Russian Invasion of Ukraine Megathread - Episode III - Revenge of the Ruski (now unlocked with new skins and gameplay modes!!!)

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I present U.S. Army General Laura Richardson:

View attachment 4308355

The United States intends to procure Soviet weapons for Ukraine from Latin American countries, including Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela (lmao) on the condition that these countries replace Soviet weapons with American weaponry. Three countries who are close to Russia and hate the US, donating their weaponry to Ukraine in exchange for expensive and unsuitable armaments. This is my first kek of the day.

Presumably the US would control the supply, repair, replacement and ordnance and thus, the military of those nations. Nations, I remind you that have endured constant attack and sanctions from the US. Why would they agree to give up their armaments to donate to Ukraine if their repair/replacement is subject to the whims of DC? Why would they not either enter into new agreements with Russia with and/or secure Chinese and Iranian equipment to complement them?

I do know that Venezuela is Russia's largest trading partner in Latin America; former Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.began a program of large-scale purchases of Russian weaponry as part of his push to modernize the Venezuelan military.

Last time I looked, Venezuela had purchased about $12 billion of Russian military equipment, including Su-30MK2V fighter jets, Mi-17V5, Mi-26T2 and Mi-35m2 helicopters, T-72B1 tanks, Smerch multiple launch rocket systems, S-300V anti-aircraft missile systems, Bal-E mobile missile systems for the Coast Guard, Nona-SVK self-propelled systems and MSTA-S self-propelled howitzers (I guess those HIMARs aren't the Wunderwaffe the Ukrops thought they were. Maybe Bradleys too lol).

Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Mexico and Argentina are the only other nations I can think of in Latin America that could participate in this arms swap, but as far as I am aware they mostly bought helicopters for civilian use. These nations may not want to participate since restrictions on transferring hardware to third countries exist. Russian weapons supply contracts, as a rule, stipulate that the buyer has no right to transfer them without the consent of the manufacturer, ie, Russia approving the deal. Doing so could damage relations with Russia, and any nation agreeing to the swap would be vulnerable to legal action.

I don't know what this general's sexual orientation is nor do I care, but I guess she never learned desperation is very unattractive to the opposite sex, and if you are tasked with prosecuting a war it almost always results in fatal mistakes. This has all the signs of a woman moment, and not just from Gen. Richardson, since I doubt she was the sole architect of this great plan, but also from the State Department menopausal cat ladies eating too much rugelach scrambling to fix the mess they created.
So are you saying that Latin America's lowest subhuman shitholes will not take U.S. taxpayers money to sell their decrepit Soviet-made weaponry, knowing perfectly well that the Bolshevik-run Washington will never invade them?
 
I have plenty of Polish friends which do like to have dat sweet Galician and Lviv as dem booty. I don't think you really know the borders of human greed and desires they likely have, my nigga.
Polish people are too preoccupied getting their industry to EU industry standard. Funny thing this claim was made by pundits, not high profile politicians or EU ambassador, source is fishy (Self admitted "independent" Russian journo without secondary sources or statements from Poland or EU for that matter)

And the fact Poland is the country that other EU nations use to send armaments to Ukraine. That defies reason and the fact annexing demographic group and growing borders closer to hostile Russia would be retarded.

It's on same level of logic where Russia would take over baltics, Finland and independent eastern bloc.
 
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First time I've used the Ignore feature in this thread. Your takes are not just delusional but also boring and stupid. I think you have Autistic Schizophrenia.
You clearly haven't heard of ChatGPT. You're talking to a robot!

I present U.S. Army General Laura Richardson:

View attachment 4308355

The United States intends to procure Soviet weapons for Ukraine from Latin American countries, including Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela (lmao) on the condition that these countries replace Soviet weapons with American weaponry. Three countries who are close to Russia and hate the US, donating their weaponry to Ukraine in exchange for expensive and unsuitable armaments. This is my first kek of the day.

Presumably the US would control the supply, repair, replacement and ordnance and thus, the military of those nations. Nations, I remind you that have endured constant attack and sanctions from the US. Why would they agree to give up their armaments to donate to Ukraine if their repair/replacement is subject to the whims of DC? Why would they not either enter into new agreements with Russia with and/or secure Chinese and Iranian equipment to complement them?

I do know that Venezuela is Russia's largest trading partner in Latin America; former Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez.began a program of large-scale purchases of Russian weaponry as part of his push to modernize the Venezuelan military.

Last time I looked, Venezuela had purchased about $12 billion of Russian military equipment, including Su-30MK2V fighter jets, Mi-17V5, Mi-26T2 and Mi-35m2 helicopters, T-72B1 tanks, Smerch multiple launch rocket systems, S-300V anti-aircraft missile systems, Bal-E mobile missile systems for the Coast Guard, Nona-SVK self-propelled systems and MSTA-S self-propelled howitzers (I guess those HIMARs aren't the Wunderwaffe the Ukrops thought they were. Maybe Bradleys too lol).

Brazil, Bolivia, Peru, Mexico and Argentina are the only other nations I can think of in Latin America that could participate in this arms swap, but as far as I am aware they mostly bought helicopters for civilian use. These nations may not want to participate since restrictions on transferring hardware to third countries exist. Russian weapons supply contracts, as a rule, stipulate that the buyer has no right to transfer them without the consent of the manufacturer, ie, Russia approving the deal. Doing so could damage relations with Russia, and any nation agreeing to the swap would be vulnerable to legal action.

I don't know what this general's sexual orientation is nor do I care, but I guess she never learned desperation is very unattractive to the opposite sex, and if you are tasked with prosecuting a war it almost always results in fatal mistakes. This has all the signs of a woman moment, and not just from Gen. Richardson, since I doubt she was the sole architect of this great plan, but also from the State Department menopausal cat ladies eating too much rugelach scrambling to fix the mess they created.
Why can't women in the army be like in my Japanese animes? :'( Less Jodie Whittaker lookalikes and more Tanyas and Vladilenas.
 
You clearly haven't heard of ChatGPT. You're talking to a robot!
That's an insult to the OpenAI Bot. It writes significantly more cogent posts than the ones you are referring to.

In fact, a previous post I made in this very thread was composed entirely by the OpenAI bot, in response to the following two queries:

Code:
/ask make the case that Russia is likely to succeed in fully integrating the Donbas into the Russian Federation
/ask assess the strategic goals of Vladimir Putin's Special Military Occupation and his likelihood of sucess in achieving those goals

Russia is likely to succeed in fully integrating the Donbas into the Russian Federation because of a variety of reasons. Russia has made strategic investments in strengthening its physical presence, infrastructure and political ties at the rebel-controlled Donetsk and Luhansk regions through forming a military alliance agreement with them. Russia has recognized passports and other documents issued by these breakaway states, granting further social benefits to their citizens.

In addition, Moscow has also implemented an effective propaganda campaign aimed at convincing local people of the superiority of a unified Russia over other countries. Moreover, it recently gave exclusive control to rule over Donbass to local governance bodies that are loyal to Moscow, between which agreements on movement restrictions and taxes have been reached so as to restrict access from other countries seeking influence on the region.

Finally, Russian troops continue to be deployed in large numbers along the conflict zone, backed up by well-equipped military forces and high defensive capabilities, making any attempts by outside forces to intervene or influence difficult. These combined efforts indicate that Russia is indeed likely to succeed in integrating Donbas into her fold completely.

Putin has proven adept at using military force to change the terms of engagement in conflicts which were previously seen as intractable. His ability to project strength and capitalize on opportunities where others have failed have been critical elements in achieving his strategic goals thus far. Moreover, he has been able to leverage cooperation from other states when pursuing his aims while avoiding direct confrontation with more powerful opponents such as the United States or NATO forces.

Overall, it seems that while success is never guaranteed with any foreign policy goal - Vladimir Putin’s Special Military Occupation seems likely to generate a degree of success relative to its ambitions if pursued carefully and efficiently.
 
The United States intends to procure Soviet weapons for Ukraine from Latin American countries, including Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela (lmao) on the condition that these countries replace Soviet weapons with American weaponry. Three countries who are close to Russia and hate the US, donating their weaponry to Ukraine in exchange for expensive and unsuitable armaments. This is my first kek of the day.
Making deals is the US wheelhouse.
They will have a lot of latitude to try get those countries to screw any relationship with the Russkies.

Might be a retarded observation, but why do Germans protest by holding up signs written in English?
The krauts have a white fragile complex against having any association with their third reich past.

Russia headlines: "Germany supports their Nazi Ukraine allies with tanks"

The Leopards will likely get labeled "Panzers" and any captured can then be regaled with Nazi (and neo-nazi Ukie) flags/ribbons.
1674312789347.png


Very few Germans will be keen on those sort of optics/association.
 
no you don't, you keep making shit up
Please remind me, who are you to decide whenever people are telling truth or not? You are seem to be like a rabid dog from Baltics, always hurt and always humiliated because the entire's "belt" is Europe's cruelest joke.
So are you saying that Latin America's lowest subhuman shitholes will not take U.S. taxpayers money to sell their decrepit Soviet-made weaponry, knowing perfectly well that the Bolshevik-run Washington will never invade them?
And you, mister, need to see a shrink.

Polish people are too preoccupied getting their industry to EU industry standard. Funny thing this claim was made by pundits, not high profile politicians or EU ambassador, source is fishy (Self admitted "independent" Russian journo without secondary sources or statements from Poland or EU for that matter)

And the fact Poland is the country that other EU nations use to send armaments to Ukraine. That defies reason and the fact annexing demographic group and growing borders closer to hostile Russia would be retarded.

It's on same level of logic where Russia would take over baltics, Finland and independent eastern bloc.
Hey, we live in weird time, nigga, everything is possible. I am honest when I talk that Poles will be happy to take the piece of this two-color pie and add some of that pie to cake they have.
Ukraine seemed to be in all checks for be a successful European state, without the need to be a part of European Union. But, alas, they have tongue Unlcle Tom's anus and got AIDS.

That's an insult to the OpenAI Bot. It writes significantly more cogent posts than the ones you are referring to.

In fact, a previous post I made in this very thread was composed entirely by the OpenAI bot, in response to the following two queries:

Code:
/ask make the case that Russia is likely to succeed in fully integrating the Donbas into the Russian Federation
/ask assess the strategic goals of Vladimir Putin's Special Military Occupation and his likelihood of sucess in achieving those goals
Mother of God, an entire world is The Matrix! :O
 
That's an insult to the OpenAI Bot. It writes significantly more cogent posts than the ones you are referring to.

In fact, a previous post I made in this very thread was composed entirely by the OpenAI bot, in response to the following two queries:

Code:
/ask make the case that Russia is likely to succeed in fully integrating the Donbas into the Russian Federation
/ask assess the strategic goals of Vladimir Putin's Special Military Occupation and his likelihood of sucess in achieving those goals
I wouldn't recommend you doing so. It likes to make up shit.
 
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Only way in and out of Black sea is Turkish territory and the small strait in and out of Black sea is theirs. Only seaport capable of maintaining Russian warship is the lone port Syria which Russia leased to use. Turkey on other hand has multiple seaports inside Black Sea.
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Since Turkey is invading Syria to create a buffer zone and containment for Kurds and Syrian refugees. The buffer zone is right next to Russian leased port of Latakia. Meaning that only seaports capable of maintaining Russian warship which it stores and maintains.
Northern sea route to black sea runs through multiple NATO member states and sea ports. Route listed below Avalon River or N40
View attachment 4308480
Even route in and out of Mediterranean to Russian Safe waters cross multiple NATO member states and Russia lacks other military inside Mediterranean. There are no other safe routes for Russian warship to pass through any of these routes without risking a alarm or getting closed off in any of these routes
View attachment 4308497
Meaning if situation in Syria escalates, Russia will lose only military capable seaport in the region.
That's nice, but it wasn't answering the question he asked.
 
Only way in and out of Black sea is Turkish territory and the small strait in and out of Black sea is theirs. Only seaport capable of maintaining Russian warship is the lone port Syria which Russia leased to use. Turkey on other hand has multiple seaports inside Black Sea.
That is great, but it has nothing to do with what you said here;
Let's review the progress since last February.
Russians forces retreated to annexed territories after Ukraine received modern weaponry to replace their aged soviet era arsenal, anti armor, 600 donated tanks and HIMARS caused mass retreat to annexed territories.
Ukraine receives aid package, tanks, armor and more potent and long range bomb that can be launched from HIMARS the GLSDBs with range of 150 km ,(source) which can hit Mariupol, Crimean bridge the only one left and other targets. Picture related
View attachment 4305342
Russian forces stationed in Crimea are fresh conscripts from the region. Same Applies to Mariupol. When the military bases get targeted by GLSDBs, archer artillery systemx and regiment of tanks Ukraine can cut off only source of units, supplies and units to the region.
Ukraine controls water plants in Krakhiv which supply 80% of the water to Crimea.
I don't know if you know much about military, battle of attrition and what happens when a bridge bound region gets cut off from all supplies. Only route left is sea of Azov, supply routes for ships go through NATO choke points.

Considering the fact Putin failed his two day liberation plan. Fresh untrained conscripts can't do much to artillery fire, much less cross the body of water to territory controlled by Ukraine.
Which really displays a lack of understanding of the geography of the region.

Per your own map the bridge at Kerch is well out of range of the GLSDBs. You also seem to think the Crimean peninsula is connected to the mainland only by bridges, which isn't true at all. And you seem to think that the Sea of Azov is the only way Russia could ship things to Crimea - which ignores the half dozen ports Russia has on the eastern coast all the way down to Sochi.

But by all means reply to this by talking about ports in Syria or whatever. Maybe mention Kaliningrad or Vladivostok or Murmansk for good measure.
 
Making deals is the US wheelhouse.
They will have a lot of latitude to try get those countries to screw any relationship with the Russkies.
If you believe Cuba, subjected to US sanctions since the 1960s, a failed US invasion, a US sponsored bombing campaign that killed civilians, US trade restrictions and various punitive measures is going to respond by saying "Oh sure Doña General de Ejército, please take all the weaponry and materiel the USSR/Russia gave me and give it to Ukraine so it can be used against Russia, and I'll just wait for some kewl American stuff in the future" you are woefully ignorant of relations between the US and Cuba.

Same goes for Nicaragua, hailed as a mere Soviet front and the first domino of Communism in the Americas, the recipient of a US sponsored invasion fueled by cocaine running (which led to Iran-Contra and the US crack epidemic but that's a whole other thread), US sanctions, US trade restrictions and similar, you are unaware of the fact Nicaragua survived thanks to the USSR/Russia.

This is also true for Venezuela, which up until very recently was also excoriated and sanctioned by the US, with a ban on their petroleum, a forced coup attempt and yet another "color revolution" by the US and the usual glownigger shenanigans causing intense poverty, inflation and scarcity of goods which again has sought close ties with Russia since the Chavez presidency as the US refused to sell them weaponry and so Venezuela turned to buying from them.

As for the unnamed other countries I doubt they also want to poison their relationship with Russia. The United States simply doesn't have a good reputation in Latin America, for many reasons; Russia doesn't carry any of that baggage. They also don't have the materiel Ukraine needs so I believe this general, head of Southern Command, also thinks she can make them ditch Russia by dangling a few Bradleys or NLAWs in front of them.

She is very much mistaken.
 
Please remind me, who are you to decide whenever people are telling truth or not? You are seem to be like a rabid dog from Baltics, always hurt and always humiliated because the entire's "belt" is Europe's cruelest joke.

And you, mister, need to see a shrink.


Hey, we live in weird time, nigga, everything is possible. I am honest when I talk that Poles will be happy to take the piece of this two-color pie and add some of that pie to cake they have.
Ukraine seemed to be in all checks for be a successful European state, without the need to be a part of European Union. But, alas, they have tongue Unlcle Tom's anus and got AIDS.


Mother of God, an entire world is The Matrix! :O
yeah we live in the weird times for sure. idk abt poland invading ukraine weird tho. 🤣

while were on that subject, i heard a rumor russia once approached poland through backchannels and floated the idea of partitioning ukraine with them, this was even before all that maidan business. does anyone know if there is any truth to that?
 
yeah we live in the weird times for sure. idk abt poland invading ukraine weird tho. 🤣

while were on that subject, i heard a rumor russia once approached poland through backchannels and floated the idea of partitioning ukraine with them, this was even before all that maidan business. does anyone know if there is any truth to that?
I'm the president of pshekland and confirm this is true.
 
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Sounds like allies are getting some coldish feet.

BERLIN (AP) — Germany has become one of Ukraine's leading weapons suppliers in the 11 months since Russia's invasion, but Chancellor Olaf Scholz also has gained a reputation for hesitating to take each new step — generating impatience among allies.

Berlin’s perceived foot-dragging, most recently on the Leopard 2 battle tanks that Kyiv has long sought, is rooted at least partly in a post-World War II political culture of military caution, along with present-day worries about a possible escalation in the war.

On Friday, Germany inched closer to a decision to deliver the tanks, ordering a review of its Leopard stocks in preparation for a possible green light.

There was still no commitment, however. Defense Minister Boris Pistorius rejected the suggestion that Germany was standing in the way but said, “we have to balance all the pros and contras before we decide things like that, just like that.”

It's a pattern that has been repeated over the months as Scholz first held off pledging new, heavier equipment, then eventually agreed to do so.

Most recently, Germany said in early January that it would send 40 Marder armored personnel carriers to Ukraine — doing so in a joint announcement with the U.S., which pledged 50 Bradley armored vehicles.

That decision followed months of calls for Berlin to send the Marder and stoked pressure for it to move up another step to the Leopard tank.

“There is a discrepancy between the actual size of the commitment and weapons deliveries — it’s the second-largest European supplier — and the hesitancy with which it is done,” said Thomas Kleine-Brockhoff, a Berlin-based senior analyst with the German Marshall Fund of the United States think tank.

Scholz, an unshakably self-confident politician with a stubborn streak and little taste for bowing to public calls for action, has stuck resolutely to his approach. He has said that Germany won’t go it alone on weapons decisions and pointed to the need to avoid NATO becoming a direct party to the war with Russia.

As pressure mounted last week, he declared that he wouldn't be rushed into important security decisions by “excited comments.” And he insisted that a majority in Germany supports his government’s “calm, well-considered and careful” decision-making.

Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, on Wednesday, Scholz listed some of the equipment Germany has sent to Ukraine, declaring that it marks “a profound turning point in German foreign and security policy.”

That is, at least to some extent, true. Germany refused to provide lethal weapons before the invasion started, reflecting a political culture rooted in part in the memory of Germany's own history of aggression during the 20th century — including the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union.


“No German chancellor, of no party, wants to be seen out front in pushing a military agenda — you want to try all other options before you resort to that,” Kleine-Brockhoff said. “And therefore for domestic consumption, it is seen as a positive thing for a German chancellor not to lead on this, to be cautious, to be resistant, to have tried all other options.”

Scholz does face calls from Germany's center-right opposition and some in his three-party governing coalition to be more proactive on military aid; less so from his own center-left Social Democratic Party, which for decades was steeped in the legacy of Cold War rapprochement pursued by predecessor Willy Brandt in the early 1970s.

Scholz “decided early on that he does not want to lead militarily on Ukraine assistance,” Kleine-Brockhoff said, though “he wants to be a good ally and part of the alliance and in the middle of the pack.”

But the cautious approach “drives allies crazy” and raises questions over whether they can count on the Germans, Kleine-Brockhoff acknowledged.

Berlin kept up its caution on the Leopard tank even after Britain announced last week that it would provide Ukraine its own Challenger 2 tanks.

The hesitancy isn't just an issue between Berlin and Kyiv, since other countries would need Germany's permission to send their own stocks of German-made Leopards to Ukraine. On Wednesday, Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki said Warsaw would consider giving its tanks even without Berlin's permission.

“Consent is of secondary importance here. We will either obtain it quickly, or we will do the right thing ourselves,” Morawiecki said.

British historian Timothy Garton Ash wrote in The Guardian and other newspapers this week that “to its credit, the German government’s position on military support for Ukraine has moved a very long way since the eve of the Russian invasion.”

But he argued that the tank issue has become “a litmus test of Germany’s courage to resist (Russian President Vladimir) Putin’s nuclear blackmail, overcome its own domestic cocktail of fears and doubts, and defend a free and sovereign Ukraine,” and that Scholz should lead a “European Leopard plan.”

Whether that will eventually happen remains to be seen. Scholz's government has insisted on close coordination with the United States, a possible reflection in part of the fact that Germany — unlike Britain and France — relies on the U.S. nuclear deterrent.

On Friday, Scholz's spokesman, Steffen Hebestreit, denied reports that Germany had insisted it would only deliver Leopard tanks if the U.S. sends its own Abrams tanks. He rejected the notion that Berlin is trailing others and insisted it is taking the right approach.

“These are not easy decisions, and they need to be well-weighed," he said. "And this is about them being sustainable, that all can go along with them and stand behind them — and part of a leadership performance is keeping an alliance together.”

The U.S. has resisted providing M1 Abrams tanks to Ukraine, citing extensive and complex maintenance and logistical challenges with the high-tech vehicles. Washington believes it would be more productive to send German Leopards since many allies have them and Ukrainian troops would need less training than on the more difficult Abrams.
 
If you believe Cuba, subjected to US sanctions since the 1960s, a failed US invasion, a US sponsored bombing campaign that killed civilians, US trade restrictions and various punitive measures is going to respond by saying "Oh sure Doña General de Ejército, please take all the weaponry and materiel the USSR/Russia gave me and give it to Ukraine so it can be used against Russia, and I'll just wait for some kewl American stuff in the future" you are woefully ignorant of relations between the US and Cuba.

Same goes for Nicaragua, hailed as a mere Soviet front and the first domino of Communism in the Americas, the recipient of a US sponsored invasion fueled by cocaine running (which led to Iran-Contra and the US crack epidemic but that's a whole other thread), US sanctions, US trade restrictions and similar, you are unaware of the fact Nicaragua survived thanks to the USSR/Russia.

This is also true for Venezuela, which up until very recently was also excoriated and sanctioned by the US, with a ban on their petroleum, a forced coup attempt and yet another "color revolution" by the US and the usual glownigger shenanigans causing intense poverty, inflation and scarcity of goods which again has sought close ties with Russia since the Chavez presidency as the US refused to sell them weaponry and so Venezuela turned to buying from them.

As for the unnamed other countries I doubt they also want to poison their relationship with Russia. The United States simply doesn't have a good reputation in Latin America, for many reasons; Russia doesn't carry any of that baggage. They also don't have the materiel Ukraine needs so I believe this general, head of Southern Command, also thinks she can make them ditch Russia by dangling a few Bradleys or NLAWs in front of them.

She is very much mistaken.
Money talks ... this is one reason much of Eastern Europe fell so readily.
This is the justification of getting their foot in the door.

Yeah I agree it's unlikely they will be able to offer any weapons deal anytime soon, but flooding cheap American goods/pop culture to the masses is a way to begin to sway the masses.
 
Money talks ... this is one reason much of Eastern Europe fell so readily.
This is the justification of getting their foot in the door.

Yeah I agree it's unlikely they will be able to offer any weapons deal anytime soon, but flooding cheap American goods/pop culture to the masses is a way to begin to sway the masses.
If the embargoes on those nations were to be lifted you would see Ukrostyle chimpouts from the refugees of those countries in America so I'm pressing doubt,
 

Some liberated Ukrainian regions have mixed loyalties​

In pro-Russian areas the country will have to win back hearts and minds​

Near kupiansk, an hour’s drive from the Russian border, Andrei, a Ukrainian aid worker, was distributing sweets to children when he noticed some taking photos of him with their phones. A soldier told him they were sending them to Russian social-media channels, and possibly to hit squads. On another occasion he saw villagers refusing aid from Ukrainians. “They still miss the Russians,” Andrei says.

Months since Ukraine recaptured Kupiansk, pro-Russian sentiment in the area remains high, says the town’s acting mayor, Andrii Besedin. Russian shelling has destroyed about a third of the city; only 17,000 of its 57,000 pre-war residents remain. Officials think some still send information on Ukrainian deployments to Russian troops, less than 10km (six miles) to the east. Some Ukrainian troops say they were told not to accept food from locals, for fear of poisoning. A broadcasting tower in Belgorod, a city north of the border, pumps Russian propaganda into local homes. The Ukrainians have been unable to block the signal. “A large majority of the people here were pro-Russian” before the war, says Mr Besedin, and not much has changed.

Not really suprising, but an intresting story nonetheless.

According to the official, who spoke to reporters on condition of anonymity and not being quoted verbatim, time favors Russia in Bakhmut, given its greater artillery resources and sheer numbers of troops.
According to the senior official who spoke on condition of anonymity, Ukraine needs to refocus.

Instead of expending so many soldiers and so much ammunition on a strategically unimportant target, the United States is advising Ukraine to take those forces out for refit and join US-led training programs aimed at forming a more sophisticated and heavily armed force able to launch an offensive in the south.

The official noted that weapons for the counter-offensive were pouring into Ukraine, including several hundred armored vehicles just this week -- the kind of equipment that will be needed for a mobile offensive force.

But time is needed to train, so the Ukrainians need to consider the trade-off of holding onto Bakhmut versus preparing that broader strategic effort, the official said, adding that the Ukrainians may not have the resources to meet both challenges.

US says Ukraine can't hold Bakhmut and should retreat
 
Money talks ... this is one reason much of Eastern Europe fell so readily.
This is the justification of getting their foot in the door.

Yeah I agree it's unlikely they will be able to offer any weapons deal anytime soon, but flooding cheap American goods/pop culture to the masses is a way to begin to sway the masses.
Political leadership in these three countries absolutely know better than to fall for that bait. Uncle Sam's been trying to regime-change them for a while and they understand that very well that DC is against their interests. The only way they'd agree to this shit is either out of stupidity or active sabotage inside their own leadership.
 


So are you saying that Latin America's lowest subhuman shitholes will not take U.S. taxpayers money to sell their decrepit Soviet-made weaponry, knowing perfectly well that the Bolshevik-run Washington will never invade them?
Latin American countries are not filled with cucks, so no, they won't hand over their weapons for someone else to use. Sorry to disapoint you, but you can't get your rocks off with that.
 
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