It's not countless, it's just an offensively high number.countless people are living below the poverty line
It's not countless, it's just an offensively high number.countless people are living below the poverty line
There's also the factor is Russia probably wants to keep some of it's ammo in reserve. Sure, NATO is supplying Ukraine but NATO is not directly fighting Russia ATM and Russia would probably not want to be at dangerously low stockpiles of ammo in case that actually were to happen.Sure, but this means a decrease in firepower. This may be particularly critical for intense, protracted combat, because they potentially need to stockpile for heavy action, so anywhere that doesn't have sufficient reserves will have degraded combat effectiveness. They mostly seem to be wasting missiles on cities, for large amounts of human suffering and low military effectiveness.
If they're also ending up using old and degraded ammunition - potentially badly stored as well - chances are a significant chunk of that ammo won't work. One in ten artillery shells not exploding is a pretty dramatic drop in combat effectiveness (and a nightmare for post-war clear-up). If it explodes in the wrong conditions - storage or in the gun, even worse.
To be fair, that's a lot of counting. I ain't counting that high.It's not countless, it's just an offensively high number.
I wonder if Russia knew how this would play out and wanted to cause enough civilian deaths and suffering for them to pressure the government into surrender early on. If that's the case, they severely underestimated Ukrainian resolve.They mostly seem to be wasting missiles on cities, for large amounts of human suffering and low military effectiveness.
For "Russia" read "Putin" and for "this is worth it" read "he can keep his job".Which begs the question how long Russia thinks this is worth it.
My gut instinct is to say that the Kremlin cannot possibly have imagined a civilian bombing campaign would work, because history shows they never do.I wonder if Russia knew how this would play out and wanted to cause enough civilian deaths and suffering for them to pressure the government into surrender early on. If that's the case, they severely underestimated Ukrainian resolve.
The irony is that Putin is old enough to remember the USSR's Afghanistan campaign and while it didn't doom the USSR, it sure as hell probably didn't do it any favors either. And lets face it, the USSR was arguably more capable then Russia is now and probably was taking fewer loses over a smaller period of time.For "Russia" read "Putin" and for "this is worth it" read "he can keep his job".
I think Vlad is a Cold War dinosaur, romantic about the might of the USSR, and motivated to some degree with a dream of imperial restoration. Behind its geographical size Russia is actually quite weak: adding 50 million people from Ukraine and Belarus (increasing its population by a third or so) would make it much more of a player again.
But mostly I think he's a low-grade bully that likes being in charge. Regimes like Russia don't run on sentiment: Putin could go in the blink of an eyelid in a palace coup. All it takes is enough damage to his authority, and a serious enough failure in Ukraine could do enough damage to undo him. So he'll send his country into the mire up until the point that causes him even more damage, and Russians' tolerance to endure heaps of shit (helped by stranglingly tight media control) is probably quite high.
I would not be surprised if the war doesn't end until Putin goes, with Russia just grimly squatting on as much of Ukraine's land as it can hold indefinitely.
Interesting - I'd never checked the casualties for the Soviet-Afghanistan war and assumed they were much higher - more like 200k total.Like holy shit, Russia has already lost nearly as many troops by their own numbers in one year then the Soviet Union did a decade fighting the Afghanis. And again, those numbers are likely the low end.
I think the business of running a country is almost intrinsically a business of accepting trade-offs that include people dying - even at the level of an extra 100 a year because you're not shoving another few million quid into the health service. In that sense, I suspect top politicians tend to have significant tolerance for casualties, otherwise they couldn't do the job. However, they still tend to have limits, especially in more civilised countries.I know Putin probably doesn't give a fuck(after all, he doesn't know any of those people) but still.
For some reason I keep thinking of that apparent Stalin quote: "One death is a tragedy. A million deaths is a statistic". I know all countries have a tendency to do this but it feels very Russian, especially in times like these.But Russia... I think its leaders have carried a certain mindset about the expendability of peasants largely unchanged all the way from the Tsarist era.
(By-the-by, that's widely misattributed, and almost certainly not one of Stalin's. I've also read it attributed to an Imperial German officer).For some reason I keep thinking of that apparent Stalin quote: "One death is a tragedy. A million deaths is a statistic". I know all countries have a tendency to do this but it feels very Russian, especially in times like these.
He's not the first person to have come up with it or something very close. The issue is more that it's unverifiable: hearsay, claimed by some diplomat or politician who had spoken with him.(By-the-by, that's widely misattributed, and almost certainly not one of Stalin's. I've also read it attributed to an Imperial German officer).
People are usually a lot more careful what they write down or say on camera that may be captured by posterity than what they say in an unrecorded conversation.Unfortunately, so much of the best quotes and stories from Stalin may or may not be completely untrue, but there's no real way of knowing either way.
Just waiting for the resident apologist to tell us how this is our fault, and that Russia should be allowed to do whatever it wants so that we can avoid nuclear armageddon.
Honey, Wake up. Russia's weekly death threat to humanity has dropped.
RESET THE CLOCK!
"You're a slave to history. Even after Calamity, you fight against the only order that can guarantee the safety of your people. You, solely, are responsible for this."-Crimson 1 but also Russia, probably.Just waiting for the resident apologist to tell us how this is our fault, and that Russia should be allowed to do whatever it wants so that we can avoid nuclear armageddon.
"Given the technological superiority of Russian weapons..."snip
I mean, the Admiral Kuznetsov is perpetually escorted by Tugboats to show how big and awesome and strong it is and totally not because it keeps catching fire at random."Given the technological superiority of Russian weapons..."
Let's be fair now, I think once it was its floating drydock that caught fire and sank.I mean, the Admiral Kuznetsov is perpetually escorted by Tugboats to show how big and awesome and strong it is and totally not because it keeps catching fire at random.