
-=: Kaelon :=-
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That, and that other countries were supposedly not paying their fair share of the cost to maintain NATO.
I count "not paying their fair share" as part of "sitting on their fat asses",
but thanks for specifying :-)
Another problem with Poland and EU is that the current gov wakes up the sentim
t about Poland being HQ of Central Europe driven alliances, not Germany. Three
eas Alliance from Baltics to Greece is part of that program that can create Eu
pean Union within European Union that is big enough to counter-balance German d French ambitions to have solo role in setting standards.
Re: Russia's Defeat
By: Kaelon to Dumas Walker on Tue Aug 01 2023 03:07 pm
Spanish separatists movements are all but quelled. NOne of them were ever bought with money. Try waving a Spanish flag in some areas near the Basque community - and I am not saying *in* the Basque community - and they will gang
on you and break your face.
What "worked" in order to eliminate terrorism was to grant terrorists the rightto a political party. Now we have separatists parties (such as Bildu) formed byex-ETA members. They no longer bomb stuff but their goals are the same and
their determination has not diminished the least.
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