After 2 years the war has gone through several phases. Russia nearly occupied the entire country in the early phases of the war, then Ukraine recaptured thousands of kilometers back. Ukraine has damaged or sunk nearly a third of Russia's black sea fleet and separatists have started to launch attacks into Russian territory in Belgorod. Now Russian forces have regained the initiative, so far they haven't captured large amounts of territory but they've gained the strategic initiative which means they are able to attack at a time and place of their choosing. It can be desensitizing to hear about thousands of causalities on both sides for such a long period of time to the point where it can start to lose all meaning. The conflict is entering a new phase that brings with it new threats. At one point in 2022 military experts were concerned that a collapse of the Russian front lines might mean Russia would launch a tactical nuclear attack. Now analysts are sounding the alarms that if Ukraine's front lines were to collapse and Russia advanced into their territory it could mean a response from European countries like France who have diplomatically signaled they would be willing to deploy non combat troops into Ukraine.
I see it as a war of attrition, Ukraine will run out of troops before Russia. Russia is not leaving anything behind the lines so there will be no insurgency after the fall.
That Dude is the Czech "Most Interesting Man in the World", I'm sure He'll 'stumble' over all sorts of stuff to help out. I'll tip a Budvar to the Man.
He actually just might with only selling these shells for 1875$ a piece it is pretty cheap considering what everyone else is trying to push there 155mm shells for this is more priced like the prices from 2019/2020
Lol out of desperation zelensky is selling out his people for the next 100 years minimum. Ukraine lost its freedom when he thanked Goldman-Sachs for their help lol.
Yes but you have to also remember that the great war was first and foremost a conventional krieg between the entente and the central powers. Currently and for well over half a century by now it has been unnecessary for major world players to have such war-waging capabilities on account of nuclear weaponry, after all why have WWI/WWII period counterpart conventional warfare waging capabilities in the early twenty first century AD, if that doesn't happen anymore between powerful nation's? Hence the lower conventional artillery shell production and/or amounts of present day major world players (Great Britain, France, the US) when compared to them in earlier years and past major world powers (Germany, Austria, Japan).
@@ethanangel61623I mean yes but also no. Really hard to compare real cost from over 100 years ago but when looking at industrial output when comparing like items it is significantly less labor intensive to produce shells.
He actually had some in his garage, some in his attic and some under his bed...though one shell was left in his bedroom because his mrs uses if for ..uh...u know @deborahhoffman3941
@@deborahhoffman3941old Soviet stockpile most likely. It's not the most unrealistic idea they located a stockpile in some mountain cache that the Soviets just abandoned, slipping through the cracks until now. Not that any major military power would admit it, but they do misplace things sometimes. Hell, the US loaded live nukes into planes, instead of dummies, more than once, and has lost a few over the years.
@@Fazoo247 WDYM hidden Soviet stockpile? We were not part of Soviet union... Those shells are not ours or on our territory, otherwise we would send them for free 2 years ago already (we have given Ukraine every single attack helicopter we had, like third of our tanks and hundreds of thousands of shells and millions upon milions of ammo... first Czech weapons were sent just 5 days after the start of the war and 3 months after the start of the war we already sent tanks and self propelled artillery). Those shell can be bough using our cold war era contacts, but we are not able to pay for them ourselves, thats why our government is asking other NATO countries to support it financially, together with us. Some will be from South Korea, but lot of them will be from Africa, various Asian countries, south America and so on. Our government mentioned that some of those countries even have friendly relations with Russia currently and that only few countries like Iran or North Korea were taken off the table. Otherwise we are willing to buy anywhere and send it to Ukraine.
Imagine when 10 to 25 million combat deaths happened in each world War along with another 30 to 50 million Civilians and another 50 million injuries. That was at least 5 to 10 of the population at the time.
That, and the ~4 km long pipe that happened to run from the Russian positions then underneath and behind the Ukrainian positions about a kilometre so when the Russians snuck ~2 battalions of their more veteran/well-trained Air-Assault units back there to wreak havoc. Well, that's what they did, they really actually wreaked havoc..! That happened ~2 weeks before the actual "fall of Avdiivka" which is apparently when Ukraine began pulling out...
Yeah, for sure, that was a huge factor. Also: it's worth remembering that Avdiivka had been a lone holdout salient nestled right up against firmly established Russian territory with easy resupply lines and strong transport infrastructure for Russian forces. Sustaining a push a couple dozen km beyond that, it's a much tougher game. Ukrainians' new defense line is along a river, backed up by heights overseeing largely open fields. The Avdiivka salient factor also speaks to the fact that it's one thing to peek out over the horizon with an SU-34 for a few minutes at a time, not even getting close to enemy lines, drop payload, and scurry back to safety...and still lose a significant chunk of planes doing it. Much easier to do to a salient like Avdiivka, far more problematic to pull off the further out they have to fly. Let's just hope that those 2 destroyed Patriot launchers were not the only assets shooting down those planes. If Russian pilots now get to enjoy open skies for the foreseeable future, then much of what I just said may be moot.
1. the city is arguebly the strongest frotress on the frontline 2. russians only have been activly fighting for it for a month or 2 before it fell 3. where tf are you getting these numbers from?@@highdefinist9697
One of those Abrams tanks destroyed was firstly hit into the side by a T-72. Later finished off by a Kornet missile hit. I don't think Russians will go into full scale, big arrow offensives. They are quite content with small scale operations. One of the reasons might be that they want to inflict as many casualties possible while sustaining the least possible. In the end, they are fighting the battle of attrition; sooner or later Ukraine will run out of manpower. And with videos of force mobilization in Ukraine circulating online, it appears to be working.
It also works in Russia's favour as Ukraine desperately tries to launch PR to maintain their public image, which comes at a huge cost to them. Following the Russian capture of Artemovsk, the Ukrainians launched an incursion into Belgorod region and their soldiers began uploading selfies, meanwhile footage from the first day showed several destroyed armoured vehicles on the border, not to mention how many died inside Russia. Then there was the Ukrainian counteroffensive which not only was publicly announced months in advance, but they also made a movie-style trailer for it, and of course we all know how that ended. 20+ brigades reduced to below offensive capability. Almost immediately after that, Krynki happened to try and take media attention away, some hardcore pro-Ukrainians were screaming about how this was the true offensive. And we know how that ended up.
I can only imagine also the advantage Russia has from capturing abandoned Abram’s on the field. Being able to haul them back to Moscow for study and test them out. Especially since the tanks don’t look horribly destroyed.
Russia is also running out of manpower. Which is why they are sending troops to the front line with no tour end date! Once they get there, they aren't allowed home.
@@BlatentlyFakeName Who told you that? They have over 250.000 reservists still in the country. They are fighting the french right now in africa aswell. They started their drone production not so long ago, right now they are producing them in millions. They use 20.000 artillery shells per day and produce 3.000.000 a year. They rebuild the city of Mariupol in record time and are starting to rebuild cities in DNR and LNR regions. They are very very far from running out of anything, equipment, missiles, drones, manpower, shells. Dont trust your news, watch independent information with proofs to it.
Really liked that you talked about gloating. I've seen channels where they smile as they talk of the dead in this conflict and seem jubilant. These people (for the most part) were dragged unwillingly into this mess. My heart goes out to the families on both sides.
Exactly. I remember this drone footage of a Russian soldier lying on the ground shaking in terror and likely in pain aswell, having grenades dropped on him and people in the comments were just mocking him. Disgusting behaviour.
@@jameslopez9661i mean its the same for people in the western regions of Ukraine though, their told constantly on state sponsored news that the Russians are a bunch of bumbling & incompetent idiots and that Ukraine is winning the war, then when they get to the front they get a rude awakening...both sides are heavily propagandized.
Great summary of the current situation. I really appreciate how you don't shy away from the reality of the situation. Most of the other channels I follow didn't cover the HIMARs loss, etc.
they lost some western AA vehicles as well. The big question really is how long can Russia run its economy ragged with this level of spending. Its not about if they can do it, left alone indefinitely as things are Russia will slowly advance. But there is a pocket book at the end of this and the more they spend on this war the less good things will be down the road.
@@MicroSBs As long as oil and gas prices remain high and they have reserves. I would say maybe 5 years. But to be fair, that's a lot longer then Ukraine right now,
@@MicroSBs Russia has always been poor when in a conflict. Even in WW2… even in the Cold War. The USSR was not an economic powerhouse… it was a military one.
One of the things you missed is the fact that there were no combined operations because Ukraine wasn’t provided fighter jets. They were not covered from the sky, which defeats the purpose of combined operarions
Yeah good point. I was thinking as I was watching this "we are supplying Ukraine with some great equipment, but nothing to support it and it's just going to go to waste." M1 Abrams are great tanks, but no tank is invulnerable and if you're not covering the tank's weaknesses with support, Russia is going to exploit the weakness every chance they get. Tanks are useless without air and anti-air support. They're also useless without good training, both in operations and in tactics. We need to either give them the full package or not give them anything at all IMO. As harsh as that sounds, we're just throwing money into a fire that we're probably not going to recover. I want to see Ukraine succeed, but I'm not optimistic they can without a full and well rounded military aid package including F-16s, patriots, tanks, munitions, and proper training and advising on how best to utilize all of the assets together as a cohesive fighting unit. And unfortunately, they just don't have time to properly train F-16 pilots. The process would take more than just a few months for them to be truly effective and not be in the same situation where the equipment becomes little more than fodder.
Oh, they have fighter jets already. Problem is, they are no match for Russian ones. And there's no indication F-16s alone are going to alter this in a decisive way.
@@anatolyexlmao, the whole war is just fighting for villages and small towns, like ww1. ukraines lost 10k men trying to take krinki with 991 people living there. They lost 90k soldiers in town bakmut instead of retreating, now they lost ivanovskoe.
