Russia Is Still Advancing, But Slowly. Here's Why.

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  • Опубликовано: 14 май 2024
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    For the past few months, Russia has been on an offensive in Ukraine. It has been successful in the sense that Russian troops have gained ground. It has been less the optimal from the Kremlin's perspective because those gains have come about slowly. So why is Ukraine losing ground, and why isn't Ukraine losing more ground? This video puts the current offensive in a broader context, and places special focus on the role of defensive entrenchments in explaining what is happening now.
    0:00 The War's Current Tempo
    1:06 Recent Territorial Exchanges
    4:53 Why Is Russia Gaining Ground?
    10:26 Why Are Russia's Gains So Slow?
    The appearance of U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) visual information does not imply or constitute DoD endorsement.
    Media licensed under OGL 1.0 (nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/o...
    By UK MOD:
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    By Ministry of Defense of Ukraine:
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    Media licensed under CC BY 4.0 (creativecommons.org/licenses/...
    By Mil.gov.ua:
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    By Kremlin.ru:
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Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @johnsullivan6843
    @johnsullivan6843 Месяц назад +523

    There’s a sports saying, “offense will help sell season tickets, but defense (or pitching for us baseball fans) is what gets wins.”

    • @HavocHerseim
      @HavocHerseim Месяц назад +9

      you must be a fighter.

    • @Chilicoach
      @Chilicoach Месяц назад +15

      Heard this in basketball all the time. But the way the game has evolved, idk if it still rings true 😂

    • @zjpdarkblaze
      @zjpdarkblaze Месяц назад +58

      there is also a sports saying that "offense is the best defense."

    • @VodkaPandas
      @VodkaPandas Месяц назад +48

      Shut up, you all laugh when Russia is on defensive last year, lol.

    • @bearlytamedmodels
      @bearlytamedmodels Месяц назад

      @@VodkaPandas putin isn't going to sleep with you

  • @joeytje50
    @joeytje50 Месяц назад +587

    How is it possible to miss a 'Putin' in the long string of pudding, putting, punting, etc wordplay?

    • @pierocaramelli1493
      @pierocaramelli1493 Месяц назад

      better yet the phrase "little f*cker" is "P" "U" "T" "I" "N" "H" "O" in my native language

    • @JaKingScomez
      @JaKingScomez Месяц назад +4

      It doesn’t work

    • @Yuusou.
      @Yuusou. Месяц назад +25

      @@JaKingScomez I think it was easy to put in Putin somewhere.

    • @OdyTypeR
      @OdyTypeR Месяц назад +22

      ​@@Yuusou. Well, the video is about the situation _on_ the ground...
      Can't wait for the _in_ the ground vid, where Vladimir can be Put in.

    • @JaKingScomez
      @JaKingScomez Месяц назад +3

      @@Yuusou. do you talk or just comment on the internet?

  • @josephfox9221
    @josephfox9221 Месяц назад +82

    my theory is that a slow burn war is easier on Russia. a constant war drains Ukraine manpower, but doesnt invite as much Western Aid. a slow burning war also doesnt send too many body bags home in one go. also it gives Russia the Opportunity to build up their military. so for Russia, as long as the lines move westward. it doesnt mind how slow it goes

    • @andrewryanwasright
      @andrewryanwasright 29 дней назад +15

      I think that's a good analysis

    • @SkyDiver-wd5oj
      @SkyDiver-wd5oj 27 дней назад +3

      I agree

    • @JeanLucsNerdBrain
      @JeanLucsNerdBrain 22 дня назад

      @@andrewryanwasright Russia so far has played a very patient long game after the opening moves. they knew this would be a long war and have not been in a rush to escalate it despite what western MSM wants people to think. sure they COULD send a tone of soldiers armed to the teeth into Ukraine in a massive offensive but that might scare NATO enough to do something stupid. instead they let western interest slowly fade while slowly griding away at Ukraine morale and making them realize that unless they gave up SOMETHING willingly this will never end and countless generations of Ukrainians will never know peace.

    • @boarfaceswinejaw4516
      @boarfaceswinejaw4516 20 дней назад +4

      based on footage from the war, and the amount of manpower losses russia suffers with its disastrious long sieges on deeply held defensive positions, i'd argue that it doesnt preserve manpower.
      in fact, if the amount of footage of russian troops without sufficient vehicle support is anything to go by, as well as the frequent clown-car tactics using apcs and tanks (where they regularly have more than twice the amount of passengers on them), russia's slow advance can be partially chalked up to a lack of sufficient vehicles.

    • @Karlswebb
      @Karlswebb 20 дней назад +1

      @@andrewryanwasrightIt’s a horrible analysis. They are taking massive losses at 4 dead per 1 ukranian dead.

  • @Srbazo
    @Srbazo Месяц назад +374

    Shovels, washing machines and now ninja turtles

    • @dustintacohands1107
      @dustintacohands1107 Месяц назад +17

      Heroes in a half shell turtle power

    • @GeneralMegrel
      @GeneralMegrel Месяц назад

      You people keep using the same dumb jokes over and over again. It won't change the fact that tens of thousands of Russian boys are fertilizer in Ukraine with nothing to show for it

    • @Theta90
      @Theta90 Месяц назад +23

      Reading this comment with no context is fantastic

    • @larsrons7937
      @larsrons7937 Месяц назад +10

      Wait till you see russia's new combat fridge-killing burger on the battlefield. Video: _'Killer burger' robot created by Russian engineers developing hobby_

    • @CensorshipGenesis
      @CensorshipGenesis Месяц назад +7

      @@larsrons7937- Gosh! What about toasters?! Toasters chips matter! LOL 😂 😂

  • @jameslopes6918
    @jameslopes6918 Месяц назад +88

    The answer to this question is pretty simple. Technology. The modern battlefield is saturated with drones monitoring every piece of the frontline. Any movement is detected and coutner measures activated. Defenders advantage has got to an insane level now that the Russians only option for overcoming a defensible piece of territory is to demolish the defenses ahead of an assault. Demolishing the defenses take a bit of time so they move slowly. Those 1500kg bombs do some work though holy shit. Even still, blowing up building by building in a city can take a lot of time.

    • @Mosern1977
      @Mosern1977 Месяц назад +18

      Yes, the fog of war is pretty much gone now. And when neither side have air superiority then its going to be a very slow grind. Winning by destroying everything in its path seems to be the Russian tactic, it takes a lot of time and a lot of ammo.

    • @mellohi6175
      @mellohi6175 Месяц назад

      My theory is that Russia is also using their strategy of destroying everything in its path as an opportunity to depopulate Ukrainian cities and resettle them with Russians. Kind of like what the Nazis wanted to do in Ukraine after WW2.

    • @yugster78
      @yugster78 29 дней назад +2

      Exactly the narrator of this vid never mentioned this key factor. Drones and precision guided weapons have done to the battle field what the machine gun did 100+ years ago.

    • @johns9969
      @johns9969 28 дней назад +1

      The manpower miss match is staggering. Ukraine has been depopulated.

    • @zeffy._440
      @zeffy._440 28 дней назад +1

      @@Mosern1977 air superiority won't help much drones can hit enemy helicopters, AA systems can knock em out of the sky.

  • @Mosern1977
    @Mosern1977 Месяц назад +301

    Slow progress is probably because the defending side has too many advantages in this war as the parties currently stand.
    Neither side will be able to repeat their earlier quick captures/re-captures.

    • @NikolayBychkovRus
      @NikolayBychkovRus Месяц назад +70

      My opinion as russian: it is grinding, slow and steady. Land gains is unimportant at all. RUAF has higher hand in artillery and aviation, especially with new gliding fab1500, and can afford demolishing of fortifications.

    • @Aurxa09
      @Aurxa09 Месяц назад +11

      @@NikolayBychkovRus snd what about losses

    • @NikolayBychkovRus
      @NikolayBychkovRus Месяц назад +44

      @@Aurxa09 uaf loses? Yep, based on UA news in legislation, they are in trouble.

    • @debilman9065
      @debilman9065 Месяц назад

      @@NikolayBychkovRus Careful now, you're discrediting the Russian armed forces by ignoring the progress of prisoner battalions

    • @inf3rnis984
      @inf3rnis984 Месяц назад +33

      @@Aurxa09 losses on the russian side dramatically decreased since the start of the war through better tactics ukraine on the other hand is quite the opposite

  • @Aqueox
    @Aqueox Месяц назад +299

    I would contend that Russia is intentionally taking its time, for the moment. Why?
    1. Ukraine is having supply and manpower issues.
    2. Western support is waning, and the US election is still months away.
    These two factors give Russia a certain time advantage, and they are simply "meandering" along, applying just enough pressure to keep Ukraine on the back foot and never getting comfortable, but little enough where they aren't losing men and material unnecessarily in vast offensives that may or may not work.
    Russia is simply fighting an attritional conflict now. They tried a quick blitz, and that didn't work. Ever since the initial invasion, they've just switched gears to attritional warfare with the understanding that Ukraine will inevitably run out of men and/or material.

    • @JK-dv3qe
      @JK-dv3qe Месяц назад +76

      and also: the longer the 'war' lasts, the more depleted western military capability/arsenals will become. they keep sending their haha equipment only for it to be destroyed in ukieland ('elite' stuff like the M-1 Abrams, the 'elite' Challenger 2, the laughable Leopard 2, and numerous french baguette equipment). as Sun Tzu said: don't interrupt your enemy when he is in the process of weakening himself

    • @robertrennebohm506
      @robertrennebohm506 Месяц назад +34

      Western equipment is good but just like the Russian stuff built for a different war. Also how many times has each sides stuff been hit before its destruction? This is new warfare and the Russians are making changes fast and technical. The Russian forces 2 years in are a good fighting force and adapted to the new reality of this

    • @Vatnikenrager
      @Vatnikenrager Месяц назад

      The u.s had total air dominance over Vietnam and a 10 to 1 kill ratio.. still lost. If you think Russia Iran and north Korea can materially and financially out produce nato, Japan, south Korea and others you are on vatnik crack.

