User Panel
Originally Posted By Prime: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/203719/Volhynia_JPG-2741585.jpg https://www.pap.pl/aktualnosci/news%2C1547029%2Cpremier-morawiecki-prawda-o-rzezi-wolynskiej-musi-byc-wyjasniona-do-konca https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Massacres_of_Poles_in_Volhynia_and_Eastern_Galicia View Quote Very interesting. It was a very bloody time and I hope both sides can talk about it honestly and openly. Obviously the Poles have managed to look past this history to fight a common enemy. |
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Originally Posted By kpacman: I believe Jack and Capta are correct. This was the issue behind Vindman's allegation that he heard Trump tell Zelensky that military aid wouldn't be arriving unless Zelensky could provide evidence of Biden's corrupt behavior in Ukraine. When Vindman and others went public, military aid THEN started flowing in, as Congress had authorized. View Quote Vindman is a liar and a partisan hack. His only purpose was to damage Trump, even at the expense of Ukraine. He is a POS traitor to both countries. |
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Run-(over) of APU fighters by the M-55S tank transferred by Slovenia to Ukraine
Preparations for the spring kicking of blond asses are in full swing 🇺🇦💪 https://t.me/uniannet/92190
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“If by chance you were to ask me which ornaments I would desire above all others in my house, I would reply, without much pause for reflection, arms and books.”
Baldassare Castiglione |
Its a 3 week old video so the first 15 minutes aren't really relevant now but the rest is rather good about NAFO and memes.
Silicon Bites - NAFO Special Episode - Viewing is Non-negotiable - Brain Damaged Dogs Fight Disinfo. |
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nothing of value here
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Originally Posted By AlmightyTallest: Oof.
View Quote Oof indeed. |
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IPC-7711/7721 Certified IPC Trainer
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Originally Posted By m35ben: I'm not sure they want to do it. I think they are fully committed to a cause. That cause is everyone that doesn't do or think like them is wrong to the point of being evil. In holding that belief they will allow themselves to associate with anyone whom they think will further their cause. Its win at any cost. View Quote I hope you are wrong and at some point soon, the idiots wake up and realize "wait, I am allied with the USSR"...But I'm an optimist. |
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Originally Posted By amanbearpig: Yes push them further into a pro Russian sphere, genius. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By amanbearpig: Originally Posted By sq40: That is fucking awesome. I will Definitely use that on assholes. Yes push them further into a pro Russian sphere, genius. I've been Pro-Ukraine since the beginning of this war and Anti-Russian/Soviet my entire life and I found that meme pretty distasteful. |
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Originally Posted By ITCHY-FINGER: I hope you are wrong and at some point soon, the idiots wake up and realize "wait, I am allied with the USSR"...But I'm an optimist. View Quote |
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nothing of value here
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Originally Posted By Ryan_Ruck: You can't post her name without a picture. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/102941/Fq5F_ByWAAQfBMw_jpg-2741655.JPG View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Ryan_Ruck: Originally Posted By sq40: https://mil.in.ua/en/news/finland-will-consider-the-transfer-of-f-a-18-fighters-to-ukraine/ https://mil.in.ua/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/52489931382_73a1bf7608_o-1.jpg Finland will consider the transfer of F/A-18 fighters to Ukraine Aviation F/A-18 Hornet Fighter jet Finland Military assistance Ukraine The Finnish government, together with other allies, may consider providing Ukraine with F/A-18 Hornet fighters. The Prime Minister of the country, Sanna Marin, said that such a discussion could be raised in Finland, especially since the country was buying the newest fighter jets to replace the current ones. “I think we could discuss the Hornet fighters – whether it would be possible to offer them to Ukraine, what preparation is needed for this,” the Prime Minister said. You can't post her name without a picture. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/102941/Fq5F_ByWAAQfBMw_jpg-2741655.JPG That video of her dancing. Mmmm… FINLAND Prime Minister DANCING LIKE THERES NO TOMORROW_VIDEO_MUST SEE+SANNA MARIN at Wild DRUG PARTY |
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“America... just a nation of two hundred million used car salesmen with all the money we need to buy guns and no qualms about killing anybody else in the world who tries to make us uncomfortable.” -Hunter S. Thompson
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Originally Posted By Charging_Handle: Do the anti-Ukraine, pro-Russian element of the right not realize the damage they are doing to the republican party? The overwhelming majority of Americans vehemently disagree with them. The left disagrees. The independents disagree. And (hopefully) most on the right disagree. Yet the more extreme (such as MTG) are the squeaky wheels getting all the attention. If these fools manage to convince independent voters that the republican party is the pro-Russia party, then we can expect democrat supermajorities and a democrat president for the next 50 years. If being demoralized is what led these fools to their current twisted views, imagine how demoralized they will feel once independents and even many republicans start voting democrat. That is exactly what is about to happen if they don't drop this foolishness and distance themselves from the morons spouting it. View Quote Exactly. And the Dems are busy smearing the whole GOP as Putin Puffers…..they see a path to reclaiming thier “Birthright”, so cruelly taken from them by Newt Gingrich, of absolute control of Congress for generations to come, if not forever. |
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For the love of all things holy
stop crapping this thread with page upon page of political left/right/Trump/Putin/Tucker bickering start a "Russo-Ukrainian War Politics" thread |
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"People, ideas, and hardware...in that order!" Col John Boyd
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Originally Posted By amanbearpig: Yes push them further into a pro Russian sphere, genius. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By amanbearpig: Originally Posted By sq40: That is fucking awesome. I will Definitely use that on assholes. Yes push them further into a pro Russian sphere, genius. They want to be turncoats, they can choke on it. |
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“America... just a nation of two hundred million used car salesmen with all the money we need to buy guns and no qualms about killing anybody else in the world who tries to make us uncomfortable.” -Hunter S. Thompson
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Dt.