@@beastlysunYes and no. Problem is there are no more eyes in the sky with the advent of drone combat. Its important to remember that ukraine is mined to hell and back now so having rows of men is very dangerous so its hard to spread out. But also if you have collumns of tanks they become easier to spot making them more vulnerable just like what happened in ww2. Drones have significantly shaken up how we look at tactics now. You cannot hide anywhere especially in the fields of ukraine. Ukraine and russia both are figuring out the best tactics to approach this new state of warfare. NATO tactics have never seen this level of combat before so while we can say NATO tactics work becuase of experience we cannot say we experienced combat in a war filled to the brim with drones everywhere. Its easy to point fingers from the outside in but its important to remember you arnt there, you dont know how far down a road you can walk or run before you run into a drone. You dont know how far the enemy is from you. etc. There are an insane amount of variable that most of us armchair generals dont think about or understand.
Trophy is more like a basic anti-RPG system for common anti-tank weapon systems that Isreal see. They won't help with more advanced top-down attack munitions. I'm sure in the next 5-10 years we will see systems to resolve this limitation.
I was a small cog in the battle staff machine at the battalion level back in 2003-2005 in the S-3 shop and it is just crazy how hard those jobs really are and how much data they have to dig through, probably twice as much now due to advancing technology. Definitely a different type of fight than I was used to as a line infantryman.
Really the unsung heroes in war , very little is understood about their job . Thank you for your service . I only ever saw how company level command and control worked
@@TaskandpurposeI was mainly assisting the S3 so he could do his job, and drive him around like Miss Daisy. There are just so many moving pieces just at the battalion level that many grunts just don't see; if an Air NCO flubs his job then they don't get a seat or even an aircraft for airborne operations. Ammo NCO doesn't do something right you get 5.56 4:1 mix instead of 5.56 ball. Signal people in the TOC don't do their job right no one can talk with each other. It really does take a village to move a grunt.
I was one of the assistants to the Ops NCO, as an E4. If you’re squared away in S3, especially as an E3, E4, you will definitely get big boy tasks. I was literally the only RTO that had real time 9 line experience from Iraq. So on top of my other tasking, I had to get everyone else up to my standard on using the TOC radio. But it was high work, high reward. The BC had my back on a lot of things, so it really evened out. Good times.
My VNam experience was much like the “expendable” calculus. Spotter planes spotted suspected enemy movement. The command then sent a couple squads of us 19 year olds with a grizzled 35 year old, combat experienced platoon sergeant with a radio man and a green Lieutenant (light platoon) to push us forward and make contact, or flush the enemy. Often, the enemy had already high-tailed out of the area. But when contact was made, we were supposed to hold them in position while the green Lieutenant (scared shitless) called in coordinates for F4 Fantoms to come in and drop napalm on them. Once the birds were 3 minutes out, we scrambled out quickly to where Huey choppers were supposed to pick us up. Basically, us booney rats were bait. It was crazy because sometimes the birds were off coordinate and if we didn’t get our asses fried, we had NVA hot on our tails following us to our pickup point. Crazy, crazy shit!!😊
Russians and americans fight differently/ In Vietnam war for every military death there are 28 civilian deaths, americans just burned everybody with napalm. In Ukraine there is only 10,000 civilian deaths. If russians fought like americans there would be significantly less military casualties. USA invaded Iraq and killed 1,000,000 civilians, occupied and robbed Iraq for years. Russia invaded Georgia in 2009 won in a week. Left Georgia immediately after, no occupation, no civilian casualties.
Look up McNamara doing it on purpose. It was meant to serve yourself into a "respectable and useful position" in society. It wasn't by accident, you're right in discovering a systematic pattern there. Way meaner things to be said about that.
Thats not true. Sure they may engage in combat. But their primary role is not to fight directly. Their job is to act as a liason between the defenders and their own combat arms units.
Yeah, they were set up to fail from the beginning. Promised everything, but the whole effort was a dollar short and a day late from the beginning. A couple of hundred top tier tanks, and the weapons that have been drip fed them given at the start and they would have had the chance when they took back Kherson. Sickening levels of hubris and arrogance by the west.
The tunnel in Avdiivka was not dugged out. It was an old existing tunnel, and took some effort to get through. They did not put explosives in it, but troops went through and surprised the ukranian forces, creating a bridge head. Where on Earth do you guys get your information from ? 😄
Thank you vey much for giving those of us that have no concept of war a clearer understanding on the complexity of this conflict. What a great and honest presentation.
"Ours is not reason why" from his Korean war veteran grandfather is originally from The Charge of the Light Brigade describing it's charge of 600 men into highly fortified positions during the Crimean War.
It is hard to imagine that Chris doesn't know that, it being rather common knowledge (especially among soldiers), but it looked like he delivered it without a wink of some sort.
@tayikolla6205 Not really Russia doesn't exactly have a stabilising influence, they are there to fuck over France and steal the resources @@tayikolla6205
@@starlordyt6151 You mean providing uncorrupted highly effective military support as their express request ? losing our life on the battlefield for them ? Yeas real colonization right here, I'm not saying we didn't make a profit one way or another, but we sent men there, a lot of them, and we helped and trained them for years, no questions asked. We also leaved when they changed governments, it took us 3 weeks in 2013, to basically secure 5000km, which is what you would call a "prouesse" because it's fucking impressive.
I live across the street from a US Conus ammo storage facility. It regularly fires off old munitions. I don't know why that older ammo isn't being shipped.
Have you considered the reason this ammo is being destroyed is that it's unstable and would not be safe to ship or for the Ukrainians to try to use just as it seemingly isn't safe for the US to use.
@@leonelpadilla8484 I'm sorry, I wasn't aware that Ukraine was apart of the US. Maybe the Ukrainians shouldn't have bought yachts and luxurious properties/goods with what was given to them. Not our war, not our problem.
I think you have forgot to mention that in Spain sits one of the largest ammo productions plants of Europe, Expal. Recently bought by Rheinmetall, who plans to expand the facility, it has by herself the capacity to keep Ukraine fed with 155 mm. ammunition, but the problem is the lack of politic willpower to do it. Which is stupid beyond belief.
Another quality youtube channel (Anders puck Nielson) said that the succes of the counter invasion of Ukraine in 2022 led to the political lack of wiilpower today. Increasing arms production in the EU is necessary for the defence of the EU and Ukraine. Former Warsaw pact countries now in Nato and the EU are going full apeshit due to the serious threath the Russian federation gives. This European war is affecting everybody in Europe. Solong a diplomatic solution is out if the question we must sadly rearn.
That's great info. I understand there is a large Russian expat population in Spain. Part of the issue again comes back to the US. We have an ancient President who means well but who can barely speak at times and a VP who is an empty shell and hack. Neither is up to the task to marshal our allies to help Ukraine.
@@chrisstrawn4108 There is a large population of russian expats.. and still more ukrainians. If those populations counted for something the plant will be making shells non stop.
The scope of this channel- now including more geopolitical info and analysis- has really broadened from its original range. It's not quite the CSIS, FA, etc, but it provides a good overview of the current situation- and, importantly, imo, it's engaging/entertaining enough to interest people who may not normally seek out decent info on the subjects at hand. Cheers.
To me, this war is pushing Russia to modernize and improve at much faster rate than before. Russia is going up against a lot of Nato equipment, and learning the weaknesses (they're mainly older models keep in mind) The war is basically giving the current Russian army experience fighting a near pear opponent.
@@captainalex157 Thinking like this is what gets people killed. If you underestimate your enemy, it'll bite you. The fact is, if Russia went to war with NATO, Russia would undoubtedly lose, but tens of thousands, would die on both sides.
China has a lot of the same problems russia had at the start, not enough body armor for every soldier, not enougb ways to transport all of their soldiers and china hasnt been in a war in awhile@captainalex157 Edit: they have a problem giving out nvgs and thermals to the majority of their troops also
Talking about casualties is very important to determine the blowback from those familys that lost a loved one. It's also very important to figure out how much closer and bigger the next mobilization wave will be.
With the point he raised about the prison population of Russia reducing by over 200,000 that is a smart move from Russia. Using men that have lived a very violent life for the most violent even humans have ever created. This means a huge of the Russians dying were convicted criminals.
Basically the American neocons started the war by wanting to expanding NATO to Russia border, BUT very, very few neo cons have their children fighting in any conflicts ie always someone's children as canon fodder.
You have emerged as a serious, evidence-based analyst on military matters. Very impressive work -- keep it up. I also agree that the blowout panels make western tanks pretty vulnerable to drones. It's a mission kill, at the very least.
Wow!!! this is one of the best comprehensive updates on the war in Ukraine. this channel has really become top-tier news agency thank you for your non-biased reporting
@@fancychannelname You are citing the 20.000 kidnapped children story as if you knew it was actually true. I wonder how would you know? Western media is broadcasting a stream of propaganda and nobody seems to check - which admittedly wouldn't be an easy enterprise right now. If you never listen to the other side, you are bound to be misled and if you listen to the other side, you will walk around with a lot of undecidable questions. The latter seems better than walking around with a lot of purposefully instilled wrong convictions.
I have a brilliant idea! Attach a Billion Dollar Ukraine artillery shell package to the Tic Tok regulation bill! I'm so smart, even I amaze myself sometimes.
I'm not sure that would work, given the fact that Trump and members of his personality cult are despotic simps for Putin. The democrats gave the republicans everything they wanted with a border deal, but Trump didn't want it - since he wants to take the credit for solving the border crisis. Plus when the democrats tried to make a bill that specifically stated it was to help Ukraine, Trump turned that down as well. Not to mention the fact that the republican speaker of the house has had business dealings with Russian businessmen, so its likely he's Russian agent.
@@jibberism9910 Its not really relevant what some people without any clue say in the media. But sure, we obviously dont use information as a weapon in the right way.
