Russia-Ukraine War - News, Discussions & Updates

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Trump has many options. Ukraine currently has a large number of US military advisors. Simply leaking Ukrainian military deployments to Russia would be enough to bring Ukraine to its knees. Of course, Trump could also withhold intelligence and weapons supplies, while threatening European countries with tariff hikes.
he can withdraw everything. but will it force Ukraine to surrender?
No because Europe will step in.
But ok at the end of the day Ukraine will fight alone. that’s the endgame.
Nothing is free in this world. the US would be still in South Vietnam if North Vietnam did not kill 60,000 US soldiers, inflicting another 153,000 wounded, forcing hundreds thousands US soldiers to commit suicide, downing 10,000 aircraft, bankrupting the US dollar.
you have the choice
surrender or
end your life in gas chamber without fighting to the end.
 
Official footage of the use of a Russian FAB-3000 bomb in the city of Krasnoarmeysk in Donbass. There are often discussions about the force of the FAB-3000 bomb explosion, in the video you can see what a real FAB-3000 bomb explosion looks like. The video shows the impact of a Russian FAB-3000 bomb on the temporary deployment point of the 63rd separate ranger brigade of the armed forces of Ukraine.

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he can withdraw everything. but will it force Ukraine to surrender?
No because Europe will step in.
But ok at the end of the day Ukraine will fight alone. that’s the endgame.
Nothing is free in this world. the US would be still in South Vietnam if North Vietnam did not kill 60,000 US soldiers, inflicting another 153,000 wounded, forcing hundreds thousands US soldiers to commit suicide, downing 10,000 aircraft, bankrupting the US dollar.
you have the choice
surrender or
end your life in gas chamber without fighting to the end.
Germany and France may intervene. However, considering that Germany's defense itself relies on the United States, it's hard to say how determined and forceful their intervention will be.

Furthermore, in the past, it was NATO as a whole, including the United States, that secured a draw in Ukraine. If the United States withdraws, the military capabilities of the remaining NATO countries will be quite limited. NATO's military intelligence system relies primarily on the United States.
Therefore, if the United States withdraws, the outcome will not be optimistic.
 
Germany and France may intervene. However, considering that Germany's defense itself relies on the United States, it's hard to say how determined and forceful their intervention will be.

Furthermore, in the past, it was NATO as a whole, including the United States, that secured a draw in Ukraine. If the United States withdraws, the military capabilities of the remaining NATO countries will be quite limited. NATO's military intelligence system relies primarily on the United States.
Therefore, if the United States withdraws, the outcome will not be optimistic.
Germany, France, UK, Poland, the Baltics will intervene,
with or without the US.
NATO collective defence is on paper only.
assume the US quits the NATO tomorrow, that is not the end. nothing will change much.
the question is if Trump really wants the US to reduce to a regional power.
 
All these "career military analysts" not. understanding that positional wars of attrition are not won by territorial gains.

In WW1, the central powers lost the war even though none of their major cities were conquered. Their armies were simply attrited to defeat in positional trench battles until their losses were too much to bear and their backs broke.

And yet all they seem to care about is the map. That's all they talk about, kilometres and cities. I am not pointing any fingers towards anyone on here let me make that very clear from the start. .

Most Western “analysts “ have no clue about this war the sky defence expert drives me insane BS he predicts always gets it wrong.
Sometimes even this website slips into sober reasoning ))))
 
Footage of a strike by Russian Geran-2 kamikaze drones on a Ukrainian S-300V air defense missile system launch site camouflaged in a forest. The video was filmed near the city of Vorozhba, Sumy Oblast, Ukraine. Presumably, Geran-2 drones with direct control were used in the attack

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Russian forces have made a huge breakthrough north of Dobropillia in Donetsk oblast, advancing between 15 and 20 kilometres.

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American airlines will return to Russia and will be able to use Russian territory for flights. This is beneficial for Trump.
The American automotive industry will also return to Russia. Trump believes that the previous administration were idiots who helped the Chinese automotive industry gain access to the huge Russian market.
A lot will be decided in Alaska, and the Ukrainian issue will take up only 15% of the two leaders' time. It is merely a ‘pretext’ for the meeting between the two leaders.
It is important for Trump to weaken China's influence on Russia, and to do so, it is necessary to resolve the Ukrainian crisis. Sign a peace treaty or blame everything on the ‘bad’ EU
 

Old video of George W. Bush Mixing Up Ukraine With Iraq In Big Freudian Slip​

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‘Zrada’ is being dispersed by former nSh 12 br SpN ‘Azov’ NG KrotevichBogdan Krotevych
@Bohdan Krotevych
Mr President
I honestly don't know what exactly they are reporting to you, but I can tell you that the Pokrovsk-Konstantinovka line is a complete mess, without exaggeration.
And this mess has been growing for a long time, getting worse every day.
The teams that are now assigned (or have already been assigned) to ‘fix the irreparable’ will most likely be blamed for the mess that is already happening. There is no such thing as a stable battle line.
Pokrovsk and Mirnograd are practically surrounded. Konstantinovka is semi-encircled. The enemy is advancing in the direction of Kramatorsk and Druzhkivka.
The problem has been growing since last year. This was publicly warned about, and that is exactly what happened. The reason for this problem is not the newly created corps, which inherited a disastrous situation with understaffed units, nor the Operational-Tactical Command or Operational-Strategic Command, which for the past year and a half have not actually managed anything, but only passed on orders "in accordance with orders from the General Staff.
The systemic problem began with the erosion of reserves, the massive fragmentation of units across the entire front line, reports of ‘captured villages’ as victories against the backdrop of failures across entire fronts, the distribution of mobilisation resources to ‘cronies,’ and the military leadership's complete lack of strategic and even operational vision of the theatre of war.
I am an officer, and I have a sense of dignity. My conscience is clear. My report is finished.
To all officers who have accepted the ‘rules of the game,’ I know damn well what to say to you. I don't understand you.