    • @jdevries404
      @jdevries404 Месяц назад +41

      This is actually a quite good analysis in my opinion. I would like to add, with the US elections in mind. A slow conflict seems a better option to not really awake Nato. In many nato countries ukraine barely reaches the news and fast flashy wins would put more pressure on nato to help ukraine. In a slow and painful death russia seems to get an edge while nato keeps being distracted.

    • @Vatnikenrager
      @Vatnikenrager Месяц назад +59

      @@JK-dv3qe Russia has lost 3k tanks and you are getting excited about nato losing 100..much wow..such lol. Meanwhile Russia is using ural's and t55 in frontal attacks.

  • @amymason156
    @amymason156 Месяц назад +37

    I think the lack of ammunition and the solution to it are together the best explanation for the way the war is going. Ukraine can't go on the offense without more ammunition, but Russia can't go on the offense when Ukrainians are using drones to break their assault groups. Drones are far better defensive weapons than they are offensive weapons, because it's easier to defend against drones than artillery shells, but it's easier to attack moving targets with drones than with artillery.

  • @F.R.E.D.D2986
    @F.R.E.D.D2986 Месяц назад +544

    Two reasons that come to mind:
    1) You'll always lose land if you don't attack, WW2 Germany was still gaining land through counter attacks, even in March of 1945.
    2) Ukraine has a shortage of ammunition, which is ultimately the biggest reason
    Edit: WW3 has officially began in these replies

    • @memazov6601
      @memazov6601 Месяц назад +5

      Have you reached day 2000 yet

    • @stevenkies802
      @stevenkies802 Месяц назад +28

      Two caveats:
      1) If you actrashly, you can end up making things worse
      2) "Amatures think stategy, experts think logistics" -Napoleon

    • @IconoclastX
      @IconoclastX Месяц назад +21

      No one mentions the fact that the troop numbers are so low. Millions of men were used in ww2 thats why the gains were rapid. If russia drafted three to four million men, Ukraine would be gone in a year

    • @F.R.E.D.D2986
      @F.R.E.D.D2986 Месяц назад +2

      @@memazov6601
      ._.
      do you think this is the time to ask /j

    • @F.R.E.D.D2986
      @F.R.E.D.D2986 Месяц назад +26

      @MayankTrivedi2
      But it's not, I have seen countless hours of footage, and about 99% of them are younger than 40.
      Ukraine isn't in a manpower shortage, that's Russian propaganda. Because it just does not make sense, historically, or demographically.

  • @pretoasted
    @pretoasted Месяц назад +152

    Line those maps, bb.
    Keep up the amazing work!

    • @VodkaPandas
      @VodkaPandas Месяц назад +5

      Cope, you all laugh when Russia build their defense, lol.

    • @remyphilly5168
      @remyphilly5168 Месяц назад

      ​@@VodkaPandasshut up bot

    • @2MeterLP
      @2MeterLP Месяц назад +2

      @@VodkaPandas Of course we laugh when the agressor in a war of conquest is forced to build defenses against a country that is 28 times smaller.

    • @VodkaPandas
      @VodkaPandas Месяц назад +1

      @@2MeterLP Who said it was a war of conquest? 200k troops was not enough to occupy all of Ukraine, Russia achieved it's victory when Ukraine promise to negotiate in Istanbul if Russia pull their troops out of Kyiv, when Russia do that Ukraine betrayed them and continue fighting with the western countries support, at the beginning of the war Russia comes with 200k troops while Ukraine had 900k active duty and 1.2 mil reserve, now Russia have more troops in the front than Ukraine, what Ukraine gonna do about it?

    • @2MeterLP
      @2MeterLP Месяц назад

      @@VodkaPandas Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Crimea say its a war of conquest.

  • @shurqeh
    @shurqeh Месяц назад +65

    Option three: Russian offensive is less offensive more probe and they are waiting for signs that Ukraine does not have the firepower to respond

    • @tpespos
      @tpespos Месяц назад

      Probes typically have smaller force offensive and much less manpower and material losses. Calling these attacks probes is the same thing Ukraine did by calling their offensives probes

    • @abas656thegodemperor9
      @abas656thegodemperor9 Месяц назад +5

      bingo, that tactic is a favorite for russia, down to the combat, one of their strategies is to probe defensive lines and then make a spearhead to breacb and encircle the enemy forces

    • @adam.maqavoy
      @adam.maqavoy Месяц назад

      Not really No. Unless you'd want to Esculate War and get them even more Furious of & By NATO.
      Even I can Agree with The Pycckian President on this.
      *Why?*
      - Because less than 4 in The World (by Politican Leaders) in the EU.
      Are Against AI development.

  • @kevinc1200
    @kevinc1200 Месяц назад +29

    Could be Russia is not aiming at territorial gain at the current stage of the war. It may be that Russia is actually winning in attrition (despite claims on the English speak media) and is cautiously pushing forward to force engagement with the aim of grinding down Ukrainian personnel, material and morale.

    • @ProcaviaCapensis-ts8ub
      @ProcaviaCapensis-ts8ub Месяц назад +7

      I don't see Russia winning the war of attrition. I keep seeing massed Russian attacks getting hammered by mines , artillery and drones , for negligible loss to Ukraine.
      I also see Ukraine hitting oil refineries and now Russia is importing fuel.
      When it comes to an economic war of attrition , Russia can only lose against the West so time is not on their side.

    • @heroes8844
      @heroes8844 Месяц назад

      winning what? nato havent even mobilize

    • @ilyal5712
      @ilyal5712 Месяц назад +13

      @@ProcaviaCapensis-ts8ub
      Then why military officers are so eager head-hunting for new recruits in Ukraine? You said 'negligible loss to Ukraine'.

    • @ProcaviaCapensis-ts8ub
      @ProcaviaCapensis-ts8ub Месяц назад +2

      @@ilyal5712 Russia has been actively recruiting mercenaries , including from neighbouring countries and countries as far away as Cuba as well as prisoners.
      Ukraine needs to match this so obviously Ukraine needs more manpower.

    • @ilyal5712
      @ilyal5712 Месяц назад +2

      @@ProcaviaCapensis-ts8ub
      Same as Ukraine's international legion with Polish, French, Colombians, Georgians, etc.?
      In the latest law, Ukraine will utilize prisoners as soldiers too.

  • @RockMusicEnjoyer
    @RockMusicEnjoyer Месяц назад +30

    Russia doesn't need to advance when it can just whittle down what's left of the enemy. As for saving troops, I suspect that they're genuinely worried about full blown WW3 and want to save most troops for that possibility.

    • @Dkamenev
      @Dkamenev 26 дней назад +5

      The current Russian loses from the front lint don't look like a savings strategy.

    • @2727daqwid
      @2727daqwid 21 день назад

      Edit: AI-generated TLDR: (sorry for absurdly long comment)
      - Nuclear war deters large-scale conflict between Russia and the West (EU+allies).
      - Even without nukes, a full-scale war wouldn't benefit either side due to the vast differences in manpower and resources.
      - Russia's justifications for the war are weak (e.g., Ukraine joining NATO).
      - Ukraine's best hope is to hold on long enough to make the war too costly for Russia, which may happen.
      - Russia can't give up completely, because of all the investment it has already committed.
      WW3 is not possible, because it would inevitably lead to a nuclear exchange. It simply doesn't calculate. It's completely different for russia to try to take on Ukraine which is way smaller in all metrics, and take on the collective "West", or even the EU alone which are multiple times bigger in most metrics but landmass and current military industry output (which could change in the future, if EU countries think conflict is imminent). If that war were to happen, saving manpower wouldn't matter one bit.
      On top of that, the EU collectively has 1.4 million professional military personnel and another 2.3 million in reserves. Russia has 1.3m conscripts (part of it is professional, granted, but not the majority) with 2m in reserve. Population-wise, the EU has 4x the population. I think you see where I'm going with this, right? It just doesn't calculate for either side even with 0 nukes involved, especially, for russia. Besides, the EU or its countries are not interested in a conflict - aside from some bullying smaller countries in Africa and the Middle East for multiple insanely complicated reasons. And those are rather hugely unpopular amongst the population.
      I remember at the beginning of this offensive/war putin said that he was worried NATO and the EU were getting too close to russian borders. Dude forgot about Kaliningrad/Konisberg/Krolewiec (pick your favorite name lol) and Belarus, and Finland + Norway... Not to mention he mentioned Ukraine would join NATO and attack russia - which would mean nothing, because NATO cannot help in such an event, and on top of that, try convincing the EU citizens to die in a war started by some dude in Ukraine. Wouldn't happen in our, or any alternative universe, absolute 0% chance. I bet some Europeans didn't know where Ukraine was on the map before the war lol. Like asking the average American where their own state of Vermont is lol.
      When it comes to the first part of your comment - russia does have positive GDP growth, however, that comes from military production boosted by the state. That's not sustainable long term. And they know this will swing the other way regardless of where the war ends and they chill with the production, or will have to increase taxes, and that can go sideways real quick in russia.
      I guess for now it's a positive outcome politically, strategically, maybe economically (though I doubt it since the land they are gaining is virtually useless, and will be for years to come).
      My point is, that there is a chance Ukraine may be able to hold for long enough for russia to quite literally lose any economic and political gain from all of this. A successful Ukrainian offensive of course would tip the scale way quicker, but that didn't happen, so the best Ukraine can do is to try to hold the line, inflict as much damage - especially inside russia - as they can and hope the profitability is enough for russia to give up advancing. The question then is, if Ukraine can give up the territory because 100% russia is not getting out of there empty-handed, that would just absolutely collapse the entire nation thanks to all the war propaganda and their historical character. Not to mention all that investment, loss of lives, isolation from the West, Chinese influence... All would be for nothing.