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“America... just a nation of two hundred million used car salesmen with all the money we need to buy guns and no qualms about killing anybody else in the world who tries to make us uncomfortable.” -Hunter S. Thompson
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Originally Posted By HIPPO: Interesting lessons learned article: Lessons From Ukraine Many Don’t Want to Hear Click To View Spoiler Lessons From Ukraine Many Don’t Want to Hear Link to sauceU.S. Soldiers, assigned to 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment, train with the Integrated Visual Augmentation System and the Enhanced Night Vision Goggles during Project Convergence 2022 (PC22) at Fort Irwin, Calif., Nov. 7, 2022. PC22 brings together members of the All-Service and Multinational force to rigorously test the effectiveness and interoperability of cutting-edge weapons and battle systems. (U.S. Army photo by SGT Thiem Huynh) There is no shortage of commentary on the lessons to be learned from the war in Ukraine. There is an understandable debate unfolding given the tremendous amount of sacrifice, human loss, and suffering. The stakes are high and learning needs to occur. War is, and has always been, the best teacher. It has been nothing short of incredible what David has been doing to Goliath on the Steppes of Ukraine. There are indeed valuable lessons to learn from all sides. Yet, for Western militaries, it is more about the lessons they may not want to hear that will prove to be the most valuable in deterring, preparing, and if necessary, fighting the next war. Much of the West has over invested in other domains (e.g., maritime, air) and niche capabilities, at the expense of combat power on land. The war in Ukraine has validated the need for decisive land combat power to win large-scale wars. These types of wars are far from extinction and finding the right balance of capabilities to wage war in appropriate fashion, remains a fundamental security challenge for Western nations. Historically, military organizations have been known to cling to capabilities long past their ability to offer decisive returns. Put simply, there is a continual sin to fight the way one might wish rather than the way one should, and equally important, one might not know exactly where they might have to fight and in which domains. Conversely, there are continuities in war that do not change, and therefore, an alignment of military concepts and associated capabilities in a dynamic environment remains key. Ukraine is a harbinger of future warfare, and the world is paying close attention. In the face of adversity came extraordinary innovation. The following five lessons bear consideration for changes that need to occur today, not tomorrow, to create advantage in future war. 1. Mass Matters. Attrition warfare is not dead. This mode of warfare emerges when neither side can achieve a clear asymmetric advantage. Standing armies are the only instrument nations can use to prevent, deter, and fight invading aggressors. Mass is required in a war of attrition. Funding and maintaining land power may seem like an expensive insurance policy but doing the opposite is to risk state collapse. Wars can only be won on the ground where nations exist, and people live. Land power is an indispensable capability, even in the Pacific. A lack of appreciation for emerging threats over time has eroded land capabilities in the West. Power withers when it proves frail, and a perceived weakness invites aggression. Key capabilities such as armor, artillery, and engineers cannot be replaced by cyber, space, or any other information-related capabilities. The Ukraine conflict proved they were less decisive than expected. 2. Maritime Operations Are Vulnerable. Expensive naval forces are threatened by inexpensive weaponry. Ukrainian attacks have minimized the impact of the Russian Black Sea fleet and little by little the Russian Navy drifted further back toward the mainland. Naval experts proclaim this is “an unmistakable warning — that today’s run-of-the-mill missiles and commercial data systems can knock even the world’s top warships out of a fight.” China seeks this competitive advantage in the Pacific with “carrier killer” missiles. 3. Deep Attacks by Themselves Are Ineffective. There is a desire to employ rotary attack aircraft – and to some extent, fixed-wing aircraft - deep behind enemy lines for strategic effect. This tactic is practiced routinely in exercises, but it has been proven futile in past wars. In Ukraine, soldiers operating short range anti-aircraft defensive equipment and using small arms fire, have been taking out multi-million-dollar aircraft. Control of the air remains contested and this will be a continual feature of future conflict. Neither side was able to use aviation in a game-changing role. Russian attack regiments had to change their tactics and use aircraft in a combat support role. Likewise, the Ukrainians had to do the same to preserve combat power and support ground maneuver forces. Rather than pursuing deep attacks, the West would benefit more from the development of counter-unmanned aerial systems (UAS) tactics and technologies. Additionally, decades of experience from combat and modern gaming finds “the output of an entire joint force is amplified when synergistic integration across components increases.” Joint capabilities must work together, and in an allied context, strategic lethality can be achieved with the improved integration and interoperability of battle networks. 