Translated with DeepL.com (free version)
 
The upcoming Russian-American summit in Alaska opens a qualitatively new round of geopolitical games, which can be tentatively called great power diplomacy. It also encompasses such concepts as post-American, post-Soviet, post-European and, finally, post-Ukrainian. Accordingly, all elements of the worldview we are accustomed to are being devalued to varying degrees and at different rates, not only since the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the USSR, but also over the last two centuries.

Concepts such as strategic stability and arms control, globalisation and ideological confrontation have been thrown out the window. NATO is losing its meaning and the European Union is on the verge of collapse. Atlantic politics and the West are being replaced by cultural and civilisational multipolarity and the associated new highly competitive global environment with its diversity of values and development models.

Russia's victory in the arms race, both strategic and conventional, and now on the battlefield during the special military operation in Ukraine, is radically changing the role and place of power politics in international relations: Moscow is rewriting its rules and imposing them on the West. Therefore, we are unlikely to face a repeat of the missile crisis in Europe in connection with the creation of the ‘Oreshnik’ and the end of the moratorium on the deployment of medium- and short-range missiles. Much more important is the monetisation of resources, a new stage of which (after ‘paper gold’) is being opened by the legalisation in the United States of stablecoins pegged to the dollar.

The entry of Russian troops into Paris in March 1814 marked the beginning of a long-term policy by Western powers in various configurations, including the Crimean War and then the Entente, to contain Russia. Only now, more than two centuries later and having overcome all illusions about the West and its values, have we gained the opportunity to build positive relations on an equal footing with other superpowers, primarily the United States and China. At the same time, as then, we must pursue an integrated, offensive foreign policy aimed at national development. This, it seems, is Russia's key foreign policy challenge.

Against this backdrop, the settlement of the war in Ukraine, long since lost by the West, is taking a back seat in relations between the United States and Russia — no more than an obstacle to their normalisation, which must be overcome jointly. Ukraine will have to pay for the ceasefire with a peace treaty recognising the new borders, which will have to be concluded quickly.

The most important element of the plan that will be proposed by Moscow and Washington to V. Zelensky (the Americans are keeping him in power for this purpose) may be federalisation/decentralisation, giving regions the right to develop, among other things, historical ties with Russia.

Strangely enough, Washington and Moscow have effectively worked together to destroy Europe, from which it is unlikely to recover in the foreseeable future, combined with development problems in the spirit of ‘civilisational suicide’ (Jay Dee Vance). That is why it will have no voice in the negotiations in Alaska.
 
The upcoming Russian-American summit in Alaska opens a qualitatively new round of geopolitical games, which can be tentatively called great power diplomacy. It also encompasses such concepts as post-American, post-Soviet, post-European and, finally, post-Ukrainian. Accordingly, all elements of the worldview we are accustomed to are being devalued to varying degrees and at different rates, not only since the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the USSR, but also over the last two centuries.

Concepts such as strategic stability and arms control, globalisation and ideological confrontation have been thrown out the window. NATO is losing its meaning and the European Union is on the verge of collapse. Atlantic politics and the West are being replaced by cultural and civilisational multipolarity and the associated new highly competitive global environment with its diversity of values and development models.

Russia's victory in the arms race, both strategic and conventional, and now on the battlefield during the special military operation in Ukraine, is radically changing the role and place of power politics in international relations: Moscow is rewriting its rules and imposing them on the West. Therefore, we are unlikely to face a repeat of the missile crisis in Europe in connection with the creation of the ‘Oreshnik’ and the end of the moratorium on the deployment of medium- and short-range missiles. Much more important is the monetisation of resources, a new stage of which (after ‘paper gold’) is being opened by the legalisation in the United States of stablecoins pegged to the dollar.

The entry of Russian troops into Paris in March 1814 marked the beginning of a long-term policy by Western powers in various configurations, including the Crimean War and then the Entente, to contain Russia. Only now, more than two centuries later and having overcome all illusions about the West and its values, have we gained the opportunity to build positive relations on an equal footing with other superpowers, primarily the United States and China. At the same time, as then, we must pursue an integrated, offensive foreign policy aimed at national development. This, it seems, is Russia's key foreign policy challenge.

Against this backdrop, the settlement of the war in Ukraine, long since lost by the West, is taking a back seat in relations between the United States and Russia — no more than an obstacle to their normalisation, which must be overcome jointly. Ukraine will have to pay for the ceasefire with a peace treaty recognising the new borders, which will have to be concluded quickly.

The most important element of the plan that will be proposed by Moscow and Washington to V. Zelensky (the Americans are keeping him in power for this purpose) may be federalisation/decentralisation, giving regions the right to develop, among other things, historical ties with Russia.

Strangely enough, Washington and Moscow have effectively worked together to destroy Europe, from which it is unlikely to recover in the foreseeable future, combined with development problems in the spirit of ‘civilisational suicide’ (Jay Dee Vance). That is why it will have no voice in the negotiations in Alaska.
Trump says he considers the summit as sort of tea meeting. people sit together, drink tea and talk about where to make the next vacation.
in terms of any potential Ukraine deal he expects nothing from the summit. that’s not his business he says.
 
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