  • @davidcrawley9479
    @davidcrawley9479 25 дней назад +4

    Early blunders in the Russian offensive have led to staggering losses of skilled troops. They have replaced these losses by mobilizing troops and sending them to the front line with limited training. The result is that the Russia lacks any real skill in its fighting troops. Without skilled troops it is very hard to make forward progress. The result has been that Russia has engaged in even more costly offenses leading to further losses of troops - and a vicious circle goes around again. Ukraine on the other hand has tried to preserve manpower, and its front line troops are now extraordinarily experienced. Russia can continue to make incremental gains by throwing manpower at skilled Ukrainian troops but this will make matters worse not better in the long run.

  • @PSEPI_Kabooshki
    @PSEPI_Kabooshki Месяц назад +103

    The lines on maps have turned into lines-in-dirt

    • @wppz7691
      @wppz7691 Месяц назад +1

      Why?

    • @VodkaPandas
      @VodkaPandas Месяц назад +3

      Urine lines would not be as strong as Surovikin line

  • @jasip1000
    @jasip1000 Месяц назад +76

    Progress is slow partly because drones have now changed warfare so that big troop movements can’t be made, without being detected and suck in enemy artillery fire.
    But then again, what’s the goal with the special military operation is it mostly conquering land or is it mostly demilitarize and denazify Ukraine?

    • @secretbunnie2206
      @secretbunnie2206 Месяц назад

      The war will end when the Ukrainians run out (this will happen faster than a direct seizure of territory).
      I don't understand why Russia feels sorry for the civilian population and tries to wage war "carefully" if, as a result, sooner or later the front-line cities turn into a burnt-out desert anyway
      No one needs the population of these territories anyway.
      Most of the Russian population already lives in the part of the territory that was liberated earlier in 2022

    • @andersgrassman6583
      @andersgrassman6583 Месяц назад

      Nobody seems to be confident about what the hell the goals of this war are for Putin. Whatever goals, they seem either unattainable, or the war has actually made things even worse. Like if Putin wanted less of a potential NATO border, he just doubled it with Finland and Sweden ACTUALLY having joined NATO.
      If he wanted a more Russia friendly regime in Ukraine ("denazification") - well obviously Putin has on the contrary managed to absolutely galvanize the Ukranian people as sternly anti-russian. Probably for generations to come.

    • @markmarco6277
      @markmarco6277 Месяц назад

      Nazies...Hitler would love Putin.

    • @LLachs283
      @LLachs283 Месяц назад +11

      Listen to putin. For them ukraine is just a seperatis russian state that needs to be "reunited" with the "motherland"

    • @sashap5747
      @sashap5747 Месяц назад +7

      ​​​@@LLachs283 Not all of it definitely. Ukraine is devided inside itself. Western regions with too much population opposed to Russia would be too much of a problem. In the East a lot of peope are actually proRussian

  • @AdeptAnalytic
    @AdeptAnalytic Месяц назад +10

    Thanks William

  • @LewisPulsipher
    @LewisPulsipher Месяц назад +23

    Why announce a big mobilization when you can mobilize large numbers every month without seeming to change anything? Some suggest that this is exactly what has been happening.

    • @user-ww7bz1cx2p
      @user-ww7bz1cx2p Месяц назад

      Let's imagine your assumption is true. Realistically it is impossible to hide a mobilization even in small numbers every month. Especially with the claims of Ukr MOD. But We don't hear any reports about new mobilized people since 2022. Even gossips. I know several people who volunteered to sign a contract with Russian MOD. My friend who were a part of an annual conscription claim that although they were heavily encouraged to sign a contract but nobody forced them to to that. And my friend decided not to. And now they just returned to their civilian lifes.

    • @Horny_Fruit_Flies
      @Horny_Fruit_Flies Месяц назад +1

      Shadow mobilization for PR reasons. Mobilize covertly without announcing it publicly. Fairly typical of fascists states like Russia.

  • @miskakopperoinen8408
    @miskakopperoinen8408 Месяц назад +19

    Multiple reasons are given for the Russian slow advance in the comments, but I'd like to emphasize the significance of the casualties Russia has suffered in their low- and mid-level officer corps. It is their duty to ultimately keep the smaller portions of the army supplied, organized and moving and the casualties have been grievous. I am willing to accept that Russia has largely replaced them, but practical experience and institutional knowledge plainly put just takes time to build. I hence suspect that Russia does not have many formations that would be even capable of the organizational strain that a complex, rapid tactical maneuver would necessitate. Massive, set-piece strategic struggles like the one in Avdijvka are ultimately simpler to maintain and supply (While the demands are enormous, the supply chains can be organized to supply a single point and don't need to constantly adapt to shifting positions and uneven consumption rates), and provide even a relatively poorly-led force the opportunity to seriously hurt their opponent thtrough the weight of firepower.
    Personally I see similar aspects to WW1 in this specific regard; There, too, massive but highly localized battles often took places with the primary goal of grinding the opponent down , hopefully faster than own forces were attritioned.

  • @we3d4fre38
    @we3d4fre38 Месяц назад +7

    25 freedom distances caught me offguard XD

  • @thespiceman9367
    @thespiceman9367 Месяц назад +3

    Will I love your content. No brainrot, no doomerism, just straightforward explanations. Really scratches my itch of missing interesting college lectures. Thank you 🙏

  • @GenericInternetter
    @GenericInternetter Месяц назад +26

    I think it's worth analyzing how much it costs (in all senses, not just money) either side to hold each km^2 of Ukranian territory.
    Then comparing that to estimates of how much of those costed resources each side has in reserve and can generate per day/week/month.
    I would love to see a video on that.
    Gaining territory doesn't mean much if you can't hold it.
    If you steal 50 bricks from me, you're probably not going to be able to hold them for very long before I catch you.
    On the other hand, if you steal 1 brick from me, you'd probably be long gone before I can even react.
    Strange analogy, I hope it makes sense.

    • @JeRefuseDeBienPrononcerBaleine
      @JeRefuseDeBienPrononcerBaleine Месяц назад

      I think a better analogy would be the cost for a legal battle. Like, if you steal a brick from one guy and he sue you in court the cost is going to be much more manageable than if you stole from 50 persons and they all sue separatly. Or it's going to be easier if you earn 50000 $/month than if you earn 5000 $/month because you'll be able to last longer and hire a better team.

    • @draculasneeze6681
      @draculasneeze6681 Месяц назад +1

      talks about gaining/holding (territory), then gives an "analogy" using bricks (costed resources) - wrong by your own definitions. 😝😝😝😝😝😝

  • @romanbellic810
    @romanbellic810 Месяц назад +5

    What's the tree picture for?

  • @gabrielbalbec883
    @gabrielbalbec883 Месяц назад +26

    Ukrainians actually started building fortifications in 2014. Avdeevka was supposedly one of the best fortified towns in the world.

    • @MarvinWestmaas
      @MarvinWestmaas Месяц назад +5

      And the only reason the main fortification fell was the single orc who had a sudden rush of intellect to the brain, discovering and utilizing the drainpipe to get past the main fortification.

    • @mhhmsmfshsmhfh
      @mhhmsmfshsmhfh Месяц назад +26

      @@MarvinWestmaas Sounds alot like you're crying

    • @sliftylovesyou
      @sliftylovesyou Месяц назад +20

      @@MarvinWestmaas Funny that Russia knew about the existence of the drainpipe and Ukraine did not 😂

    • @MarvinWestmaas
      @MarvinWestmaas Месяц назад

      I smell $ubhum4n$, they reek 🤣🤣😂😂

    • @MarvinWestmaas
      @MarvinWestmaas Месяц назад

      @@mhhmsmfshsmhfh A Swede supporting orcs.... you must be a natsi 😂😂🤣🤣

  • @BenjaminCherkassky
    @BenjaminCherkassky Месяц назад +8

    I do miss a bit the fun anecdotal outros, but nevertheless another great video!

    • @Gametheory101
      @Gametheory101  Месяц назад +7

      I'm animating a spicy one at the end of a video on coups. Should either be the end of next week or the beginning of the following week.

    • @BenjaminCherkassky
      @BenjaminCherkassky Месяц назад +2

      @@Gametheory101 Ooh! I look forward to seeing it

    • @Timo0469
      @Timo0469 Месяц назад +2

      Nice👌

  • @JerronHonda
    @JerronHonda Месяц назад +1

    Very good work ! Subscribed 🎉

  • @simonbowden8408
    @simonbowden8408 Месяц назад +1

    Great video thank you!

  • @miroslavdusin4325
    @miroslavdusin4325 Месяц назад +73

    It seems to me that Russian advance is based on total destruction of the area they conquer so this way it can't be faster. Second thing is that the improved Russian strategy is mainly on the high level but not on the low level. Just hypotheses, my knowledge is limited here.

    • @VodkaPandas
      @VodkaPandas Месяц назад +12

      Russian advance is based on the shortage of Ukrainian troops on the frontlines, just like Russia during Ukraine counteroffensive on Kharkiv and Kherson, Ukraine need to retreat and retreat again just like Russia last year, now the tide once again turns on Russia's favor.

    • @LewisPulsipher
      @LewisPulsipher Месяц назад +8

      @@VodkaPandas It's ammo in an artillery war, mate. Not anything else.

    • @VodkaPandas
      @VodkaPandas Месяц назад +6

      @@LewisPulsipher Of course that too, what a shortage Ukraine is not facing? Manpower, ammunitions, money? Everything, that Country is not supposed to last this long.

    • @creature2479
      @creature2479 Месяц назад

      They're not fighting for land, they're fighting for casualties and ammo as Russia has far more of these to spare. Think WW1, when something cracks, stuff will move fast

    • @creature2479
      @creature2479 Месяц назад

      They're not fighting for land, they're fighting for casualties and ammo as Russia has far more of these to spare. Think WW1, when something cracks, stuff will move fast

  • @risaradocz5440
    @risaradocz5440 Месяц назад +82

    Land gains more like grains 😂

    • @risaradocz5440
      @risaradocz5440 Месяц назад +6

      I hate my jokes }:(

    • @EEX97623
      @EEX97623 Месяц назад +22

      Ukraine is exporting more grain now than in the grain deal, and now Russia has fled the Black Sea

    • @doodsrem
      @doodsrem Месяц назад +2

      @@risaradocz5440This comment made your joke better! 😂

    • @andersgrassman6583
      @andersgrassman6583 Месяц назад

      @@risaradocz5440 It's ok.😊

    • @kengsenchong4010
      @kengsenchong4010 Месяц назад

      good rhyme wake up...don't giggle....