4. Airborne and Amphibious Warfare Has Been Minimized. These modes of warfare have their place in specialized units but the conduct of these methods at a large-scale, using thousands of soldiers and marines, is resource intensive, high risk, and perhaps even anachronistic. The Russian’s hesitance to execute an amphibious operation is for good reason. The potential gain from such operations is not worth the cost. This painful lesson was learned by Russia’s elite airborne forces, the VDV, at Hostomel airport last year. Their forces were decimated. It might not be time to write an obituary for these types of operations but their use on a large-scale in peer warfighting is limited with contested air space and ubiquitous stand-off weaponry. It might be worth Western nations evaluating their efficacy and determining whether it is time to repurpose these types of units for a role that has increased survivability and lethality. This leads to the next lesson. 5. Artificial Intelligence Has Arrived. It has been said that advanced algorithmic warfare systems equate to having a nuclear weapon. Ukrainian forces have compressed their “kill chains,” and used software engineers on the frontlines to calibrate algorithms for devastating effect. A.I. is not tomorrow’s problem. This enabling technology is being used today and will be more and more prevalent tomorrow. Western nations will need to induce a greater rate of digital transformation to make use of their data and build battle-winning algorithms. U.S. Army Futures Command is forward thinking in this space. The commander, General Rainey, proposes “formation-based lethality.” The future is about integration. In a past RCD article on Project Convergence, we proposed this could be accelerated through the use of experimental units. The Army could profit from emulating past examples like the 11th Air Assault Division (Test) which gave birth to air assault operations. Could a present day experimental unit do the same with manned and unmanned systems teaming, leveraging A.I.? And by possibly adding software engineers to unit formations, could this spark greater collaboration, integration, and testing of concepts? These are the questions to ponder when examining lessons from Ukraine. Conclusion The West can ignore these lessons at their own peril or use them to transform existing capabilities into future war-winning advantages. The danger of dominant military organizations is that, short of lessons learned in the unforgiving crucible of combat, they tend to fall back on comfortable assumptions and ignore any signals of change that contradict their most-cherished strategic beliefs. We can do worse than to listen and learn from the incredible innovation happening in the Ukraine. Matthew Van Wagenen is a major general in the U.S. Army currently serving as the Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations (DCOS OPS) in the NATO Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE). Arnel P. David is a colonel in the U.S. Army completing a PhD at King’s College London. He is the cofounder of Fight Club International. The views and opinions expressed are those of the authors and do not reflect any entity or organization of the U.S. Government or NATO. View Quote They're not wrong. I would add that a few quibbles (such as it tends to minimize Airborne's capability to rapidly reinforce isolated formations, which is something that Airborne is really good at but the the US seldom trains for) which can rapidly increase "mass" of ground forces provided you can achieve local air superiority. |
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Blameless, the tempest will be just that
So try as you may, feeble, your attempt to atone Your words to erase all the damage cannot A tempest must be just that |
Originally Posted By Charging_Handle: Do the anti-Ukraine, pro-Russian element of the right not realize the damage they are doing to the republican party? The overwhelming majority of Americans vehemently disagree with them. The left disagrees. The independents disagree. And (hopefully) most on the right disagree. Yet the more extreme (such as MTG) are the squeaky wheels getting all the attention. If these fools manage to convince independent voters that the republican party is the pro-Russia party, then we can expect democrat supermajorities and a democrat president for the next 50 years. If being demoralized is what led these fools to their current twisted views, imagine how demoralized they will feel once independents and even many republicans start voting democrat. That is exactly what is about to happen if they don't drop this foolishness and distance themselves from the morons spouting it. View Quote They will just explain to you why you are wrong and why they are better americans/conservatives than you are. It's like a religion for them. |
