Frosty
Logical and sensible but turns women gay
Reports that Russia have been making some gains of villages in the Donbass - does anyone know how much we should read into this? I am assuming it isn't a strategic gain.
Slow, plodding gains. Reports of being harassed along their supply lines and unable to take full advantage of their advances (see post 28484).Reports that Russia have been making some gains of villages in the Donbass - does anyone know how much we should read into this? I am assuming it isn't a strategic gain.
It’s all about stalemating them while Ukrainian armed forces are undergoing the intense training in Nato countries on all the new western toys they’ll be delivered. Arestovich (one of Zelensky advisers) suggests the impact from new weapons will become more and more evident by the late Maye/early June.Reports that Russia have been making some gains of villages in the Donbass - does anyone know how much we should read into this? I am assuming it isn't a strategic gain.
For your information, their nuclear heads have long been stationed in Kaliningrad.I’d imagine that the media in a particular country focus mainly on threats to that country. We’ve already seen Russia cutting off gas supply to Poland and Bulgaria. It’s threatened to bring nuclear weapons close to the Baltic sea in response to Finland abs Sweden joining NATO. It’s trying to destabilise Moldova, and it’s definitely made threats against the US for providing weapons. By and large I think most of those threats are empty, but are designed to be quotable by the media of the affected country and hopefully (for the Russians) change opinions.
Reports that Russia have been making some gains of villages in the Donbass - does anyone know how much we should read into this? I am assuming it isn't a strategic gain.
It might even be that it is simply easier for Ukraine to attack an overstretched column than a static Russian frontline.Gaining and holding are two different things.
It might even be that it is simply easier for Ukraine to attack an overstretched column than a static Russian frontline.
For your information, their nuclear heads have long been stationed in Kaliningrad.
Impatience is a bad reason to go to war.I’m getting pretty fed up of this now. I am fully cognisant of the risks and potential global impact of escalating this, but to my mind the time has come to enforce our way of life. Every minute this goes on, the more we embolden Russia and the more we give away and erode that ethos. Ukraine might not be in NATO but this is now beyond that fact. History has told us that people like Putin don’t settle for a bit. The more we don’t do enough, the more he feels he can do. It’s time to take another step in support in my view, and that’s at least more significant equipment provision and a no fly zone. As I said I’m fully aware of what that means, but it’s time.
I think it has been confirmed that Germany will send 155mm ammo to Ukraine and will train Ukrainians on the PzH 2000 in Germany.The German news magazine Der Spiegel speculates that Germany is sending some models of Panzerhaubitze 2000 to Ukraine and is also training Ukrainian soldiers on them. That would be a different calibre than the Gepard flak tank.
They seem to quite like their Starlink and Brit/Swe NLAW's.
I think they might just buy the propaganda and not know better. They might think nuclear war is something Russia does to others, not something that can be done to Russia.I know people are dismissing it as just bluster but all this Russian talk of nuclear warfare is creepy as feck. I understand that it's a different mentality in Russia but you'd think their citizens would be scared by this too and there'd be more internal pressure.
and yes i'm aware that any dissent is quickly cracked down upon but if enough people did it....
I have real trouble understanding that in an age of nuclear weapons and interconnected economies. The Cold War for example was all about a mutual fear of nuclear aggression, it's hardly likely that anyone of that era has forgotten that threat.Was about to post that thread. The part about the callousness towards their own comrades is kind of bizarre.
I think they might just buy the propaganda and not know better. They might think nuclear war is something Russia does to others, not something that can be done to Russia.
Don't worry, it becomes less creepy when you know that Russia changes its message depending on the audience. To the West they're using nuclear threats to scare us but they're saying different things to India for example.I know people are dismissing it as just bluster but all this Russian talk of nuclear warfare is creepy as feck. I understand that it's a different mentality in Russia but you'd think their citizens would be scared by this too and there'd be more internal pressure.
and yes i'm aware that any dissent is quickly cracked down upon but if enough people did it....
I guess I just find it hard to believe that when their government talks about nuclear war that citizens don't think "hang on a minute, this is insane".
They seem to quite like their Starlink and Brit/Swe NLAW's.
Yes. Though the Chechen reputation wasn't entirely without merit. I believe they were regarded as pretty good jihadist fighters in conflicts outside Chechnya such as Syria.Who was it again who said Chechen soldiers were real life James Bonds? Was it the guy who recently had this break down claiming Russia is clearly winning the war?
I know people are dismissing it as just bluster but all this Russian talk of nuclear warfare is creepy as feck. I understand that it's a different mentality in Russia but you'd think their citizens would be scared by this too and there'd be more internal pressure.
and yes i'm aware that any dissent is quickly cracked down upon but if enough people did it....
Who knew that nuclear armageddon was going to be decided by some guy on a football forum.I’m getting pretty fed up of this now. I am fully cognisant of the risks and potential global impact of escalating this, but to my mind the time has come to enforce our way of life. Every minute this goes on, the more we embolden Russia and the more we give away and erode that ethos. Ukraine might not be in NATO but this is now beyond that fact. History has told us that people like Putin don’t settle for a bit. The more we don’t do enough, the more he feels he can do. It’s time to take another step in support in my view, and that’s at least more significant equipment provision and a no fly zone. As I said I’m fully aware of what that means, but it’s time.
I know people are dismissing it as just bluster but all this Russian talk of nuclear warfare is creepy as feck. I understand that it's a different mentality in Russia but you'd think their citizens would be scared by this too and there'd be more internal pressure.
and yes i'm aware that any dissent is quickly cracked down upon but if enough people did it....
The BBC reports:
"... Vladimir Putin has made a fresh threat to the West, saying any country that sets out to intervene in Ukraine will face a "lightning-fast" military response.
"We have all the tools for this, that no one else can boast of having... we'll use them, if needed," he said. "We have already taken all the decisions on this ...
The expanded sharing is intended to help Ukraine defend and potentially retake territory in those regions, the person said, speaking on condition of anonymity about the sensitive matter.
Ironically this statement could have been made by the US, UK or NATO.
Ironically this statement could have been made by the US, UK or NATO.
" ... Maria Zakharova, the Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman, suggested that strikes could be authorized against NATO states who provide arms to Ukraine.
She warned: 'Do we understand correctly that for the sake of disrupting the logistics of military supplies, Russia can strike military targets on the territory of those NATO countries that supply arms to the Kyiv regime?"
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/worl...ites-in-pro-ukraine-nato-countries/ar-AAWE2OK