- Joined
- Aug 14, 1999
- Messages
- 131,122
- Location
- Hollywood CA
- Caf Award
- Caf Lifetime Achievement Award 2017
It's astonishing that Russia committed two-thirds of its entire ground combat strength at the start of its invasion of Ukraine.
When you consider that it has since had to pull in units from elsewhere, and also that some of its ground combat units need to stay in places like Kaliningrad, Transnistria and the disputed islands of the far east, it must mean that Russia - short of declaring war and a full mobilisation - has very little ground combat strength left to commit into Ukraine.
It would also validate NATO's approach of flooding Ukraine with NATO quality weapons to play the long game and basically grind it out until Putin runs out of resources, all the while continuing to economically choke him from within. At that point, he will either be forced to negotiate or escalate (which would be tacit suicide for him, as any use of WMDs would turn the entire world against him).