- Reaction score
- 27,905
- Points
- 1,090
Halifax - no.Would you consider abandoning our territory and citizens to and aggressive, oppressive and hostile foreign power if we were invaded?
Pembroke - yes.
Halifax - no.Would you consider abandoning our territory and citizens to and aggressive, oppressive and hostile foreign power if we were invaded?
Fits with their actual goal of the total elimination of Ukraine. Terrorise/scare off the population, deport/torture/murder or mobilize those that remain, flatten the cities so uninhabitable and indefensible, steal everything useful and at the same time reduce the criminal, discontented and minority populations at home. Oh, and remain in power and steal from your own population as much as posssible.Ukraine needs more AD assets - that is a Big fuck me off bomb
Why was this not done 2 years ago... Oh yeah "escalation management". And look how well that turned out (for the military industrial complex and reconstruction industries)US to Redirect All Patriot Air Defense Orders to Ukraine
united24media.com
This is so inaccurate in so many waysWe forget that Ukraine had been dropping arty on the ethnic Russians who live in those regions for the last decade or so...
Does Ukraine really want all of that territory back? Because that territory comes with people, and those people are ethnic Russians who were never warmly recepted as Ukranians by Ukranians or the Ukraine government...
This is so inaccurate in so many ways
Russia has already stated, as a core part of its "Russkiy Mir" philosophy, that any territory ever held by Russia and any territory occupied by Russian speaking peoples IS Russia and liable to be retaken, using all means necessary (hybrid as well as declared kinetic operations).Along those same lines, the Baltic countries have a significant number of ethnic Russians living in their territories (along with many, many other former SU countries), should those countries be 'forced' to give up land that is within their sovereign territory because they contain X% of citizens that don't want to be citizens? Please remember that Stalin moved hundreds of thousands of ethnic Russians into areas of the SU that had non-Russian ethnicities that do not want to be a part of the SU. The Ukraine and the Baltics are perfect examples of this, along with a large number of other former SU countries.
Hmmmm. The Toronto - Montreal corridor? To the USA? A lot of those same cultural and economic and familial ties to the hostile power already exist. If one wanted to try to draw western parallels to the Donbas.Would you consider abandoning our territory and citizens to and aggressive, oppressive and hostile foreign power if we were invaded?
Russia doesn't have 6k warheads.(from the Russian perspective - but with 6000 nuclear warheads & this conflict very much starting to fit their use as per Russian nuclear doctrine, their perspective matters A LOT...)
Best OS analysis has 1,549 strategic warheads, I tend to veer towards 750-1150 number, as many are N/S due to lack of maintenance, beyond their decommissioned warheads. The Tactical Nuclear Warhead readiness is likely much lower than the Strategic - so my assumption would be IVO of 500-100 of those.
Russia can rattle their saber as much as they want - but they know its really rusty - and it isn't a credible threat, as they wouldn't be able to get everyone, while the American arsenal will go boom on them, as well as the French (and maybe 50% of the UK missiles )
Vancouver and Markham to China?Hmmmm. The Toronto - Montreal corridor? To the USA? A lot of those same cultural and economic and familial ties to the hostile power already exist. If one wanted to try to draw western parallels to the Donbas.
That said, the Russians have included the threat tactical nuclear weapon use in their doctrine for many years. As they see it, a limited use of low-yield weapons on the battlefield would utterly shock the west, which it undoubtedly would, and there are good reasons to doubt that anyone in the west would be willing to move up the escalation ladder and start threatening the Russian homeland with nukes when their own hasn't been touched. In the Cold War, this was known as the extended deterrence problem - how realistic is it to assume that the US would risk Chicago to save Brussels from the Red Army?
By this line of thinking, the Russians might calculate that they could use tactical nuclear weapons in Ukraine without the US, UK or France responding with nuclear weapons of their own.
The fact that they haven't done this says something about the Russian estimate of the cost-benefit relationship for nuclear use in Ukraine. They probably don't see this as sufficiently decisive to offset the risks of breaking the nuclear taboo. Even if their opponents don't start throwing their own nukes at Russia, they would absolutely would respond strongly with a variety of diplomatic and military tools.
Vancouver might have to be split 3 ways between CHN IND PKVancouver and Markham to China?
It's anyone's guess whether it unites with China before or after Taiwan.Vancouver might have to be split 3 ways between CHN IND PK
Agreed - I am not suggesting that the arsenal isn't deadly - just that it isn't as big as they want everyone to think, and it's a define lose for them - while some other countries mostly likely would get devastated it wouldn't be the end of them. Especially given that the 40 year old Patriot system (albeit it's been upgraded) has done a pretty stellar job taking out their 'hypersonic missiles' - and the BMD systems are even more advanced - it probably isn't a gamble that Russia would want to take - for if they opt for that route - and we in America knock out the majority of their missiles - they don't have any option to stop ours.I wouldn't sell their strategic arsenal short. I think it's reasonable to conclude that the bulk of their warheads are serviceable and that the delivery systems work, but even if they only had 750 warheads, that's more than enough to kill more than 100 million people. Possibly many more, if they went for a straight countervalue strike. It's enough to rule out any possibility of anyone deliberately pushing towards a strategic exchange.
