xanderman524 t1_ixxc09y wrote
Reply to comment by MrFancyPanzer in Zelensky and the Prime Minister of Belgium sign declaration of support for Ukraine’s membership to the EU and NATO by TheRealMykola
If by "foreseeable future" you mean next few months until it becomes impossible to resupply due to Ukrainian advances cutting off all supply routes and/or Ukraine just retaking it manually, then yes.
If you instead mean that Russia is going to keep control of it, then you should go back to whichever hole you've not been paying attention from for the past several months.
MrFancyPanzer t1_ixxchwg wrote
Even military experts think trying to take Crimea would stretch them too thin. I wish they could take all their land back, but the direction of the war is far from determined.
hipery2 t1_ixz727r wrote
Which military experts claim that?
Because from my non military expert point of view, Ukraine is one city away from signing Crimea.
MrFancyPanzer t1_ixzk9rx wrote
Mark Milley.
hipery2 t1_ixzqft5 wrote
MrFancyPanzer t1_ixzqkha wrote
Yes, i didn't say we shouldn't support Ukraine.
xanderman524 t1_ixxe314 wrote
I mean, Ukraine has done nothing but advance and successfully defend from counter-attacks on all fronts, and already advanced to where the land routes to Crimea are under threat. They also hit the bridge, which though repaired, is still unusable by large trucks and trains due to structural damage. They did the same thing to the Russians at Kherson: made it impossible to maintain those positions and wait for the withdrawal. I see no reason why it couldn't happen again. And if the reason is "because nukes" then why, when Russia suffered previous major defeats, weren't they used already? Standard Russian doctrine at their wargames concludes with using a nuke to force negotiations. They would've used one by now if they were ever going to. They won't. They posture and brag and threaten but they're losing and can't do anything about it. Even if they use a nuke, Ukraine won't give in. Russia won't deplete their functional missiles over Ukraine. Ukraine surrendering means deaths for millions of innocents, as per the mass murders found everywhere the Russians have been, and a signal to every tin-pot tyrant that having or using nukes gets you a free-pass to conquer and pillage as you please. Ukraine can't give in, so Russia can't win.
orangejuicecake t1_ixxwx08 wrote
ukraine still needs to reclaim 42% of the land russia took over since the invasion (including crimea). Its still a tall order that might take another year or even more especially with the upcoming winter and damaged electrical grid
xanderman524 t1_ixy3huw wrote
With the upcoming winter, Conscript Ivan Notgayovich, currently VDV Sergeant previously double life without parole in Siberia for cannibalism, with his blue tarp tied to a tree that he shares with a dozen other conscripts, is going to die of hypothermia clutching the rusty AKM and half magazine he was issued while Ukraine, equipped with actual winter equipment, will make short work of the invaders. Or have you forgotten how winter benefits the country with intact logistics and stable equipment acquisitions, generally the defender?
orangejuicecake t1_ixy49wk wrote
historically russia was the defender benefitting from winters because advancing into the tundra wasn’t a good idea…
xanderman524 t1_ixy5rxs wrote
Russia is the attacker with the non-existent supply lines in Ukraine. The whole "winter" thing is the deaths of thousands of conscripts.
[deleted] t1_ixy92kd wrote
[deleted]
xanderman524 t1_ixy9avt wrote
Like Russian victory?
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