@@dmitriyzhukov9193 Well, in the case of "the most anticipated offensive in military history" (Ukrainian summer offensive last year) it was pretty much everyone talking about it. Not so much the clueless.
what ukraine offers that is the most important thing is real world experience with modern combat. it would be in the best interest of many military powers to fully investigate this war and the changes to modern war.
@joselopez-kx3sm I'm a Reserve Soldier and "Oberstleutnant" (equal to Lieutenant Colonel in the USA) of the Gebirgsjäger of the Bundeswehr (served for 6 years, did 2 tours in Afghanistan with the Gebirgsjägerbrigade 23) and i have helped train Ukrainian Soldiers since the Invasion by Russia and i 100% agree. While a ton of Ukrainian Soldiers come here to have us train them professionally, once should not ignore the Fact that they literally defend their "Heimat" (Homeland) as we say in Germany, and i definitely can confirm that a lot of the battle hardened Ukrainian Soldiers who we trained also managed to teach us a lot!
1. 122mm and 200+mm cannons are useful 2. ERA is not optional 3. Production economy matters 4. NATO tactics DO NOT WORK! 5. Air support can’t be relied upon.
20:38 I have to point this out. Those are not highways. They are department roads. I notice it often times that Americans mistake them for highways. In Europe highways don’t cut through cities but rather go around them. VERY different.
This was an excellent summary covering strategic and tactical questions, and gave an unusually thorough examination of logistics of personnel, arms, and equipment.
yes its interesting to see the US Mil-ind-complex narrative sources such as this channel slowly walking back all their claims about Russian incompetence and the impending UKR victory/RU surrender. Reminds me of afghan, iraq, viet, and others. What is surprising to me is how slow the US public is at figuring out that these sources of information cannot be trusted.
@@Ngaktahu99 I've watched military summary channel for maybe almost half a year now and I can say that he's definitely more pro Russian... but yes, he also shows the Russians losses.. so, I can recommend it. Compared to many other videos I've seen from other channels, this video is at least quite balanced and doesn't claim to tell the pure truth (like the 31k losses of the Ukrainians, which is a ridiculously low number)..
I've been glued to coverage of the war since the start. Just wanted to thank you from the UK for probably the best analysis on UA-cam . If I really want some as unbiased info, you guys are my go to channel. Glory to Ukraine.
This is not the war NATO expected to fight against the Soviets during the Cold War era. In many ways it is more like the hedgerow-to-hedgerow fighting seen in Normandy in 1944 but along the entire length of the line of contact. Neither side has air superiority and drones prevent both sides from building up sufficient forces in a location to make a major push.
Amazing summary of events since November! In the "next" episode, might you cover the logic behind the technological "delta" between the southern and Kherson fronts, and those near Donetsk and Kupyansk? Is there a future advantage to be gained by so obviously supplying the western/northern fronts with markedly better equipment? Also, and I understand that you are an Army guy, but the Ukrainian advances against the Black Sea Fleet, the offshore oil rig network, Russian commercial shipping, and technological advances with sea-based drones are incredible.
the quote at 33:52 is Tennyson's charge of the light brigade - a story from the battle of balaclava in the Crimea war. ] Half a league, half a league, Half a league onward, All in the valley of Death Rode the six hundred. “Forward, the Light Brigade! Charge for the guns!” he said. Into the valley of Death Rode the six hundred. II “Forward, the Light Brigade!” Was there a man dismayed? Not though the soldier knew Someone had blundered. Theirs not to make reply, Theirs not to reason why, Theirs but to do and die. Into the valley of Death Rode the six hundred. III Cannon to right of them, Cannon to left of them, Cannon in front of them Volleyed and thundered; Stormed at with shot and shell, Boldly they rode and well, Into the jaws of Death, Into the mouth of hell Rode the six hundred. IV Flashed all their sabres bare, Flashed as they turned in air Sabring the gunners there, Charging an army, while All the world wondered. Plunged in the battery-smoke Right through the line they broke; Cossack and Russian Reeled from the sabre stroke Shattered and sundered. Then they rode back, but not Not the six hundred. V Cannon to right of them, Cannon to left of them, Cannon behind them Volleyed and thundered; Stormed at with shot and shell, While horse and hero fell. They that had fought so well Came through the jaws of Death, Back from the mouth of hell, All that was left of them, Left of six hundred. VI When can their glory fade? O the wild charge they made! All the world wondered. Honour the charge they made! Honour the Light Brigade, Noble six hundred!
@@attilamarics3374 You are coping hard. Russia is stuck controlling like 15% of Ukrainian territory after over 2 years of war. Pathetic failure of an war started for no real reason other than Russian imperialism
Good channel I machined the presidential cuffs for the ch53 heli and worked Army experimental on the AGT 1500 Abrams. It was never designed for muck and mire battle but for Siberia in the snow. When it went to the desert the crew baked. I designed the quick change air system for sand and would change to a less restrictive system now. The turbine injector nozzle shields were always cracking in the hot section and the recuperator was copied after a super trapp muffler from dirt bike racing. I'll bet that driveshaft isnt cheap today.
The news and analysis has been great. You been doing a great job really like the videos. The information is relevant and important and accurate. Thank you
Really appreciate the enormous amount of research you put into these very informative episodes. Your presentation is top touch, your narration is on point and you don't look too bad in front of the camera. You provide a much-needed service. Stay well.
16:10 “Russian missile strike on Kramatorsk train station” Except that serial number on the Tochka U missile, showcased by Italian military correspondents, corresponds exactly to same series of missiles used on Luhansk, Donetsk and other rebel held territories over the 9 years of combat, suggesting it is extremely possible that it came from same Arsenal storage. Not to mention that Russians practically never use Tochka U missile systems, and they were retired and put on conversation more than a decade ago in Russia, while Ukraine used and use to this day this missile systems due to abundance of it. So far, “Russia used Tochka U missile to hit civilians” sounds like Ukrainian effing up with their targeting and blaming Russians for it, as usual.
@@DytoxPrime Ahh when it's Ukrainian civilians it's always Russia but when it's Russian civilians it's a Russian false flag. lol get real the Ukrainians and Russians are firing missiles into civilian centers the only difference between the two is Russia is targeting military infrastructure imbedded in civilian centers while the Ukrainians are targeting residential areas
As the Shahed drones are now equipped with cameras to increase targeting accuracy, but these rely on cellular communication networks, this seems like an easy thing to combat. If the Ukrainian government just lets the public know that when the air raid sirens sound, that cell service will also be intentionally cut to cause the attacking drones to fly blind, I think this is a sacrifice they would be willing to make.
The Shahed drones are just a place holder until Russia can ramp up production of their own Lancet drones sufficiently, we should probably worry more about them and their capabilities for the future.
@@highdefinist9697 Really? Cause i say Russia are ramping up domestic drone production you're talking to me like I'm some sort of pro Russian blogger? Well okay my mistake, i was wrong. They rely only on Iranian Shahed drones and shovels witch they plan to continue to do forever. Slava Ukraine! Feel better now?
@@highdefinist9697 Russia has many times more drones than Ukraine, and many times higher drone production. You are acting like they dont produce huge ammount sof lancet drones right now. They didnt buy drones from Iran, they bought the right to build them at home.
@@attilamarics3374 Many pieces of drone wreckage found in Ukraine clearly has farci language written on the components showing that they were built in Iran. Look it up
The comparison to China supporting Vietnam has one little issue - the weapons supplied were eventually used against China. There’s no such thing as an eternal enemy or friend in geopolitics. Weapons supplied to Ukraine could be used against NATO, especially in the situation where Russia wins and install a puppet regime. This is also why the west were reluctant to provide lethal aid at the beginning of the war, when most people expected a swift Russian victory. In terms of aids, if NATO really wants Ukraine to win, it will need to send at least its Air Force. The Soviet Union sent air force to the Korean War disguised as North Korean and Chinese pilots, so western pilots can just disguise as Ukrainian pilots along with donated jets. The catch is, pilots and jets are expensive compared to grunts (with no disrespect to Cappy). Sending pilots and jets in significant numbers would be Very expensive. It’s doubtful if any leaders would make this level of commitment.
you are correct that's a great point, it's for sure not a perfect historical analogy, I'm guessing someone can think of a better example. and yes jets are far more expensive than us ground pounders haha
@@Taskandpurpose Two perfect examples , one the hardware left behind in Afghan and the western arms going out the back door of Ukraine and turning up in terrorist organisations , which has been proved!
@@jimmyc974Ukraine isn't supplying arms to foreign extremist groups. That's a story because Putin doesn't want to USA to send weapons to Ukraine. I know that the news report seemed trustworthy, but it isn't. Just think about it.. Ukraine: "Finally, America has sent the artillery... but it was our trick! Now we will send it to the middle eastern terrorists, even though we're fighting for our lives here!" That level of ridiculousness shows what they think of their viewers' intelligence. They know people are afraid of terrorists. The goal is to delay weapons shipments to Ukraine. So, they try to link the 2 together. Don't let them play you like that. If you're not in favor of helping Ukraine, that's up to you, but don't let them get away with such a dumb story as that. They'll end up putting you on a sucker list, and you'll get a ton of scam calls and emails.
NATO weapons being used against the West is already happening. Corrupt Ukrainian officials looking to get some quick bucks have sold NATO weapons in the international Arms blackmarket. Now you see weapons like Javelins in places like Nicaragua and Central Africa.
I highly doubt any of the remaining military personnel left in the US military will be very motivated to fight Biden's war, and recruitment is in the toilet so Potato Joe would have to reinstate the draft. If Trump wins this year though, well Ukraine can say goodbye to any munition deals, as it should be. If Europe is so concerned about war, they can prepare and pay for it. We have our own invasion to deal with back home.
