World War III

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The consolidation of the southern land corridor is obviously one of the major goals of the invasion. One question is how long a corridor it is likely to be. The recent comments https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-61188943 about linking up with Transnistria I believe would be a step too far for the EU, and could trigger a major escalation and involvement of EU countries. Even without direct involvement (actual EU troops) it would likely mean much larger arms transfers (possibly the offensively oriented heavy armor I mentioned earlier ... that's basically main battle tanks and highly mobile rocket/artillery units with air cover) needed to cut into the southern areas the Russians currently control (like around Mariupol).

My indigestion over this war is getting worse.
 
Puta has already nibbled away at Moldova…so a strategy of making Ukraine landlocked is certainly ongoing. I suspect the Russian forces are exhausting their resources. Their soldiers, like those in WW2 in St. Petersburg, are often forced to fight at the tip of a bayonet. Zelinsky’s merry men are highly motivated and mobile with a huge edge in intelligence. I hope the heavy artillery (155MM) will break apart tank formations
 
Read This: "Russian General Lets Slip Secret Plan to Invade New Country"
https://www.thedailybeast.com/russi...a-and-seize-ukraines-entire-coastline?via=ios

The opening:
As Russian troops tighten their grip on the strategic port town of Mariupol, their strategy is finally becoming clear. Russian military commander Rustam Minnekaev now says the second phase of President Vladimir Putin’s “special operation” is focused on establishing a “land corridor” from the Donbas all the way to Moldova, which would cut off the rest of Ukraine from the sea.

“One of the tasks of the Russian army is to establish full control over the Donbas and southern Ukraine. This will provide a land corridor to the Crimea, as well as influence the vital objects of the Ukrainian economy,” Minnekaev said Friday at a meeting with the Union of Defense Industries, as reported by the Russian state-owned Interfax. “Control over the south of Ukraine is another way out to Transnistria, where there are also facts of oppression of the Russian-speaking population.” Transnistria is a separatist region of Moldova that has so far not been officially involved in the war despite hosting a Russian military base since the 1990s.

The general’s words suggest that Moldova’s sovereign borders would also come under threat from further Russian expansion. Phony efforts to protect Russian-speaking peoples have often foreshadowed Putin’s imperial invasions.
 
You're being bled dry - and quickly. Now Hunter's crack buddy Zelensky demands 7 Billion USD per month. Hunter's "The Big Guy" daddy coughs up another 500 million on the spot.
I very much hope for the victory of Ukraine and the international trial over the crazy Putin and his subordinates!
On that subject: The US is one of only 7 countries that have refused to be part of that court; "China, Iraq, Israel, Libya, Qatar, and Yemen"
Oh! That is only 6 countries....oh yeah...forgot so soon...
2. Is the US a member of the ICC?

The US is not a state party to the Rome Statute. The US participated in the negotiations that led to the creation of the court. However, in 1998 the US was one of only seven countries – along with China, Iraq, Israel, Libya, Qatar, and Yemen – that voted against the Rome Statute. US President Bill Clinton signed the Rome Statute in 2000 but did not submit the treaty to the Senate for ratification. In 2002, President George W. Bush effectively “unsigned” the treaty, sending a note to the United Nations secretary-general that the US no longer intended to ratify the treaty and that it did not have any obligations toward it.
 
The Daily Beast is very trustworthy
How many generals left? Take a wild guess. There's lots of them.
The Daily Beast feeds you distractions as it goes not as it should.
But since when are the nazis good guys?
That's what I don't understand.
 
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When Russian troops first streamed across the Belarusian border into Ukraine for what they had assumed would be a lightning assault on Kyiv, they were intending to rely on the region’s extensive rail network for supplies and reinforcements.
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The Russians hadn’t taken into account the railway saboteurs of Belarus.
Starting in the earliest days of the invasion in February, a clandestine network of railway workers, hackers and dissident security forces went into action to disable or disrupt the railway links connecting Russia to Ukraine through Belarus, wreaking havoc on Russian supply lines.
The attacks have drawn little attention outside Belarus amid the drama of the Russian onslaught and the bloody aftermath of Russia’s humiliating retreat. Fierce Ukrainian resistance and tactical errors by an ill-prepared Russian force were likely enough to thwart Russia’s plans, analysts say.

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But the Belarus railway saboteurs can at least claim a role in fueling the logistical chaos that quickly engulfed the Russians, leaving troops stranded on the front lines without food, fuel and ammunition within days of the invasion.
Alexander Kamyshin, head of Ukrainian railways, expressed Ukraine’s gratitude to the Belarusian saboteurs. “They are brave and honest people who have helped us,” he said.
The attacks were simple but effective, targeting the signal control cabinets essential to the functioning of the railways, members of the activist network said. For days on end, the movement of trains was paralyzed, forcing the Russians to attempt to resupply their troops by road and contributing to the snarl-up that stalled the infamous 40-mile military convoy north of Kyiv.
How much of the chaos can be attributed to the sabotage and how much to poor logistical planning by the Russians is hard to tell, especially as there is no independent media reporting from Belarus, said Emily Ferris, a research fellow at the London-based Royal United Services Institute. But without automated signaling, trains were forced to slow to a crawl and the number of them traveling on the tracks at any one time would have been severely restricted, she said.
 
The Russians are really in a tough spot at the moment. A reasonable thing to do would be to sue for peace before things get much worse.

They have been too slow redirecting things to eastern Ukraine and the Ukrainians have had three whole weeks to get ready for them. And they are stripping their army and national guard clean to feed troops into the meat grinder that Ukraine has become.

The national guard is particularly interesting because that is an internal police force in Russia. When people figure out that they aren't around (or are sorely weakened) I think there will be a lot of unrest in Russia.
 
I didn't read the whole thread yet.

But, I consider these times scary times. What we see on the news from Ukraine is so, so sad. And the potential here for something bigger is currently laying dormant, but, can blow, changing all our lives.
 
A Putin ally lost the Slovenian elections on Sunday, too. (Slovenia is a small but important post-Yugoslav country).
One of the big mysteries of this time in history is why so many people took money from a corrupt and murderous creep like Putin. Or more precisely how so many people thought that was a good idea.
 
Well, greed is not a new thing. And easy money is a ploy that many people fall for. The EU strategy was to integrate the Russian economy so that it would be not in Russia's best interest to attack the EU. Which may work if everybody is on the same economic strategy page. If everybody accepts the capitalist system as it is embodied now. One mistake was to become too dependent on a necessity from a possible enemy. Looking at it from the Russian side, by supplying Germany, for instance, with the bulk of its energy needs, they were preventing Germany from attacking Russia. Same strategy really. Except, it could also be turned to nefarious purpose, as Putain has done.
 
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