• @[email protected]OP
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    Українська
    01 year ago

    Nowadays, thanks to DPICM munitions and Western tanks, there’s little of CQC. Ruscist soldiers are sent to hell en masse with relatively little Ukrainian casualties. Ukraine gradually (but powerfully) attrits Ruscist artillery and army (instead of territorial advance at any cost) exactly because it values its soldiers. Thanks to this attrition, the former Ruscist artillery advantage is now gone, and Ukraine now shoots at Ruscists with little counterbattery fire and CQC.

    Wars from the past are relevant since they show that ultimately, it is economics and logistics (not population) which decide the outcome of the war. And Russia’s GDP is about 20 times less than the combined GDP of the pro-Ukrainian alliance. It’s less than the Texas economically.

    • @Eheran
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      11 year ago

      Where do you get informations that there is little QCQ now?

      • @[email protected]OP
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        fedilink
        Українська
        01 year ago

        "The simplest answer is that the battlefield of 2023 is very, very different from the battlefield of 1943.

        In 1943, tanks could rarely hit targets further than 500m away, or 1km at the maximum. Today the best tanks can strike targets to the visual horizon.(5000-6000m), Digital fire controls and laser range-finding have radically altered the accuracy of guns.

        Furthermore, the development and deployment of numerous infantry fighting vehicles renders dismounted infantry more vulnerable, as an armored vehicle firing 40mm exploding shells at 200 rounds per minute can decimate a hundred charging infantry in 30 seconds or less. Such vehicle classes didn’t even exist in WW2.

        GPS and laser-guided munitions allow precision strikes to take out groups of infantry from 50-60km away."

        https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2023/5/2/2166485/-Quick-Explainer-A-WW1-Russian-General-could-explain-why-the-Russian-Winter-Offensive-Failed