Generational Dynamics World View News

Discussion of Web Log and Analysis topics from the Generational Dynamics web site.
DaKardii
Posts: 955
Joined: Tue Jan 17, 2017 9:17 am

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by DaKardii »

Guest wrote:
Sun Mar 27, 2022 11:21 am
- The US and the EU actually defaulted on their obligations to Russia, freezing its reserves - now everyone knows that the reserves of the state can simply be stolen
Sounds like an act of war to me. Let’s Go Brandon.

Guest

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by Guest »

DaKardii wrote:
Sun Mar 27, 2022 12:44 pm
Guest wrote:
Sun Mar 27, 2022 11:21 am
- The US and the EU actually defaulted on their obligations to Russia, freezing its reserves - now everyone knows that the reserves of the state can simply be stolen
Sounds like an act of war to me. Let’s Go Brandon.
Move to Russia and support your friends.

Guest

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by Guest »

utahbob wrote:
Sat Mar 26, 2022 1:36 pm
The latest from Tom Cooper. I think he talking with some members of the “Secret Squirrel Association” with this post.

Let's title this one, 'Plan E'...
Began writing the following yesterday, primarily to address the question, ‘are the Russian armed forces underperforming – and why?’
This morning, I have a feeling this write-up was ‘overrun by developments’ – though also confirmed to the last dot and comma, and that by nobody less than the latest press conference of the Keystone Cops in Moscow of the last evening. Namely, they have announced that ‘now’ the RFA is to concentrate on the situation in eastern Ukraine.
***
The answer is my favourite: ‘yesno’.
Keep in mind that everything a military force does is what its political masters equip, train, and order it to do. If orders of political masters are realistic, the military force is – usually – successful. If not, then not. In this regards there’s next to no difference between democracies and dictatorships – except that in democracies the politicians might be more likely to listen to the advice of their generals. In a dictatorship not only are generals unlikely to properly advise the dictator (for the fear of being ‘removed’), but even the best intelligence service cannot supply a correct assessment of the situation.
In the case of the RFA in Ukraine, matter of fact is that there is only one person determining its military objectives: that is the Fool in Kremlin. Therefore, Putin is the primary culprit for the failure and underperformance of the RFA. He is the secondary culprit, too, for it was his responsibility to take care the RFA to be properly equipped and trained, indeed: reformed and re-armed, the last 20 years. Fact is: it wasn’t, because Putin’s mafia-styled regime is as corrupt and as incompetent as it is. Indeed, Putin’s regime sacked even its own members the moment they began complaining about corruption. Unsurprisingly, the Russian Armed Forces simply couldn’t perform as expected.
Why is all of this important? Because Putin started this war to avoid accountability for all of his own failures of the last 22 years. Not because of ‘NATO’s expansion’ or whatever other kind of nonsense. The aim was to sack Ukraine and thus prevent it from joining the NATO and then the EU; prevent Ukraine from developing democracy and thus having a 'negative' (for Putin) influence upon Russia.
But, I’m digressing… Point is this: Putin ordered Ukraine to be overrun within three days. For this task, Shoygu deployed about 70% of available VDV- and Spetsnaz units, more than half of the Rosgvardia and a brigade of Kadyrov’s Chechens. The VDV and the Spetsnaz are the ‘elite’ of the RFA: definitely best-paid, supposedly best armed- and trained units, too. Rosgvardia and Chechens are comparable to a combination of Waffen-SS, Hitlerjugend, IRGC, and Gestapo: incompetent on military plan, but well-armed and more trusted by Putin than the RFA (so much so, Rosgvardia is nowadays responsible for protection of all the strategically important installations in Russia and occupied parts of Ukraine, including nuclear facilities).
Plan A
Putin’s Plan A was to overrun Ukraine within three days: to kill or capture – i.e. topple – the government and implement a regime change. That plan failed: we do not yet know exactly how and why: it could be it failed the moment the VDV lost the Hostomel Airport to the 4th Rapid Intervention Brigade, and/or the Chechens were hacked to pieces while driving into downtown Kyiv, on the first day of the war. But, there is no clear evidence in this regards, and it's going to be some time before we know for sure.
Plan B
As is obvious by now, Putin had no Plan B. He was (and remains) so obsessed with his illusions about the weakness of democracy and collapse of the West, that he could not imagine any other outcome but a quick victory. When that plan failed, he ordered the RFA to improvise the Plan B. This resulted in a dissipation of effort and utmost chaos: instead of running a ‘victory parade while liberating Ukraine’, the RFA rushed to simultaneously assault Kyiv from north-west and east, to take Mariupol, to take Kharkiv, and to reach Odessa and connect with Transnistria. Based on another illusion (‘Ukrainians are too weak to resist’), the Plan B fell apart in a matter of 2-3 days, too.
Plan C
Undaunted, Putin ordered the RFA into Plan C: besiege Kyiv, Chernihiv, Kharkiv, Mariupol, and Mykolaiv. Force them into submission by wholesale destruction of Ukraine, through murdering civilians, making their life miserable....Still based on unrealistic expectations, this plan failed, too: it only resulted in catastrophic losses of RFA units that attempted to effect all these sieges in too many places at once.
Plan D
Then, around 10-14 March, Putin ordered the RFA to go for the Plan D: secure Ukraine east of Dnepr. The RFA was still improvising and lacked troops for this: the most it managed was an advance from Kherson up the western bank of the river, while simultaneously pushing for Zaporozhye. The first prong run out of steam, until colliding with Ukrainian defences south of Kryvyi Rih, the second was ambushed and de-facto destroyed south-east of Zaporozhye.
Plan E
Now we have clear evidence that Putin ordered the RFA into the Plan E: surround the Ukrainian forces along the LOC in Donbas, and secure Mariupol. The fate of that plan is going to be decided somewhere within triangle Izium-Vuhledar-Zaporozhye, and then by
a) the ability of the RFA to deploy a superior force and punch through into the back of the Ukrainian forces along the LOC, while
b) preventing another massive loss.
Conclusion: the RFA didn't under-perform, but was given unrealistic objectives. Each of objectives was outside of its reach, and thus insufficient forces, support, and supplies were assigned for the task in question. As a result, so far, all the objectives remained outside its reach.
Now, why should anybody care about all of my rambling here?
Pay attention at the following fact: Putin is all the time downsizing his aim. From 'all of Ukraine’, 'collapse of the West' and 'destruction of democracy', via ‘Ukraine east of Dnepr’.... he's now down to 'just the LOC'.
This is about the only 'good' development in this war by now
Ten men fighting for liberty are worth a thousand slaves whipped into battle in defence of tyranny.

