Putin lost in the fog of war, while about Kherson, the Russian Federation Army puts on a deadly clown show; unfortunately too real for Ukrainians

Putin lost in the fog of war, while about Kherson, the Russian Federation Army puts on a deadly clown show; unfortunately too real for Ukrainians

This is in honor of terminal burnout for the Russian Federation Army in Kherson. May their example of , well dumb****ery live on forever.

quote

A Yale historian who predicted former U.S. President Donald Trump's fascist turn contends Russian President Vladimir Putin is losing his war in Ukraine, saying the fact that other powerful Russians are speaking out means the despot is "lost in the fog of war."

other powerful Russians are speaking out means the despot is "lost in the fog of war."

"We now regularly hear ... from people aside from Putin (for example, former Prime Minister and President Dmitri Medvedev) about the meaning of the war, the catastrophic consequences that await Ukraine and the West, and so forth. This is a sign that Putin is losing control," said Timothy Snyder, Levin Professor of History at Yale, Saturday in a?lengthy Twitter thread .

Among Snyder's myriad other reasons for the assertion: Russia's "doom propaganda" is serving as "rhetorical preparation for a power struggle after Putin falls," and "drastic proclamations" are serving as "evidence that important Russians think that Russia is losing."

Russia is capable of mobilizing its people for war "only at the level of emotions, not bodies,"

end of quote

I.e. the Russian elites are circling like Buzzards on a death watch, as the losses mount and Putin lacks Russian Federation popular support for a full wartime mobilization.

While this carnage is going on, see this

quote

The biggest signal of a big change in the conflict continues to be in the west. That’s where Ukraine is demonstrating to a suddenly terrified Russia just who is in control of the situation. Ukrainian forces have isolated what’s reported to be over 1,000 Russian troops in the town of?Vysokopillya. Ukraine has planted neat patterns of craters on both the Antonovskyi Bridge outside Kherson and the Kakhova Bridge 50km to the north, both to limit the utility of those bridges and to make it clear to Russia that they can close those bridges whenever they want. And Ukraine has taken down a series of bridges across the Inhulets River, showing that they can isolate Russian forces inside Kherson oblast, making it extremely difficult for Russia to move to points of conflict, or to get supplies to their troops in forward positions.

Russia seems to be responding by attempting to build a series of pontoon bridges to cross the wide Dnipro River near Kherson, a tactic that cannot hope to keep the area adequately supplied, even if they make it work. Pontoon bridges are easy to take out. So are vehicles queuing to get onto a pontoon bridge, something Russia might remember from a place called Bilohorivka.

end of quote

HIMARS can take out Pontoon bridges, OOPS

Next

quote

In this first one, the tank driver apparently forgets that tanks have a barrel, and that barrel can’t magically pass through trees.

This Belarus crew is out to show they are better showmen than Kadyrov’s Chechens.

Proof that WWII era tanks just don’t want to go to Ukraine.

This instructional video on how to throw your own people off a tank, then repeatedly almost run over them, has been seen before, but is worth a repeat.

Missile go up, missile go down. Very close to where missile go up.

I would love to know what this guy says shortly after this missile launches. I can’t stop matching this thing. Somehow …?so satisfying.

Showing Josh Hawley how it’s done.(Scene of a Russian in a sprint mode ). WOW

end of quote

A series of nonstop bloopers, by the Russian Federation Army. Now we are getting reports of 4-7 days of small arms training for Russian "volunteers", and so the above blooper reels are what we can expect with soldiers thrown in a meat grinder, with less than a week of combat training

Get the picture ?

This is an army about ready to be STOMPED by the middle of September.

OOPS

https://fortune.com/2022/07/24/yale-historian-who-predicted-trumps-fascist-turn-foresees-russias-failure-in-ukraine-putin-has-been-good-at-keeping-us-all-in-a-fog-but-now-he-himself-seems-lost-in-the-fog-of-war/?showAdminBar=true

quote

The Yale historian who predicted Trump’s fascist turn foresees Putin’s failure in Ukraine: ‘You pretend to win a war and we pretend to show enthusiasm’

BY?

ERIN PRATER

July 24, 2022?5:26 PM EDT


Russian President Vladimir Putin attends the State Awarding Ceremony at the Grand Kremlin Palace, June12 in Moscow, Russia.

A Yale historian who predicted former U.S. President Donald Trump's fascist turn contends Russian President Vladimir Putin is losing his war in Ukraine, saying the fact that other powerful Russians are speaking out means the despot is "lost in the fog of war."

"We now regularly hear ... from people aside from Putin (for example, former Prime Minister and President Dmitri Medvedev) about the meaning of the war, the catastrophic consequences that await Ukraine and the West, and so forth. This is a sign that Putin is losing control," said Timothy Snyder, Levin Professor of History at Yale, Saturday in a?lengthy Twitter thread .

