• @xkforce
      link
      English
      371 year ago

      Unfortunately Russia has a long history of throwing bodies at a problem until it is solved. They lost almost 30 million people in WWII and I have no doubt Putin would throw as many as he could get away with at Ukraine as was needed.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          171 year ago

          He’s achieving two of his goals: genocide of Ukrainians and genocide of minorities of Russian federation.

          Why would he withdraw?

          • @ricdeh
            link
            English
            -31 year ago

            Genocide has no meaning anymore. The war between Ukraine and Russia is pretty much as conventional as it can get, stop using the term genocide inflationary

          • NegativeLookBehind
            link
            fedilink
            71 year ago

            Comrade, allow me to show you beautiful view from 16th floor balcony. Very beautiful, is to die for.

            • gregorum
              link
              fedilink
              English
              21 year ago

              But first, a cup of tea. Be sure to drink all of it!

      • @Gradually_Adjusting
        link
        English
        131 year ago

        I don’t think he could do 30 mil. His army is only about 3 million personnel including reservists per wikipedia, and AFU is claiming to have liquidated nearly 10% that many. Military theory is that an army loses all combat efficacy at around 30-40% casualties, and the rate of Russian casualties per day has gone up very significantly. After Russia spent all those lives in WWII, their demographics are still not what they used to be.

        Despite the fact that they’re paying troops so much to fight, it’s not clear to me that they can sustain these losses indefinitely. What we’re really seeing here is whether Putin’s “military Keynesianism” can overcome Russia’s demographic collapse. Experts are already saying Russia could not mount an invasion of this scale again for the foreseeable future.

        I think they’re going to end up as a failed state in the long run whether or not they succeed in Ukraine. The resistance would metastasize into an insurgency.

      • @foggy
        link
        English
        71 year ago

        They had more soldiers than guns.

        Folks went into the front lines knowing the plan was to pick up guns from their dead commrades.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          61 year ago

          I think it’s important enough to note, there’s no evidence showing this was the plan in any Soviet campaign in WW2. (But this is based off memory so there could be a single digit number of times)

          In WW1? That would be accurate. Say what you will about Soviets but weapons were something they could produce and properly supply unlike the tsar.

          In the Ukraine war though you are probably correct.

          • @foggy
            link
            English
            2
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            I’ll admit my sources are unverifiable, while strong.

            Stories from college professors. Guy was not a biased man, and was probably a fuggin mod on /r/askhistory; that type. 🤷‍♂️ Strong to me. No one listen to me. I’m drunk.

            Edit: and my general history is not iron clad; could been WWI, but it seems a prevalent story beyond my eccentric old professor.

        • @xkforce
          link
          English
          -11 year ago

          deleted by creator

      • andrew
        link
        fedilink
        English
        61 year ago

        I loved that you got two conscripts out of your barracks instead of one when playing as Russia in Command and Conquer.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      -81 year ago

      Oryx is unreliable. There are numerous images of “Russian tanks” that are verified to be Ukrainian and many more “Russian tanks” that pop up as destroyed multiple times.

      This isn’t that surprising since Russia and Ukraine use the same equipment (and considering the methodology Oryx uses), but it’s very difficult to trust their numbers.