  • @General12th
    @General12th Месяц назад +2

    Hi Dr. Spaniel!

  • @ninahenricsson4934
    @ninahenricsson4934 Месяц назад

    Hi all, just a question: Most of you post your comments under a signature. How do you get one? Where can I register to procure one? Grateful for your comments on this.

  • @sleepybokchoy
    @sleepybokchoy Месяц назад +46

    new lines on maps just dropped 🔥🔥

    • @fv5855
      @fv5855 Месяц назад +1

      UKRAINIAN OFFENSIVE A FAILURE ?? Ukrainian Offensive began on May 8 th 2023 until September . In 5 Months TOTAL Ukrainian Gains .......................................321 Square Kilometers Russian Offensive Began on October 9 th , 2023 until Now In 6 Months TOTAL Russian Gains ..........................................106 Square Kilometers If the Ukrainian Offensive was a Failure what are You Russians Calling the Russian Offensive with Only 1/3 of the Ukrainian Gains ??? How Embarrassing as even Rusian Trolls cannot Spin this ......Massive Failure The Entire World is Laughing at the Russian LOSERS as Russia Collapses 😀

  • @earljohnson2676
    @earljohnson2676 Месяц назад +5

    Great breakdown really like this guy he puts out some great material. You know your war that’s for sure thanks for another great video

  • @drstepan1078
    @drstepan1078 Месяц назад +2

    I was thinking you were gonna say its because theyre taking time to build good defenses/minefields and such as they advance

  • @hugoballroom5510
    @hugoballroom5510 29 дней назад

    Appreciate the analysis of the factors of Ukraine's resource allocation issues. One aspect i would like to see more depth on is the relative effect of taxing the Ukrainian domestic economy in favor of military strategy. The case in point in the video is the discussion of the issues of building both defensive fallbacks and counteroffensive capability at the same time. The issue was brought up only in military and political dimensions. In other words what "reserves" of human and industrial resources does Ukraine need to factor in just so that there is, after all, an economy to defend.

  • @FrenchmansFlats51
    @FrenchmansFlats51 Месяц назад +5

    A good straightforward and logical analysis that hits the key points. Thanks for avoiding the sensational clickbait headlines like everybody else on youtube.
    I would only add that russia might be in attrition war right now, since they have the numbers.

  • @multimossad
    @multimossad Месяц назад +3

    Some reports talk about almost unmaned ukranian positios in the front , the russians know it and still not atack those weak spots , very strange indeed , as if the russians were more interested in deplete the western weapons depots rather than taking ground , perhaps they dont want to overextend their logistics and are comfortably with a slow pase and short logistic lines , other very strange fact is that most of the Ukraines bridges are intact even while the russian various misiles and bombs can reach close to Poland , one explanation could be thay wanted those briges for themselves but everybody knows that if ukranians retreat they will blow the bridges behind.

    • @shaun7142
      @shaun7142 Месяц назад

      And let me guess, all of those reports are from Russian stooges.

  • @brucegordon9007
    @brucegordon9007 Месяц назад

    An excellent article, realistic facts and conclusions. Any "new" army will suffer when pushed against an experienced force but can learn as well. Ukraine has been able to pick ground that has given it an advantage and offense is much more costly than defense. Russians seem not able to count equipment loss like our Pentagon whom couldn't count artillery ammo going out /stockpile, have been wrong on both Afghanistan and the fall of Ukraine and took 18 months to figure out how to write a multiyear contract. Can't believe we actually pay these guys. You have had on several booksellers whom seemed very misinformed but have redeemed yourself with this excellent article. % land gain and loss was especially helpful.

  • @kuil
    @kuil Месяц назад +16

    Both are slowly losing, but one has less (it can) lose. Who loses it all first?

    • @AmishMarine
      @AmishMarine Месяц назад +20

      Classic war attrition Ukraine never had a chance!

    • @senatorjosephmccarthy2720
      @senatorjosephmccarthy2720 Месяц назад

      Kuil,
      That's a new and true evaluation.

    • @Mosern1977
      @Mosern1977 Месяц назад +7

      Well, Ukraine has more to loose in this war for sure.

    • @edwinng7313
      @edwinng7313 Месяц назад

      its basically never tell your enemy your location
      danish frogman qoute in a youtube video

  • @RogerAckroid
    @RogerAckroid Месяц назад +33

    Aren't the fortifications in Avdivka strong (it's on the frontline for the last 10 years) but Russia brute forced their way?
    In this case Russia is slow because they can't brute force everywhere at the same time

    • @theedain
      @theedain Месяц назад +11

      Brute force, a misnomer. Russia attacked Avdivka methodically and v carefully.

    • @Mankorra_Gomorrah
      @Mankorra_Gomorrah Месяц назад +2

      Russia attacked the areas around avdivka and threatened to encircle the city. The Ukrainian command decided that the risk of getting all the soldiers in the area trapped was not worth continuing to defend the city and withdrew allowing the Russians to take the fortifications without a fight. The Russians basically did to avdivka what the Germans did the maginot although with more brute force.

    • @draculasneeze6681
      @draculasneeze6681 Месяц назад +3

      @@Mankorra_Gomorrah i love how when given an opportunity people always plump for WWII (it's as if Afghanistan and Vietnam never happened).

    • @SYD_EA
      @SYD_EA Месяц назад +2

      ​ddraculasneeze6681afghanistan and Vietnam wars were very different in strategy and tactics. That's why people dont compare

    • @jannegrey593
      @jannegrey593 Месяц назад +1

      @@draculasneeze6681 What SYD_EA said plus the fact that World War is well known in the "World". While most of people Outside of US and USSR might not know the details of Vietnam or Afghanistan campaigns.

  • @angliccivilization1346
    @angliccivilization1346 Месяц назад +7

    Those gains are compared to the Western Front in World War one. That means 10,000s for each square kilometer gained.

  • @robertfoster347
    @robertfoster347 Месяц назад

    There has been a shift in the military balance of offense vs defense. The old solution to trenches and fortifications was tanks and mass. Now tanks are easily destroyed by soldier fired missiles and mass draws effective artillery. Drone make tactical surprise difficult. Both sides have found small assaults by dismounted infantry to be most effective. But this prevents breakouts that can exploit success.

  • @KarlKarpfen
    @KarlKarpfen Месяц назад +1

    The way it seems from analyses of Russian equipment losses and remaining stockpiles, it seems like Russia may actually just be starting to run out of repairable vehicles and as a result, the fastest an advance can be, is the speed a man can walk.
    Then again, the defender has huge advantages in this war and the greatest advantage of the attacker, surprise, is completely gone after both sides adapted very well to the current state of the war. It's just very unlikely for any side to break this stalemate of lacking offensive power but remarkable defensive power on both sides of the front line.
    It takes a huge amount of additional offensive power for any one side to break this tie, be it the results of western wartime production for Ukraine, Chinese arsenals flooding Russia with arms or one side with a new weapon invention no-one envisioned so far, it needs such a change to get the front line moving again.

  • @seanmellows1348
    @seanmellows1348 Месяц назад +4

    Excellent work here.

  • @okaforkosiso1474
    @okaforkosiso1474 Месяц назад +26

    "We are winning"

  • @k53847
    @k53847 Месяц назад

    The engineering assets you need to build defenses (which should be done by commercial construction companies) are not usable in the offensive. So the issue is that you have to pay for the work, not time or resources.

  • @dillipinaction
    @dillipinaction Месяц назад

    good subtle analysis

  • @darsdm
    @darsdm Месяц назад +20

    Why does nobody speak about Ukrainian losses? According to your analysis, the number of casualties in 2023 counteroffensive was minimal, but Russia suffered huge losses taking Avdiivka. Is the game actually about depleting manpower?

    • @viktorgv7937
      @viktorgv7937 Месяц назад

      it may be so

    • @GothPaoki
      @GothPaoki Месяц назад +1

      If they were minimal they wouldn't have stopped. Unless you believe Zelenskys 31 thousand dead claim.

    • @sircatangry5864
      @sircatangry5864 Месяц назад +4

      Because Ukraine was not throwing people at trenches, due to lack of manpower.
      That's why counteroffensive reached so little, Ukraine had neither machines or people to storm the frontline.

    • @user-cu1er2nt7v
      @user-cu1er2nt7v Месяц назад +3

      @@sircatangry5864 coping so hard with this one xD

    • @kjj26k
      @kjj26k 27 дней назад

      ​@user-cu1er2nt7v
      Typical Orcbot, couldn't make sense even when it benefits them...

  • @robmar7190
    @robmar7190 Месяц назад +9

    Neutrality - peaceful people without a agenda playing one side against another’ all this would never have happened! Don’t invite a bully to your house that hates your neighbors!

    • @meatrealwishes
      @meatrealwishes 28 дней назад

      Russia decided to take ukraine right after its independence. This is not even their first war.

    • @SkyDiver-wd5oj
      @SkyDiver-wd5oj 27 дней назад

      @@meatrealwishes Russia did not bother Ukraine at all upon the USSR's dissolution. It was us (the US) who chose not only to continue with NATO after the Warsaw Pact was gone but to break our promise and continue expanding NATO East. The closer we moved the Alliance to Russia's border, the more insecure they got. When they got wind that they'd soon face up NATO's warships in the post of Sevastopol, they took action. We simply did not consider Russia's security interests valid and acted like they did not matter.

