El Guapo wrote: Tue Mar 01, 2022 11:49 pm
LawBeefaroni wrote: Tue Mar 01, 2022 10:59 pm
malchior wrote: Tue Mar 01, 2022 10:49 pm
I just heard that updated assessments are that Kyiv might hold up weeks now but probably will fall.
Will inevitably fall without foreign boots on the ground.
Possibly dumb question, but why is that? Just the sheer difference in manpower? Military equipment quality? And i assume that relies on the assumption that the Russians can sustain fighting under all the collective sanctions?
Not that I think that's wrong, I'm mainly just curious because the general assessment seems to be that Russia's military has shat the bed thus far. If they continue with the perpetual bed shitting, is there a real prospect that Ukraine could (even without an insurgency) at least fight to a draw?
Russia can field more than six times the trained military personnel that Ukraine can, and keep that difference if they start drafting civilians. And while I'd argue that equipment quality isn't as much of an issue with the recent wave of imports, the number of people fully trained in its use is a bigger problem. And keep in mind that Russia still hasn't committed its full conventional armor force to the field, nor its air force. They'll reach a point eventually at which the civilians don't have a lot of options for fighting back. They'll be taking shells from far out of reach, bombs from far out of reach, and the troops that move in to clean up what's left will be beyond Ukraine's ability to hold off. Yeah, the Russian military has either failed spectacularly or has some reason for holding back. But if they ever decide to truly commit, there won't be a draw.
But while Russia may take control, they can't win. They've got a population of extremely ballsy patriots who are now armed to the teeth. Russia will be pulling lead splinters out of their ass for decades to come. Ukraine will, at best, be Russia's Vietnam. Maybe they'll eventually pull out, maybe they'll eventually quash enough resistance that it becomes a minor annoyance, but they're going to be tied up for a long, long time either way. That also weakens their forces elsewhere. They could end up with fully half of their military tied up for twenty years, and with no resources to increase it.
Ukraine's best shot is that the war remains unpopular in Russia, compounded with the cost that the economic consequences are going to have on the Russian people, and that there is a regime change (peaceful or otherwise, now or a five years from now.)
What doesn't kill me makes me stranger.