@@highdefinist9697You are high if you think western nations are going to first-strike Moscow with nuclear weapons because NATO troops in Ukraine (a non-NATO state) died. Any forces in Ukraine are fair game and if NATO does send troops, they WILL get Iskandered as a message. We should ALL not be doing things to deliberately escalate to thermonuclear war. It is not like the fallout games. You are absolutely not ready for that hellscape.
@@Shinkajo mission creep is slow escalation without having a specified end goal. Meaning we went from sending tanks as being called ww3 to now having F-35s in the combat zone to France calling for boots on the ground. Fox Conner is rolling over in his grave right now.
Gramps definitely borrowed that quote from the poem Charge of the Light Brigade. Which was Brits following orders without question in the Crimean War and getting shredded by Russians
Here's an extract from Tennyson's poem about the charge. Orders had sent the British cavalry up the wrong valley, directly into a Russian gun emplacement. "... though the soldier knew Someone had blundered. Theirs not to make reply, Theirs not to reason why, Theirs but to do and die. Into the valley of Death Rode the six hundred. " Cannon to right of them, Cannon to left of them, Cannon in front of them Volleyed and thundered; Stormed at with shot and shell, Boldly they rode and well, Into the jaws of Death, Into the mouth of hell Rode the six hundred. " Flashed all their sabres bare, Flashed as they turned in air Sabring the gunners there, Charging an army, while All the world wondered. Plunged in the battery-smoke Right through the line they broke; Cossack and Russian Reeled from the sabre stroke Shattered and sundered. Then they rode back, but not Not the six hundred."
Things like this happen more often than you would think lol 10 years ago a stash of housands stg44's were found in a warehouse in the middle east with tons of ammo
@@bloodking73 Not to mention they didnt find shells, they found the money. I dont get what are you guys are talking about, the west couldnt fulfill even the rpomises they made in 2022. They dont have enough shell prdouciton.
29:40 is a key point most people overlook. Russia "has a command economy", he says. Yes, the state is above corporations, not the other way around, as is the case in the west.
It's not that meaningful. The US can transition into a quasi command economy during a formal declaration of war. Look up the Defense Production Act for reference.
What is he supposed to do? Sabre rattle to give NATO warmongers more excuses? As if they arent already manufacturing them out of thin air already..... Lukashenko staying quiet is perfectly normal.
True, they would be in the jaw of the nutcracker when fighting spreads west. Sorry for Lukasenko that he couldn’t get the Wagner safety blanket that he tried to get.
China has its own interests in Russia remaining a wartorn pile of crap, they won't bother, especially with how loosely tied Discord is to China in that sense. This is not like Tik Tok, Discord is way less risky, even if it is still relatively unguarded.
Hey! I subscribed to your channel, but for some reason I cannot view the content that unlocks. Maybe I am just being impatient, but thought I’d write a note anyway. Looking forward to viewing the Bell and General Dynamics interview in particular!
The way of war is changing as we speak and people think the new Abrams would survive those attacks. Just sit down, learn from these experiences, so that tomorrow American crews are better protected against these new threats.
In North Korea, China sent far more than advisors and weapons. They sent well over a million soldiers who shot NATO (mostly USA) soldiers and the world did exactly nothing. So don't expect red lines.
After 2 years the war has gone through several phases. Russia nearly occupied the entire country in the early phases of the war, then Ukraine recaptured thousands of kilometers back. Ukraine has damaged or sunk nearly a third of Russia's black sea fleet and separatists have started to launch attacks into Russian territory in Belgorod. Now Russian forces have regained the initiative, so far they haven't captured large amounts of territory but they've gained the strategic initiative which means they are able to attack at a time and place of their choosing. It can be desensitizing to hear about thousands of causalities on both sides for such a long period of time to the point where it can start to lose all meaning.
The conflict is entering a new phase that brings with it new threats. At one point in 2022 military experts were concerned that a collapse of the Russian front lines might mean Russia would launch a tactical nuclear attack. Now analysts are sounding the alarms that if Ukraine's front lines were to collapse and Russia advanced into their territory it could mean a response from European countries like France who have diplomatically signaled they would be willing to deploy non combat troops into Ukraine.
" non combat" troops so cooks?
@@liuyifei1989or logistics guys
I see it as a war of attrition, Ukraine will run out of troops before Russia. Russia is not leaving anything behind the lines so there will be no insurgency after the fall.
Aren’t the French gonna go in?
@@amc3463Ha-ha - good one!
I just pictured the President of Czech taking a walk and stumbling over hundreds of thousands artillery shells.
LOL
Oh darn I just randomly tripped over 800,000 artillery shells. How did they get there?
That Dude is the Czech "Most Interesting Man in the World", I'm sure He'll 'stumble' over all sorts of stuff to help out. I'll tip a Budvar to the Man.
He actually just might with only selling these shells for 1875$ a piece it is pretty cheap considering what everyone else is trying to push there 155mm shells for this is more priced like the prices from 2019/2020
He didn’t. That part was misrepresented. He got together money to buy shells, but couldn’t find very many to buy.
Update: Petr Pavel found 200k more shells, making it a million.
Some ppl look under their couch and find loose change, Pavel finds other things...
Have friends like Pavel.
makes good buck too.
How many used condoms are they sending to Ukraine is my question.
@@hamsterSNAKEnone needed, you can keep them
Lol out of desperation zelensky is selling out his people for the next 100 years minimum. Ukraine lost its freedom when he thanked Goldman-Sachs for their help lol.
It blows my mind how an entire year's worth of artillery dueling now, the shell count is what a *single large battle in WW1 would expend.
Hadn’t thought about that, Shelling is a lot more accurate now tho
@@Taskandpurpose at a significantly higher cost however
Yes but you have to also remember that the great war was first and foremost a conventional krieg between the entente and the central powers. Currently and for well over half a century by now it has been unnecessary for major world players to have such war-waging capabilities on account of nuclear weaponry, after all why have WWI/WWII period counterpart conventional warfare waging capabilities in the early twenty first century AD, if that doesn't happen anymore between powerful nation's? Hence the lower conventional artillery shell production and/or amounts of present day major world players (Great Britain, France, the US) when compared to them in earlier years and past major world powers (Germany, Austria, Japan).
@@ethanangel61623I mean yes but also no. Really hard to compare real cost from over 100 years ago but when looking at industrial output when comparing like items it is significantly less labor intensive to produce shells.
Berel Lazar and the j zelensky are just warming up like netanyahu
The Czech president "just came across" 800000 artillery rounds, 😂😂😂
At 6,000 a day that will last only a few months. I’d also like to know where he got them from.
Because if it’s from the 3rd world…
He actually had some in his garage, some in his attic and some under his bed...though one shell was left in his bedroom because his mrs uses if for ..uh...u know @deborahhoffman3941
@@deborahhoffman3941old Soviet stockpile most likely. It's not the most unrealistic idea they located a stockpile in some mountain cache that the Soviets just abandoned, slipping through the cracks until now. Not that any major military power would admit it, but they do misplace things sometimes. Hell, the US loaded live nukes into planes, instead of dummies, more than once, and has lost a few over the years.
@@Fazoo247 so 30+ year old shells.
Well, some will work… at least
@@Fazoo247 WDYM hidden Soviet stockpile? We were not part of Soviet union... Those shells are not ours or on our territory, otherwise we would send them for free 2 years ago already (we have given Ukraine every single attack helicopter we had, like third of our tanks and hundreds of thousands of shells and millions upon milions of ammo... first Czech weapons were sent just 5 days after the start of the war and 3 months after the start of the war we already sent tanks and self propelled artillery). Those shell can be bough using our cold war era contacts, but we are not able to pay for them ourselves, thats why our government is asking other NATO countries to support it financially, together with us. Some will be from South Korea, but lot of them will be from Africa, various Asian countries, south America and so on. Our government mentioned that some of those countries even have friendly relations with Russia currently and that only few countries like Iran or North Korea were taken off the table. Otherwise we are willing to buy anywhere and send it to Ukraine.
My hometown had a population of around 14,000. 20,000 Casualties is insane. Imagine you and everyone you’ve ever seen, dead. It’s hard to comprehend.
Casualties doesnt necessarily mean dead no?
@@danielmeb84correct casualties include injured
Imagine when 10 to 25 million combat deaths happened in each world War along with another 30 to 50 million Civilians and another 50 million injuries. That was at least 5 to 10 of the population at the time.
My hometown has a population of 800
How do you not now what casualties are. 14000 casualties means less than 3000 kia. Claims of 14.000 are vastly overstated though.
Cappy, I think this video marks the first time you've correctly said the word "nuclear"! Good job, Cappy!
It only took me two years !
Cappy is evolving. He's learning. Nature is beautiful...
That's it; game over, man! Game over!
Well you still can’t say “foRward”
@@Taskandpurpose😂😂😂 finally
I think the Russians FAB-1500 glide bomb had a lot to do with the taking of Advika as well. My understanding is they used about 250 of those
That, and the ~4 km long pipe that happened to run from the Russian positions then underneath and behind the Ukrainian positions about a kilometre so when the Russians snuck ~2 battalions of their more veteran/well-trained Air-Assault units back there to wreak havoc. Well, that's what they did, they really actually wreaked havoc..!
That happened ~2 weeks before the actual "fall of Avdiivka" which is apparently when Ukraine began pulling out...
These devices ARE a game-changer.
Yeah, for sure, that was a huge factor. Also: it's worth remembering that Avdiivka had been a lone holdout salient nestled right up against firmly established Russian territory with easy resupply lines and strong transport infrastructure for Russian forces. Sustaining a push a couple dozen km beyond that, it's a much tougher game. Ukrainians' new defense line is along a river, backed up by heights overseeing largely open fields. The Avdiivka salient factor also speaks to the fact that it's one thing to peek out over the horizon with an SU-34 for a few minutes at a time, not even getting close to enemy lines, drop payload, and scurry back to safety...and still lose a significant chunk of planes doing it. Much easier to do to a salient like Avdiivka, far more problematic to pull off the further out they have to fly. Let's just hope that those 2 destroyed Patriot launchers were not the only assets shooting down those planes. If Russian pilots now get to enjoy open skies for the foreseeable future, then much of what I just said may be moot.
that was in the south tho the thing that actually killed the city was an attack from the norht that cut the supply to it@@scottsauritch3216
1. the city is arguebly the strongest frotress on the frontline 2. russians only have been activly fighting for it for a month or 2 before it fell 3. where tf are you getting these numbers from?@@highdefinist9697
One of those Abrams tanks destroyed was firstly hit into the side by a T-72. Later finished off by a Kornet missile hit.
