Why were we so wrong about Russia?

2024 ж. 11 Мам.
603 068 Рет қаралды

Before the Russian Invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 the Russian Armed Forces were generally portrayed as a capable and competent force by many analysts. The question is why and how did most analyst got it wrong? For this we talk with Stanimir Dobrev ( / delfoo , who got it correct.
Original cover: 2020 Moscow Victory Day Parade, 24 June 2020, kremlin.ru/events/president/ne..., This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license. Attribution: kremlin.ru, commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
Modified by MHV.
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» SOURCES «
Dobrev, Sanimir: Dwarfing the Giant: The Reality of Russia’s Military, Part I, 19th September 2018, international-review.org/dwar..., last accessed: 27th May 2022.
Dobrev, Sanimir: Dwarfing the Giant: The Reality of Russia’s Military, Part II, 14th November 2018, international-review.org/dwar..., last accessed: 27th May 2022.
Defense Intelligence Agency: Russia Military Power - Building a Military to Support Great Power Aspirations - 2017
Lee, Rob: Moscow’s Compellence Strategy, 18th January 2022, www.fpri.org/article/2022/01/..., last accessed: 27th May 2022
Kofman, Michael: The ABCs of Russian Military Power: A Primer for the New Administration, 4th February 2017, nationalinterest.org/feature/..., last accessed: 27th May 2022
Lilis, Katie Bo; Bertrand, Natahsa: US intelligence community launches review following Ukraine and Afghanistan intel failings, 13th May, 2022, edition.cnn.com/2022/05/13/po..., last accessed: 27th Mary, 2022
Heinemann, Christoph: General a.D Kujat: Die ukrainische Armee hat keine Chance, 25th February 2022, www.deutschlandfunk.de/interv..., last accessed: 27th May 2022.
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harald_...
de.wikipedia.org/wiki/General...
/ 1491197696707002368
neprizyvnoi.ru/kontrakt/skolk...
#russiaukraine,#russianarmy,#whysowrong
00:00 Intro
04:57 Errors Happen
05:31 The Analyst: Stanimir Dobrev
05:56 Why were you not surprised by the Performance of the Russian Army in Ukraine 2022?
14:55 What did you do differently?
28:20 How did the Russian Army did take 20 % of Ukraine?
32:23 Final Remarks

Пікірлер
  • You can follow Stanimir Dobrev on twitter: twitter.com/delfoo Correction, I said "Debrov" it should be "Dobrev".

    @MilitaryHistoryNotVisualized@MilitaryHistoryNotVisualized Жыл бұрын
    • Slavs generally do not want to fight Slavs. This is a major consideration

      @clintonreisig@clintonreisig Жыл бұрын
    • 9:52 on paper it would look fixed - Pontemkinsch villages again great analysis and interview

      @typxxilps@typxxilps Жыл бұрын
    • @@clintonreisig until they do; wouldn't be the first time. You probably wont find many Germans wanting to fights Austrians either, on the other hand Prussia and Austria fighting over supremacy is pretty much a good part of our history.

      @delfinenteddyson9865@delfinenteddyson9865 Жыл бұрын
    • So much for the great German military minds like Guderian and Manstein. The German greats are turning in their graves over the low quality analysis of their for-bearers (General Kulat).

      @WorshipinIdols@WorshipinIdols Жыл бұрын
    • Why are you interviewing a Soros guy?

      @jamesrowlands8971@jamesrowlands8971 Жыл бұрын
  • Remember militaries go to great lengths to cover up deficiencies however this is usually aimed at foreign militaries and not at their own government.

    @staticgrass@staticgrass Жыл бұрын
    • Also you should always treat your enemy as credible when you are unsure it's far worse to be under prepared than over

      @kevinyoung9243@kevinyoung9243 Жыл бұрын
    • The level of corruption was amazing...

      @External2737@External2737 Жыл бұрын
    • Build a kleptocracy of corrupt oligarchs Start a war Find out the lower levels all did the same Surprised Pikhatchu

      @fuckgoogle2554@fuckgoogle2554 Жыл бұрын
    • @@fuckgoogle2554 That’s the big joke, no? The big boss of a criminal syndicate plans the ultimate heist: to steal an entire country. But the plan falls apart when the big boss discovers that his criminal organization is riddled with . . . . criminals.

      @MarcosElMalo2@MarcosElMalo2 Жыл бұрын
    • But did they go to great lengths to cover up the corruption? Or were the higher echelons just not asking questions because they were getting their skim? If Putin was getting 5 or 10% of the vig, where did he think it came from?

      @MarcosElMalo2@MarcosElMalo2 Жыл бұрын
  • The truth is simply this. It is far better to overestimate an enemy than to underestimate. If you are going to be surprised it is better to find out the enemy is weaker than you thought.

    @DavidSiebert@DavidSiebert Жыл бұрын
    • although overestimating can lead to problems of its own,both are not good.

      @mojewjewjew4420@mojewjewjew4420 Жыл бұрын
    • That is essentialy how you get the money. At least in USA. If Russia launches lets say one new submarine, you as a admiral will make statement how dangerous system is that, and how competent is its crew and then you will ask your politicians for money on 3 new submarines. You will get 2. So you are intentionally hyping the threat. And because intelligence agencies are watching each other they will just reflect their own wrong assumptions and create echo chamber...

      @AB8511@AB8511 Жыл бұрын
    • That's cool when you get to actual fighting, but if it's an information war, it can cause the would-be allies to avoid supporting you because they don't beleive in your victory and don't want their weaponry to fall into enemy's hands. Which is in fact what happened. It makes me really sad to think that if the fame of Russian army wasn't as overblown, more support would come sooner, and Ukraine could be in a better position right now...

      @TomasLKarlik@TomasLKarlik Жыл бұрын
    • @@TomasLKarlik I also think that at least in the U.S the leadership was worried about another Afghanistan. They could have sent in more equipment before this invasion started but probably remembered what happened in Afghanistan and at least considered the government would collapse and all those weapons would just end up in the hands of Russia. In the case with Afghanistan the Afghan army had a lot of troops and was well equipped but the leadership structure all the way up to the president collapsed.

      @Bitchslapper316@Bitchslapper316 Жыл бұрын
    • That’s why the Americans waited 4 years to finish off the South in the Civil War.

      @craigclemens986@craigclemens986 Жыл бұрын
  • What I saw in this video is completely identical to my own experience during army service. I was a conscript in one of the “elite” motorized infantry division in the western military district. Corruption, low quality the majority of soldiers and vehicles are completely true. Unfortunately, not only western analysts had a such overestimated view. Before the war and even now numerous simple Russian civilians continue to associate the army with pared which they see on Red Square during Victory Day. However, this is just a show which dramatically far away from the real stuff. Thanks for interesting video and perfect analyzing

    @glebivanov1069@glebivanov1069 Жыл бұрын
    • So bad would it be in the med-low priority districts, do you thinkv

      @looinrims@looinrims10 ай бұрын
  • To get a government contract you have to kick back a sizeable share, so that has to be made up for by cutting corners in what you deliver: we saw examples of how abandoned Pantsir missile transporters, which should have been running on expensive imported Michelin tires, were using cheaper Chinese replacements. Which means that somebody pocketed the difference and hoped that nobody would notice.

    @Ralphieboy@Ralphieboy Жыл бұрын
  • Around 25 minutes Stanimir mentioned "ghost soldiers." Lately I've been reading quite a lot of stuff about the Cosa Nostra and honestly no-show jobs are one of the primary bread winners for those guys. They take the salary but there's no worker. I wonder how many Russian colonels/battalion tactical group commanders just reported wrong numbers in their battalion tactical group numbers and pocketed the difference themselves.

    @Perkelenaattori@Perkelenaattori Жыл бұрын
    • good observation

      @jefferynelson@jefferynelson Жыл бұрын
    • Add it to the list. It think this video gives a prettu good run down. kzhead.info/sun/nJ2iZJurnptjiWw/bejne.html

      @marinusjansen9139@marinusjansen9139 Жыл бұрын
    • This has been an issue since time immemorial for armies. It's been very common for commanders to do this.

      @nutyyyy@nutyyyy Жыл бұрын
    • South Vietnam in the 1970's is an example. Shadow soldiers were created by officials pocketing the money but not recruiting. Spoiler: it didn't go well.

      @neilwilson5785@neilwilson5785 Жыл бұрын
    • Check out the video that Perun recently did on the forms of corruption in Russia

      @e2rqey@e2rqey Жыл бұрын
  • Recommendation for you. There is a KZheadr named Perun who made a recent video called How Corruption Destroys Armies. It is a very detailed and thoughtful analysis that often references the current state of Russian military affairs, yet outlines principles that can be applied to various areas and topics outside of that.

    @Jkim890@Jkim890 Жыл бұрын
    • Perun doesnt know anything. Do you even know what his background or expertise is? ZERO. He is just proficient at making a power point preso based on someone else's dubious work.

      @Internetbutthurt@Internetbutthurt Жыл бұрын
    • @@Internetbutthurt true, but it's still a good intro

      @mseeross@mseeross Жыл бұрын
    • @@Internetbutthurt so you are saying to completely disregard all of his points? I believe its unwise to completely disregard someone's insight due to not having prior military expertise. Also, he dubiously studied German and Soviet tactics and strategic outlook in the Eastern Front during World War Two, similar to what Bernard does.

      @blank2.0@blank2.0 Жыл бұрын
    • Perun is a joker who like this channel has regurgitated propaganda albeit in long form since the conflict began.

      @jamesrowlands8971@jamesrowlands8971 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Internetbutthurt I think he’s a civilian employee of the Australian Defense Ministry.

      @kurousagi8155@kurousagi8155 Жыл бұрын
  • I think we can all agree, we would prefer to overestimate our enemy than to underestimate them.

    @aarongraham9424@aarongraham9424 Жыл бұрын
    • Up to a point. If you overestimate the enemy too much, you’ll surrender without fighting. It’s happened before. You’d be amazed at some of the bluffs that historical commanders have pulled.

      @davidblair9877@davidblair9877 Жыл бұрын
  • reading the local weeklies to secure vital strategic secrets out of closed socities is nothing new : in WWII , clever intelligence individuals who kew German culture intimately realized there was a strong local tradition to publicly mark the death of all military carerrists. Situated in Switzerland they got german small town weeklies, did a statistical analysis and realized the huge constant death toll on the eastern front even in late 1941……

    @michaelmarshall55@michaelmarshall55 Жыл бұрын
    • The original book "Megatrends" described how the Western Allies had large departments that measured publication inches in Axis newspapers to conduct trends analysis. How much Nazi newsprint was being devoted to agriculture each month ? What about stories on the Chinese War in Imperial Japanese newspapers? What about rationing of newspaper and ink?

      @amerigo88@amerigo88 Жыл бұрын
    • The gov & military have a vested interest in over hyping other military’s … to justify ever bigger Budgets…..follow the $$$$

      @PhilSallaway@PhilSallaway20 күн бұрын
  • Brilliant stuff. Stanimir Dobrev did the military analyst equivalent of forensic accounting. He used lower level open source intel to get a more complete picture of the Russian army.

    @calc1657@calc1657 Жыл бұрын
    • @@BtappinHD lmao imagine if the us shared a land borded with iraq I mean HAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAHA

      @hasanhaskovic4307@hasanhaskovic4307 Жыл бұрын
    • @@BtappinHD The Second Battle of Fallujah lasted 6 weeks. It pitted 10000 US and 3000 allied troops against 4000 insurgents. Obviously, with Russian-style tactics of leveling cities and murdering civilians, the battle would've been even shorter.

      @calc1657@calc1657 Жыл бұрын
    • You believe the work of a Soros guy?

      @jamesrowlands8971@jamesrowlands8971 Жыл бұрын
    • @@BtappinHD I find it hard to believe the invasion of Ukraine is anything to boast about. Just look at all the losses Russia has sustained in 100 days. Then again, Russia doesn't care about losses of human life, right?

      @dn5578@dn5578 Жыл бұрын
    • @@calc1657 Those are american stye tactics, imagine if Russians used those.

      @overlord4404@overlord4404 Жыл бұрын
  • For the same reason most financial analysts were surprised by the 2008 financial crisis. The more one knows about a subject, the more facts one can apply confirmation bias to, and thus the better one can twist those facts to fit a preconceived notion. Most analysts and experts have some pet theory or prediction that they want the facts to fit. Most intelligence agencies want to form conclusions that will make their political bosses happy.

    @Dennis-vh8tz@Dennis-vh8tz Жыл бұрын
    • Thats one way to put it.

      @clmBerserker@clmBerserker Жыл бұрын
    • You're are a victim of the very mentioned bias by yourself : ) The 2008 was anticipated. It was just silly willingness of the many to believe that no crisis will happen and that they still can play into "inflate the prices" game. But its limits do exist.