  • @Velereonics
    @Velereonics 15 дней назад

    2:20 about here the audio is "0.85" which is an order of magnitude above the figure shown on screen

  • @boosterhuiz2779
    @boosterhuiz2779 Месяц назад +1

    Such good analysis

  • @aaronbaker2186
    @aaronbaker2186 Месяц назад +14

    It feels like too many people miss that not only is the Ukraine war tactically more like WW1 than WW2 (e.g. trenches) but strategically as well.
    Ukraine, and I assume Russia as well, know that this is not a war of taking land, but of destroying the willingness or ability of the other side to keep fighting.
    If you look at the maps and onky talk about Ukraine taking territory or Russia taking territory, you don't look like a serious analyst. Hence why William talked about the mobilization. Remember that in terms of land held, Germany was decisively winning at the end of WW1.
    The Russian strategy is "take land because we have no idea how else to make Ukraine stop fighting." But the Ukrainian strategy is "keep hurting Russia until they give up." It is really hard for Russia to quit without getting *something* but Ukraine (rightly) feels that if Russia gets anything from the second land grab, there will be a third. For Ukraine this was is existential, so they kill Russians and destroy industry in Russia until Russia leaves.

    • @draculasneeze6681
      @draculasneeze6681 Месяц назад +1

      "take land because we have no idea how else to make Ukraine stop fighting." .... and "the Ukrainian strategy is "keep hurting Russia until they give up." Do you know what a strategy is? - these are not strategies at all.

    • @aaronbaker2186
      @aaronbaker2186 Месяц назад +1

      @@draculasneeze6681 well hmm, in war college I think I was taught that strategy, as opposed to tactics, was "how do you make the other guy decide to ask for peace instead of keep fighting."
      But hey, what does the US military know about war? We are renowned worldwide for refising to attack anyone or join any military alliance, right? So I guess what I was taught in the US military as an officer was probably wrong.

    • @friedrichzizek6700
      @friedrichzizek6700 27 дней назад

      spot on but u miss how russia methodically destroys ukraine. They destroy infrastructure, they (slowly) reduce their manpower, they destroy ADs etc. This war is way heavier on ukraines economy and population. Its very unlikely for ukraine to keep up the fight for another 5 years. In russia, besides the poor who get drafted, the war is almost not existent in the day to day life. Infrastructur works, economy is still normal and most of the population has no risk whatsoever to get mobilized. Ukraine hangs on western support, which may stop one day or reduce. The economy will maybe collapse at some point etc.

  • @Deltarious
    @Deltarious Месяц назад +13

    Since you asked for progress speculation: Attrition and logistics.
    The losses they are taking right now are *staggering* and it seems that most of the times they mass for a larger attack they are met with overwhelming counterattack from drones and artillery. Additionally Ukraine has been fairly aggressive going after logistics and really putting the squeeze on the lines. It seems like to me that this attritional style of fighting is costing them more materiel than they can muster currently. They do not seem to be lacking in manpower, that much seems sure, but we have seen increasingly bizarre and sometimes desperate choices in vehicles to lead attacks and to move troops to the line of contact

    • @ardentspy
      @ardentspy Месяц назад

      LOL. You're totally deluded.

    • @mikael.wilhelm
      @mikael.wilhelm Месяц назад

      " increasingly bizarre and sometimes desperate choices in vehicles"
      Wut, are you saying golf carts are no good as infantry fighting vehicles?

    • @misterpinkandyellow74
      @misterpinkandyellow74 Месяц назад

      You are living in a fantasy land

    • @vanjamenadzer
      @vanjamenadzer 27 дней назад

      "increasingly bizarre" by slapping simply steel shack roof tops on a tank in order to completely render FPV drone useless isn't bizarre. It's extremely effective and we can expect some proper advanced covers for frontal assault vehicles coming soon.

  • @Bigvs.Dickvs
    @Bigvs.Dickvs Месяц назад +171

    A trench is also a line on a map!

    • @Gametheory101
      @Gametheory101  Месяц назад +74

      #facts

    • @2639theboss
      @2639theboss Месяц назад

      So is it Bigs Dicks and the v is just to get around the censor? Big vs Dicks vs? Like a royal rumble between Big and Dicks?

    • @Bigvs.Dickvs
      @Bigvs.Dickvs Месяц назад

      @@2639theboss The Romans had no U letter, they used V for both pronouncing it differently depending on the letter's position that could be easily distinguishable to be a vowel or a consonant.
      And yes, also go around the censor, it no likes me.

    • @aryanbhuta3382
      @aryanbhuta3382 Месяц назад +13

      @@2639theboss It's fake Latin. 'Biggus Dickus' but classical Latin represented the u with a v.

    • @SuhbanIo
      @SuhbanIo Месяц назад +1

      @@aryanbhuta3382 yes

  • @stephenking27
    @stephenking27 Месяц назад

    I love your channel. It’s so informative.

  • @amymason156
    @amymason156 Месяц назад

    Is it difficult to detect glide bombs before they hit? If it's possible to launch an intercept, it should be easy to get them out of the sky since they're unpowered. Even just sticking a rocket with no warhead to one and deploying a parachute would work.

    • @salonitanicus
      @salonitanicus Месяц назад +2

      Their heat signature is insignificant making them extremely hard to detect and track. And those are basically "stupid" bombs so electronic warfare doesn't work against them.

    • @MartinBohun
      @MartinBohun Месяц назад +1

      Well, "Dr." Spaniel confuses kilometres with miles, he said 40 kilometers, but the glide bombs are dropped from a distance of *70-80km* (cca. 40 miles). There is not much you can do against a glide bomb dropped from 70-80km away, plus those glide bombs are inexpensive, and Russia has huge supplies of them, and developing more, in fact there is now FAB-3000 too.

    • @amymason156
      @amymason156 Месяц назад

      @@MartinBohun That does mean there's several minutes between when they cross the horizon and when they reach their target, and if anything happens to their delicate control surfaces during that time they will miss, most likely very badly. That seems like a lot of potential for foiling plans.

    • @nerd1000ify
      @nerd1000ify Месяц назад +1

      Radar signature is far more relevant here, the bombs are no different from a cruise missile I that respect. Most likely the issue is lack of radar SAM systems in range. For example, a Buk system has an engagement range of about 40 km, so it would have to be perilously close to the front line to engage the bombs. The Ukrainians have to keep their theatre air defense systems like S-300 and Patriot back to defend against constant Russian missile strikes on their cities, so their longer range is unavailable. Russia has the exact same problem which is why they are lobbing enormous glide bombs from 80 km away rather than using tactical aviation in a more traditional fashion.

    • @MartinBohun
      @MartinBohun Месяц назад

      ​@@amymason156 well, here is my rough understanding of the situation, i got from reading/watching number of different Telegram channels that are posting the front-line videos, and some do comment and explain some of the technical details; the chronology is important:
      1. First you launch the observation/surveilance drones, such as ZALA Z-16 (endurance 4+ hours / range 75+ km), those are providing the view/info about the battlefield, and among aother things i guess they are used to select targets for those FAB-500/FAB-1000/FAB-1500 glide bombs, and as well pass back coordinates of Ukrainian air defence systems, and other Ukrainian military hardware, vehicles, troops, etc.
      2. Do not forget that the front-line is VERY LONG, and Ukraine has only a limited number of air defence systems they can use to protect (some of) their front-line positions. Russia has well over 100+ Su-34s that are used to drop those inexpensive glide bombs.
      3. If one of those scarce and expensive Ukrainian air defence systems is detected near the front-line, then it will be targeted with number of different Russian weapon systems (kamikaze drones, artillery, Iskander missiles).
      You are welcome to "crack the numbers" yourself: the range (and cost) of those Ukrainian HIMARS M31 GMLRS rockets, the range (and cost) of Russian surveilance drones, the distance from which Su-34 can drop those FAB glide bombs, and the number of different Ukrainian front-line "strong-holds" Russia has been targeting with those FAB glide bombs. UMPK aerial bomb glide kit cost is given at around 25k USD, that is apx. 5 to 15 times less than the cost of one single M31 GMLRS rocket.
      Don't get me wrong i am not trying to say it is a walk in the park for the Russians, but Ukraine simply does not have enough air defence systems so they could protect all of their front-line positions, and protect all of their cities, factories, power plants, bridges, and all the other assets at the same time.

  • @Fenrisson
    @Fenrisson Месяц назад +6

    This channel really makes geopolitics and strategy easy to understand.

  • @Crftbt
    @Crftbt Месяц назад +11

    What is the source for the captured territory percentages?

  • @user-ww5mu2ot9e
    @user-ww5mu2ot9e Месяц назад +1

    Please make an audiobook for your Russia Ukraine book!

  • @gromowigor9505
    @gromowigor9505 Месяц назад

    Shortages in ammunition supply are key to it. You cannot effectively fight with an ammo ratio 1 to 6.

  • @curious_gage
    @curious_gage Месяц назад +9

    The problem is that Ukraine expects everyone to keep sending them supplies endlessly. Then they blames their circumstances on the reduced aid. Doesn’t Ukraine realize that the only way they’ve held out this long is because of the generous donations made by the west. Show some appreciation rather than demanding more help that nobody was ever obligated to provide.

    • @SirAntoniousBlock
      @SirAntoniousBlock Месяц назад +1

      Da da da In mother Russia you don't blame state, state blames you.

    • @user-cx9nc4pj8w
      @user-cx9nc4pj8w Месяц назад

      Just ignore that document the USA signed to get Ukraine to give up its nukes in exchange for the protection of its sovereignty and territory. And how Ukraine is destroying the threat of Russia to the west and to countries the West is required to defend. And how if the West had provided more aid more useful aid in the past the war could be over by now, but no, tanks from the west had to be delayed, for no good reason, an aircraft pipeline was delayed, for no good reason, and things like ATACMS, HIMARS, cluster munitions and artillery shells, aren't provided in sufficient quantities for progress. And Ukraine is willing to hold on until it can make a counteroffensive, ut its not going to send its men to die so that stupid westerners can feel that its doing enough to deserve more aid

    • @ilyal5712
      @ilyal5712 Месяц назад

      @@SirAntoniousBlock
      JKF: Do not ask what USA can do for you, ask what you can do for USA.