WRT Cold War potentially going hot, the fact that there where few hundred thousand American soldiers, airmen etc in Europe, meant any use of Tac Nukes against the West was going to kill Americans - and thus demand a return in kind (one reason the Europeans liked to have Americans at the front and in major areas).That said, the Russians have included the threat tactical nuclear weapon use in their doctrine for many years. As they see it, a limited use of low-yield weapons on the battlefield would utterly shock the west, which it undoubtedly would, and there are good reasons to doubt that anyone in the west would be willing to move up the escalation ladder and start threatening the Russian homeland with nukes when their own hasn't been touched. In the Cold War, this was known as the extended deterrence problem - how realistic is it to assume that the US would risk Chicago to save Brussels from the Red Army?
I wouldn't want to take that bet either way -- but it probably would get some sort of retaliatory strike - even if not Nuclear. Frankly I would prefer if everyone just kept their hand off the nuclear saber and didn't even rattle it. Nuclear release is a slippery slope - and it really is a game that no one wins.By this line of thinking, the Russians might calculate that they could use tactical nuclear weapons in Ukraine without the US, UK or France responding with nuclear weapons of their own.
Agreed - while Putin may claim that the annex territories are Russian, I highly doubt he would be willing to risk the worldwide 'attention' it would bring, @ytz brings up the points quite well as to what it would mean for his supporters - and you can pretty much guarantee that Iran and NK know they would bear the brunt of some pressures exerted - whatever those may be.The fact that they haven't done this says something about the Russian estimate of the cost-benefit relationship for nuclear use in Ukraine. They probably don't see this as sufficiently decisive to offset the risks of breaking the nuclear taboo. Even if their opponents don't start throwing their own nukes at Russia, they would absolutely would respond strongly with a variety of diplomatic and military tools.
Agreed - while Putin may claim that the annex territories are Russian, I highly doubt he would be willing to risk the worldwide 'attention' it would bring, @ytz brings up the points quite well as to what it would mean for his supporters - and you can pretty much guarantee that Iran and NK know they would bear the brunt of some pressures exerted - whatever those may be.
I think if there is a nuke and Xi wasn't forewarned and okay'd it - Putin's on borrowed time. The biggest question would the Chinese get to him before others...I think it's mostly Xi driving this bus. And he was already annoyed at the scale of the Russian invasion when it kicked off. If there's a nuke the Chinese aren't expecting they'll either cut the Russians off or they'll be asking the Siloviki to replace Putin.
Agreed - I am not suggesting that the arsenal isn't deadly - just that it isn't as big as they want everyone to think, and it's a define lose for them - while some other countries mostly likely would get devastated it wouldn't be the end of them. Especially given that the 40 year old Patriot system (albeit it's been upgraded) has done a pretty stellar job taking out their 'hypersonic missiles' - and the BMD systems are even more advanced - it probably isn't a gamble that Russia would want to take - for if they opt for that route - and we in America knock out the majority of their missiles - they don't have any option to stop ours.
WRT Cold War potentially going hot, the fact that there where few hundred thousand American soldiers, airmen etc in Europe, meant any use of Tac Nukes against the West was going to kill Americans - and thus demand a return in kind (one reason the Europeans liked to have Americans at the front and in major areas).
I wouldn't want to take that bet either way -- but it probably would get some sort of retaliatory strike - even if not Nuclear.
I think if there is a nuke and Xi wasn't forewarned and okay'd it - Putin's on borrowed time. The biggest question would the Chinese get to him before others...
Along those same lines, the Baltic countries have a significant number of ethnic Russians living in their territories (along with many, many other former SU countries), should those countries be 'forced' to give up land that is within their sovereign territory because they contain X% of citizens that don't want to be citizens? Please remember that Stalin moved hundreds of thousands of ethnic Russians into areas of the SU that had non-Russian ethnicities that do not want to be a part of the SU. The Ukraine and the Baltics are perfect examples of this, along with a large number of other former SU countries.
Aren't a lot of those Russians there because Stalin enforced an infiltration policy that moved ethic Russians into the lands he took over. When folks move into a new country it is expected that they will conform to the new country's rules and practices. It is not expected that the new country will change to suit them. That is the biggest problem here in Canada now and in Europe for that matter. It is called national pride.I think Russia will ultimately hold/defend the areas it's taken, and any territory regained by Ukraine will be negotiated for.
I think another question is - why does Ukraine want that territory back so badly?
We forget that Ukraine had been dropping arty on the ethnic Russians who live in those regions for the last decade or so...
Does Ukraine really want all of that territory back? Because that territory comes with people, and those people are ethnic Russians who were never warmly recepted as Ukranians by Ukranians or the Ukraine government...
(If we look at the battle lines of May 29, 2023 and June 1, 2024...those lines haven't moved a whole lot...)