      @worldoftancraft@worldoftancraft Жыл бұрын
    • @@worldoftancraft He dident say he was surprised he said many analysts were surprised. Your both in agreement that there are forces that are interested in good news while pretending the bad news isent real. Just like the climate change conversations.

      @clmBerserker@clmBerserker Жыл бұрын
    • @@clmBerserker I can agree, I did make a wrong point.

      @worldoftancraft@worldoftancraft Жыл бұрын
    • If you over hype the capabilities of a potential enemy, you'll most likely get a nice cash injection into military-defensive complex as a whole and your agency in particular. Win-win. US alphabet agencies have been playing this game for decades during the Cold War.

      @rh_BOSS@rh_BOSS Жыл бұрын
  • I seriously did not expect Russia to take over 4 times the casualties america sufferred in Afghanistan and ira combined over 40 years in three months

    @willgreen9861@willgreen9861 Жыл бұрын
    • Not Ira but Iraq

      @anuragpoddar8631@anuragpoddar8631 Жыл бұрын
    • @@anuragpoddar8631 True

      @willgreen9861@willgreen9861 Жыл бұрын
  • Defensive wars generally require less training and professionalism, as the fighters are highly focused as they are defending their homeland. But offensive wars on another country's soil require extreme degrees of professionalism and training, like the Germans had in the early 40's.

    @prayerpatroller@prayerpatroller Жыл бұрын
    • Like the US military today. That most countries now sucks at conducting invasions is a GOOD thing.

      @danielch6662@danielch6662 Жыл бұрын
    • This is why russia is generally shit when it invades outside russia but decent on home soil

      @Ukraineaissance2014@Ukraineaissance2014 Жыл бұрын
    • 🟡🟡Why thugs are upside down in America?? Not long ago recessions seemed to strike America roughly once a decade. But only two years after the first lockdowns, the business cycle is turning at a sickening speed and another one already seems to be on its way. If you are like most people, your memory of downturns will be dominated by the past two- the financial heart attack in 2007­09 and the pandemic­induced collapse in 2020. Both were severe and highly unusual. By their standards, America’s next recession will almost certainly be milder and more pedestrian. But because the world economy, asset markets and America’s politics are all fragile, it may yet have nasty and unpredictable consequences

      @PutinTerapevtEuropi@PutinTerapevtEuropi Жыл бұрын
    • @@PutinTerapevtEuropi bot smh

      @ProxiProtogen@ProxiProtogen Жыл бұрын
    • @@Ukraineaissance2014 russia literally drove the germans all the way back to berlin. I dont think you know what you are on about.

      @romanromanchuk7718@romanromanchuk7718 Жыл бұрын
  • I feel like they treated them as a credible threat because if you don't treat an enemy as credible when they are it's far worse then if you you treat them as credible when they aren't

    @kevinyoung9243@kevinyoung9243 Жыл бұрын
    • They are are a credible threat to Non-Near-Peer border states. They don't see facing off with US, much less US+(USplusNATO) as a situation they can realistically attempt to match. (That's why they are so quick to use #AtomicRhetoric🚀

      @VincentTorneyPlus@VincentTorneyPlus Жыл бұрын
  • Maybe Red Dawn was somewhat optimistic

    @catmonarchist8920@catmonarchist8920 Жыл бұрын
    • COD MW2 was waaaay too optimistic aswell :( VDV taking the entire east coast in a week :') Good game tho, regardless of the very wrong estimations

      @TRPilot06YT@TRPilot06YT Жыл бұрын
    • Red Dawn had most of Central America involved.

      @peterson7082@peterson7082 Жыл бұрын
  • Unironically the thing that completely broke any delusion(of which I had little to begin with) of the Russian army's competence was a video by a Russian KZheadr called NFKRZ on Russian obligatory military service. He goes into some detail about the degree to which obligatory service sucks, just how far draft dodging goes and how generally terrible the entire deal is. After that talking to Russians from time to time, especially about their experience(and noting that almost all of them had none despite officially being far past the age that they should've served) clued me in a lot.

    @Criomorph@Criomorph Жыл бұрын
    • That is a general issue with conscripted armies and most likely why we dont depend on them in the west

      @jnnfccc1794@jnnfccc1794 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jnnfccc1794 Yes and no, plenty of countries have had and still have a fairly high quality conscript service(see: Israel). Obviously those conscripts barely compare to their professional counterparts in any way but it's clearly possible to execute well enough. Yet Russia's military fails not only in it's conscripts, but it's regular army is also a complete shambles. Also...there's deeper political reasons why the West has largely gone away from conscripts - Vietnam is a big reason. After Vietnam a lot of countries started only deploying professional troops abroad if not wholly shifting to professional armies. Put simply, people are a lot less sensitive to military interventions with professional armies.

      @Criomorph@Criomorph Жыл бұрын
    • I saw that video; that video was the reason I thought Russia would never invade Ukraine, because their army clearly sucked and wouldn't perform well. I was wrong about the invasion, but correct in my reasoning.

      @thatfighterguy5846@thatfighterguy5846 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Criomorph I mean Israel's conscripts represent how much of the global conscript population by %? Does it even hit 1% after Russia, China and both Koreas are taken into account? There is an exception to every rule. Also technology plays a major role in the move away from conscripts as you need a focused professional for very specific combat roles. Conscripts basically produce a rifleman with no frills, they really cant be used for anything more advanced considering their service spans 2 years max, usually one, and again with some sliver sized country somewhere with an exception.

      @jnnfccc1794@jnnfccc1794 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jnnfccc1794 China doesn't tend to use Conscription, they don't need to. South Korea's conscripts tend to be of a higher quality and lower rates of abuse, there's also Switzerland and Norway - Switzerland like Israel represents relatively high quality conscripts. Now all these countries use their conscripts in a variety of roles and one of the most popular uses for conscripts in regards to regular service seems to be rear echelon personnel, regular patrols(see: Israel) and security. On the flip side, North Korea's entire army is conscripts only - they don't have "professionals" as per se - and so on.

      @Criomorph@Criomorph Жыл бұрын
  • One thing hasn't changed: they don't care about their own losses.............grunts are still nothing but canon fodder.

    @nicomeier8098@nicomeier8098 Жыл бұрын
  • In the Summer of 1992 I was a reservist attached to a Forward Artillery Observer unit of a European army's 12-gun battery of 105mm howitzer. After 11 months of training as a signalman i was looking forward to my first live-fire exercise. All went well until a Colonel arrived to view a 'fire for effect' battery shoot. A Captain i had previously respected gave me a Toys'R'Us type walkie talkie and told me to crouch out of sight. A 'random' target was selected...shots hit everything but the designated target... until we adjusted over unencrypted comms. All appeared resolved. That night we fired on a moving hillside spotlight target, this was rehearsed for weeks before... '7 sec. delay...drop 300, west 400'.... The battery was congratulated by the Colonel, $180,000 of ammo was expended, all boxes ticked. BUT we still couldn't do the fundamental task, i.e. send rounds to a target with any efficiency (let alone security). The same army i served in could scrape an under-strength battalion annually to perform UN duties (more box-ticking). The same thing has happened on a vast scale for the Russians. They can slap about Syrians, Georgians and Chechens with limited capabilities and zero air assets but their large-scale ground game is abysmal. Criminal negligence from the top is being paid for by Russian troops and worse Ukrainian civilians targeted it seems by the acre. Truly tragic.

    @alanburke1893@alanburke1893 Жыл бұрын
    • So your army had a bad performance 30 years ago and that's why russian army has a bad performance now.

      @Loreless@Loreless Жыл бұрын
    • How the heck did you guys not have encrypted comms for something as basic as adjusting fire? How the heck were there more than one or two rounds before fire was properly adjusted? Was there some kind of time constraint that meant it wasn't the typical "one round, check, fire another round, check again" process?

      @Lawofimprobability@Lawofimprobability Жыл бұрын
    • "A European Army" is pretty vague in the context of 1992. Western European NATO army or a former Warsaw Pact nation whose government had disintegrated within the previous 24 months? With the latter I would expect some serious teething problems as the entire country realigns to an entirely different political and military system.

      @marsnz1002@marsnz1002 Жыл бұрын
    • @@marsnz1002 I would expect this kind of behaviour in any army, even the best ones. It is a kind of institution which is excellent for status quo preservation more than actual problem solving. -transparency : delicate (which, in the worst case, means : no one will ever look over your shoulder) -culture of authority (which gives a mechanical reluctance to contesting a colleague's wrongdoing : you would hinder their authority. This especially becomes a problem when you yourself know you are not crystal clean) -dilution of responsibility (this is the hindrance of any administration. Layers of hierarchy brings individuals to not endorsing actual responsibility on problems. It's the most efficient way to keep a system still, ban any risk-taking, and shut down any alerts on real problems.) Actually, in my european country, we often have to wait until independent reporters or civil agents report a problem (loudly) for the army to take measures. (And not always. Like, we've got guys with swastiks tattoed on the torso, and our headquarters say "nah, this is fine") (but for training, for example implementation of airsoft replicas instead of blank weapons, it was independant civil persons who provoked the army to move and do something.)

      @lc1138@lc1138 Жыл бұрын
    • @@marsnz1002 "Alan Burke" is an amazingly British name. It's possible it was the British Army (went to Bosnia for "UN boxticking") but I doubt his inference about capability given that it walked across the Falklands to slap the Argentines and also spent two decades patrolling Northern Ireland. You don't do that without massive casualties if you don't know what you're doing. The alternative is he's Irish and he's bitching about the military capabilities of a neutral nation the size of New Zealand and in danger of being invaded by literally no-one.

      @aaronleverton4221@aaronleverton4221 Жыл бұрын
  • It is nice to get an analysis from some one who is not trying to sell a product or service OR get a budget increase for his agency. Well done.

    @mikemcclay9111@mikemcclay9111 Жыл бұрын
    • You have been misled. Dobrev is 100% selling you a product. He's a Soros employee.

      @jamesrowlands8971@jamesrowlands8971 Жыл бұрын
    • The price is that he bases his analysis on anecdotal evidence. Not very credible, but certainly interesting.

      @Shelmerdine745@Shelmerdine745 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Shelmerdine745 everything Dobrev says is paid propaganda. He works for an institution that's specifically designed for that purpose.

      @jamesrowlands8971@jamesrowlands8971 Жыл бұрын
    • Well... If he actually has the newspaper articles that the alleged 'help wanted' ads were in, his arguments would be solid. It really depends if his opinions and accusations are backed by evidence.

      @purplespeckledappleeater8738@purplespeckledappleeater8738 Жыл бұрын
    • Check out the channel called Perun. Best unbiased analysis of multiple specific aspects of the conflict I've seen on youtube

      @quanganhvu6791@quanganhvu6791 Жыл бұрын
  • The best analysis I have seen. Instead of just grabbing the low hanging fruit, and accepting it as fact, the techniques used to check on the "official facts" was very well done and very comprehensive. Thank you both for your work.

    @johntrottier1162@johntrottier1162 Жыл бұрын
  • The US and western militaries in general greatly publicize their defficiencies and faults. They do this, because its an excuse to ramp up military spending, and for promotions/work. If the airforce concludes it needs this edge over the russians and says how weak and outliens their defficiencies, congress gives them the moeny and support, and they fix it quickly enough. Especially after Vietnam, the US military basically adopted that entire rhetoric of basically never underestimating their enemy, and to a large extent, overestimating them. Russia on the other hand just wants to act strong, and thats it.

    @honkhonk8009@honkhonk8009 Жыл бұрын
    • Speaking of Airforce. Russia needs to remember that the CIA has almost the same size Airforce as the USA Airforce has and CIA Airforce did over 80% of all Iraq and Afghanistan sorties,go look it up. Good luck Putin if you think that you're Airforce is the strongest.

      @insertnamehere313@insertnamehere313 Жыл бұрын
    • That's why having a paranoid MoD is beneficial. By grossly overestimating you're enemies, you'll basically win most of the time, however COIN is where most countries fail, especially if the insurgents you're fighting is fanatical and has better knowledge of the terrain.

      @PyroFTB@PyroFTB Жыл бұрын
  • That was a remarkably insightful interview, thank you for bringing us this information. I think a lot of us in the west had misconceptions about Russia due to previous history that colored how we perceive Russia in the present. This just goes to the wisdom of being willing to accept propaganda for the smoke screen it is and look for low-level, harder to control sources when you are searching for the truth.