    • @SirAntoniousBlock
      @SirAntoniousBlock Месяц назад +1

      @@ilyal5712 What has that got to do with Russian trolls?

    • @misterpinkandyellow74
      @misterpinkandyellow74 Месяц назад

      ​@@SirAntoniousBlockgrow a brain nafo

  • @prestencederien
    @prestencederien Месяц назад +33

    I think that the issue is that the are running out of minorities to send to ukraine. 350k kia from minorities is no big deal. 10k Moscovites is.

    • @glintongordon6811
      @glintongordon6811 Месяц назад

      Of the 2 armies is asking for 500k more soldiers and scraped the demobilization orders... It isn't Russia

    • @creature2479
      @creature2479 Месяц назад

      It still looks like Russia is winning the manpower war

    • @angeurbain6129
      @angeurbain6129 Месяц назад +12

      You are saying bullshit and i guess you know it.

    • @prestencederien
      @prestencederien Месяц назад

      @@angeurbain6129 My number is far far far closer to whatever kremlin has ever released. What was it after 2 years? 15k kia? I am sure you can call bullshit on that too,mr russian troll.

    • @horoshkoaleksandr273
      @horoshkoaleksandr273 29 дней назад

      @@angeurbain6129 what bullshit?

  • @berserkasaurusrex4233
    @berserkasaurusrex4233 Месяц назад +2

    Slow, continuous gain is safer and consequently worth more to the regime than a more aggressive push that might end in disaster. This is all about attrition and time is on Russia’s side. So long as they continue to gain or hold, they will likely continue the same slow push.

  • @markotoshich7676
    @markotoshich7676 Месяц назад +2

    I agree with your final comment. This is pure speculation with the nuance of bias.

  • @victorpaslay2062
    @victorpaslay2062 Месяц назад +61

    The real reason why russia is making the slow progress is in the technological advancements of this war. The area is observable everywhere by UAVs and cold-war machines do not work well here. Ukraine will face the same problem during the offensive and our gains will be slow unless we find the cure against the watching eye. Greetings from Ukraine.

    • @pogo1140
      @pogo1140 Месяц назад +1

      The cure are called jammers

    • @icemike1
      @icemike1 Месяц назад +1

      Our?

    • @Karifi
      @Karifi Месяц назад +1

      Where's did you live?

    • @sparkooctavian7941
      @sparkooctavian7941 Месяц назад

      @@icemike1 "our" means ukrainians. 'Cause he's ukrainian

    • @bacon9646
      @bacon9646 Месяц назад +2

      @@pogo1140some of the drones are now using ai so that’s starting to not work

  • @jonathanfeldheim6554
    @jonathanfeldheim6554 Месяц назад +28

    this is the best place to get real info about what's going on. imagine if our media reported this way

    • @Bwood42
      @Bwood42 Месяц назад +3

      I'd actually watch the media if they did that. :)

    • @tracym8952
      @tracym8952 Месяц назад

      Reporters get paid like college professors. They should present information like William does

    • @theinacircleoftheancientpu492
      @theinacircleoftheancientpu492 Месяц назад

      Agreed, this is genuinely informative. (Not cheap tabloid stuff)

    • @glintongordon6811
      @glintongordon6811 Месяц назад +10

      This is just ukraine propaganda

    • @AmishMarine
      @AmishMarine Месяц назад

      There is no real info being released. Its almost all fake propaganda. Have you noticed there has been no front-line reporting and how they banned all Russian reporting?

  • @Yezpahr
    @Yezpahr Месяц назад +1

    When collab lines on maps with lines in sand?

  • @just_hris
    @just_hris Месяц назад

    Same happened in the winter war (they won in a few months but they were very slow initially)

  • @KenVet
    @KenVet Месяц назад +2

    Always a pleasure to learn from you. Best regards, Carry On !!!

  • @jannaZX
    @jannaZX Месяц назад +12

    Russia weilding shovels with computer chip taken from washing machines are still doing a creditable job

    • @ilyal5712
      @ilyal5712 Месяц назад

      Russian hackers are the best!

  • @aprilgeneric8027
    @aprilgeneric8027 28 дней назад

    F16 AIM120 max range is 40 miles..meaning the target is blind and does nothing to change it's course and speed and not defend itself with chaff and evasion.
    the AIM9 max range is 10 miles.. and again the same conditions apply except flares must be used instead of chaff
    F16's are ground pounders...offensive capabilities exist but were not the primary designed intent hence the limited range offensive capabilities and the massive support around an incredibly diverse ground pounding arsenal

    • @vanjamenadzer
      @vanjamenadzer 27 дней назад

      I was convinced that Abrams and F16's will never see active combat at the contact line because I knew that RU will literally race to be the one who took it out and that Abrams is just as any other tank - without air superiority to protect it, it burns just as easily as any T tank. But I was wrong about usage of Abrams. If they think the F-16 will do any better than Mig 29, then they are either delusional or simply don't care, F-16's will be picked of the sky just as easily as any other non stealth aircraft.

  • @earljohnson2676
    @earljohnson2676 Месяц назад +2

    There was a release of info and they have the Russian numbers of troops and it was quite high very high n surprising

    • @draculasneeze6681
      @draculasneeze6681 Месяц назад

      i love a good factual quote, it clears up any confusion.

    • @kjj26k
      @kjj26k 27 дней назад

      Details?

  • @GothPaoki
    @GothPaoki Месяц назад +21

    So let me get this straight. Ukraine had an 880.000 army per Zelensky. In two years they lost 31k a ridiculously low number but somehow they're still on Def and their counteroffensive failed horribly.

    • @IconoclastX
      @IconoclastX Месяц назад +8

      And thats why they need 500,000 more men. Makes sense right?

    • @AgentDoubleOSeven77
      @AgentDoubleOSeven77 Месяц назад +7

      Ammunition shortage, they can’t do meat wave attacks and roll up in golf carts like team Z

    • @antred11
      @antred11 Месяц назад +2

      "In two years they lost 31k a ridiculously low number"
      Did they admit 31k dead or 31k losses overall? Because if it's the former then that implies a much larger number of overall casualties (because there'll be at least twice this many MIA / WIA / POW).

    • @GothPaoki
      @GothPaoki Месяц назад

      @@antred11 he specifically mentioned those were killed. Didn't say anything about wounded soldiers.
      He did say though that there were 180.000 thousand dead russians and more than 500.000 wounded.

    • @GothPaoki
      @GothPaoki Месяц назад +2

      @@IconoclastX why would it make sense when You're alleging that this is so one sided? It would make sense if the Ukrainians were out of Moscow by those estimations. And it wouldn't make sense you force mobilisation when your manpower is basically intact all things considered.

  • @axioms22
    @axioms22 Месяц назад +4

    This percentage talk is super not helpful in any way lol, it's about where those percents are

    • @Mosern1977
      @Mosern1977 Месяц назад +4

      They are in some fields next to the Russian front-lines in Ukraine.

  • @MrMrin
    @MrMrin Месяц назад

    Interesting aspect of the war covered in this video. I believe Russia recognizes the advantages of defensive stance is one of the reason. Another maybe usually aggressor in a conflict (in their own mind) tend to be more offensive - Note here I am talking about NATO vs Russia.

  • @GRIGGINS1
    @GRIGGINS1 Месяц назад +1

    Could be literally a lack of fuel.

  • @boonedockjourneyman7979
    @boonedockjourneyman7979 Месяц назад +2

    You have no idea what would create “lots of resistance” to Putin within Russian society.

  • @F.R.E.D.D2986
    @F.R.E.D.D2986 Месяц назад +12

    Honestly, I'm not worried, you always lose land in war, it's just happens, and it will happen until the end of it

    • @collinsoconnor5843
      @collinsoconnor5843 Месяц назад +5

      Yes, kiev is also insignificant. We can afford to lose it, just the way we lost Bakhmut and Avdeevka.

    • @paperandmedals8316
      @paperandmedals8316 Месяц назад

      What are you talking about? Please educate all of us as to the land lost by the US, France or UK in wars it’s been involved with, because you always lose land in a war.

    • @paperandmedals8316
      @paperandmedals8316 Месяц назад +5

      @@collinsoconnor5843 “We”? The only thing insignificant is your post.

    • @F.R.E.D.D2986
      @F.R.E.D.D2986 Месяц назад +3

      @@collinsoconnor5843
      Kyiv and Andiivka.
      Also, I'm not worried, because this is what happens in wars.
      The Russians have taken less land that Operation Spring awakening, when the German nation was literally falling apart, the Germans still managed to capture more land than this current Russian offensive has, and did it in one month.

    • @F.R.E.D.D2986
      @F.R.E.D.D2986 Месяц назад +3

      @@paperandmedals8316
      Are you talking to me?
      Example from the top of my head:
      Every nation against Napoleon
      Russia in WW1, and pretty much every other nation for that matter
      Germany after WW1
      The entirely of WW2
      The Korean war

  • @reedschrichte800
    @reedschrichte800 19 дней назад

    In WWI defense had the advantage. We figured that movement warfare in WWII made static defense obsolete. Currently, it appears that defense again has the advantage, since movement warfare has been so hamstrung by continuous drone observation and mines.
    Russia can obliterate any single piece of ground and then move in to occupy it. Though it's hard to see how this tactic is scalable to a comprehensive strategy.

  • @firstsecond-ft1qg
    @firstsecond-ft1qg Месяц назад

    Can you do a video about the territorial gains in the Black Sea.

  • @dIRECTOR259
    @dIRECTOR259 Месяц назад +13

    This really is baby's first strategic analysis... Any simpleton can see russia's strategy for now is obviously deliberate slow attrition, because it is obviously in their favor. There, I solved the mystery. Maybe you could also peddle a half-baked book about that realization.

  • @chesleyruff4755
    @chesleyruff4755 Месяц назад +14

    Bottom line, Ukraine is still losing. Period.