I don't think Russians will go into full scale, big arrow offensives. They are quite content with small scale operations. One of the reasons might be that they want to inflict as many casualties possible while sustaining the least possible. In the end, they are fighting the battle of attrition; sooner or later Ukraine will run out of manpower. And with videos of force mobilization in Ukraine circulating online, it appears to be working.
It also works in Russia's favour as Ukraine desperately tries to launch PR to maintain their public image, which comes at a huge cost to them. Following the Russian capture of Artemovsk, the Ukrainians launched an incursion into Belgorod region and their soldiers began uploading selfies, meanwhile footage from the first day showed several destroyed armoured vehicles on the border, not to mention how many died inside Russia.
Then there was the Ukrainian counteroffensive which not only was publicly announced months in advance, but they also made a movie-style trailer for it, and of course we all know how that ended. 20+ brigades reduced to below offensive capability.
Almost immediately after that, Krynki happened to try and take media attention away, some hardcore pro-Ukrainians were screaming about how this was the true offensive. And we know how that ended up.
I can only imagine also the advantage Russia has from capturing abandoned Abram’s on the field. Being able to haul them back to Moscow for study and test them out. Especially since the tanks don’t look horribly destroyed.
@@chiefster11 I mean the Russian's have already known the in's and out's of the Abrams since the 80s.
Russia is also running out of manpower. Which is why they are sending troops to the front line with no tour end date! Once they get there, they aren't allowed home.
@@BlatentlyFakeName Who told you that? They have over 250.000 reservists still in the country. They are fighting the french right now in africa aswell. They started their drone production not so long ago, right now they are producing them in millions. They use 20.000 artillery shells per day and produce 3.000.000 a year. They rebuild the city of Mariupol in record time and are starting to rebuild cities in DNR and LNR regions. They are very very far from running out of anything, equipment, missiles, drones, manpower, shells.
Dont trust your news, watch independent information with proofs to it.
Really liked that you talked about gloating. I've seen channels where they smile as they talk of the dead in this conflict and seem jubilant. These people (for the most part) were dragged unwillingly into this mess. My heart goes out to the families on both sides.
well said..
Exactly. I remember this drone footage of a Russian soldier lying on the ground shaking in terror and likely in pain aswell, having grenades dropped on him and people in the comments were just mocking him. Disgusting behaviour.
Yeah and it's worse when you see how authoritative the Russian side is in getting info or speaking freely so they're forced to war
@@jameslopez9661i mean its the same for people in the western regions of Ukraine though, their told constantly on state sponsored news that the Russians are a bunch of bumbling & incompetent idiots and that Ukraine is winning the war, then when they get to the front they get a rude awakening...both sides are heavily propagandized.
Very true
Great summary of the current situation. I really appreciate how you don't shy away from the reality of the situation.
Most of the other channels I follow didn't cover the HIMARs loss, etc.
they lost some western AA vehicles as well. The big question really is how long can Russia run its economy ragged with this level of spending. Its not about if they can do it, left alone indefinitely as things are Russia will slowly advance. But there is a pocket book at the end of this and the more they spend on this war the less good things will be down the road.
Didn’t cover the congress situation here tho 🤷🏻♂️
@perfectly Maybe that’s your clue that you are watching Western propaganda
@@MicroSBs As long as oil and gas prices remain high and they have reserves. I would say maybe 5 years. But to be fair, that's a lot longer then Ukraine right now,
@@MicroSBs Russia has always been poor when in a conflict.
Even in WW2… even in the Cold War. The USSR was not an economic powerhouse… it was a military one.
One of the things you missed is the fact that there were no combined operations because Ukraine wasn’t provided fighter jets. They were not covered from the sky, which defeats the purpose of combined operarions
well russians rush like bots. many drone videos when they literally fail in matter of seconds
Yeah good point. I was thinking as I was watching this "we are supplying Ukraine with some great equipment, but nothing to support it and it's just going to go to waste." M1 Abrams are great tanks, but no tank is invulnerable and if you're not covering the tank's weaknesses with support, Russia is going to exploit the weakness every chance they get. Tanks are useless without air and anti-air support. They're also useless without good training, both in operations and in tactics. We need to either give them the full package or not give them anything at all IMO. As harsh as that sounds, we're just throwing money into a fire that we're probably not going to recover. I want to see Ukraine succeed, but I'm not optimistic they can without a full and well rounded military aid package including F-16s, patriots, tanks, munitions, and proper training and advising on how best to utilize all of the assets together as a cohesive fighting unit. And unfortunately, they just don't have time to properly train F-16 pilots. The process would take more than just a few months for them to be truly effective and not be in the same situation where the equipment becomes little more than fodder.
Oh, they have fighter jets already. Problem is, they are no match for Russian ones. And there's no indication F-16s alone are going to alter this in a decisive way.
Maybe they should build their own instead of begging... 🤷♂️
Having a fighter doesn't mean it can be effectively used. Russia has excellent air defense.
400,000 people is NOT a small town.
if you mean Avdiivka, it was 40,000
@@horoshkoaleksandr273 he just trying to give russians more credit than they deserve .
@@anatolyexlmao, the whole war is just fighting for villages and small towns, like ww1. ukraines lost 10k men trying to take krinki with 991 people living there. They lost 90k soldiers in town bakmut instead of retreating, now they lost ivanovskoe.
@@Wayferer159what kind of propaganda would say russia lost 90k troops in a city💀
@@-Warrior-. Prolly by joe
I like the way you break everything down barney style for the average Cavalryman like me. I appreciate the work you do to keep us informed.
Southfront.
Expeditionary Force vibes
The time for tanks without active protection systems like the trophy, and active drones protection systems, are over.
what should be also over is to send those tanks alone. Sadly that is what happened with those that were taken out
or you know, of tanks without infantry support, which is a time that never happened,
@@beastlysunYes and no. Problem is there are no more eyes in the sky with the advent of drone combat. Its important to remember that ukraine is mined to hell and back now so having rows of men is very dangerous so its hard to spread out. But also if you have collumns of tanks they become easier to spot making them more vulnerable just like what happened in ww2. Drones have significantly shaken up how we look at tactics now. You cannot hide anywhere especially in the fields of ukraine. Ukraine and russia both are figuring out the best tactics to approach this new state of warfare. NATO tactics have never seen this level of combat before so while we can say NATO tactics work becuase of experience we cannot say we experienced combat in a war filled to the brim with drones everywhere.
Its easy to point fingers from the outside in but its important to remember you arnt there, you dont know how far down a road you can walk or run before you run into a drone. You dont know how far the enemy is from you. etc. There are an insane amount of variable that most of us armchair generals dont think about or understand.
Trophy is more like a basic anti-RPG system for common anti-tank weapon systems that Isreal see. They won't help with more advanced top-down attack munitions. I'm sure in the next 5-10 years we will see systems to resolve this limitation.
Was thinking the same, when a 20k drone can destroy a 10mill tank its a problem.
I was a small cog in the battle staff machine at the battalion level back in 2003-2005 in the S-3 shop and it is just crazy how hard those jobs really are and how much data they have to dig through, probably twice as much now due to advancing technology. Definitely a different type of fight than I was used to as a line infantryman.
Really the unsung heroes in war , very little is understood about their job . Thank you for your service . I only ever saw how company level command and control worked
@@TaskandpurposeI was mainly assisting the S3 so he could do his job, and drive him around like Miss Daisy. There are just so many moving pieces just at the battalion level that many grunts just don't see; if an Air NCO flubs his job then they don't get a seat or even an aircraft for airborne operations. Ammo NCO doesn't do something right you get 5.56 4:1 mix instead of 5.56 ball. Signal people in the TOC don't do their job right no one can talk with each other. It really does take a village to move a grunt.
I was one of the assistants to the Ops NCO, as an E4. If you’re squared away in S3, especially as an E3, E4, you will definitely get big boy tasks. I was literally the only RTO that had real time 9 line experience from Iraq. So on top of my other tasking, I had to get everyone else up to my standard on using the TOC radio. But it was high work, high reward. The BC had my back on a lot of things, so it really evened out. Good times.
It really is a science in its own.
My VNam experience was much like the “expendable” calculus.
Spotter planes spotted suspected enemy movement. The command then sent a couple squads of us 19 year olds with a grizzled 35 year old, combat experienced platoon sergeant with a radio man and a green Lieutenant (light platoon) to push us forward and make contact, or flush the enemy. Often, the enemy had already high-tailed out of the area. But when contact was made, we were supposed to hold them in position while the green Lieutenant (scared shitless) called in coordinates for F4 Fantoms to come in and drop napalm on them.
Once the birds were 3 minutes out, we scrambled out quickly to where Huey choppers were supposed to pick us up.
Basically, us booney rats were bait. It was crazy because sometimes the birds were off coordinate and if we didn’t get our asses fried, we had NVA hot on our tails following us to our pickup point.
Crazy, crazy shit!!😊
I watch videos from that war and it definitely looks like pure hell.
Yeah US Empire and stupidity then, US Empire and stupidity, now. Same outcomes.
Can't believe the NVA fell for that old trick, pursuit of the enemy on the run!!😂😅😊
Russians and americans fight differently/
In Vietnam war for every military death there are 28 civilian deaths, americans just burned everybody with napalm.