    @jamisondavenport6760@jamisondavenport6760 Жыл бұрын
    • Same here -- the idea that any army could be so corrupt was beyond my imagination. If I had read, a year ago, that army professionals were stealing shoes from conscripts, or that officers were embezzling and misreporting so much, I'd have wondered what was wrong with the analyst, not the Russian army. But throw in three months of obvious ineptitude in the field, a level of incompetence and lack of proficiency which boggles my mind, and now I am a believer. I can understand why professional analysts were unwilling to stick their necks out -- they probably didn't believe it themselves!

      @grizwoldphantasia5005@grizwoldphantasia5005 Жыл бұрын
    • Need to keep up those defense contracts so homegrown propaganda is also a part of it.

      @theodoresmith5272@theodoresmith5272 Жыл бұрын
    • @@grizwoldphantasia5005 Well i knew that things like this happened but i thought that it only happened in the units for the third line not everywhere. On the other side as far as i know many of the russian soldiers in the Ukraine come from the more rural regions of the russian federation.

      @Talashaoriginal@Talashaoriginal Жыл бұрын
    • ”I think a lot of us in the west had misconceptions about Russia due to previous history that colored how we perceive Russia in the present” But shouldn't that result in the west underestimating the russians instead of overestimating them? After all russian history is full of military failure.

      @George-cr6jq@George-cr6jq Жыл бұрын
    • @@Talashaoriginal ”On the other side as far as i know many of the russian soldiers in the Ukraine come from the more rural regions of the russian federation.” Russia has used most of their elites units and in fact is the western military district who has underperformed the most.

      @George-cr6jq@George-cr6jq Жыл бұрын
  • Why were we so wrong about Russia? Because "Never underestimate a threat"?

    @toshtenstahl@toshtenstahl Жыл бұрын
    • Also they looked at least somewhat competent in Syria and Crimea. Furthermore they won in Georgia though that was a shitshow militarily speaking for Russia. Taking ukraine is a different level entirely; instead of a few divisions fighting sporadically, it's the entire ground forces fighting essentially continually with a near peer rival.

      @TheFirebird123456@TheFirebird123456 Жыл бұрын
    • @@TheFirebird123456 Also, in previous conflicts they were fighting against armies that they trained and therefore knew how to beat. But in Ukraine, they’re fighting an army that was trained by the West and is using inherently superior tactics that have largely negated the Russian advantage in quantity of equipment and air power and missiles. Russia doesn’t know how to beat these tactics except to try to overwhelm them with numbers, and they can’t change their doctrine because it is inextricably linked with their system of government.

      @bluemarlin8138@bluemarlin8138 Жыл бұрын
    • @@bluemarlin8138 i am lost is Ukraine winning the war

      @MegaMakambo@MegaMakambo Жыл бұрын
  • So it's now 3 weeks later. Is the Russian army still so terrible now that Ukraine have lost so much ground?

    @cicaklaut@cicaklaut Жыл бұрын
  • It is my opinion that the initial stages of the invasion, were Russia’s attempt to take Ukraine in a “western style” when that failed they resorted back to heavy artillery bombardment, capturing ruins etc.

    @enjoythedecline3616@enjoythedecline3616 Жыл бұрын
    • Lol western style for me it's bombed to pebbles Yugoslavia, Libya separated back into tribes and Vietnam where's no place without traces of the bombing

      @TimoshkaKartosha@TimoshkaKartosha Жыл бұрын
    • Have you seen east Ukraine?? Its lile looking at ww2 pictures everything is bombed to rubble

      @notsaying543@notsaying543 Жыл бұрын
    • @@notsaying543 what? Mauripol? most people got evacuated because well lets be honest. Western style is bomb the sht out of them from day 1. Kiev still stands there, nothing got bombed like First Chechen War. There is no such thing as west style, only US Style which is that.

      @mirage_panzer2274@mirage_panzer2274 Жыл бұрын
    • I agree aswell. The whole western style of invasion didn't work out well for Russia. Which makes sense since the west had a century to build up that style. Russia had 10 years at best.

      @honkhonk8009@honkhonk80092 ай бұрын
  • Several military officers I talk to on occasion were dumbfounded by how badly the Russians did. There was a real sense of "I've spent years training to fight these jokers?" From them.

    @travisjohnson6703@travisjohnson6703 Жыл бұрын
    • I understand, but the reason those Western officers are so much better than the Russians is BECAUSE they train for years.

      @bluemarlin8138@bluemarlin8138 Жыл бұрын
    • It's telling that the military officers you spoke to also are falling for the propaganda.

      @jamesrowlands8971@jamesrowlands8971 Жыл бұрын
    • Surprises also happen the other way around. I served with ex NVA (East Germany) officers. And they told me how shocked they were, realising that they sacrificed their life to fight the expected nato attack only to find out that those plans never existed after they had access to the nato data.

      @sebastianriemer1777@sebastianriemer1777 Жыл бұрын
    • @@sebastianriemer1777, this is typical for totalitarian regimes - pumping up their population with defensive war rethroric, everyone around is an enemy and wants to destroy our precious state. And every war they begin is explained by "the enemy wanted to attack us first!". This is same for Hitler, for and it's the same for Putin in 2008 and 2022. This is exactly the kind of bullshit you can make millions people believe when they live in isolation (even partial), and the state controls the media.

      @VioletGiraffe@VioletGiraffe Жыл бұрын
    • Western armies have fought guys in sandals.... Russia would destroy US in urban warfare like they are destroying the Nazi fucks in the Ukreich

      @willisiemens3858@willisiemens3858 Жыл бұрын
  • As the old saying goes: *No army survives contact with corruption*

    @LazyLifeIFreak@LazyLifeIFreak Жыл бұрын
    • Can they feed their army I thought the old saying was an army rides on its stomach

      @ralphmalph6097@ralphmalph6097 Жыл бұрын
    • Napoleon actually said _"No plan survives first contact with the enemy"._

      @SirAntoniousBlock@SirAntoniousBlock Жыл бұрын
    • US army begs to differ lol

      @joestendel1111@joestendel1111 Жыл бұрын
    • @@joestendel1111 a lot of units in the US army have the exact same issues ol boy mentioned...

      @ryankolbe365@ryankolbe365 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ryankolbe365 yes… but they have not created ghost soldiers or stolen training funds yet. Most of the corruption is limited to kick backs

      @joestendel1111@joestendel1111 Жыл бұрын
  • I mean they're making ground now, against entrenched enemies. They've also learned from their mistakes early in the war and have upped air sorties from 200, in March, to 300 in May. They may not be steamrolling Ukraine, but they are beating them.

    @williammiller7799@williammiller7799 Жыл бұрын
    • True. Everyone doesn't understand this for some reason

      @yajamanvamsikrishna509@yajamanvamsikrishna509 Жыл бұрын
    • shhh don't ruin the narrative, ukraine will be in moscow within two more weeks trust the youtube generals

      @luanandreas@luanandreas Жыл бұрын
    • Not to mention that the whole world is supporting Ukrain rn both financially and militarily with weapons. People tend to forget that Ukrain is not fighting against Russia alone.

      @kipcsaknorris2776@kipcsaknorris2776 Жыл бұрын
    • @@yajamanvamsikrishna509 People also underestimate how big Ukraine is. They've already taken land the size of the Benelux countries, with only 200k troops. All things considering they're doing very well.

      @scvboy1@scvboy1 Жыл бұрын
    • @@kipcsaknorris2776 Very true. The war would've already been over if the West didn't send tens of billions of dollars in free aid.

      @scvboy1@scvboy1 Жыл бұрын
  • 22:30 I've heard this before. The crime syndicate in Russia can basically drive up to the military base and threaten the soldiers and make them pay protection money. Imagine that! Criminals driving up to armed soldiers at their own base and threatening them! Thing is the crime syndicates in Russia are basically loyal to the regime. So they belong to some Oligarch who probably is loyal to Putin. The soldiers can't do anything against them, because they are under protection of the ruling class. Rumors have it that Putin wants the military to have low self esteem and keep them down, so they are incompentent and can't try a coup d'etat.... but the incompetence and incapability shows when they go to war, too.

    @tiberius8390@tiberius8390 Жыл бұрын
    • В 90-х такое вероятно могло происхождить, но сейчас любых нарушителей принято расстреливать на месте если, конечно, мы не говорим о военной части в "Сергеевке" и в других частях, расположенных на дальнем востоке, имеющих малый контроль над персоналом и повышенной криминогенной обстановкой.

      @andreysomov1688@andreysomov1688 Жыл бұрын
    • @@andreysomov1688 путиноид, очнись, девяностые никуда не уходили. Тебе просто глаза телевизором замылили

      @PokeUrFace@PokeUrFace Жыл бұрын
  • this was exactly like the old Missile Gap where the US looked at what russia was doing, where it was, and extrapolated and then it turned out it had plateaued instead of increased its efforts

    @AsbestosMuffins@AsbestosMuffins Жыл бұрын
    • The "missile gap" was known to be nonsense though. Kennedy just pushed it during his election campaign for political reasons

      @lovablesnowman@lovablesnowman Жыл бұрын
    • The missile gap was always in US favour & the military industrial complex promoted the lie of soviet superiority to gain support for even more of an imbalance hidden

      @benwinter2420@benwinter2420 Жыл бұрын
  • This is perhaps the most insightful interview I've seen on the topic.

    @williambrasky3891@williambrasky3891 Жыл бұрын
    • This is perhaps the least insightful interveiw I've seen on the topic, because it is the only interview on the topic I have seen.

      @GrimgoreIronhide@GrimgoreIronhide Жыл бұрын
    • @@GrimgoreIronhide In which case it's also the most insightful, you absolute goon.

      @williambrasky3891@williambrasky3891 Жыл бұрын
  • I'd rather we over-estimated the enemy and then be pleasantly surprised than the opposite

    @multipl3@multipl3 Жыл бұрын
  • Those of us who have lived in corrupt societies (and understand how things work in these corrupt societies) were really not that surprised.

    @oolieboolieyeah@oolieboolieyeah Жыл бұрын
  • Big thank you to Stanimir Dobrev. This is very enlightening. Also thank you Bernard for tackling Russian military corruption. This and Perun's video about it, show the need for militaries to be better funded, more training and more professionalism. I hope my country the Philippines is actually paying attention to all this, because it still has quite alot of problems.

    @josephsteven1600@josephsteven1600 Жыл бұрын
    • I don't know about better funded but I desperately wish more people understood what the separation of functions is in preventing corruption. Keep commanders and paymasters separate.

      @Lawofimprobability@Lawofimprobability Жыл бұрын
    • My former battalion commander in Kosovo, 1999, Danish forces, was found guilty in nepotism, a few years ago. So it goes on here too.

      @ThePRCommander@ThePRCommander Жыл бұрын
    • Corruption and nepotism will always be part of the military but it should be a exception and not part of the system.

      @sebastianriemer1777@sebastianriemer1777 Жыл бұрын
    • You can also look at economy data of some countries. Some numbers can be tuned with kind of legal matters, but in some economic crisis of the past, there were doubts on chinese numbers especially. The idea was, that district and regional officials were reporting beautified numbers. Some people looked at electrical power generated or used coal and other basic numbers for a better picture of the situation

      @mweskamppp@mweskamppp Жыл бұрын
    • >I hope my country the Philippines is actually paying attention to all this, because it still has quite alot of problems. bro we both know BBM is gonna sell the country to China anyway

      @captainautism8221@captainautism8221 Жыл бұрын
  • I honestly didn't think Putin was going to invade. One reason was that I saw reports on the appalling conditions the troops on the "exercise" were living under, sleeping like sardines in unheated rooms, etc. But the main reason was that I had looked up the strength of the Ukrainian armed forces. Which was about the same size in active personal as the russian forces in theatre. I simply couldn't imagine that anyone would be dumb enough to try a major assault against a trained, experienced and reasonably well equipped regular army that was both prepared and had the advantage of defence without a massive numerical advantage. I figured there was no way Putin would be dumb enough to try such an assault without AT LEAST a two-one advantage (I would personally have wanted more, but I figured that 600k troops would be way, way out of Russia's ability to concentrate). Guess if I was surprised on the 24th...

    @gustavchambert7072@gustavchambert7072 Жыл бұрын
    • Main advantage Russia has was in armoured units and Air Force , thier armoured advantage was neutralised by ATGMs in urban areas and their Air Force ran out of stand-off ammunitions and vulnerable to MANPAD while dropping dumb bombs.

      @g1y3@g1y3 Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, this operation will be studied by military experts, because Ukraine has 3x numerical advantage and is on defensive, but Russia is still pushing them back.

      @alexsilent5603@alexsilent5603 Жыл бұрын
    • @@alexsilent5603 You're delusional if you think Ukraine has 3x the numerical advantage.

      @Daneclaw@Daneclaw Жыл бұрын
    • Yup, no sane leader attacks without at least 3 to 1 advantage.