Among Snyder's myriad other reasons for the assertion: Russia's "doom propaganda" is serving as "rhetorical preparation for a power struggle after Putin falls," and "drastic proclamations" are serving as "evidence that important Russians think that Russia is losing."

Russia is capable of mobilizing its people for war "only at the level of emotions, not bodies," Snyder said, adding that the country has taken "horrible losses in men" since invading Ukraine in late February.

"Russian regions are now working hard to find highly paid 'volunteers' who are sent to die with little training," he said. "Putin is clearly afraid that a general mobilization would undo his popularity and bring down his regime. In this sense, he is weak."


Tentative factors like "mastery over rivals, soft support in the population, [and] integrity of the army" keep Putin in power—barely, Snyder said.

"Putin has been good at keeping us all in a fog. But now he himself seems lost in the fog of war."

Snyder has long warned publicly of the existential threat Trump poses to American democracy,?saying shortly before the Jan. 6 Capitol riot ?that "we are in a slow-motion?Reichstag Fire ?right now."

"Donald Trump is not as skilled as Hitler," he?told Salon in October 2020 . "He doesn't work as hard as Hitler. He doesn't have the same level of confidence as Hitler, but he's clearly looking for that Reichstag Fire emergency. ... 'Antifascists' and 'thugs' and 'law and order' and so on is part of that effort."

"Donald Trump keeps trying to make the Reichstag Fire work."

end of quote

https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2022/7/24/2112160/-Ukraine-update-A-picture-of-every-growing-chaos-and-fear-among-Russian-troops

quote

Ukraine update: 'A picture of ever growing chaos and fear among Russian troops'


Mark Sumner ?for?Daily Kos

Daily Kos Staff

Sunday July 24, 2022?·?9:30 AM EDT

?Recommend?449??Share??Tweet

368?Comments?356 New


Ukrainian children set up their own checkpoint in a village near Kharkiv, Ukraine. July 23, 2022,

One year, when I was in college, it snowed. At lot. And no, that’s not because it was during the Ice Age.?

In any case, this was Kentucky, where snowplows were considered exotic beasts and 30” of white stuff was enough to literally call out the National Guard, declare a statewide emergency, and put the campus on a lockdown.?Also, since this was Kentucky, and college, and and the dorms were segregated by gender, it took roughly twelve hours before the dorm where I lived was missing big chunks of walls and ceilings. Twenty-four before someone on my floor decided that patterning a 12 gauge shotgun on the fire door was a keen idea.


Stick with me. This is going somewhere.

In order to distract the student body before our snow break generated a body count, the campus administration quickly came up with a series of competitions, from snow sculpture to a makeshift musical, in a desperate attempt to keep us from being the idiots that we were. And somehow, in that middle of that, I found myself playing in a campus-wide, winner-take-all, no-holds-barred tournament of that most time-consuming and monotonous game: Risk.

If you’ve never played Risk …?don’t bother. But for anyone who has, you’re almost certainly familiar with the final stage of the game, when the last two players on the board are trying to drive each other to extinction. What I mostly remember from that tournament, again and again, was that the final stage looked like this: Player 1 tried to push player 2 off the map, but got carried away and fell short. What looked like a massive army at the outside dwindled as it fought and spread. That left their forces spread paper thin all over the map, easy pickings for Player 2 when that player mounted their own counteroffensive.?If the first player didn’t start with enough to guarantee carrying them through, they often found the tables turning. Quickly.

The idea of “the hunter becoming the hunted” has long roots. Greek mythology has a very literal version of this, when?the hunter,?Actaeon , is transformed into a deer by the goddess?Artemis and is then chased and torn apart by his own hunting dogs?(yeeks). Real life rarely provides such clear examples as board games and myth, but what’s going on right now in Ukraine certainly seems pretty close.

Even though Russia spent much of last week floating claims that they were going to take more and more and more of Ukraine, the truth seems to be that Putin’s?offensive in the Donbas has stalled out short of objectives. While there continues to be fierce exchanges at many points along the front line, and Russia continues to launch attacks toward positions like Bakhmut and Bohorodychne, there are no confirmed reports of a significant gain by Russian forces in over two?weeks. In?that same period, a number of villages either?returned to Ukraine ?or been thrown into?dispute? as Ukraine has refused to give Russian forces a chance to catch their breath.

At this point, the Ukrainian ministry of defense estimates the Russians have suffered 39,000 killed in action over the course of the invasion. U.S. intelligence estimates that 85% of the Russian military is already actively engaged in Ukraine. When Russia discovered it could not quickly take all of Ukraine, it withdrew and refocused on capturing a much smaller area. Months later, it hasn’t managed to accomplish even that.