In Ukraine there is only 10,000 civilian deaths.
If russians fought like americans there would be significantly less military casualties.
USA invaded Iraq and killed 1,000,000 civilians, occupied and robbed Iraq for years.
Russia invaded Georgia in 2009 won in a week. Left Georgia immediately after, no occupation, no civilian casualties.
Look up McNamara doing it on purpose.
It was meant to serve yourself into a "respectable and useful position" in society.
It wasn't by accident, you're right in discovering a systematic pattern there.
Way meaner things to be said about that.
"Sending Advisors and instructors" is a smokescreen quote for sending in tier one direct assault units. Lol
Yup. Just like the American "advisors" sent to Vietnam in the 60s
Thats not true. Sure they may engage in combat. But their primary role is not to fight directly. Their job is to act as a liason between the defenders and their own combat arms units.
You know special forces operators were there the minute it started. No way Delta and CIA operators would sit out this game.
Ok keyboard operator
@@300thNPCI don't know. Footage from Civ Dev & Co clearly suggests otherwise.
Not sending ATACMS in 2022 was a give-up move
Yeah, they were set up to fail from the beginning. Promised everything, but the whole effort was a dollar short and a day late from the beginning.
A couple of hundred top tier tanks, and the weapons that have been drip fed them given at the start and they would have had the chance when they took back Kherson.
Sickening levels of hubris and arrogance by the west.
The same accounts for Taurus. The ghost of Richard Chamberlain is out of the bottle.
Yea I’m sure that’s the only reason Russia is steamrolling
@@debrainwasher Yes true but its Neville Chamberlain not Richard. Richard was the actor.
@@debrainwasher Not sending ATACMS understandably makes Germany hesitate to send Taurus.
The tunnel in Avdiivka was not dugged out. It was an old existing tunnel, and took some effort to get through. They did not put explosives in it, but troops went through and surprised the ukranian forces, creating a bridge head. Where on Earth do you guys get your information from ? 😄
The fact western people think this is the most unbiased and informative videos is sad tbh, thet havent seen the real truth
And it's how they were able to capture the old air defense base
most of the bs this guy talked about is just miserable nato propaganda
this dude is a clown
It was a pipe! The Russians supplied air to the soldiers.
😂 So many fellow supporters memed and laughed their 'arse' about it! "The mighty pipe"
Thank you vey much for giving those of us that have no concept of war a clearer understanding on the complexity of this conflict.
What a great and honest presentation.
"Ours is not reason why" from his Korean war veteran grandfather is originally from The Charge of the Light Brigade describing it's charge of 600 men into highly fortified positions during the Crimean War.
It is hard to imagine that Chris doesn't know that, it being rather common knowledge (especially among soldiers), but it looked like he delivered it without a wink of some sort.
Or with a non-ironic "hurrah "....
And we all know how that turned out
Crimea was Russian then and Russian it will remain.
We learned this poem in English literature class. The questions came up in my country's version of SAT haha. Neat
The lesson is tanks can no longer assume where the enemy can shoot it. Drones make it easy to get above and behind.
France is also pissed at Russia for using Wagner to help destabilize the former French colonies in the coup belt in northern Africa.
You mean by stabilize African countries?
@tayikolla6205 Not really Russia doesn't exactly have a stabilising influence, they are there to fuck over France and steal the resources @@tayikolla6205
@@tayikolla6205 yeah years later french still colonizing africa
@@starlordyt6151 You mean providing uncorrupted highly effective military support as their express request ? losing our life on the battlefield for them ? Yeas real colonization right here, I'm not saying we didn't make a profit one way or another, but we sent men there, a lot of them, and we helped and trained them for years, no questions asked. We also leaved when they changed governments, it took us 3 weeks in 2013, to basically secure 5000km, which is what you would call a "prouesse" because it's fucking impressive.
France is "pissed" , that's so cute. The little Napoleon is angry LOL
I live across the street from a US Conus ammo storage facility. It regularly fires off old munitions. I don't know why that older ammo isn't being shipped.
Have you considered the reason this ammo is being destroyed is that it's unstable and would not be safe to ship or for the Ukrainians to try to use just as it seemingly isn't safe for the US to use.
@@daniels0376uhhhh idk about that dude. I'm pretty sure it has to deal with all the US politicians who are pro-Russian. 😂😂😂😂
@@daniels0376 Right. The US regularly invades other countries because we just f'ing feel like it.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
@@leonelpadilla8484 I'm sorry, I wasn't aware that Ukraine was apart of the US. Maybe the Ukrainians shouldn't have bought yachts and luxurious properties/goods with what was given to them. Not our war, not our problem.
That's an odd take @@daniels0376
I think you have forgot to mention that in Spain sits one of the largest ammo productions plants of Europe, Expal. Recently bought by Rheinmetall, who plans to expand the facility, it has by herself the capacity to keep Ukraine fed with 155 mm. ammunition, but the problem is the lack of politic willpower to do it. Which is stupid beyond belief.
It’s the Spanish they fumble everything
Another quality youtube channel (Anders puck Nielson) said that the succes of the counter invasion of Ukraine in 2022 led to the political lack of wiilpower today.
Increasing arms production in the EU is necessary for the defence of the EU and Ukraine.
Former Warsaw pact countries now in Nato and the EU are going full apeshit due to the serious threath the Russian federation gives.
This European war is affecting everybody in Europe.
Solong a diplomatic solution is out if the question we must sadly rearn.
That's great info. I understand there is a large Russian expat population in Spain. Part of the issue again comes back to the US. We have an ancient President who means well but who can barely speak at times and a VP who is an empty shell and hack. Neither is up to the task to marshal our allies to help Ukraine.
@@chrisstrawn4108 There is a large population of russian expats.. and still more ukrainians. If those populations counted for something the plant will be making shells non stop.
Smart beyond belief.
The scope of this channel- now including more geopolitical info and analysis- has really broadened from its original range.
It's not quite the CSIS, FA, etc, but it provides a good overview of the current situation- and, importantly, imo, it's engaging/entertaining enough to interest people who may not normally seek out decent info on the subjects at hand.
Cheers.
Very good video Chris, well documented! Congrats to you and the team
Thank you for these updates, Chris.
To me, this war is pushing Russia to modernize and improve at much faster rate than before. Russia is going up against a lot of Nato equipment, and learning the weaknesses (they're mainly older models keep in mind) The war is basically giving the current Russian army experience fighting a near pear opponent.
NATO isnt near peer for russia lol. Russia really isnt a threat to NATO. China on the other hand...
@@captainalex157 Thinking like this is what gets people killed. If you underestimate your enemy, it'll bite you. The fact is, if Russia went to war with NATO, Russia would undoubtedly lose, but tens of thousands, would die on both sides.
China has a lot of the same problems russia had at the start, not enough body armor for every soldier, not enougb ways to transport all of their soldiers and china hasnt been in a war in awhile@captainalex157
Edit: they have a problem giving out nvgs and thermals to the majority of their troops also
Yes why has nobody even notice?
Colonel Douglas McGregor and Scott Ritter seem to agree with you. America’s military is too woke now to be effective in a real full scale battle.
Talking about casualties is very important to determine the blowback from those familys that lost a loved one. It's also very important to figure out how much closer and bigger the next mobilization wave will be.
You raise great points , thank you for the feedback
With the point he raised about the prison population of Russia reducing by over 200,000 that is a smart move from Russia. Using men that have lived a very violent life for the most violent even humans have ever created. This means a huge of the Russians dying were convicted criminals.
Basically the American neocons started the war by wanting to expanding NATO to Russia border, BUT very, very few neo cons have their children fighting in any conflicts ie always someone's children as canon fodder.
This very channel has pointed out that only one side is running out of recruits.
Of all the various Ukraine blogs I've seen on YT yours was by far the most interesting, comprehensive and realistic.
And balanced.
Perun is also interesting if you slow him down to .75 speed
Thanks!
You have emerged as a serious, evidence-based analyst on military matters. Very impressive work -- keep it up. I also agree that the blowout panels make western tanks pretty vulnerable to drones. It's a mission kill, at the very least.
Wrong. The channel is very biased towards western propaganda.
yeah with info taken from one side, biased ''analysts'' gtfoh, he only knows what is told to him.
@@undercoverfarts9741what did he say that is biased? Can you bring up any examples or just say nothing?
What evidence? All I saw was slew of Forbes, and NYT articles.
@@skelo903315 downed Russian fighters, and than he said, although there’s no visual evidence.. tells it all
Wow!!! this is one of the best comprehensive updates on the war in Ukraine. this channel has really become top-tier news agency thank you for your non-biased reporting
This is not bad, but definitely NOT non-biased reporting. :-)
@@marcelma what would you recommend
@@danielmacdonald8358history legends is way better
@@fancychannelname Since it didn't happen claiming it happened is certainly a biased act.
@@fancychannelname You are citing the 20.000 kidnapped children story as if you knew it was actually true. I wonder how would you know? Western media is broadcasting a stream of propaganda and nobody seems to check - which admittedly wouldn't be an easy enterprise right now. If you never listen to the other side, you are bound to be misled and if you listen to the other side, you will walk around with a lot of undecidable questions. The latter seems better than walking around with a lot of purposefully instilled wrong convictions.
Thank you so much for the inside information and risking your life to get it. God bless!
I have a brilliant idea!
Attach a Billion Dollar Ukraine artillery shell package to the Tic Tok regulation bill!
I'm so smart, even I amaze myself sometimes.
We can ban both in one fell swoop
the american way
Eheh, although we have mechanisms against that here in Brazil, which’d indicate that you probably have some sort too
So like how every bill works?
I'm not sure that would work, given the fact that Trump and members of his personality cult are despotic simps for Putin. The democrats gave the republicans everything they wanted with a border deal, but Trump didn't want it - since he wants to take the credit for solving the border crisis. Plus when the democrats tried to make a bill that specifically stated it was to help Ukraine, Trump turned that down as well.