      @Samthing752@Samthing752 Жыл бұрын
    • @@g1y3 Yea, I knew about those advantages. But I figured that defensive warfare, especially defensive urban warfare hasn't really changed. Fundamentally it still always comes down to the boots and blood.

      @gustavchambert7072@gustavchambert7072 Жыл бұрын
  • One thing everyone is ignoring is the incredible experience the Russian military is having on the ground. The last time the US & allies faced a war of this magnitude was the 1970s, in Vietnam.

    @marxfelix3973@marxfelix3973 Жыл бұрын
    • That experience didn’t mean much most of the guys are either 1) Dead or wounded, or 2) conscripts that are going to put back into their civilian lives once this is over. And that still doesn’t even the account for the corruption issues the Russian military has. I mean shit, there early war performance tells me they still learned jack-shit from Grozny all those years ago.

      @nobodyherepal3292@nobodyherepal3292 Жыл бұрын
    • nope, Vietnam is child play just like Afghan or Iraq/Iran. If you think Vietnam gives US hard time then youre probably leaning into the memes and Press Propaganda. it is decisive for the US. They dont really lose it on military/combat like at all. Ofc people would mention how their close ones died and all that but statistically, they lost a few and knowing US, they treat a few deaths as a big deal and the press was soo against them, making them sounds like losing. US never fought someone on par with them ever since WW2.

      @mirage_panzer2274@mirage_panzer2274 Жыл бұрын
    • They are learning a lot of lessons that should have been been learned long ago and should not have been allowed to disapear again by investing in training and excercise.

      @baronvonlimbourgh1716@baronvonlimbourgh1716 Жыл бұрын
    • @@baronvonlimbourgh1716 they had learned a lesson: never try to do things nicely, in gloves. Was there any technical reason why Russian army didn't use "shock and awe" style operation? Any missiles Ukrainians had trouble intercepting in April, May etc, especially October, November and December, they could be fired in first few days too, smashing military bases, depots, large SAM installations, civilian infrastructure especially key distribution transformers and junctions between power plants and the power grid, not to mention bombing buildings like parliament or central government. No, Russian didn't do that because they wanted to do everything in nice way. "From tomorrow, you have different government, everything else is going as usual". I would say that in case of any potential NATO neighbor like Georgia, they should do exactly that with side note that next wave of missiles will be with tactical weapons. Neutral or sand turned to radioactive glass? Georgians would have very easy choice. After the war ends, be sure that at least _some_ Ukrainians will ask about Zelensky and his politics and why he was so cocky instead "let's try to negotiate, let's have peace". Why would he? He rents his villa to Russian couple because money is universal language.

      @BojanPeric-kq9et@BojanPeric-kq9et Жыл бұрын
    • 50s, Korea. Is Russia honestly doing so badly? Russia put up against the second biggest army in Europe which had 300,000 various security forces on the ground ready to go, and they’re conducting most of their fighting from miles deep what if Acacian that works constructed over the course of a decade if not longer. West is used to seeing her advanced professional militaries rollover disorganized tribesman in the matter of days or weeks so that’s become our expectations of how quickly a military operation should go. It was admitted only about three or four months in Ukraine was completely out of their original weapons stocks and the Russians have destroyed their industry so if not for copious foreign aid they would have fallen long ago. Keep in mind within the first two months Ukrainians took so many losses it would have destroyed the standing British army. If anything the fact the Russians are able to advance continuously against such a numerous and well dug in the enemy while scoring six kills to every one loss is absolutely amazing and should instill a very deep fear and respect of the Russians.

      @Mortablunt@Mortablunt Жыл бұрын
  • I've been following Ukraine coverage obsessively, and this was by far the most interesting and informative discussion of background information that I've seen. Thank you very much for making this.

    @cymeriandesigns@cymeriandesigns Жыл бұрын
    • You should check out the channel Perun he has some really interesting videoes on the situation of the Russian army

      @thecanadiankiwibirb4512@thecanadiankiwibirb4512 Жыл бұрын
    • @@thecanadiankiwibirb4512 perun is such an amazing source of input. I was going to recommend him myself as well

      @RuffinItAB@RuffinItAB Жыл бұрын
    • You should check out KZhead channel, 'The New Atlas' for news coverage on the war, which is very informative.

      @Rextreff@Rextreff Жыл бұрын
  • I had some quite big doubts about Russian military capabilities. It seemed like every month we used to get a new video of a boondongle. A helicopter crashing at a display, a surface air missile performing somersaults, Kuznetsov deciding to catch fire again. That said I didn't think it would play out like this. I could only ever see Ukrainian getting crushed over a few months due to being completely over matched by Russia. I didn't expect Ukraine to perform well tactically.

    @dylanmilne6683@dylanmilne6683 Жыл бұрын
    • I agree. I knew that the Russian army still relied on much Soviet junk because it lacked funds to replace all Soviet tanks, artillery, steel helmets and provide everyone with body armor. I also knew that the Russian military doctrine sucks and is the opposite of auftragstaktik. I did also knew that Russia lacked funds and high technology to keep competing with the western world in top notch high quality weapons... and that T14 Armata and SU57 was both overly hyped in their capapbilities, and they were too expensive for poor Russia to mass produce, and that they would likely be delayed and perhaps not be produced at all. The tolerance of heavy losses might be a strength of the Russian army compared to the west. But otherwise I have been fundamentally unimpressed by the Russian forces. But even I did not expect them to perform as bad as they did. Poor maintance, corruption, overheard communcation, poor morale etc were factors I was unaware of on how bad there were before the war.

      @nattygsbord@nattygsbord Жыл бұрын
    • Anyone would have seen the writing on the wall during the Kursk disaster and the asinine rescue attempts by Russia.

      @allewis4008@allewis4008 Жыл бұрын
    • nato support and satellite intelligence

      @lglubbock7593@lglubbock7593 Жыл бұрын
    • @@allewis4008 Well, sinking of Kursk is 22 years ago, basically when Jeltsin was just of his office. So, in hindsight it looks like those problems are only hushed away, and organization is still just as inept. But that is only with the experience's in 2022 combined with what happened in August 2000.

      @Tuning3434@Tuning3434 Жыл бұрын
    • Well,the latest update , ukrainian just push Russian out from severedonetsk. For honest i think they cant do it. But again,they are prepare the war since 8 years ago. What a good news for Ukraine.

      @pixelion1579@pixelion1579 Жыл бұрын
  • You should look into Colonel Mikhail Khodarenok article from January 2022 entitled 'Mass Fire attack on Ukraine', where he covered a lot of the likely issues the Russians would face and how the military and government in Russia was massively misjudging the situation and were very overconfident. He mentions foreign volunteers and various other factors.

    @nutyyyy@nutyyyy Жыл бұрын
    • A very interesting article.

      @rogerwilco2@rogerwilco2 Жыл бұрын
    • Just read it. Excellent article. Too bad everyone, including the Russian leaders, ignored it.

      @ed-te1fp@ed-te1fp Жыл бұрын
    • I read it, it is an excellent article. He very accurately predicted the troubles that the Russian army would face in this conflict.

      @MPdude237@MPdude237 Жыл бұрын
    • @@MPdude237 they seem to be doing ok in donbass, just ask Ukraine.

      @nagantm441@nagantm441 Жыл бұрын
    • @@nagantm441 Bleeding a lot for an area they already had a nice chunk of. If they take it, the war will continue. Remember the Germans made it all the way to the outskirts of Moscow (the Germans could see the Kremlin at a distance) but ended up getting pushed all the way back to Berlin.

      @FakeAssHandsomeMcGee_@FakeAssHandsomeMcGee_ Жыл бұрын
  • The people who said Russia's military is a paper tiger were laughed at for years

    @theimmortal4718@theimmortal4718 Жыл бұрын
  • The Ukrainian military had many of the same issues. Both suffer from the same soviet history. This corruption and staff turnover becomes crippling when technical skills are needed, such as in engineering, artillery and armoured units, and on the front line where a core of professional NCOs and troops who trust them is also of great value

    @ihategooglealot3741@ihategooglealot3741 Жыл бұрын
    • yet ukrainian army is destroying russian one

      @ericpaunovic3579@ericpaunovic3579 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ericpaunovic3579 in a defensive war with massive support from the West. Just sayin'.

      @KingRavenfilms@KingRavenfilms Жыл бұрын
    • @@KingRavenfilms soon enough it'll be an offensive, it already is in some sense (belogorod bombed, explosions across russia) its only matter of time victorious armies of west engage.

      @ericpaunovic3579@ericpaunovic3579 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ericpaunovic3579 no

      @MaximillionBucks@MaximillionBucks Жыл бұрын
    • @@MaximillionBucks yes

      @ericpaunovic3579@ericpaunovic3579 Жыл бұрын
  • Rob Lee's assessment was spot on. The Russian southern districts have been by far the most successful, though eventually stopped after capturing Mariupol, Melitopol, and Kherson. The other's assessment was less correct though.

    @mmcion1@mmcion1 Жыл бұрын
    • half of the reason Kherson was so successful is because it was perhaps the only city where FSB actually managed to get a foothold before the war broke out.

      @iannordin5250@iannordin5250 Жыл бұрын
    • @@iannordin5250 I thought that the military commander for Kherson refused to fight. I'm not clear whether he went to Russia or just left Ukraine, maybe neither. I recall Zelensky saying there had been traitors that capitulated in Kherson without fighting. Someone got arrested, and that's all I recall about it.

      @cliffc2546@cliffc2546 Жыл бұрын
    • @@cliffc2546 Basically, the man in charge of the defenses actively sabotaged the entire defense including de-mining roads, dismantling the units stationed there, and closing volunteer recruitment. The Kherson defense forces also refused to blow up the bridges that would have greatly slowed the southern advance and nearly make the place untouchable from the Russian advance.

      @iannordin5250@iannordin5250 Жыл бұрын
    • They’ve not stopped though. You’re living in a fantasy land.

      @randomclick2826@randomclick2826 Жыл бұрын
    • @@randomclick2826Yes they have. Most of the advancements and villages that Russia has made in the last 2 weeks have been pushed back in the last 3 days. With every village they capture they lose another.

      @serronserron1320@serronserron1320 Жыл бұрын
  • Better to overestimate than underestimate a possible foe. Especially when your armed forces funding has to be sourced from an elected body with the majority not being soldiers prior to their new responsibilities.

    @MT-fh1pw@MT-fh1pw Жыл бұрын
    • Too much optimism is dangerous. Too much pessimism is dangerous too. One should always try to be a realist. It is of course easier said than done. Too much optimism can make you take stupid risks and walk into ambushes and have no plan B for escaping because you was too overconfident in your own ability and underestmated your foe. But if you overestmate your foe all the time, then he can psychologically blackmail your country into concessions despite your military is stronger. And in a war you might be paralyzed and too afraid to take risks despite there is a high chance of success and your attacks are very likely to pay off very well, and quickly bring the war to an end for you with a small price for you and a high price for the enemy. So one should try to never over or underestimate an enemy. A realistic view is the best. Then you can avoid stupid overly aggressive mistakes, and you can still sometimes play very aggressive when it pays off.

      @nattygsbord@nattygsbord Жыл бұрын
    • Yes, MT. No General ever complained about an excess of Victory.

      @dougstubbs9637@dougstubbs9637 Жыл бұрын
    • @@nattygsbord exactly. "Better safe than sorry" doesn't always work in war. It can often lead to being sorry in another way.

      @lc1138@lc1138 Жыл бұрын
    • The point I was trying to make was in regards to funding of forces, that better the funding and R&D be provided to fight a near peer adversary and achieve overkill to reduce friendly casualties as opposed to an underestimation and the extra blood to be spilled from this result.

      @MT-fh1pw@MT-fh1pw Жыл бұрын
    • @@MT-fh1pw Economics and military strategy focus on the best handling of limited resources. Spending enormous amounts of money on one weapon system to achieve overkill, means that you got less money over to spend on other types of weapons. I don't think that would be an effiecent handling of resources, and it would probably create more human losses. Maybe Tiger II was not the best tank for Germany, despite its extra big 88mm gun made both the gun on the Tiger I and panther look weak. And despite its well sloped thick frontal armor was twice as thick as needed. The Germans did achieve an overkill. But they could never build many of this tank. It would have been better if they had upscaled production of their other tanks instead like the panther. Israel could upgrade their Merkava tanks if they wanted to. Then they could achieve overkill with mounting a 15cm gun on their tank. But it would be pointless to fire a mini nuke on an old Soviet garbage tank that its neighbouring countries use. 15cm ammo is more expensive than the 12cm. It takes more time to reload. You can carry fewer rounds of ammunition inside a tank etc. So I don't think upgrading the gun on Merkava is the most pressing need of Israels army. It might do other better things with its military budget... spending it on the airforce, or on the infantry or whatever..

