Загальні бойові втрати противника з 24.02.22 по 19.08.24 (орієнтовно)

#NOMERCY #stoprussia #stopruSSiZm #stoprussicism #ВІРЮвЗСУ

t.me/GeneralStaffZSU/16753

  • @paddirn
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    2525 days ago

    Another milestone passed with seemingly no end in sight. It’s such a disgusting disregard for life for little apparent reason, and that the Russians keep throwing themselves into the meat grinder in mind-boggling.

  • @EnderMB
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    2525 days ago

    600k losses is absolutely astonishing, if true. Wikipedia places their armed personnel numbers at ~2.5m, so to lose a fifth of your army to a war that you didn’t need to start, that will ultimately leave you in a worse strategic position is ridiculous.

    What is the endgame here? In two years they’ve lost a fifth of their army. In ten years will it be the entire army? I just don’t see why they’re continuing.

    • @[email protected]
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      1324 days ago

      Russia has basically destroyed most of their elite and veteran force early on in the invasion. Most people arriving at the frontline have barely any training. They do recruit around 1000 new “volunteers” every day, so the numbers are just a bit behind their average daily losses. But the quality of the new troops is of course abysmal.

  • Cyrus Draegur
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    1925 days ago

    six hundred thousand dead orcs.

    how many more must die before they stop throwing themselves into this meat grinder?

    imagine being a russian soldier, receiving deployment orders for siberia, and then crying tears of joy and relief because thank GOD they’re not sending you to ukraine.

    • @Buffalox
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      1025 days ago

      It’s absolutely insane, Russians have stepped it up since last year. Where the daily losses were about half what they have been for the past 9 months.
      I’m beginning to wonder if they’ll step it up further, now they’ve lost Russian territory. Seems like it’s the only strategy they know when they are pressed.

      • Cyrus Draegur
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        25 days ago

        i do wonder just how much of their combat capacity they’ve dumped into invading ukraine. i’m sure they wanted the world to believe that the force they’re exerting on ukraine is but a fractional whisper of their “true power”, but so much about russia has exposed itself to be a paper tiger thus far that i actually wonder if they may even be overextended on just trying to invade ukraine and actually utterly defenseless in the practical sense everywhere else.

        their defence may be rather … non-credible one might say :3

        • @Buffalox
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          1225 days ago

          i’m sure they wanted the world to believe that the force they’re exerting on Ukraine is but a fractional whisper of their “true power”,

          When Russia invaded they used massive amounts of people and material, including naval and air support. It was very obvious that Russia came in force, to make Ukraine give up without a fight. They had several VDV forces attack Kyiv to capture Zelensky, and massive convoys of armed forces driving towards the city.

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Kyiv_convoy

          i do wonder just how much of their combat capacity they’ve dumped into invading ukraine.

          They clearly attempted to display overwhelming power, and Russians have used everything they have, including their most expensive equipment and missiles. There is no doubt that early on, Russia tried to win a quick and decisive victory with overwhelming force. And they have continued to apply as much pressure on Ukraine as they possibly can.

          The only options they have left that I can see, is to either use nukes, which is unlikely because the consequences would be devastating for Russia too, and the other is to push more cannon fodder on the front lines.

        • @[email protected]
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          1025 days ago

          Russia still has a large airforce, the navy outside the Black Sea has also not been hit and the nukes also still work. All of that is with an army, which is clearly able to fight a large scale war. Obviously they are so far failing to take a country with a quarter of the Russian population, but they are clearly able to fight.

          What this does do is destroy the massive Soviet era weapons stockpile, it hurts the Russian economy and kills a lot of the willing fighting age men. If Putin is removed and Russia and the war ends, chance are that Russia ends up in a huge economic crisis, with a lot more of its talent leaving the country, massive cuts in military spending and the demographic crisis becoming even worse. It probably means a lot of infighting, maybe even a civil war, but certainly a lot of crime. However Russia as an entity will survive this and will remain a threat to Europe, as long as its culture does not change.