Not to mention the fact that the republican speaker of the house has had business dealings with Russian businessmen, so its likely he's Russian agent.
I think telling you opponent what you're not willing to do to defend yourself only emboldens then.
Yes its really dumb to do that. Also dumb to tell in detail and in advance which weapons we deliver.
@@dmitriyzhukov9193 How about elaborately discussing entire planned offensives in the media? For months :')
@@jibberism9910 Its not really relevant what some people without any clue say in the media. But sure, we obviously dont use information as a weapon in the right way.
@@dmitriyzhukov9193 Well, in the case of "the most anticipated offensive in military history" (Ukrainian summer offensive last year) it was pretty much everyone talking about it. Not so much the clueless.
@@jibberism9910 *Spring offensive.
what ukraine offers that is the most important thing is real world experience with modern combat. it would be in the best interest of many military powers to fully investigate this war and the changes to modern war.
Already being down from day1. All the captured Rus weapons and equipment are being sent to the US and UK for research.
@joselopez-kx3sm
I'm a Reserve Soldier and "Oberstleutnant" (equal to Lieutenant Colonel in the USA) of the Gebirgsjäger of the Bundeswehr (served for 6 years, did 2 tours in Afghanistan with the Gebirgsjägerbrigade 23) and i have helped train Ukrainian Soldiers since the Invasion by Russia and i 100% agree.
While a ton of Ukrainian Soldiers come here to have us train them professionally, once should not ignore the Fact that they literally defend their "Heimat" (Homeland) as we say in Germany, and i definitely can confirm that a lot of the battle hardened Ukrainian Soldiers who we trained also managed to teach us a lot!
@@chartreux1532Thank you, and good luck in your endeavors.
@@chartreux1532 dang just 6 years and lt. Col 👀 did you do some heroic stuff to get promoted so quickly?
1. 122mm and 200+mm cannons are useful
2. ERA is not optional
3. Production economy matters
4. NATO tactics DO NOT WORK!
5. Air support can’t be relied upon.
20:38 I have to point this out. Those are not highways. They are department roads. I notice it often times that Americans mistake them for highways. In Europe highways don’t cut through cities but rather go around them. VERY different.
Love your assessments. Despite being Pro-Ukraine, you do your best to not explain things in such a biased way.
Its getting harder for the Western hegemons to tell lies.
Reality is just rigged for the West.
Wow, excellent update, sobering to be sure.
This was an excellent summary covering strategic and tactical questions, and gave an unusually thorough examination of logistics of personnel, arms, and equipment.
yes its interesting to see the US Mil-ind-complex narrative sources such as this channel slowly walking back all their claims about Russian incompetence and the impending UKR victory/RU surrender.
Reminds me of afghan, iraq, viet, and others. What is surprising to me is how slow the US public is at figuring out that these sources of information cannot be trusted.
An what I get is, the American Republicans are at fault with not giving ukraine what they need and blood is on their hands.
This channel has honestly provided the best, most comprehensive coverage of this war that I've seen.
This channel is too Ukrainian-biased if you want something neutral about military summer
@@Ngaktahu99 I've watched military summary channel for maybe almost half a year now and I can say that he's definitely more pro Russian... but yes, he also shows the Russians losses.. so, I can recommend it.
Compared to many other videos I've seen from other channels, this video is at least quite balanced and doesn't claim to tell the pure truth (like the 31k losses of the Ukrainians, which is a ridiculously low number)..
Thanks for the update
Great reporting! Best real info. about the Ukraine war Ive ever found on UA-cam. Thank you for all your efforts. I wish you all the best.
Southfront.
@Taskandpurpose: Russia is now using the 1500 version of the glide munition... not only the 500 version.
thank you for the correction I'll be sure to look into that
Both actually the 1500 is for deep bunkers and 500 for any smaller yet big enough target.
@@asavelakuse6865no, Russians use 1500 to destroy anything that has weapons. Trust, i saw it in the video)
I’m seriously impressed with your ability to present unbiased information. Thank you, keep it up.
Thank you for this through update!
Outstanding video on strategy, tactics and logistical factors.
One of the best vídeos of this channel
truly appreciate the candid moment to those that have lost their lives, casualties are that, it is not a score board, thank you
An honest analysis is required and necessary to properly judge your opponent. Much appreciated Cappy
Excellent video cappy. It is amazing to see how the quality grew with the channel!
Damn last time I was this fast and early I swam fast to fertilize the egg.
I've been glued to coverage of the war since the start.
Just wanted to thank you from the UK for probably the best analysis on UA-cam .
If I really want some as unbiased info, you guys are my go to channel.
Glory to Ukraine.
Сало уронили! Героям в срало!
This is not the war NATO expected to fight against the Soviets during the Cold War era. In many ways it is more like the hedgerow-to-hedgerow fighting seen in Normandy in 1944 but along the entire length of the line of contact.
Neither side has air superiority and drones prevent both sides from building up sufficient forces in a location to make a major push.
Thank you for your video. Very informative.
nice pfp btw o7
Very informative and honestly the most unbiased review of the war I've seen. Well done.
Amazing summary of events since November! In the "next" episode, might you cover the logic behind the technological "delta" between the southern and Kherson fronts, and those near Donetsk and Kupyansk? Is there a future advantage to be gained by so obviously supplying the western/northern fronts with markedly better equipment? Also, and I understand that you are an Army guy, but the Ukrainian advances against the Black Sea Fleet, the offshore oil rig network, Russian commercial shipping, and technological advances with sea-based drones are incredible.
What advances are you on about? Why are you deluding yourself with lies from MSM?
the quote at 33:52 is Tennyson's charge of the light brigade - a story from the battle of balaclava in the Crimea war. ]
Half a league, half a league,
Half a league onward,
All in the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred.
“Forward, the Light Brigade!
Charge for the guns!” he said.
Into the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred.
II
“Forward, the Light Brigade!”
Was there a man dismayed?
Not though the soldier knew
Someone had blundered.
Theirs not to make reply,
Theirs not to reason why,
Theirs but to do and die.
Into the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred.
III
Cannon to right of them,
Cannon to left of them,
Cannon in front of them
Volleyed and thundered;
Stormed at with shot and shell,
Boldly they rode and well,
Into the jaws of Death,
Into the mouth of hell
Rode the six hundred.
IV
Flashed all their sabres bare,
Flashed as they turned in air
Sabring the gunners there,
Charging an army, while
All the world wondered.
Plunged in the battery-smoke
Right through the line they broke;
Cossack and Russian
Reeled from the sabre stroke
Shattered and sundered.
Then they rode back, but not
Not the six hundred.
V
Cannon to right of them,
Cannon to left of them,
Cannon behind them
Volleyed and thundered;
Stormed at with shot and shell,
While horse and hero fell.
They that had fought so well
Came through the jaws of Death,
Back from the mouth of hell,
All that was left of them,
Left of six hundred.
VI
When can their glory fade?
O the wild charge they made!
All the world wondered.
Honour the charge they made!
Honour the Light Brigade,
Noble six hundred!
Finally a impartial source of information, Instantly subscribed... keep it up buddy!
Still western biased.
@@rafkul3952reality is western biased
@@esanahka9284 No, all these nonsensicla channels are. And when you even look at pro-ukrianian maps and their report, these tlaking points shatter.
Impartial is the most naive thing ever😂😂😂😂😂
@@attilamarics3374 You are coping hard. Russia is stuck controlling like 15% of Ukrainian territory after over 2 years of war. Pathetic failure of an war started for no real reason other than Russian imperialism
Good channel
I machined the presidential cuffs for the ch53 heli and worked Army experimental on the AGT 1500 Abrams. It was never designed for muck and mire battle but for Siberia in the snow. When it went to the desert the crew baked.
I designed the quick change air system for sand and would change to a less restrictive system now.
The turbine injector nozzle shields were always cracking in the hot section and the recuperator was copied after a super trapp muffler from dirt bike racing.
I'll bet that driveshaft isnt cheap today.
The news and analysis has been great. You been doing a great job really like the videos. The information is relevant and important and accurate. Thank you
Really appreciate the enormous amount of research you put into these very informative episodes. Your presentation is top touch, your narration is on point and you don't look too bad in front of the camera. You provide a much-needed service. Stay well.
16:10 “Russian missile strike on Kramatorsk train station”
Except that serial number on the Tochka U missile, showcased by Italian military correspondents, corresponds exactly to same series of missiles used on Luhansk, Donetsk and other rebel held territories over the 9 years of combat, suggesting it is extremely possible that it came from same Arsenal storage.
Not to mention that Russians practically never use Tochka U missile systems, and they were retired and put on conversation more than a decade ago in Russia, while Ukraine used and use to this day this missile systems due to abundance of it.
So far, “Russia used Tochka U missile to hit civilians” sounds like Ukrainian effing up with their targeting and blaming Russians for it, as usual.
Weren't there several false flags of Russians bombing Lubański and Donetsk and then blaming Ukraine?
@@DytoxPrime Ahh when it's Ukrainian civilians it's always Russia but when it's Russian civilians it's a Russian false flag. lol get real the Ukrainians and Russians are firing missiles into civilian centers the only difference between the two is Russia is targeting military infrastructure imbedded in civilian centers while the Ukrainians are targeting residential areas
no, it sounds like russia okay'd separatists to use it on civilians. still despicable, still a crime, still Russia to hate
Incredible video, thx for the good work team !
Excellent presentation and insights - Many thanks
I find your videos very informative and accurate and gives a good overview and prospective. Good job
Such a great channel, appreciate the objectivity
One of your best videos bro, I check out at least 3 a week for the last year
This is so informative, subbed.
Southfront.
As the Shahed drones are now equipped with cameras to increase targeting accuracy, but these rely on cellular communication networks, this seems like an easy thing to combat.