    • @LoneWolf343
      @LoneWolf343 Месяц назад +5

      Bottom line, if Russia was as good as people seem to think it is, it should have won by now.
      It's like if you got in a fist-fight with a squirrel, and two years later, yeah, it's getting a bit tired, but how the fuck haven't you beaten it yet?

    • @iTzsimplefx7
      @iTzsimplefx7 Месяц назад

      Finally someone who actually look at facts instead of pretending otherwise.

    • @Horny_Fruit_Flies
      @Horny_Fruit_Flies Месяц назад +1

      Whatever helps you sleep in your hay hut at night, Ivan

    • @iTzsimplefx7
      @iTzsimplefx7 Месяц назад

      @@Horny_Fruit_Flies I rather sleep in a hay hut than pretend im making progress, in a war you were bound to lose from the get go. Oh and if it makes you sleep better at night you can refer to me as Vladimir lol.

    • @Horny_Fruit_Flies
      @Horny_Fruit_Flies Месяц назад +2

      @@iTzsimplefx7 Kiev in two weeks, amirite comrade?

  • @phineascampbell3103
    @phineascampbell3103 Месяц назад

    "... Wordplay aside..."
    NO!!! NEVERRR!!! Wordplay NEVER aside. Always wordplay. Play word, and let slip the puns of war...!!

  • @user-nh2to7im6d
    @user-nh2to7im6d 26 дней назад

    Currently a lot of company run private militias are being formed. Lots of volunteers will apply because they know they will not do frontline duty and get a superb salary as a bonus. In about 6 months time, Putin will sign a decree transferring private mercenaries under contract to be incorporated into the army. It 8s also a neat trick for tapping into the money at these companies for training these recruits.

  • @mungucitimothy3530
    @mungucitimothy3530 Месяц назад +7

    Considering Zelensky promised to be chilling in Crimea by the end of 2023, I'd say the Russians are more formidable than he thought.

    • @jackburgess8579
      @jackburgess8579 Месяц назад

      @@fv5855
      >>"Entire World is Laughing at the Russian LOSERS as Russia Collapses"
      Congratulations!
      Not many toddlers can write so well.

    • @stevemawer848
      @stevemawer848 Месяц назад +2

      And Putin would be in charge of Ukraine in 2 to 3 days .... Just sayin'.

    • @no-bodymr6419
      @no-bodymr6419 29 дней назад +1

      @@stevemawer848 That was also said by the Western media. Invading a country with a size of France using only 200k is still going easy as forces would stress thin as they moved further deeper into the territory comparing German use 3 million troops for the France invasion.

    • @stevemawer848
      @stevemawer848 29 дней назад

      @@no-bodymr6419 Putin was a bit deluded to think the Ukrainians would welcome the "liberators" with open arms. People want out of Russia, not in.

    • @no-bodymr6419
      @no-bodymr6419 29 дней назад

      @@stevemawer848 the separatists in Ukraine don’t want part of either Ukraine or Russia, they just want to be independent from Ukraine.

  • @sheldor5312
    @sheldor5312 Месяц назад +6

    The part everyone misses is what Putin said from the beginning “demilitarization and denazify”. What does that have to do with gaining ground? Seems like a lot of demilitarization is happening.

    • @dobi2236
      @dobi2236 Месяц назад

      You've got to be delusional to believe what Putin says the goal of the war is

    • @cyborghobo9717
      @cyborghobo9717 Месяц назад +3

      If there's any demilitarisation going on well that's on the russky side . At the current attrition rate they are estimated to run out of armoured vehicles within two or three years. Wait till there'll be a decision to do with russia what allies planned to do with reich as an alternative to occupation and do some little deindustrialization.

    • @manserizawa2327
      @manserizawa2327 Месяц назад

      ​@@cyborghobo9717go read what the commander of US European Command GEN Cavoli laid out to the House Armed Services Committee why Russia is as much, is more of a threat today than when they kicked off their invasion of Ukraine.

    • @christianarchambault6111
      @christianarchambault6111 Месяц назад

      @@cyborghobo9717 I hate to say it kid but you’ve been fooled for awhile

    • @stevemawer848
      @stevemawer848 Месяц назад

      The only nazis in Ukraine were sent in by Putin. If he wants to denazify he just withdraws his troops.

  • @jinglejangle77
    @jinglejangle77 23 дня назад

    The Juzam Djinn is inked on the back top-left corner.

  • @danielwalther5841
    @danielwalther5841 Месяц назад +40

    The bigger picture shows a Russia in economic decline (lack of workers, e.g. Chinese banks refusing payment transactions, dramatic decline in oil production). Very important: the weapons stocks from Soviet times are running out and, despite the war economy, more is being destroyed on the fronts than is being replenished. And Ukraine is putting up this bravest resistance, even though NATO, Europe in particular is still sleepwalking and America's arms supply is politically blocked - damn it!

    • @MartilloWorkshop
      @MartilloWorkshop Месяц назад +8

      Europe has done a lot. We could do more, but based on GDP Europe has done more than the US.
      Denmark literally wanted to give all our F16 (untill the US wanted to buy Argentina's allegiance with some of them instead), and we did give all our Ceaser systems. There's not much more useful equipment to give away, so the rest will have to be new purchases

    • @kirrausanov
      @kirrausanov Месяц назад +3

      Steiner... Yes! YES! STEINER WILL LEAD THE COUNTEROFFENSIVE! IT WILL ALL BE FINE! FINE! (trembling hands removes glasses)" - a line from Mr Zelens'kyj's favourite movie.
      *
      "The war has ended, not necessarily to the advantage of Japan"
      - Emperor of Japan addressing the nation after (un)conditional capitulation in 1945
      *
      Mr Zelens'kyj's swan song.
      I am standing alone on the stage in front of the drawn curtain.
      The empty prompter's booth... and box-office.
      Deafening silence.
      No limelight. No applause. No flowers.
      Disappointed audience have left me a long time ago.
      A cleaner is about to finish his work.
      The piano lid has slammed shut.
      Unbearable pain has brought me back to my senses.
      The show is over.
      *
      "When a clown moves into a palace, he doesn't become king. But the palace becomes a circus!" - Turkish proverb
      *
      "Put him on stage and remove a ladder" - Chinese proverb referring to bad performers.
      *
      "There was once a comedian who killed people with stolen jokes and was hanged by his wits' end." - H.Warner
      *
      "How pathetic the jester is, on the king's throne,
      How stupid the people who allowed it."
      - Robert Burns 1759-1796
      *
      Пане Зеленський, сподіваюся, ви ще пам'ятаєте старе прислів'я рідною мовою:
      "Не по Сеньке шапка."

      Незабаром Україна стане однією великою Малинівкою.
      Втішає те, що Європа та Америка йдуть тим самим шляхом.
      До таких політичних проходимців і невдах, як Рютте, Джонсон, місіс Траст i... дo Вас пане Президенте, приєднаються Шольц, Бербок, Трюдо, Сунак і дідусь Джо. Почнуться взаємні звинувачення. Hа зміну обіймам i усмішкам прийдуть удари в спину.
      *
      “Ukraine shouldn’t sign anything with them at all - and let’s just fight.” - Boris Johnson, Kyiv on Apr. 9, 2022
      *
      "Росія хотіла припинити війну в обмін на нейтральний статус України, який зобов'язав би Київ ніколи не вступати в НАТО.
      Водночас «коли ми повернулися зі Стамбула, приїхав Борис Джонсон до Києва і сказав, що ми взагалі нічого не підписуватимемо з ними - і давайте будемо просто воювати." - Давид Арахамія, в інтерв’ю Наталії Мосійчук (25 листопада 2023)
      *
      "Former UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has strongly rejected the claims that he interfered with peace negotiations between Ukraine and Russia in the spring of 2022." - Kyiv Post, January 11, 2024

    • @bacon9646
      @bacon9646 Месяц назад +4

      @@kirrausanovspeak English bro I don’t understand your language

    • @LordOfChaos.x
      @LordOfChaos.x Месяц назад

      This is stupidity. This war should end. No matter which side loses. There will be no win for Ukraine if Nato doesnt step in. And if it does ww3 is inevitable. Russia wont bsck down as it can sustain itself if u ignore the western propaganda.

    • @kirrausanov
      @kirrausanov Месяц назад +1

      @@bacon9646
      Use google translator, bro.
      (For the record: I am a sheila)

  • @kompatybilijny9348
    @kompatybilijny9348 Месяц назад +30

    Russia is gaining ground, because Ukraine is not attacking currently, because of manpower disadvantage. Russia is gaining ground extremely slowly, because it used up basically all replacement equipment and as such is now way more careful with it. Every vehicle lost now is too painful to bear, especially in comparison to the start of the war.

    • @AmishMarine
      @AmishMarine Месяц назад

      Wow! Do you really think Russia is running out of equipment? They are the 2nd largest producer of weapon systems and other military gear. They have enough weapons to be always at war, on multiple fronts, and in multiple countries just like the USA! Remember when the West was saying Russia was running out of missiles and tanks? The reason why Russia is importing weapons from other countries has nothing to do with the weapons. It has to do with moral support and as a propaganda tool. haha Wake up kid!

    • @justsumguy8193
      @justsumguy8193 Месяц назад +7

      They can make more equipment. Russia has a massive population and production base. Look at how many russians died in WW2. They will throw bodies and money into the war for years and years to come. They might end up losing 5x more equipment or manpower than Ukraine but as long at they win that's al that matters

    • @VodkaPandas
      @VodkaPandas Месяц назад +14

      You can only said it was "slow advance" if you're not following this war closely, It was a much faster advance than last year, this year Russia gain 85% more land than the Ukraine ever recapture after Kharkiv and Kherson.

    • @AmishMarine
      @AmishMarine Месяц назад +6

      @@VodkaPandas Ukraine propaganda never sites how these mysterious numbers are formulated.