      @nattygsbord@nattygsbord Жыл бұрын
  • Experts don't know what they're talking about. They didn't realize that Ukraine was the most capable army in Europe and that was what Russia was fighting. They have been preparing for this for almost a decade. Not a single Western power have faced such enemy since Vietnam, where the US lost. They were wrong at the start, and still wrong today. They either overestimate or underestimate Russia.

    @dharmdevil@dharmdevil2 ай бұрын
  • If Ukraine has 700,00 troops and Russia has 200 to 300,00 troops then Russia is doing a pretty good job pounding it with artillery.

    @keimcpartlan7434@keimcpartlan7434 Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, despite the support Ukraine is receiving from NATO, people of Russia are STILL able to fight them effectively. Most people are blinded by propaganda saying one side is currently dominating the other... (It's most noticeable with Pro-Ukraine propaganda) However, what is actually happening is that the armies are currently evenly matched despite the supply difference.

      @pyroball602@pyroball602 Жыл бұрын
    • The front is 1000 kilometers long and the west INSISTS Ukraine not invade Russia…. Allowing Russia to fuck around and concentrate forces…

      @bobh9492@bobh94923 ай бұрын
  • The Russian military loop. 1. Russian military obviously poorly equipped with no training, poor leadership, outdated tactics, no maintainance, etc. 2. Russia shows off new high tech shit to prove it's actually strong. 3. West skeptical, says Russian shit is useless. 4. Russian shit shown not to be useless. West panics. Forgets Russia isn't strong. 5. Russia forgets it isn't actually strong. Invades Japan/Finland/Ukraine, throws outdated, unmaintained equipment with everything that isn't bolted down scavenged by the troops for survival, and uncoordinated human waves of troops at wall, then puts their officers against the wall when it doesn't work. 6. Repeat. (optionally the disgruntled soldiers help someone overthrow the government).

    @petersmythe6462@petersmythe6462 Жыл бұрын
    • Ah yes, the Lazerpig Loop.

      @frostyguy1989@frostyguy1989 Жыл бұрын
    • 6. Germany invades Russia(50% chance of success).

      @lukatomas9465@lukatomas9465 Жыл бұрын
    • Nice fantasy you got there, but, no. Russia does not lack training, nor leadership skills. Russia is fighting a numerically superior enemy and has won every single major battle it has fought in the Ukraine (with exception of some smaller, less important battles). Mariupol was defended by at least 8,100 troops many of whom were elite, battlehardened troops who had years of preperation yet lost big-time to Russian and DPR forces. The Ukrainians managed to so easily lose a very important bridgehead in the Donbass (Izyum) in spite of having enormous terrain advantage and failed in every single one of their attempts to retake the area. Losing the town of Liman in a few hours and allowing their front to collapse in Popasna shows that the RAF is far from what they are portrayed in the media. Russia does not throw human waves of troops (and neither did they do that in WW2, for the most part). This is an unsubstantiated allegation promulgated by Western liars and older uneducated folk. In fact, Russia is making slow gains not because of Ukrainian so-called ''resistance,'' but because Russia wants to reduce unnecessary casualties on their side. A minimum of 400,000 shells are fired by the Russians per day - it is clear that they want to soften the Ukrainians up a bit before advancing, and when they advance, they advance very fast, as we have seen in Popasna.

      @fegelfly7877@fegelfly7877 Жыл бұрын
    • That's not how they do it though. Russia has been slow because they've been doing the exact opposite of human waves but instead waves of artillery and rocket batteries. This war has been a mechanized and industrial war, not that WW2 Soviet bullshit your speaking off lol

      @pilotman9819@pilotman9819 Жыл бұрын
    • @@fegelfly7877 'has won every single major battle it has fought in the Ukraine (with exception of some smaller, less important battles)' like the really -big- small battle for Kyiv or the really -big- small battle for Kharkiv, a city only 40km from the border that they couldn't even encircle

      @spankeyfish@spankeyfish Жыл бұрын
  • I appreciate the work and effort and attention to detail that you put into this channel. I have learned more about military history and human engagement with military technology than any other source including college courses. THANK YOU

    @gregorybrennan8539@gregorybrennan8539 Жыл бұрын
  • "Why we continue to be wrong about Russia", there I changed it for you. The hubris some are displaying is incredible. You miss the forest for the trees while Russia grabs the Ukrainian east.

    @domokun845@domokun845 Жыл бұрын
  • Correct me if I'm wrong. But doesn't those 20% of Ukraine also include the areas that was occupied in 2014? So, a more interesting question would be, how much more territory have Russia taken after the 24th of February?

    @thor-inge@thor-inge Жыл бұрын
    • well i dont know in % but if you dont count crimea and the separatis teritories its fucking little compared to what they lost over all but they lost so much cause kyiv was there main target and only after if failed they focused on the southern territoryes so if you dont count russian losses on kyiv and count only there losses in the south its may be even trade off for russia ?? dont know depends what standards you use by western cultures its a fail by asian cultures its win cause they all ways swarmed whit mass conscripts and sacrificed them to take over land

      @caiusion3893@caiusion3893 Жыл бұрын
    • They might have doubled the territory

      @hoteltesla@hoteltesla Жыл бұрын
    • I think he means 20% in total including Donbas, Crimea

      @throwed210SATX@throwed210SATX Жыл бұрын
    • It was 4/5% beforehand, so they've gained 15 %

      @conor987@conor987 Жыл бұрын
    • At the end of the day they control less now than they did months ago. How any could possibly see this as anything other than a major strategic defeat is grasping at straws. Nothing about the Russian plan indicated limited wargoals. Kyiv was the priority and they failed to take it.

      @nutyyyy@nutyyyy Жыл бұрын
  • We always have been. I was in the USSR during the collapse of Marxism (advising the new govt on financial matters) and our guides were furious at the stupidity of the West actually believing what their leaders said. This was a common theme - we assume they are telling the truth and the people presume they are lying.

    @smb123211@smb123211 Жыл бұрын
    • So no different than our political system, they lie, we believe it because otherwise we are serfs. Funny how we assumed the opposite, I guess the grass IS always greener.

      @afungusamungus2860@afungusamungus2860 Жыл бұрын
    • This is basicaly how I feel about naive dummies from "the west" ever since the war started. People are citing the Russian government as if they suddenly started to tell the truth.

      @MrSzczuras@MrSzczuras Жыл бұрын
    • so shock therapy?

      @BlitzOfTheReich@BlitzOfTheReich Жыл бұрын
    • If i Have understood correctly In russia there is actually a term For a lie government Tells, no one actually believes but repeats to everyone so they won't cross The daggers with government or its supporters. amazing.

      @anttitheinternetguy3213@anttitheinternetguy3213 Жыл бұрын
    • @@afungusamungus2860 The difference is that you can sit and bitch all day at your country and leaders without worrying about spending 15 years in jail or being stopped on the street to have your phone checked.

      @smb123211@smb123211 Жыл бұрын
  • Moscow, and the West, believed their own hype. Equipment is only as good as the soldiers using it, the logistics supporting it, and the command and control network directing it.

    @charlesharris9965@charlesharris9965 Жыл бұрын
    • There hasn't been a single, successful, Ukrainian counterattack in over 100 days of warfare.

      @jamesrowlands8971@jamesrowlands8971 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jamesrowlands8971 Really? I've seen several so far. On every front, Kyiv, Kharkov, Severdonesk, Kherson all have seen successful Ukrainian counterattacks. Admittedly they are limited local attacks, but they have been successful and more counterattacks are coming.

      @charlesharris9965@charlesharris9965 Жыл бұрын
    • @@charlesharris9965 and they all have been successfully repulsed with many ukrainian casualties.

      @lexburen5932@lexburen5932 Жыл бұрын
    • @@lexburen5932 and many ruzzian casualties as well

      @charlesharris9965@charlesharris9965 Жыл бұрын
    • @@charlesharris9965 imagine 200k army overcome 600k or mb million already? in OFFENSIVE, ure suffers some heavy form of shizophrenia

      @lek8630@lek8630 Жыл бұрын
  • US intelligence is more worried about the risk of offending any big economic deals that might be in the works with belligerents rather than doing a thorough review.

    @arwzqu1964@arwzqu1964 Жыл бұрын
  • Stanimir Dobrev is an excellent example of someone who does HUMINT (human intelligence), something Western countries used to be good at -- back in the days of the Cold War. Now? It seems far too much intelligence analysis is based on perusing top level official reports and documentation produced by a potential adversary, including their propaganda, coupled with high tech "national assets", which provide awesome remote sensing capability, but are incapable of sniffing out the detailed reality on the ground. Plus, one has to consider the ideological filter the analysis is put through, and the end goals of the intelligence product. Which is usually to incentivise the procurement of weaponry or to justify the deployment of additional "national assets". Are we looking at an example of the military-industrial complex that Eisenhower so eloquently warned against?

    @EdwardRLyons@EdwardRLyons Жыл бұрын
    • Or basically why those of us who use Telegram and actually read what the Russians put out and talk to the Russians see shit coming far in advance that comes a shocking news if it ever even makes it to Western cable months later. One had its incredibly gratifying to finally be vindicated about stuff after months of waiting on the other is incredibly annoying waiting for the talking news heads to admit it and hearing people constantly dismiss it as Russian propaganda.

      @Mortablunt@Mortablunt Жыл бұрын
  • Yet another great piece of coverage, where Military History not Visualized measures much better than what I see in the news, when I do have a look at my TV. Well done, and Stanimir Dobrev should be invited back. I will have to rewatch this episode, as it has so many details, that I might have missed too many.

    @jimboAndersenReviews@jimboAndersenReviews Жыл бұрын
    • All Stanimir does is reprodusing rumors :) It was also funny to see how russians were doin poorly in conflict with geargians. I mean, they knocked out Geargia in six days. And yet everyone tells how cool us army is wich basically lost all its wars lol

      @ardour1587@ardour1587 Жыл бұрын
  • It's true - the 2017 Russian military wasn't the poorly equipped and uncoordinated force that invaded Georgia in 2008. It's an entirely new poorly equipped and uncoordinated force!

    @facubeitches1144@facubeitches1144 Жыл бұрын
    • Ahh ges yhats why rhey are soo good at adopting to their enviroment, quicly changing fighing style and so on.

      @Silver_Prussian@Silver_Prussian Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you, this is just so insightful. Stan is just so articulate and detailed. It's actually quite amazing so few professional western analysts were able to comb through OPEN information from Russia about the state of their military and come to this conclusion.

    @daanno2@daanno2 Жыл бұрын
  • WoW! Awesome content and information. I see why his deep dive into local sources can be much more effective that crunching published numbers. Thanks for this excellent interview!

    @annehersey9895@annehersey9895 Жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for the interview. Two things from me: 1 - I really appreciated your methodology in looking for information. General analysis does not go as deep as it should. I will give you an example from business. There was a local firm who sold 80% of their product to one company. In analyzing the firm, I listened to the announcements of their customer. The customer reported that it had completed the project that they were using the local firm for. It was pretty easy to see this was going to be a problem for the local firm going forward. I do see lots of Press Release analysis in this war, so thanks! I came to a similar conclusion from a different direction - budget. The announced Russian military budget is about the size of the UKs. But they have so much more to fund, some of which is really antiquated and tough to maintain. I didn't know if the Ukrainians could do much (2014 said they would not), but it was clear that the threat from Russia was exaggerated at a global level. 2 - I know a Military Intelligence Analyst at a Battalion level in the US Army very well. He never gives me specifics or anything actionable. But he did say they were told about the equipment that the top end units of the Russian Military had. That equipment was equivalent of what Western soldiers have. It is pretty clear at this point that this equipment does not reach very far into the units of the Russian Army - poor comms, no NVGs, bad body armor (if at all), bad rations. He assumed, as I think we all did, that this better equipment was in widespread use. Turns out - no.

    @jimsackmanbusinesscoaching1344@jimsackmanbusinesscoaching1344 Жыл бұрын
    • Budget is the real thing to zero in on. There is simply no way to operate and maintain a force of 1 million on the budget as stated. That doesn't include the acquisition costs for new systems or modernization. It is actually pretty easy to see who is lying about readiness just by looking at the budget.

      @CB-vt3mx@CB-vt3mx Жыл бұрын
    • Russia has a large, modern army. Its just that the modern part isn't very large and the large part isn't very modern.

      @swissarmyknight4306@swissarmyknight4306 Жыл бұрын
    • @@swissarmyknight4306 I like that a lot. There are a lot of Independent Sales Rep positions where they say you can work part time and you can make lots of money. I always laugh and add...yes, just not at the same time.

      @jimsackmanbusinesscoaching1344@jimsackmanbusinesscoaching1344 Жыл бұрын
    • @@swissarmyknight4306 Thanks, you made my morning.

      @lc1138@lc1138 Жыл бұрын
    • I’m skeptical that the top-end equipment is the equivalent of what the average Western soldier has. I’m sure the Russian government advertises it as equivalent, and perhaps the prototypes were equivalent, but I doubt the Russians have the high-tech manufacturing capability to match Western weapons that rely on computer systems, and even if they did, most of the money to build them probably got stolen.

      @bluemarlin8138@bluemarlin8138 Жыл бұрын
  • When my grandfather served in the Soviet army, he did everything from messhall mass fights, to jumping out windows to get away from knife armed armenian gang, catching lobsters because theres no good food while he was naked from lack of clothes with an ak around his neck so no one would dare mock him, being forgotten in a swamp in Belaruss and wintering in a village with the locals after 2 of his 4 men almost died of freezing to death, to allying with a georgian for protection by the georgian gang, .... When my cousin served in modern Latvijas army, his worst complain was how stressful taking the practical exams where because all the superiors are watching. My family are very much highborn nobleman, but in the soviet army you just do what you have to do. Seems the Russijan army hasnt improoved the soviet army inherited, while Latvija build a new one from 0 with NATO help and is much much better off.

    @baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 Жыл бұрын
    • Modern Latvian army is rather small and professional, no wonder the difference. I hope it's capable enough to stall the Russians long enough for me to escape Riga before they shoot me in the head Bucha-style :-(

      @stariyczedun@stariyczedun Жыл бұрын
    • @baileyboy73 baileyboy73 gotta have some if you are a "traitor to the motherland" on the run.

      @stariyczedun@stariyczedun Жыл бұрын
    • @@stariyczedun Size and profesionalism doesnt matter, its the honor of the people that does. Also run how? If Russija has the strength to take Rīga it has the strength to close to Suvalki gap. If you want to run you should do so long before the war starts.

      @baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 Жыл бұрын
    • @@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 staff your army with a socioeconomic equivalent of maskačkas čigāni and pay them 200 eur per month - I doubt much honour would be left. Good point about running though. I hope I will be able to drive my skoda to Kurzeme and hop on the last ferry to old Europe. Somehow. Alternatively Latvian forests can provide hiding for many years even under total occupation.

      @stariyczedun@stariyczedun Жыл бұрын
    • Nobleman, sure ...😂😂😂😂😂 you fool

      @goodlife6277@goodlife6277 Жыл бұрын
  • So much for experts! And the "professional intelligence" community! Sad that the US intelligence capability has degraded so much - and very dangerous to the world! There should be an independent examination of the failures and not left to the people who failed!.

    @daveoatway6126@daveoatway6126 Жыл бұрын
  • Well, this didn't age very well.

    @gideonroos1188@gideonroos1188 Жыл бұрын
  • A senior Russian army defector from a Tank Guards division "Victor Suvarov" (a pseudonym) wrote the book "Inside the Red Army) in the early 80s. He pointed out many of the corruption, manning and training issues outlined here. And that was when the Soviet Union really did spend a huge amount of money on the military. Post-1991 it only got worse.

    @karlp8484@karlp8484 Жыл бұрын
    • A lot of Soviets talked shit just to get asylum.

      @Internetbutthurt@Internetbutthurt Жыл бұрын
    • He was a GRU officer. He didn't need to suck up to get asylum.

      @bentilbury2002@bentilbury2002 Жыл бұрын
    • @@bentilbury2002 The ministry of truth is essentially an "opposite" commenter, just like in 1984. Anything they say is generally the opposite of truth.

      @Haan22@Haan22 Жыл бұрын
    • Almost as corrupt as the US military industrial complex

      @thomaswalsh1082@thomaswalsh1082 Жыл бұрын
    • Victor Suvorov also wrote that Soviets wanted to attack Nazi Germany first, but Hitler beat them to it, and struck first instead. Basically, Stalin wanted to use Germany as an 'icebreaker' to springboard invasion of the rest of Europe.

      @stepanstepasha3538@stepanstepasha3538 Жыл бұрын
  • This is a pretty good brief. I must admit though, its pretty clear that the inability of intelligence professionals to get it right is troubling. However to be cautious isn’t a bad thing, as preparing to fight a war against a military that is stronger that it actually is, leaves you with an advantage, assuming the investment decisions in men, materiel and capability are sound and sufficient to meet the expected threat. When i was reading stories about how Russian troops were selling fuel to buy alcohol and food whilst on exercise in Belarus, leading up-to the invasion, i knew this was going to be a debacle. But when the system of government in place in Russia is a kleptocracy, would you expect that this mentality wouldn’t infiltrate from general officers all the way down to privates?

    @bgee515@bgee515 Жыл бұрын
    • I think forecasting how military forces will actually perform in a war is really difficult with all the variables and outside factors to consider. The Russian military wasn't prepared for the task, I think that is the only thing currently that is clear.

      @TheFirebird123456@TheFirebird123456 Жыл бұрын
    • Western intelligence has been rotting for 20 years. Ever since we "sexed up" the intelligence about WMD's in Iraq there has been more and more political interference, control and appointments. It doesn't matter if what you say is true, it matters that your report reflects the ideological bias of the political leadership. The people at ground level can feed in good intel but watch as it moves up the chain and what comes out of the top is the exact polar opposite of reality but perfectly conforms to the political desires of the people in charge. There was huge amounts of intel on Afghanistan, not a single grunt thought the Afghan Army would hold up but we are in a post truth society where pronouns are more important than performance.

      @disposabull@disposabull Жыл бұрын
    • There's corruption and lack of training in every military. There is huge danger in assuming it is widespread (see Russia's assumptions regarding Ukraine). There were known bluffs by the USSR such as finding some missiles on parade were actually wooden decoys but it was a classic case of the duty of a military analyst to assume maximum enemy capabilities while a political analyst isn't on the hook if they make a mistake in enemy capabilities. One reason why the Battle of Midway was so much of a gamble was because the positioning was based on a guess as to Japanese probable strength instead of the maximum credible strength (at least another carrier). With regards to Russia, one major assumption was that the troops used in exercises were only somewhat better prepared than typical instead of being highly prepared. Normally observing enemy military exercises is a good way to judge typical capabilities but Russia was remarkable in how bad their logistics were and exercises didn't reveal that. I also suspect that the weird tactical incompetence of Russian forces in the first week was due to sleep deprivation and inexperience that a regular military would not have due to regular exercises preparing senior officers for sleep deprivation and typical march order tasks. It is very hard to imagine a military incapable of conducting a simple march ordered assault across country. That is literally what most of the vehicles are designed for and decades of Soviet training programs prepared for.

      @Lawofimprobability@Lawofimprobability Жыл бұрын
    • @@Lawofimprobability In theory their logistics should be better but the corruption killed it. If you watch all the interviews with captured Russians from Kyiv a couple of them stated they were on exercise for 2+ months and were issued all of the shiny toys like NVG's and optics. A few days before the exercises ended the officers stole all the shiny toys to sell them. Then they had a surprise invasion with no gear, fuel, ammo or spares. Had you not noticed the cheap Russian ammo and gear on the US civilian gun market? It's all stolen...

      @disposabull@disposabull Жыл бұрын
    • @n1uk The talking heads on tv are chosen because they say what the establishment wants them to say. There is a small group of media friendly "experts" who have zero current experience on the ground. The Ukrainian and Estonian intelligence services have vastly more experience with the Russians and have a far more honest and nuanced view. Intel is supposed to be bottom up but instead it's top down and must follow the party line.

      @disposabull@disposabull Жыл бұрын
  • I remember reading an interesting opinion somewhere stating that the overestimation of Russian military power was what lead Austria and Germany to escalate arming and mobilising which in turn triggered the French and the Brittish to do the same and it all spiraled into WW1. Seems like we haven't learned all that much.

    @Eternaldream00@Eternaldream00 Жыл бұрын
    • In defence of Austrian fear of Russia, when the Austrian ambassador threatened to mobilise three army corps against Russia Tsar Alexander III twisted his fork into a knot and threw it down onto the plate of the ambassador proclaiming “that is what I am going to do to your three army corps!” Such an action would obviously make an impression.

      @codieomeallain6635@codieomeallain6635 Жыл бұрын
  • Re: pre-conflict assistance to Ukraine it is a narrow line to walk. If the US/Europe had announced significant military/military funding aid to Ukraine in late 2021 the Russians could have accelerated their timetable and attacked before it was in place. That is why maintaining sufficient defense/military forces is important. Once an enemy has a significant advantage it is very difficult to catch up because your enemy will see what you are doing and attack first. Admiral Jackie Fisher put it well in the early 1900s when commanding the British Mediterranean Fleet. He was promised significant reinforcements in event of crisis and he said I need them now both so the units are properly trained/can function together and because in a crisis the government won’t want to send them for fear of starting a war. What could the US have done to reinforce the Philippines in 1940 that would have prevented a Japanese attack without triggering said attack before the reinforcements were in place?

    @philipdepalma4672@philipdepalma4672 Жыл бұрын
  • Overestimating of Russia was in best interest of US and other NATO circles in order to get more funding. In reality, without nukes Russia have against whole NATO equal chance as Ukraine against them.

    @mladenmatosevic4591@mladenmatosevic4591 Жыл бұрын
    • The US has been desperate to pivot towards China as their main expected rival since Obama, there's no need to build up Russia as a boogieman.

      @bigd8122@bigd8122 Жыл бұрын
    • @@bigd8122 Ukrainian policy was then completely wrong, unless they expected Russia to just lie down and die.

      @mladenmatosevic4591@mladenmatosevic4591 Жыл бұрын
  • This is the best exposition on the background of this conflict I've seen since it began. Thank you.

    @beautoner@beautoner Жыл бұрын
    • You're easily duped and impressed.

      @jamesrowlands8971@jamesrowlands8971 Жыл бұрын
    • @@jamesrowlands8971 Clearly it is an opinion. If you can share a better "exposition on the background of this conflict" please do. Thanks.

      @beautoner@beautoner Жыл бұрын
  • Am I misinterpreting some of this or did he explain in there that russia has a feudal style system where officers in different regions are budgeted and responsible for generating manpower to be called on?

    @solreaver83@solreaver83 Жыл бұрын
    • No you are correct.

      @honkhonk8009@honkhonk80092 ай бұрын
  • Good talk please keep doing the overlays giving a quick explanation what the vehicle is or abbreviation meaning etc . Great work !

    @davidinmossy@davidinmossy Жыл бұрын
  • My dad who was a really intelligent guy, once said to me, if you want to work out the strength of Russia, take the numbers they give you and divide by 4.

    @oscargrainger2962@oscargrainger2962 Жыл бұрын
    • guess are hitler listening to ur dad L M A O

      @lek8630@lek8630 Жыл бұрын
  • source is trust me bro and twitter :))

    @stefandulgheriu@stefandulgheriu Жыл бұрын
  • I'm just watching the Russian military advance, and the Ukrainian army crumble. And wonder where any of this discussion is still relevant 4 days later. Apart from being pure projection, that is. It is now obvious that the average Ukrainian conscripted soldier on the front line does not get the weapons given by the West. It is also obvious that the Russians are advancing , not going backwards, and that their morale seems high. Which is normal for an army that is if not welcome, at least appreciated by the local population.

    @tikabass@tikabass Жыл бұрын
    • Where are you seeing that? And what's taking soooooooo long??

      @rogerthat4545@rogerthat4545 Жыл бұрын
    • @@rogerthat4545 They are now retreating or have retreated in the last 48 hours from Sieverodonest, Yarova, Tetyanivka, Svyatohirsk, Bairak, Peremoha and Shestakove, among others. There are many channels giving daily accounts of the fighting, which use boith Russian and Ukrainian sources. "Military Summary" and "Defense Politics Asia" being two of the most popular channels. The Ukrainian army started digging trenches and building bunkers 8 years ago, and the Russian, LPR and DPR forces are first obliterating them with massive artillery fire before advancing. This limits their losses quite a bit. It's not that slow, but it's got to be slower than when the US army drone bombs Afghanis riding donkeys, which is the type of fighting Western armies are used to these days.

      @tikabass@tikabass Жыл бұрын
    • @@rogerthat4545 Oh. And Patrick Lancaster has interviewed many residents of Mariupol and other cities. All Russian-speaking residents are quite happy with being liberated by the Russian forces, and that's about 90% of the total population of the Donbass and Eastern Ukraine. Check his YT channel, then decide for yourself.

      @tikabass@tikabass Жыл бұрын
    • @@tikabass looks to me like it's been going back and forth for quite some time.. I got to ask, what's taking the invading slave "army" soooooo long?