If the Ukrainian government just lets the public know that when the air raid sirens sound, that cell service will also be intentionally cut to cause the attacking drones to fly blind, I think this is a sacrifice they would be willing to make.
🤣😂
The Shahed drones are just a place holder until Russia can ramp up production of their own Lancet drones sufficiently, we should probably worry more about them and their capabilities for the future.
@@highdefinist9697 Really? Cause i say Russia are ramping up domestic drone production you're talking to me like I'm some sort of pro Russian blogger? Well okay my mistake, i was wrong. They rely only on Iranian Shahed drones and shovels witch they plan to continue to do forever. Slava Ukraine!
Feel better now?
@@highdefinist9697 Russia has many times more drones than Ukraine, and many times higher drone production. You are acting like they dont produce huge ammount sof lancet drones right now. They didnt buy drones from Iran, they bought the right to build them at home.
@@attilamarics3374 Many pieces of drone wreckage found in Ukraine clearly has farci language written on the components showing that they were built in Iran. Look it up
By far the best update video on the topic! Thank you so much, Chris 🙏
"Visual pictures " are the best kind... *cough*... well done, sir!
The comparison to China supporting Vietnam has one little issue - the weapons supplied were eventually used against China.
There’s no such thing as an eternal enemy or friend in geopolitics.
Weapons supplied to Ukraine could be used against NATO, especially in the situation where Russia wins and install a puppet regime.
This is also why the west were reluctant to provide lethal aid at the beginning of the war, when most people expected a swift Russian victory.
In terms of aids, if NATO really wants Ukraine to win, it will need to send at least its Air Force.
The Soviet Union sent air force to the Korean War disguised as North Korean and Chinese pilots, so western pilots can just disguise as Ukrainian pilots along with donated jets.
The catch is, pilots and jets are expensive compared to grunts (with no disrespect to Cappy). Sending pilots and jets in significant numbers would be Very expensive. It’s doubtful if any leaders would make this level of commitment.
you are correct that's a great point, it's for sure not a perfect historical analogy, I'm guessing someone can think of a better example. and yes jets are far more expensive than us ground pounders haha
@@Taskandpurpose Two perfect examples , one the hardware left behind in Afghan and the western arms going out the back door of Ukraine and turning up in terrorist organisations , which has been proved!
@jimmyc974 keep your Russian talking points to yourself. Even Ramaswammy have to retract that silly statement.
@@jimmyc974Ukraine isn't supplying arms to foreign extremist groups. That's a story because Putin doesn't want to USA to send weapons to Ukraine. I know that the news report seemed trustworthy, but it isn't. Just think about it..
Ukraine: "Finally, America has sent the artillery... but it was our trick! Now we will send it to the middle eastern terrorists, even though we're fighting for our lives here!" That level of ridiculousness shows what they think of their viewers' intelligence. They know people are afraid of terrorists. The goal is to delay weapons shipments to Ukraine. So, they try to link the 2 together. Don't let them play you like that. If you're not in favor of helping Ukraine, that's up to you, but don't let them get away with such a dumb story as that. They'll end up putting you on a sucker list, and you'll get a ton of scam calls and emails.
NATO weapons being used against the West is already happening. Corrupt Ukrainian officials looking to get some quick bucks have sold NATO weapons in the international Arms blackmarket. Now you see weapons like Javelins in places like Nicaragua and Central Africa.
This is mission creep and wouldn't be surprised if boots are on the ground before the end of the year.
I highly doubt any of the remaining military personnel left in the US military will be very motivated to fight Biden's war, and recruitment is in the toilet so Potato Joe would have to reinstate the draft. If Trump wins this year though, well Ukraine can say goodbye to any munition deals, as it should be. If Europe is so concerned about war, they can prepare and pay for it. We have our own invasion to deal with back home.
How we are still sending aid via cash, intel, metrail and advisors... Like the past 10 years.
@@highdefinist9697You are high if you think western nations are going to first-strike Moscow with nuclear weapons because NATO troops in Ukraine (a non-NATO state) died.
Any forces in Ukraine are fair game and if NATO does send troops, they WILL get Iskandered as a message. We should ALL not be doing things to deliberately escalate to thermonuclear war.
It is not like the fallout games. You are absolutely not ready for that hellscape.
How?? I don't think you understand what mission creep is. This is just natural evolution of the war and how the West helps Ukraine.
@@Shinkajo mission creep is slow escalation without having a specified end goal. Meaning we went from sending tanks as being called ww3 to now having F-35s in the combat zone to France calling for boots on the ground. Fox Conner is rolling over in his grave right now.
Awesome video, I like this new format of dialing the bias back to being neutral to give a truly clear picture 😊
nice video! you're doing a great job!
This is a great Task and Purpose episode…. It’s the real deal tactical talk, warts and all.
Thanks for the intel summary. You provide a good service that news outlets can't, or won't.
Gramps definitely borrowed that quote from the poem Charge of the Light Brigade. Which was Brits following orders without question in the Crimean War and getting shredded by Russians
Maybe gramps was 300 years old?
Yes I meant to say he used to always say and old phrase
Always assumed it was a popular phrase in the army bsck in the 1950s that drill sergeants would say
Here's an extract from Tennyson's poem about the charge. Orders had sent the British cavalry up the wrong valley, directly into a Russian gun emplacement.
"... though the soldier knew
Someone had blundered.
Theirs not to make reply,
Theirs not to reason why,
Theirs but to do and die.
Into the valley of Death
Rode the six hundred.
" Cannon to right of them,
Cannon to left of them,
Cannon in front of them
Volleyed and thundered;
Stormed at with shot and shell,
Boldly they rode and well,
Into the jaws of Death,
Into the mouth of hell
Rode the six hundred.
" Flashed all their sabres bare,
Flashed as they turned in air
Sabring the gunners there,
Charging an army, while
All the world wondered.
Plunged in the battery-smoke
Right through the line they broke;
Cossack and Russian
Reeled from the sabre stroke
Shattered and sundered.
Then they rode back, but not
Not the six hundred."
Charge of the light brigade was about a monumental British officer fuck up costing a lot of British lives for nothing.
The video is better than the media in my country has to offer. Very well-balanced journalism.
Some country: Oh, whoops… mislabeled my package. Postal, wehere are those 800.000 shells?
Pavel: this is a nice surprise
They fell off the back of a truck.
Things like this happen more often than you would think lol 10 years ago a stash of housands stg44's were found in a warehouse in the middle east with tons of ammo
@@bloodking73 Not to mention they didnt find shells, they found the money. I dont get what are you guys are talking about, the west couldnt fulfill even the rpomises they made in 2022. They dont have enough shell prdouciton.
“I found it under my couch cushions” Remember, for several decades those Czech couches were the front row seats for watching the Iron Curtain.
This is a really good video, please keep doing what you're doing, it's important work!
Best update and analysis I have come across on the war in Ukraine.
Yea when he hides Ukranian losses by over a factor of 10 its not good at all.
Thank you Cappy, great research and unbiased.
29:40 is a key point most people overlook. Russia "has a command economy", he says. Yes, the state is above corporations, not the other way around, as is the case in the west.
It's not that meaningful. The US can transition into a quasi command economy during a formal declaration of war. Look up the Defense Production Act
for reference.
Russia is more capitalist than the EU. The US ordered a Dutch company to take losses and they obeyed.
Kinda sorta off topic, but Belarus has really been quiet as of late. I am surprised.
@@SimonTmte I think he listens to only one dedushka
They aren't inclined to hand a casus belli to adversaries looking to escalate
What is he supposed to do? Sabre rattle to give NATO warmongers more excuses? As if they arent already manufacturing them out of thin air already.....
Lukashenko staying quiet is perfectly normal.
True, they would be in the jaw of the nutcracker when fighting spreads west. Sorry for Lukasenko that he couldn’t get the Wagner safety blanket that he tried to get.
@@SimonTmte they have far less drug overdoses in Belarus than in the holy USA.. strange.
Great Analysis.
Very good and equally impartial reporting.
13:05 they using discord to discuss battle tactics 😭🤣
I mean, why not? It is an easy to access and organize application good for discussion. Perfect for dudes who need to discuss "important matters" yes?
@@sikorsky5815 I can now call Putin a discord moderator and have a decent chance that it is true
@@sikorsky5815
Maybe because it’s now owned by a Chinese company and not encrypted.
I wouldn’t recommend using it for this purpose as Ukrainian.
China has its own interests in Russia remaining a wartorn pile of crap, they won't bother, especially with how loosely tied Discord is to China in that sense. This is not like Tik Tok, Discord is way less risky, even if it is still relatively unguarded.
If that's not a "cyber security" issue, I don't know what is..
Thanks brother,peace…
I pray for peace , hopefully the world settles down and chills out by 2025
@@yaboipalps8616Yeah, Vermin Supreme is going to sort things out.
@@yaboipalps8616Remember who is holding up military aid to Ukraine, again…
Those are indeed very good shovels.
Excellent information and analysis.
Hey! I subscribed to your channel, but for some reason I cannot view the content that unlocks. Maybe I am just being impatient, but thought I’d write a note anyway. Looking forward to viewing the Bell and General Dynamics interview in particular!
That’s the 2nd level spare parts army level unlocks all the exclusive content !
Thank you! Upgraded!
I just came across 3 skittles next to my bed!! I'm gonna see if Ukraine wants to strike a deal.
The way of war is changing as we speak and people think the new Abrams would survive those attacks. Just sit down, learn from these experiences, so that tomorrow American crews are better protected against these new threats.
This really tasks my purpose
Thank you for the analysis. God bless you.
In North Korea, China sent far more than advisors and weapons. They sent well over a million soldiers who shot NATO (mostly USA) soldiers and the world did exactly nothing. So don't expect red lines.
China was not a nuclear power during the Korean War.