The Ukraine war thread
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wrote on 18 Jul 2024, 12:24 last edited by
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wrote on 20 Jul 2024, 04:12 last edited by
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wrote on 20 Jul 2024, 10:01 last edited by
It's a good video.
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wrote on 20 Jul 2024, 12:13 last edited by
Very. I've long wondered about the wisdom of relying on GPS.
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wrote on 20 Jul 2024, 12:22 last edited by Jolly
If Putin is willing to suffer the loss of equipment and human life, the Ukrainians are gong to be conquered.
If the Perfumed Princes of the Pentagon learn anything (and if history is a good teacher, they don't), fundamental changes need to be made in the U.S. military if we must fight a peer vs. peer war. Some lessons from war, and not just the Ukrainian War:
- Your enemy has technology, too. See the above video. Whatever you can do, they can counter, and vice-versa.
- With a few exceptions, Wunderwaffe do not win wars.
- In a static war of attrition, defense is less costly in terms of equipment and casualties than offense.
- Combined maneuver warfare does not work well without air parity, or better, air superiority.
- Quantity has a quality of its own.
- Modern combat is voracious in terms of munitions and equipment.
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wrote on 20 Jul 2024, 13:38 last edited by Copper
@Mik said in The Ukraine war thread:
relying on GPS
The military has been testing GPS interference technology off the coast of North Carolina for at least 15 years that I know about.
They still do it regularly. The FAA publishes notices to pilots letting them know when this testing is being done.
I have no idea what they are actually doing, but they are working on it.
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wrote on 22 Jul 2024, 15:55 last edited by
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wrote on 27 Jul 2024, 18:19 last edited by
Ukes took out some electronic warfare stations.
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wrote on 30 Jul 2024, 16:11 last edited by
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wrote on 30 Jul 2024, 18:01 last edited by
Too soon to tell. The frontline is more than just the Crimea.
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wrote on 30 Jul 2024, 19:07 last edited by
I doubt liberation is all that near.
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wrote on 30 Jul 2024, 21:32 last edited by
Realistically, I believe Crimea was lost ten years ago when Putin undertook his first anschluss of sovereign Ukrainian territory. Back then it was a cheap buffet to graze and forage.
No longer the case.
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wrote on 4 Aug 2024, 12:01 last edited by
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wrote on 6 Aug 2024, 21:50 last edited by Renauda 8 Jun 2024, 21:52
Putin celebrates Navy Day:
Photos:
https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2024/07/29/in-photos-russia-stages-showcase-naval-parade-a85861
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wrote on 7 Aug 2024, 12:28 last edited by
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wrote on 7 Aug 2024, 13:35 last edited by
Interesting discussion. We'll see who got it right. https://euromaidanpress.com/2024/08/07/forbes-analyst-and-israeli-expert-clash-over-ukrainian-incursion-into-russias-kursk-oblast/
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wrote on 7 Aug 2024, 13:49 last edited by
It's war and understandable. The problem comes in what do your neighboring countries - those that may be affected by a widening conflict - think about it? After all, Ukraine is getting a lot of weapons from countries in Europe.
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It's war and understandable. The problem comes in what do your neighboring countries - those that may be affected by a widening conflict - think about it? After all, Ukraine is getting a lot of weapons from countries in Europe.
wrote on 7 Aug 2024, 18:24 last edited by Renauda 8 Aug 2024, 15:07I am sure the Orban in Hungary and Slovakia’s Pellegrini and Fico are not pleased with it. But what else can you expect from co-opted Kremlin friendly populist nationalists?
Neither supply much of anything in terms of military assistance to Kyiv. The good neighbours that do supply such as Poland, Romania, Lithuania and the remainder of European NATO membership, have no qualms about these incursions into Russia.
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wrote on 8 Aug 2024, 17:22 last edited by
Day three. Ukrainian forces appear to have control of Suzhda natural gas hub: