TheDarknessGrows
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Dec 28, 2021
I hope that the Russians and Ukrainians teleport to your houses and fight there, too.
Especially you.
Especially you.
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Let me get this straight, you're saying that Ukraine is going to position the bulk of its army in an open field right outside Kherson, even more exposed to drones and artillery than they would be in the city? Brilliant strategy, let's see how well it plays out.
Yes, they are going to gather their entire Army Group at the SPAR Parking lot outside town and post lots of tik tok memes about it to guide the Shahad drones in.Let me get this straight, you're saying that Ukraine is going to position the bulk of its army in an open field right outside Kherson, even more exposed to drones and artillery than they would be in the city? Brilliant strategy, let's see how well it plays out.
You need to play less video games, nigga.
Pavlovka is a village in Ukraine and has about 1,280 residents. Pavlovka is situated nearby to Perevalske and Sheviakyne.
Try looking at a map next time before making an ass out of yourself. North of Kherson is hundreds of kilometers of absolutely flat terrain, empty fields.Yes, they are going to gather their entire Army Group at the SPAR Parking lot outside town and post lots of tik tok memes about it to guide the Shahad drones in.
Considering the "left bank/right bank" discussion earlier, I'd like to follow up with a question of my own I've been holding onto for the past couple days. Putting aside pontoon bridge attempts or amusements, what does the withdrawal mean on a more tactical level? Kherson, by virtue of being a city, likely has a great deal of entry points from the western approaches, which turn into a growing network of streets, avenues, and boulevards. Wouldn't pulling back across the river make sense in terms of dictating new, more limited chokepoints if the advantages in 3-dimensional tactics/urban combat would be negated by opposing manpower superiority and subsequent coverage, especially if one of the goals is to try bleeding out the offensive without letting your own elements get overwhelmed?
Help me out here, I can see both the virtues and disadvantages of the course of action.
Dude, Ukraine and Russia have been fighting in those same fields for the last 6 months. If Russia was going to blow the UAF to oblivion there they would have done it already.Try looking at a map next time before making an ass out of yourself. North of Kherson is hundreds of kilometers of absolutely flat terrain, empty fields.
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But hey, let's go with your scenario. Ukraine sends a battalion of infantry and EOD squads into Kherson. Drones and artillery wipe them out before they even plant a khokhol flag on the local administration building. Russians are sharing the footage on Telegram and laughing at you. What's next? Send another battalion?
Again, this is not a video game. War isn't static and conditions change. Weather made those fields impassable, forcing any Ukrainian reinforcements to stick to the two major highways and a handful of small local roads. It's not rocket science.Dude, Ukraine and Russia have been fighting in those same fields for the last 6 months. If Russia was going to blow the UAF to oblivion there they would have done it already.
Not when they lost New York; New York remained a Loyalist stronghold until the very end. France and a few other European countries decided to support American rebels because it was weakened Britain, whose expenditures were high because of it. That tactic actually backfired as after the Treaty of Paris, Britain focused more on her remaining colonies in the Caribbean, Canada and Australia, resolved its debt and was able to fight more effectively not only on land but especially at sea.But the Continental Army was receiving massive military support from France, a superpower at that time that was using the war of independence as a proxy battle. You can’t really compare Russia to the Continentals in this situation at all.
Don't worry, I've sent an email to Ukrainian HQ, and warned them of this cunning plan, and now it wont happen. Thanks for spilling the beans, BadungusChrist the cope. I know in your brain you are imagining entire brigades of Ukrainian troops getting carpet bombed in downtown Kherson,
their tears are nourishing my soulThe vatnik cope on this thread is delicious
the fact they were so fucking insufferably smug for so goddamn long about how mighty and unstoppable and gloriously powerful their military is and how they are the new multipolar superpower that shall overthrow the western world order and blah-blah-fucking-blah makes their utter military and geopolitical humiliation this past year, the cringing grovelling begging for negotiations and a face saving exit going on now
I remember back when this started all the lopsided claims of massive strategic victories against Ukraine and how easy this "special military operation" would be. My first thought was they need to take this a hell of a lot more seriously than they are now if they want to have a chance to win. In terms of population proportions, this is like the US invading Mexico.Oh and just to remind those who were gurgling about how Ukraine was totally gonna surrender within a week back in february, we aint
Hate to break it to you, but the Dnipro is a 1 kilometer wide river, after that bridge is blown to kingdom come by demolitionists, the entirety of Kherson can literally be held by a single brigade if even that, this cope about "tens of thousands of Ukrops gonna get blasted by artillery!" is pathetic. Hell, they might not even need to do that, just move artillery up some and hide it, and use the satellite images they're getting from NATO to make sure they can't try to pontoon the thing.It's called a shit-eating grin, faggot. Come on, walk into the city. You know Ukrainians need the propaganda victory.
You're still not getting it. There's no civilian population left in Kherson, the roads leading to Kherson are under Russian fire control. Any movement inside the city will be met with artillery fire until it looks like Grozny. It will be very costly for Ukraine to even attempt a symbolic occupation of it. If they're smart, they'll stay out of the city and leave it as no man's land, but that means no propaganda victory for Ukraine's NATO curators. Now the question is just how many ukrops is NATO willing to sacrifice for that propaganda reel?Hate to break it to you, but the Dnipro is a 1 kilometer wide river, after that bridge is blown to kingdom come by demolitionists, the entirety of Kherson can literally be held by a single brigade if even that, this cope about "tens of thousands of Ukrops gonna get blasted by artillery!" is pathetic. Hell, they might not even need to do that, just move artillery up some and hide it, and use the satellite images they're getting from NATO to make sure they can't try to pontoon the thing.
This is what you are reduced too. This is all you have left to cope with. Pictures of bathrooms in Poland.Meanwhile it's looking like Ukraine will keep losing territory, even without Russia's involvement. These have been going up around Poland.
"No Poland without Lvov"
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They even posted one at this average Polish workplace:
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Sounds like a good natural border for Russia, far better than some random field in the middle of nowhere. The Kurds ended up with the same situation in Syria, they follow the Euphrates which is a good defensible border.Hate to break it to you, but the Dnipro is a 1 kilometer wide river, after that bridge is blown to kingdom come by demolitionists, the entirety of Kherson can literally be held by a single brigade if even that, this cope about "tens of thousands of Ukrops gonna get blasted by artillery!" is pathetic. Hell, they might not even need to to that, just move artillery up some and hide it, and use the satellite images they're getting from NATO to make sure they can't try to pontoon the thing.