    • @justsumguy8193
      @justsumguy8193 Месяц назад +1

      @AmishMarine what annoys me is those that push the narrative that the war is going badly for Russia. Forbes does this a lot with all of their articles on the war and so does thos channel. Russia can afford to lose people and equipment forever if they choose. It's become clear that no one in the russian government or the Russian people are going to stop Putin. He can keep this war going for another decade of he wants and gain absolutely no ground, but if year 11 is when ukraine stops getting funded by us or if they finally decide to throw in the towel, Russia takes the whole plot. I really want Ukraine to succeed but this blind positivity is so foolish. And the twisting of numbers and stats to suit the narrative of "Russia is foolish, Ukraine is much better" is doing Ukraine no favors.

  • @EzekielDeLaCroix
    @EzekielDeLaCroix Месяц назад +1

    Question: When are you going to give back your degrees?

  • @Jacky-zt5ch
    @Jacky-zt5ch 20 дней назад

    - Mom, can we have Kaiserschlacht?
    - We have Kaiserschlacht at home.
    The Kaiserschlacht at home:

  • @DawudSandstorm2
    @DawudSandstorm2 Месяц назад +4

    From what I hear, the Russian military is very much hand to mouth these days. It's entirely exhausted it's active prewar arsenal of tanks and APCs, as well as its entire stockpile of ammunition. Once something is made, or refurbished, it's immediately sent to the front. They lack the output to perform a decisive push, but also are under too much political pressure to stop pushing and such burn resources at a rate that doesn't allow for accumaltion. Thus we get in the situation we have today where they are able to inch forward due to throughput and Ukrainian shortages, but lack the capability of performing decisive action.

    • @mikael.wilhelm
      @mikael.wilhelm Месяц назад

      Good point.

    • @draculasneeze6681
      @draculasneeze6681 Месяц назад

      bwahahhaa we've been hearing this for 2 years now, get a new song.

    • @DawudSandstorm2
      @DawudSandstorm2 Месяц назад

      @@draculasneeze6681 No??? I think the only think I heard related to that prior to recently was last summer, where Russians were complaining about lack of artillery due to counter battery. This is a more recent development.

    • @kjj26k
      @kjj26k 27 дней назад

      ​@@draculasneeze6681
      We have not been hearing this for two years, get a new lie.

    • @tavish4699
      @tavish4699 27 дней назад

      exactly from what you hear, but what you hear doesnt mean is automaticly correct
      obviously refurbished newer models get sent to the front
      why woould you want to waste new kit on some grunts that need to learn how to use it first and will often times destroy it in the process
      its a very normal thing in war that the good shit gets send to the people that need it
      too say russia is depleted of gear ammo and vehicles is absurd
      russia is the successor state to the soviet union and inherited about 80 percent of all its military
      you honnestly think russia can run out of all they have in 2 years?

  • @DrakonPhD
    @DrakonPhD Месяц назад +47

    I mean, with how catastrophic Russia's losses in Adivka were, they cant really afford more victories like that.

    • @rusmapper
      @rusmapper Месяц назад +38

      You think that only Russia had losses in Avdiivka. Did the Ukrainians fall into the cauldron during the defense of Avdiivka, and after that Russia suffered heavy losses?

    • @IconoclastX
      @IconoclastX Месяц назад +3

      In terms of world wars that was nothing amd world wars were fought when the modern countries of today had 3 times less citizens. Russia is not even close to almost exhausting all its potential manpower

    • @thiefsleef6752
      @thiefsleef6752 Месяц назад +19

      They just captured 7 villages west of Avdiivka buddy and they're still moving

    • @RuffinItAB
      @RuffinItAB Месяц назад +11

      Well if the ultimate goal of conquering Ukraine is acheived at the rates of loss that Russia is experiencing, what does Russia have left to subdue the Ukrainian population AND defend themselves from internal and external threats? Russian military requirements do not end with Ukraine. @@rusmapper

    • @KinoTechUSA69
      @KinoTechUSA69 Месяц назад +18

      ​@thiefsleef6752 Ah yes, giving up Kherson and Kharkiv for 7 villages. Excellent trade😂

  • @claudetteraymond8710
    @claudetteraymond8710 Месяц назад +1

    Maybe more beaver dams way up north of Russia should get help for the dams to remove some of its water

  • @piotrczubryt1111
    @piotrczubryt1111 18 дней назад

    Military operations are only a part of the greater game.
    "We maintain…that war is simply a continuation of political intercourse, with the addition of other means. We deliberately use the phrase 'with the addition of other means' because we also want to make it clear that war in itself does not suspend political intercourse or change it into something entirely different. In essentials that intercourse continues, irrespective of the means it employs." (Clausewitz)

  • @robertnendel1993
    @robertnendel1993 Месяц назад +10

    Russia's slow advance is likely because they are depleted, but another thought does come to mind - "normalizing the line of control" in the hope that some future peace negotiation cedes lands east of that line to Russia. It could be the Russians are no longer moving to "capture Ukraine", but are instead sticking close to their line of control to continue normalizing that line as some defacto bargaining position.

    • @rextidashi1585
      @rextidashi1585 Месяц назад +9

      Russia is out producing the entire nato how's it depleted😂

    • @VodkaPandas
      @VodkaPandas Месяц назад +4

      Well, then Ukraine zero advance was because of they're losing then, lol.

    • @KayderimGameplays
      @KayderimGameplays Месяц назад +2

      @@rextidashi1585 They aren't producing new soldiers..

    • @IconoclastX
      @IconoclastX Месяц назад +5

      U.S. general just said russian army is 15% bigger than at the start of the war, lol

    • @urubissoldat5452
      @urubissoldat5452 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@KayderimGameplays They just drafted another 147,000...

  • @jumi9342
    @jumi9342 Месяц назад +7

    Are there any infos about the war exhaustion of the general Ukrainian public?

    • @prfwrx2497
      @prfwrx2497 Месяц назад +9

      Any information available will be shit by default. Able-bodied people who understand the need for national resistance (as surrender equates genocide) are either in uniform, or in training.
      Accordingly, voices from the military says they're physically exhausted (as war does), they need new recruits to come in to enable large-scale rotations completely off the front (not just tactical rotations), as there's only so much shit (chiefly sleep deprivation) the human body can take before you lose your edge. However, in terms of willingness to fight, those who see what Russia does remains as committed as ever. The consequences are written in blood when you realize more people have died in Russian occupation than in combat against Russia.
      But among the "sovok" bums roaming the streets, they're of course going to complain about "the human cost of war" and insist on peace at any price. Intentionally glossing over the fact that the price for a negotiated peace is complete Russification, that is the genocide of the Ukrainian nation and people.
      That's why there's a joke that goes around in the military. If you're tired of the war, take a break in the trenches. That way you can liquidate some invaders and contribute to victory while the veteran troops can physically recuperate after 2 years of constant deployments. Military service generates physical exhaustion. Passivity generates psychological exhaustion.

    • @AmishMarine
      @AmishMarine Месяц назад +1

      All the young fighting-age men have fled the country. Ukraine has senior citizens fighting on the front line! crazy!

    • @sithersproductions
      @sithersproductions Месяц назад

      @@prfwrx2497 Surrender equals genocide? Just look at the youtube channel "Videos from Mariupol" there is certainly not a genocide and Russia is rebuilding Eastern Ukraine. Russia obviously seeks to offset military losses in the War with millions of new citizens in Ukraine a genocide would make no sense.

    • @alexeyamosov664
      @alexeyamosov664 Месяц назад +5

      ⁠@@prfwrx2497”surrender means genocide?” What? How the hell do you imagine it happening if Ukrainians and Russians look almost the same, and in Ukraine both Ukrainians and Russians know both Ukrainian and Russian? That sounds like bs. Unless, of course, forced assimilation (which is also a crime, don’t get me wrong) counts as an act of genocide.

    • @Elendrian
      @Elendrian Месяц назад +1

      @@alexeyamosov664It does fyi.

  • @Velereonics
    @Velereonics 15 дней назад

    Re defense contributing to offense, the baggage trains of medieval armies were often larger than the army itself, encompassing moving shops, shepherds, doctors, blacksmiths, prostitutes, even at times the soldier's families. These things are in essence defensive resources, restocking and repairing weapons, food stores, clothing, and the soldiers themselves.

  • @ericp1139
    @ericp1139 Месяц назад +1

    But stalemate…?

  • @samo6083
    @samo6083 Месяц назад +10

    I have read many comments here and listened to the video, i am surprised literally no one has mentioned this.
    The reason why gains are so slow is because RUSSIA HAVENT STARTED THEIR MAIN OFFENSIVE!!! Like come on people, we literally just finished winter ( that hardest time to start an offensive)
    By all accounts Russia will start their offensive around may-june. So anything before then will obviously be slow...

    • @GermanTaffer
      @GermanTaffer Месяц назад +3

      Hmmm, letting the opponents establishing passive defense structures is actually not a good idea. The Surovikin line was really effective.

    • @samo6083
      @samo6083 Месяц назад +1

      @GermanTaffer but they are not are they? Hence the small gains that are constantly forcing them back

    • @CensorshipGenesis
      @CensorshipGenesis Месяц назад +1

      @@GermanTaffer - Although that's absolutely correct. The fact remain that Ukro corruption is such. That most serious defenses are not spawning. Due to the overwhelming corruption with many in there pocketing absolutely enormous funds!
      In the end, as usual, it's the low grade boots on the ground that pay dearly for it. Piling corpses all over the place. While they are not even reported so someone else continue pocketing for their so called "presence".
      In spite I say "Go Russia". It's honestly disgusting and revolting. Seeing the "small" people without alternatives. Bearing the load of #ZelenskiWarCriminal & Co!

    • @vanjamenadzer
      @vanjamenadzer 27 дней назад

      @@GermanTaffer Yeah but UA are corrupted to the max and they lack everything they need to build proper defenses. The longer the war lasts, the more UA innocent soldiers who were abducted from the street to die in a trench all while their officials off shore accounts get thicker and thicker. Such a sad tragedy that is unfolding in front of everyone and yet the average western citizen is completely oblivious to the fact.