Vysokopillya area is effectively cut off from other Russian forces.

The biggest signal of a big change in the conflict continues to be in the west. That’s where Ukraine is demonstrating to a suddenly terrified Russia just who is in control of the situation. Ukrainian forces have isolated what’s reported to be over 1,000 Russian troops in the town of?Vysokopillya. Ukraine has planted neat patterns of craters on both the Antonovskyi Bridge outside Kherson and the Kakhova Bridge 50km to the north, both to limit the utility of those bridges and to make it clear to Russia that they can close those bridges whenever they want. And Ukraine has taken down a series of bridges across the Inhulets River, showing that they can isolate Russian forces inside Kherson oblast, making it extremely difficult for Russia to move to points of conflict, or to get supplies to their troops in forward positions.

Russia seems to be responding by attempting to build a series of pontoon bridges to cross the wide Dnipro River near Kherson, a tactic that cannot hope to keep the area adequately supplied, even if they make it work. Pontoon bridges are easy to take out. So are vehicles queuing to get onto a pontoon bridge, something Russia might remember from a place called Bilohorivka.

There are now more reports of abandoned Russian positions, and of positions in the city of Kherson that have been handed on inexperienced troops and Russian sympathizers, as the experienced Russian forces have apparently gone out to powder their nose.

That thread also reports Russian soldiers shedding their uniforms, and Russian troops looting in the high end areas of the city. There are also reports of more explosions on the bridge and just outside the city. In essence,?Vysokopillya is just a miniature version of Kherson. Or Kherson is a larger version of?Vysokopillya. In both cases, they my not yet be physically surrounded, but the range and precision of Ukrainian weapons mean they are?effectively?surrounded.

One other thing you can pick up by playing Risk:?Ukraine is a really difficult place to hold. It touches so many areas. Scandinavia. Southern Europe. Northern Europe. They can all reinforce Ukraine.?

EXPLOSION AT HORLIVKA

Showing that Ukraine’s new use of precision guided weapons that can hit well behind Russian lines, there was this explosion on Saturday in?Horlivka, in Russian-occupied territory north of Donetsk. The target seems to have been a repair facility for Russian equipment, and past tense is definitely deserved.

The distance of this strike means it might have been drone-guided artillery, rather than HIMARS. Either way …?what a shot.

THERMITE IN DONETSK

At this point, there have been dozens, if not hundreds, of videos of Russia using white phosphorus munitions in this invasion, usually against urban areas. But this is just flat out strange. On Saturday evening, the sky over Russian-occupied Donetsk was weeping that all too familiar fire.

The best bet on this is that someone simply screwed up. There has also been a lot of speculation that this is a false flag operation, something that Moscow dreamed up in order to justify doing …?something. Maybe issuing a general?mobilization and sending people to the front with clubs.

It certainly?could?have come from Ukraine, especially from someone still boiling over Russia’s continued attacks on civilian areas. But if so, this is the first time Ukraine has been seen using incendiaries since the invasion began.

RUSSIAN AND FRIENDS FOLLIES

Strike up the?Liberty Bell March !

In this first one, the tank driver apparently forgets that tanks have a barrel, and that barrel can’t magically pass through trees.

This Belarus crew is out to show they are better showmen than Kadyrov’s Chechens.

Proof that WWII era tanks just don’t want to go to Ukraine.

This instructional video on how to throw your own people off a tank, then repeatedly almost run over them, has been seen before, but is worth a repeat.

Missile go up, missile go down. Very close to where missile go up.

I would love to know what this guy says shortly after this missile launches. I can’t stop matching this thing. Somehow …?so satisfying.

Showing Josh Hawley how it’s done.

And finally, the musical part of our program. Please stick with this one at least 30 seconds until you can see the expansive, enthusiastic audience.?

Sunday, Jul 24, 2022 · 10:56:58 AM EDT?·?Mark Sumner

Reports that?Yaremivka (яремовка) and?Studenok (студенок) on either sides of the Siverskyi Donets River between Izyum and Slovyansk have been abandoned by Russian forces who packed up and left?no idea if this has any implications?

Sunday, Jul 24, 2022 · 11:00:21 AM EDT?·?Mark Sumner

Multiple reports that Russia has people out there on Sunday trying to patch the damaged bridges. If there is a top 10 “jobs I don’t want to do today…”?

Sunday, Jul 24, 2022 · 2:13:06 PM EDT?·?Mark Sumner

This is reportedly the results of a Ukrainian strike on a Russian base in?Chulakivk, which is on that spit of land that juts back to the west beneath Kherson. According to the tweet, “it is no longer there.”

end of quote

Andrew Beckwith, PhD

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Andrew Beckwith的更多文章

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了