John
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Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by John »

** 27-Mar-2022 World View: Stouthearted Men from The New Moon
Guest wrote:
Sun Mar 27, 2022 8:01 pm
> Ten men fighting for liberty are worth a thousand slaves whipped
> into battle in defence of tyranny.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1vjqfvZVReM

Guest

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by Guest »

Ramzan Kadyrov: The United States is an economic vampire... and it's time to drive a wooden stake into his heart.

Guest

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by Guest »

Hard sparks from Hungary to Ukraine

PM Orbán about President Zelenskyy:

I am a lawyer, working with the knowledge I have gathered in the world of law.

Someone who is an actor works with the knowledge he has gathered as an actor. I don’t see anything special about this,

Guest

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by Guest »

Yesterday, Russians living in Prague demonstrated against Putin under their new white-blue-white flag.

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Tom Mazanec
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Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by Tom Mazanec »

Biden's Reckless Words Underscore the Dangers of the U.S.'s Use of Ukraine As a Proxy War
As grave of a threat as deliberate war is, unintended escalation from miscommunication and misperception can be as bad. Biden is the perfect vessel for such risks.
Glenn Greenwald
18 hr ago
https://greenwald.substack.com/p/bidens ... rscore?s=r
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”

― G. Michael Hopf, Those Who Remain

Navigator
Posts: 1020
Joined: Wed Feb 06, 2019 2:15 pm

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by Navigator »

Guest wrote:
Sun Mar 27, 2022 2:35 am

Navigator, do you still consider NATO to be hollowed out? Do you still believe Russia will take Europe all the way to Spain?
At this point, it would take a complete Russian mobilization and re-invigoration of their army, but if they did so, they could maybe eventually get to the Rhine.

Going all the way to Spain would be the action of most refugees.

MrGuest

Re: Generational Dynamics World View News

Post by MrGuest »

London calling wrote:
Sun Mar 27, 2022 8:01 am
The Strange Rebirth Of Imperial Russia
And why it could be here to stay.
There is a tendency to talk of Russia as if Putin has hijacked the country, wresting it away from the West, and from being a “normal country.” I wish that were true. Putin is closer to many Russians’ view of the world than we’d like to believe; his popularity soared after the seizure of Crimea; his mastery of modern media manipulation means his war propaganda can work at home — at least for a while.

Most Russians see Ukraine as indelibly Russian, and they certainly don’t support a fully independent nation-state allied with the EU and NATO. This was the view of figures as disparate as Alexandr Solzhenitsyn, George Kennan, and Joseph Brodsky in their time. And if you want to grasp the power of nationalism in Russia, remember that Alexei Navalny, Putin’s greatest potential foe, has built his career on it.
https://andrewsullivan.substack.com/p/t ... ia-694?s=w
I'm currently reading The Return of Holy Russia https://www.amazon.com/Return-Holy-Russ ... 1620558106, by Gary Lachman, which goes into the spiritual/esoteric/theological influences on the Russian character. Quite illuminating, and I believe in this case the fact that Westerners view Russians as a fellow traditionally "white Christian" culture blinds us to how profoundly different their worldview is to ours.

I realize that my own understanding of Russia and its history had been through the European/US lens. Based on my recent reading/viewing (including insights from members here) that has changed. As I'm now seeing it many of the legitimate fears we've long had of a nuclear armed Shia Iran guided by an apocalyptic theology should also apply to Russia. And the cultural/religious significance of Kiev as essentially the cradle of Russian identity - in addition to the obvious geopolitical/economic importance - is extremely deep. To Russians the notion that Kiev would become a Western European city strikes me as somewhat analogous to Paris or Rome falling under the spell of something like traditional Islamic rule - even secular Europeans who are fine with immigration, diversity and even pockets of Sharia governance would recoil at that. Comparisons of Putin to people like Hitler and Napoleon are not apt at all. The wars of the later were more like "family squabbles" in which the conquerors sought to (in their own twisted ways) be the ones to fulfill Europe's collective lingering nostalgia for the glory of the Roman Empire. Putin may dress and act like just another respectable first world leader, but at heart he is a 21st century barbarian in a suit.

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