For whatever reason I can't reply, so
@Mr E. Grifter.
The point about willpower is relative - a sixth of Ukraine's population has fled. It's logistical infrastructure that Ukraine has on account of 8 years of preparing for war footing and a state of mobilization from the very start of the war. Russia doesn't, but there's no meaningful difference in the quality of the manpower brought out and even a comparative outflow of human capital to what Ukraine already went through would leave it with far more to work with. Time is the object, much like just how poor the current mobilization system is. Because it has far more people, Russia doesn't need parity efficiency-wise in mobilizing and arming them, it only needs to be better. The morale question is less about not having people and far more about public and leadership willingness to take on the costs of a protracted war on the scale required in the faces of the losses to come.
Regarding materiel, China's imports haven't reduced, they've increased
relative to last year for the same period by 30%. The braindead policy of the US in saying it'll dismantle Russia in order to use the remaining satrapies as outposts to then go after China gives it every reason to prop up Russia, likewise others like Iran. This also isn't in any state of war footing or rush in production. The same stakes mean that unless Russia quits soon it's better positioned to last long term than nations to whom stepping back imposes a much lower cost, i.e the West.
Russia's losses are unsustainable in a limited scenario of 200k~ troops opposite 3-4 times more troops, with no war footing to speak of. Commentators, from tard appreciation forum spergs like me down to the CIA claiming Kiev would fall in 3 days and most importantly the Russians themselves overestimated the extent to which there was an armament or doctrine advantage on the Russian end that'd compensate for the massive difference in numbers, and the Russians then doubled by only attacking vital infrastructure half-heartedly 8 months in. Math won out. That same math points overwhelmingly in the opposite direction if Russia mobilizes to a similar extent to Ukraine. The question is only if the Russians are willing to do it and if the intangibles like morale and a Ukrainian doctrinal edge will trump math where it didn't for Russia. I see zero reason why it would and remain bullish on an eventual Russian victory, and will either smugpost or own up accordingly when we cross that bridge.
It does that when the posts are really long, I will try and keep my sperging to a minimum.
On the china part - you're right I had a brainfart and misread the headlines!
Overall Russian trade has dropped and the increase with China has not offset this.
I massively disagree on the willpower aspect of this, yes there are 7 million Ukrainian refugees in Europe - but 90% of these are women and children, the other 10% is hard to get figures on but if you start adding into that men over the age of 60 and disabled people the number of fighting age males who have left Ukraine is low. What does this tell us - these people are not traditional combatants. This does not tell you about the moral of the nation, and actually given that this then takes away large welfare burdens from the state and moves civilians out of harms way there are benefits to this outflow as well as draw backs. If we look at the polling data, Ukrainian moral is actually very high - iirc some 86% would not even consider a peace deal which included territorial losses. Even if we look at polling data in the US and Europe the support has remained strong, as opposed to some predictions that people would stop caring.
Russian men in contrast are fleeing across the border because they are scared of being mobilised for a war they probably just don't care about. It's a stark contrast.
As for numbers, in a sense you are right - but in such a broad stroke manner that it ignores all the other elements that go into making civilians into soldiers, which are then able to be used to generate combat power. Russia does not have the means to train these men quick enough, they don't have the means to properly equip them or sustain them in the field. Infantry, poorly trained and unsupported, are going to be no use on a modern battlefield. Even as early as WWII they were little use in certain environments, on the fronts which used more motorised units - look at how the Italians fared in North Africa during Operation Compass, their massed infantry were quickly isolated and defeated in detail by a force not even a quarter of their size. If Russian logistics is being strained with their current forces, how will they sustain a larger force in the field? Their automotive industry is on it's knees and their logistics fleet has been decimated - are they going to revert to horses?
Again, I agree on the sustainability point in very broad terms, if we are specifically talking about numbers and current loss rates - but this is not the entire story. Their loss rate of trained soldiers is unsustainable regardless, because they lack the soldiers to train a vast mobilised army - they have either died in Ukraine or are fighting there, the training infrastructure Russia uses is at Unit, units which have deployed to Ukraine. Their loss rate of kit and equipment is unsustainable because even without the current sanctions regime their economy couldn't replace what they have lost to the Ukrainians in a quick enough time. Their stocks of kit and equipment are deep, but they are unreliable, rusted, broken, cannibalised and also out of date and unfit for the modern battlefield. Their aircraft losses, pilot losses, use of PGMs and cruise missiles are unsustainable especially when we consider the maintenance routines on their aircraft. This means that over time the Russian Armed Forces will be severely degraded, well I think we have already seen this - and then okay they can put a million civilians into the field in uniform, with what logistics support? With what heavy weapons? That is not effective combat power, and it has not been effective combat power since prior to WW1, without heavy weapons and effective use of armoured vehicles to overcome defensive positions throwing those empty uniforms into the meat grinder achieves nothing.
None of the trends favour Russia when you scratch the surface. They are losing, and short of a political miracle for Russia in Europe and the US which is nowhere to be seen, the slide into defeat will continue and will continue to be smug about it.