      @rogerthat4545@rogerthat4545 Жыл бұрын
    • @@tikabass "Patrick Lancaster"? Let me guess, he has very convincing videos of people dressed in civilian clothes saying that Ukraine is attacking them, but offers no actual evidence? Can you explain how they can tell the difference between Russian and Ukrainian artillery?

      @rogerthat4545@rogerthat4545 Жыл бұрын
  • Did not expect to see a fellow Bulgarian in one of your videos. It was a welcome surprise and a fascinating interview.

    @ZealotOfSteal@ZealotOfSteal Жыл бұрын
  • We might be wrong about every military. Modern war is mostly unknown.

    @miguelmontenegro3520@miguelmontenegro3520 Жыл бұрын
    • Modern war is 90% logistics.

      @LazyLifeIFreak@LazyLifeIFreak Жыл бұрын
    • We’ve entered an age of drone and informational warfare. Tanks, BMPs, and even warships are obsolete.

      @MrWolfstar8@MrWolfstar8 Жыл бұрын
    • Indeed

      @stc3145@stc3145 Жыл бұрын
    • especially US military which have been mostly up against 'sandal-wearing' militaries after WWII

      @JK-dv3qe@JK-dv3qe Жыл бұрын
    • @@JK-dv3qe The US military is by default more effective than most militaries because they rely on technology and not manpower like Russia does. Drones, aircraft, smart weapons. Russia still relies on old tanks, old artillery, and old fashioned man power. Russia is basically stuck in the past while most western militaries are looking toward the future with technology. Not to mention that Russia doesn't have the economy to support most of these futuristic tactics.

      @dn5578@dn5578 Жыл бұрын
  • I remember watching in Syria as Russia attempted to leverage the Admiral Kuznetsov as the center of a western style carrier strike group. They tried and failed, with several reported Mig-29 crash landings on deck, and had to fall back on deploying air strikes from captured air fields. Then they ran out of guided bombs and couldn't reliably strike their intended targets. Then not long after, we watched the Wagner Group unit get stomped by a small force of US Marines that, by all accounts, they greatly outnumbered in both men and equipment - and frankly, what were they thinking? That very well could have sparked a major international incident, but the US and Russia seemingly agreed to brush it under the rug. These events alone pretty well told me at this point that the capabilities of Russia we were being sold on were either drastically overblown or nonexistent. I'm just a regular old guy with some military knowledge and it was pretty obvious to me. Maybe I should have called up these analysts and asked them if they'd seen any Russian youtube footage lately or actually read real news.

    @wysoft@wysoft Жыл бұрын
    • I remember on youtube, a Russian special forces soldier, lone survivor who said, the Americans didn't give them a chance. They where wiped out by artillery. All they training they had was checkmated by 155mm artillery

      @jollygreen4662@jollygreen4662 Жыл бұрын
    • That Wagner story seems to be fake.

      @keen8549@keen8549 Жыл бұрын
    • So -nothing to worry about. Relax & zelensky will soon conquer russia.

      @kitdesilva@kitdesilva Жыл бұрын
    • It's really amazing how terrible Russian military capability is, considering how they stomped ISIS to dust in a matter of months, something the US couldn't do in over a decade.

      @td6460@td6460 Жыл бұрын
    • Guess NAVY seals are over rated. Whenever I think about navy seals I just think about operation redwings lol.

      @GameSteph@GameSteph Жыл бұрын
  • Well, I think modern analysts were focused on material factors how many rockets and jets thanks to APCs were ther where very few were talking about the logistical situation the state procedures to enact a war and even fewer considered the culture in the service which is an imported factor that was almost unknown. They were bound to be wrong with curses with such a narrow focus. War is the ultimate reality check regardless of how powerful you think you are or your opponent is supposed to be you will find the truth out fast.

    @stekra3159@stekra3159 Жыл бұрын
    • Logistics aren't sexy. Battalions of transportation troops driving modern, military cargo trucks set up for handling palletized ammunition packets to distribute to artillery battery's directly.to the ammunition handling mechanisms using the built in powered crane on the truck just don't look as cool as a line of VDV boys in berets and BMDs... and if nothing in that BMD works except the drive train, well, that doesn't show in the parade does it?

      @geodkyt@geodkyt Жыл бұрын
  • Perun did a great video on Russian military corruption. It is amazing how prevalent it is in Russia and how it will destroy a military. The best example is the reason why so many Russian vehicles ran out of fuel coming out of Belarus, was mostly due to Russian soldiers thinking they were only on manuvers, sold off excess diesel to Belarus civilians. Everything from money, vodka, and household appliances.

    @JR-gp2zk@JR-gp2zk Жыл бұрын
    • Ukraine is the most corrupt country in Europe, and it's their army you believe. Very funny...

      @ISkandarash@ISkandarash Жыл бұрын
    • @@ISkandarash And you are willing to send 200k of your young Russian men to their death, and destroy Russia all so Putin and his oligarchs can make billions and move to Venezuela. The Russian people are fools. China will absorb Russia in 5 years. Have fun making Uggs.

      @JR-gp2zk@JR-gp2zk Жыл бұрын
  • I'm puzzled why anyone would take at face value 'official sources' (particularly political sources), regardless of Russian or Western, when it comes to assessments. Both Western and Russian sources have variously (different) incentives to inflate strengths / abilities, and bury deficiencies / defects. Any assessment needs to have validation from independent, microscopic, and secondary sources, and as Dobrev points out, inputs and outputs have to make sense (ex: aircraft availability vs. "600 pilots" training) at functional and operational levels. We already know that Russia is largely a kleptocracy on the 'Federal' side, so it seems naïve to me to assume kleptocratic and corrupt practices would not still extend to the armed forces since the Cold War.... and we know that (for example) Soviet capability was inflated in various ways (or at least seriously wrong) by Western IC machinery. People simply 'believing' the analyses produced by these 'analysts' without looking at their sources and methods are, well.... they deserve what they get.

    @ardentglazier2867@ardentglazier2867 Жыл бұрын
    • Thank you, Ardent Glazier, for one of the best comments on this page.

      @charleshimes1634@charleshimes1634 Жыл бұрын
    • Former communist governments aren’t trustworthy but like the USA, if they say it publicly it’s probably true, and they have much tighter control of the financial expenditures to make sure at least most of it is going where it should Communists are pathological liars

      @looinrims@looinrims10 ай бұрын
    • Russias official sources are usually just the shit you see on the TV. The west official sources are websites that keep records of stocks for their citizens to see for themselves, along with near-Amazon levels of corporate production/logistics. Id say the most corrupt branch of the US military is the Navy. The army/airforce/marines however are much less "swampy". Not even to dickride, its pretty legit. Of course there are incompetent people, and bad accounting. This very much so is obvious. But when the military starts acting more like a corporation than a military, that's when you know their competency is there. Every fuckup that couldv happened during Iraq or Afghanistan had happen, and was documented to the point it was shown on MARVEL MOVIES.

      @honkhonk8009@honkhonk80092 ай бұрын
  • Perun has also done a good video on how corruption destroys armies.

    @SirAntoniousBlock@SirAntoniousBlock Жыл бұрын
    • kzhead.info/sun/nJ2iZJurnptjiWw/bejne.html it's really good.

      @marinusjansen9139@marinusjansen9139 Жыл бұрын
    • Perun in general makes very good videos.

      @neodym5809@neodym5809 Жыл бұрын
    • Yes, it was excellent.

      @asterixdogmatix1073@asterixdogmatix1073 Жыл бұрын
  • It's important to remember that things can change very quickly. Just as the Russians discovered the Ukranian military had changed in the few years since the last war. The Russians are learning many hard lessons now and that may very likely make them more dangerous in the furture.

    @janc8797@janc8797 Жыл бұрын
    • No things don’t change quickly, it took Ukraine 8 years to fully prepare for this war with the help of NATO and the west with the addition of professional training and equipment. Russia hasn’t change at all since the 2014 annexation of Crimea and thought the current Ukraine Millitary would be the same state it was 8 years ago. Also for Russia to change everything and fix everything internally it would take years probably decades. To fix the curruption, to solve the lost equipment to properly train soldiers and have actual professional and not conscripts that only care about getting their service done and leave. These factors takes years to solve not weeks nor months of your “quickly” opinion.

      @marccronshaw7874@marccronshaw7874 Жыл бұрын
    • @@marccronshaw7874 I completely agree that there is no way Russia can fix their problems in weeks or even moths. It's going to take years and years if they can do it at all. Mainly we are just opperating with different definitions of very quickly. I would say that Ukrane fixing their army in just 8 years is "very quickly". Russians would probably agreee :p My thinking that we shouldn't let Russias poor preformance in this war lull us into being over confident, the next war 10 years down the line might be completely different.

      @janc8797@janc8797 Жыл бұрын
    • Russia simply won’t be able to afford to improve. They can’t afford to replace what they’ve already lost. Sanctions are a very slow burning tool but make no mistake it will utterly cripple the Russian economy over the next few years. Meanwhile other countries will continue to modernise as weapons get better and better. Having basically two markets (China and India) isn’t going to remotely compensate for the rest of the entire developed world. Even if they magically came into trillions of dollars every year, to overcome their tactical failings would require a wholesale reform of their military structure- something that cannot work under an authoritarian regime: it has to be top heavy by its very nature. Russian soldiers are treated as subhuman by their own side, this cannot change until their society changes. They have to continue with the propaganda that Russians can endure hardship in a uniquely Russian way, and indeed enjoy it, and treat people as commodities. In short, ain’t gonna happen.

      @lunachu8691@lunachu8691 Жыл бұрын
  • I sense that there will be still comments like ''but look at the map, Russia is still advancing'' etc. but we are talking about Ukraine there too, a country which had its own problems with corruption in general and corruption with army, neglect of army etc., even if they started to modernize. So it's not like Russia attacked some regional power there, then again just the sheer size and arms Ukraine inherited from USSR makes them a regional power in its own right. And now of course they rely more and more on Western help to fight

    @lkrnpk@lkrnpk Жыл бұрын
  • Another most informative and insightful interview. When it comes to gathering information, there is a lot that one can miss if one does not look at a more diverse set of reporting information.

    @cannonfodder4376@cannonfodder4376 Жыл бұрын
    • You are easily misled. This Dobrov guy is a Soros propagandist.

      @jamesrowlands8971@jamesrowlands8971 Жыл бұрын
  • Nice analysis, basically that's the conscript army I remember. I served there in 2015, had a story when me and few guys were sent to the construction site for night so that sergeant (middle age fat dude) could make money from it. Wish this sick regime will fall someday so there wouldn't be such a stupid stories anymore...

    @alexanderk5522@alexanderk5522 Жыл бұрын
    • And the west would still hate you and want you in an endless 90s situation...

      @Tonixxy@Tonixxy Жыл бұрын
    • Can you explain this further? You were sent to a construction site to do work, only for your sergeant to pocket the money that you were supposed to get paid?

      @Rokaize@Rokaize Жыл бұрын
    • @@Rokaize Russian soldiers are traditionally used as practically slave labour force by army officers, so I doubt these guys were promised any payment.

      @zombeaver4853@zombeaver4853 Жыл бұрын
  • The Potemkin village seems to be a particular Russian specialty. Don't create actual prosperity, create the illusion of prosperity. Don't achieve actual military readiness, create the appearance of this. Report that up the line. You have an authorized strength of 400 soldiers, but only 150 in the daily roll call? Report the 400 number up the line, and pocket the pay of the 250 phantoms. (Oldest form of military corruption in the book, goes back millennia). I mean, who's going to know, tovarish? What's the worst that can happen? Not unique to Russia by any means, but particularly highly developed there, it seems.

    @jimpollard9392@jimpollard9392 Жыл бұрын
  • So a guy wrote in a 2017 article that the Russian military wasn't a threat to Ukraine...completely ignoring the fact that the Russian army booted Ukraine out of Crimea in 2014. Fucking what?

    @cstgraphpads2091@cstgraphpads20914 ай бұрын
  • Interesting. The weakness of units further East might explain why the Russians re-deployed tired forces in the Kiev area to the Eastern part of Ukraine. They literally didn't have viable reserves anywhere else to do the job.

    @neilwilson5785@neilwilson5785 Жыл бұрын
    • It was also withdraw or lose those units entirely. They were probably a week or two away from a counteroffensive pushing East from Lviv to cut the supply lines to the units attacking Kyiv from the North. It would have meant the loss of I think 10-20,000 troops, and an utterly humiliating defeat, as opposed to the relatively orderly withdrawal they did manage to execute while Ukraine was still gathering mass for that counteroffensive.

      @ashesofempires04@ashesofempires04 Жыл бұрын
    • I am thinking to myself that perhaps the idea behind this attack on multiple fronts was for Russia to make supplying the army easier by not all troops relying on a few railway lines in the same area, but instead spread the armies out so they could be easier supplied. And another reason would be to to force the small Ukrainian army to spread out over a large area - an area so large that it would be impossible for it to cover all terrain. And here would opening in Ukrainian line show themselves - and become open for the Russian troops to exploit. I theory I see no flaw in that reasoning. However the terrain in the north favored the defenders. A traitor did not blow up a bridge so large parts of southern Ukraine quickly fell into Russian hands. The south and east did have favorble tank terrain with flat ground and short supply lines. The Russians learned much from earlier mistakes and regrouped what they had to the south and east, and hoped to at least take Donbass as a consolation prize after the overthrow of the entire Ukrainian state had failed.

      @nattygsbord@nattygsbord Жыл бұрын
    • Russia never wanted to occupy Kiev, it has little interest in occupying Russian minority areas. It went West to destroy Ukraines military infrastructure so that it could then take the east with less casualties, which is what it's currently doing.

      @slayerhuh404@slayerhuh404 Жыл бұрын
    • @@slayerhuh404 So let me get this straight one of the stated objectives was to oust the "Nazis" out of Ukraine, but upon getting absolutelypillaged, Russia repivots toward the Donbass where it's not even stomping Ukraine with Ukraine retaking Kharkhiv. Yeah no buddy, Russia had big ambitions and unlike the US in Iraq, couldn't materialize them remotely so now it's coping and desiring to break off ethnic Russian territories to prop up its two Neo-Colonies in Donetsk and Luhansk.

      @JustanothaGuy@JustanothaGuy Жыл бұрын
    • I suspect that Putin had counted on more help from Belarus. Belarus may be a stalinist holdout but the help they allowed was pretty much restriced to allow Russia to invade from Belarus territory. Apperantly the war isn't popular in Belarus and I believe that Lukashenko are shrewd enough to distance himself from Putin so he can remain in power if Putin falls. And there are Belarusian citizens that have joined the Ukrainian forces. A bit like how Franco was somehow allowed to keep ruling Spain after WW2 despite being a fascist that had been on friendly terms with Hitler that had helped put him in power.

      @michaelpettersson4919@michaelpettersson4919 Жыл бұрын
  • Great work, thank you! I cannot believe what I am about to say... but I actually understand the politicians for once. If the analysts mostly say one thing, how am I as a policy-maker to just say "No, I see beyond the analysis"

    @majormoolah5056@majormoolah5056 Жыл бұрын
  • Speaking highly of the enemy's capabilities is a great way to justify bigger budgets for your own military and to make the enemy relax or at least to make him thing he's on the right way.

    @polvoradelrey2423@polvoradelrey2423 Жыл бұрын
  • I think a key consideration that don't often get discussed is that Russia is perfectly able to take down Ukrainian assets within Ukrainian. The C4 network was successful brought down early on on the campaign but the redundancies that came online were NATO assets. NATO air, naval, and battlefield surveillance underpinned Ukrainian defence posture, force deployment and concentration. Russian is fighting Ukrainian hardware stitched together on NATO infrastructure.

    @Willys-Wagon@Willys-Wagon5 ай бұрын
  • When some random Bulgarian blogger and part time analysts asses the state and the capability of Russian armed forces, from the open source data, better than the whole western intelligence aparatus with their infinite resources, spies, satellites and analysts. And all that Stanislav done was following the local media and applying some common sense... But it wasn't only the Western intelligence community that failed to see the actual state of the Russian military. Even the independent analysts that were considered the most prominent experts on everything related to the Russian military, also miserably failed at what they do. Here I would include Micheal Kofman who constantly saw Russian military as a 10 foot juggernaut ready to crush the Baltic states and Poland before NATO could muster forces to counter them...

    @markbrisec3972@markbrisec3972 Жыл бұрын
    • You fail to mention that the Russian Elite (Putin and cronies) failed to see in what shape the army was in. It's divine justice that Putins invasion fails because of corruption and incompetence...

      @FRIPPE_THE_GREAT@FRIPPE_THE_GREAT Жыл бұрын
    • Key word here is "blogger", which already drops a huge shadow on him. Russia uses very small forces in Ukraine like 10% (Ukraine has notable numerical advantage like x3, so what Russia is doing is for history books). Russia has no goal to destroy cities that's why Russia ignores most of the infrustructure as most of these cities will be Russian and population there is mostly Russian. I guess you would be impressed if Russia would use aviation left and right like US usually does (they expected that, that's why they evacuated their embassies, but Russia didn't bait) but that's not the Russian way. Russia's goal is not to capture territory but to destroy Ukrainian army and its military complex. At first they were reluctant as it would mean to eleminate tens if not hundreds of thousands solders who are also basically Russians. Russia was not looking forward to it but have to if those don't surrender.

      @_Epsilon_@_Epsilon_ Жыл бұрын
    • @@_Epsilon_ no its easy; the Russian army is as noted in the interview corrupt and incompetent. And its obvious when you look at the map and consider this was "planned", 103 days has passed and the fascists has only managed to grab 100km of territory... Russian army consists of thieving and raping Gopniks led by drunkards. The result is a shit show and as you noted will go down in the history books...

      @FRIPPE_THE_GREAT@FRIPPE_THE_GREAT Жыл бұрын
    • @@_Epsilon_ Thank you

      @yelenazayakina1506@yelenazayakina1506 Жыл бұрын
    • I'll add another thing, Ukraine was preparing for it for 8 years, built tons of fortefications with reinforced concrete that hard to crack. Baltic states and Poland have that? Ukrainian ground troops are bigger than any NATO troops aside from US and Turkey and they are not in open field. _10 foot juggernaut ready to crush the Baltic states and Poland before NATO could muster forces to counter them..._ Crush in what sense? Russia can bomb the sh*t out of anyone, it is a matter of political will and goals. Russia doesn't have such goal in Ukraine, because it is Russia that will have to rebuilt everything. If Ukrainian forces hide in residential buildings for example (like they were doing in Mariupol) then it becomes urban war and it is not a quick process. Also most footage we get from there are from DNR and LNR forces and Akhmat guys, not from regular Russian army.

      @_Epsilon_@_Epsilon_ Жыл бұрын
  • Blinded by hate of Russia.

    @ViceCoin@ViceCoin Жыл бұрын
    • What a cartoon,, Laverov stated in reference to their naked aggression in Ukraine "Russia is not ashamed of showing the world what we are." They should be ashamed, seeing what a extremely bad show of their performance. Hahaha.

      @Elias12@Elias12 Жыл бұрын
  • Another thing to add. If you are a Western military commander, you are going to get more money if you point how dangerous your enemy is. Same thing with the 'missile gap'. In the United States, during the Cold War, the missile gap was the perceived superiority of the number and power of the USSR's missiles in comparison with those of the U.S. (a lack of military parity). Even the contradictory CIA figures for the USSR's weaponry, which showed a clear advantage for the US, were far above the actual count. Like the bomber gap of only a few years earlier, it was soon demonstrated that the gap was entirely fictional.

    @zedeyejoe@zedeyejoe3 ай бұрын
  • Around 2007 it was really easy to buy sovietic surplus all around the Canada. Mostly Mosin and SKS. No one of was thinking about it. All this stuff come from the Russian not so black market. It was legal to sell it in Canada, but it might be stolen somewhere in Russia. And no one in Russia list the "exports" correctly. And finally Russian Army Wake up and most of the stuff is missing.

    @vilaintrolltrollinsky8007@vilaintrolltrollinsky8007 Жыл бұрын
  • People always forget that, in a dictatorship, the job of the military is to look dangerous but have no real teeth. This is because they want their foreign enemies afraid, but don't want the military to be a rival for power, therefore the armed forces are kept intentionally weak whilst portrayed as strong.

    @AeneasGemini@AeneasGemini Жыл бұрын
    • Also the money which would have to be spend toward military, were actually spend on expensive yachts for the Russian oligarchs. They probably upgraded one or 2 tanks... and the rest were only "repainted", the actual money went to the corrupt officials.... but the thing is... how these same corrupt officials, thought their army is actually strong.... or they thought the whole world works like that?! It seems Putin doesn't have even one friend at the lower ranks in the military to tell him the truth. Maybe sometimes they should go there, at the normal military, not elite forces, not guard divisions, just regular folks and see how are the things there, because this is the way to see if something is not right. Seeing problems in the army is like seeing a cockroach... if you see 1, there are actually 10 000. If you see one corrupt official... they are actually 10 000...

      @Slav4o911@Slav4o911 Жыл бұрын
    • Another example why, despite always being portrayed as strong decisive and efficient, dictatorships are among the most fragile systems of government

      @z3iro383@z3iro383 Жыл бұрын
    • That’s not why the Russian army is a disaster though. Russia is a culture of theft and corruption, and that is reflected in their military.

      @liesdamnlies3372@liesdamnlies3372 Жыл бұрын
    • Putin the WEF Quisling under Schwab has placed all the 'elite' Omon & special forces etc under his own National guard Praetorian guard banner due to him not trusting the wider Russian army command . . for good reason as Putin the global young leader is tasked with a one world govt & no nation states , as in no Russia , Putin nor his cronies have not denied he is WEF yet , as Klaus Schwab boasted he is

      @benwinter2420@benwinter2420 Жыл бұрын
    • @@DrunkbearZ Not for an second do I suppose you are from Putin Russia's quarantined from wider west globalist Gulag net . . supposed what if Putin an Manchurian candidate WEF who likes to kiss young boys bellies infamous & normal in WEF pedo ranks & his husband his gay judo pal turned (!) general overnight . . lots of the non elite mafia clans are gay

      @benwinter2420@benwinter2420 Жыл бұрын
  • This was a really good video. Nice catch on finding someone who got it right and putting him in front of more people

    @dosmastrify@dosmastrify Жыл бұрын
  • I have distant family that are Russian and one of the main reasons for immigrating to my country (Mexico) was the thought of doing their military service. It is wildly know how bad hazing and even talks of rape in the military so many are now dodging or fleeing instead of going

    @tsundokus@tsundokus Жыл бұрын
    • I've heard about their hazing.. For a place that claims to be anti gay, the sure do like gay sex.. I'm pretty sure the entire Russian slave "army" are all rape victims.

      @rogerthat4545@rogerthat4545 Жыл бұрын
    • Well it has been less and less. It really depends on what platoon youll be sent. Some have quite a good time. And older soldiers abusing younger ones is an all military problem. Its just that in russia its wildly known.

      @swatcccp4673@swatcccp4673 Жыл бұрын
    • @@swatcccp4673 rape is a red army tradition.

      @rogerthat4545@rogerthat4545 Жыл бұрын
    • Oh, those aren't just talks. Russian officers literally force some of their people into prostitution. It's ridiculous.

      @hafor2846@hafor2846 Жыл бұрын
    • They can bribe to avoid

      @andrerothweiler9191@andrerothweiler9191 Жыл бұрын
  • Its stunning to me the US dumped years and billions in building the 2nd largest military in Europe and yet against a relatively small Russian force, even with all the problems mentioned, Ukraine has hardly had one offensive victory. If you follow Ukraine updates, their feed is filled with "puppy photos" rather than claims of wins. Unless NATO is drawn in, Ukraine is not just going to lose huge tracks of land, but internal stability could crumble when some deal is struck. That is why I think they banned all opposition parties to prevent an internal coup.

    @59Gretsch@59Gretsch Жыл бұрын
    • Oneof the best things coming out of this war are all the angry tears of you Russian shills...

      @hafor2846@hafor2846 Жыл бұрын
  • But yet the US couldn’t even beat rice farmers and goat herders 😂😂😂😂

    @stinkypete891@stinkypete891 Жыл бұрын
  • Soooo this guy published a couple of articles a while ago? And the sources listed are FAR from unbiased, too. Hmmm.

    @muttmankc@muttmankc Жыл бұрын
    • Watch Perun's video on the same if you're skeptical. The fact is that corruption ruins militaries.

      @talideon@talideon Жыл бұрын
    • You’ve got to admit that Russia have been shite though surely.

      @oscargrainger2962@oscargrainger2962 Жыл бұрын
    • @@talideon The argument for corruption is the easiest for an "expert" Without actual proof, anything can be explained by corruption.

      @BLMVDV@BLMVDV Жыл бұрын
  • of course!!! the initial mobilisation on the Ukraine border, when Russia was saying "they weren't going to invade" was a massive backlog of bad logistics before the battle even started.

    @DaysOfFunder@DaysOfFunder Жыл бұрын
    • I just realised basically

      @DaysOfFunder@DaysOfFunder Жыл бұрын
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