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SIC SEMPER TYRANNIS
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“America... just a nation of two hundred million used car salesmen with all the money we need to buy guns and no qualms about killing anybody else in the world who tries to make us uncomfortable.” -Hunter S. Thompson
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Originally Posted By Snerticus: Tears for Ukraine's youngest hero dubbed 'Da Vinci': President Zelensky and Finnish PM Sanna Marin join mourners grieving for commander, 27, who led feared unit called The Wolves in battle for Bakhmut Link https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2023/03/11/10/68580591-11847603-image-a-12_1678530984390.jpg https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2023/03/11/10/68580835-11847603-image-a-19_1678531342891.jpg Sad. I wonder if Kevin McCarthy regrets his decision. Pictures depict two Leaders honoring a fallen Hero. View Quote He’ll regret it when the Democrat commercials come out blasting him as a Putin Puffer for it. I have no idea what his true views on Ukraine are, but his fear of the Grifter caucus definitely outweighs any support he feels for Ukraine. He is a weakling….his refusal to man up and go over there just proves what I have always suspected. |
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Originally Posted By Saltwater-Hillbilly: They're not wrong. I would add that a few quibbles (such as it tends to minimize Airborne's capability to rapidly reinforce isolated formations, which is something that Airborne is really good for at but the the US seldom trains for) which can rapidly increase "mass" of ground forces provided you can achieve local air superiority. View Quote This war is a real eye opener for what happens when no one can achieve total air superiority. Our leaders seem to bank on our ability to achieve this vs any foe. Not exactly a wise thing for someone who controls the lives and futures of millions. |
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World ain't what it seems, is it Gunny?
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Originally Posted By amanbearpig: Apparently a bunch of people fell victim to the Russia-gate propaganda. Clearly the last few years show if you insult conservatives and call them 'ists' like racist, fascist, now apparently communist, etc and show them cringe lefty memes they will immediately change their mind and side with you. Genius. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By amanbearpig: Originally Posted By ricko1: It's shows exactly how effective divide and conquer propaganda has been at not only at splitting the right from theft but also the right from the right. Apparently a bunch of people fell victim to the Russia-gate propaganda. Clearly the last few years show if you insult conservatives and call them 'ists' like racist, fascist, now apparently communist, etc and show them cringe lefty memes they will immediately change their mind and side with you. Genius. Russia-gate lies as it relates to trump years ago has nothing to do with anything. It’s used as a crutch to link people that are pro-Ukrainian/resistance against Russia as “leftists”. The MAGA link to anti-Ukrainian/Anti-resistance propaganda is overt. Russia never attempted to get MAGA to say “we support Russia” (although contrarians in it do for the sake of being “against” leftists/“RINOS”). The entire point of the Russian Propaganda aimed at MAGA was for them to say “Fuck Ukraine” when Ukraine was getting brutAlized by their neighbor. Russia realized (correctly) that that was much more acceptable to get them latched on to than being “pro Russian”….but by doing so, and becoming indifferent to an innocent countries population being brutalized, they are helping Russia. (ETA - done with political rant) |
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The British mercenary Aslin, who was "sentenced" to death in the DPR and then released, is again fighting in the Armed Forces of Ukraine, now in the direction of Bakhmut.
And all why? Because he knows that in the Russian Federation there are terpils who, if something happens, will send him back again, not forgetting to give him a new iPhone and feed him tiramisu. Here is your humanity. He's killing our soldiers again. https://t.me/Separ13_13/9229 |
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“If by chance you were to ask me which ornaments I would desire above all others in my house, I would reply, without much pause for reflection, arms and books.”
Baldassare Castiglione |
Originally Posted By bc42: In a similar vein, I received this as a gift today. https://freeimage.host/i/HXYLX3B Fuck…am I getting so old now I can’t figure out why my img link won’t work View Quote Attached File |
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IPC-7711/7721 Certified IPC Trainer
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Originally Posted By lorazepam: This war is a real eye opener for what happens when no one can achieve total air superiority. Our leaders seem to bank on our ability to achieve this vs any foe. Not exactly a wise thing for someone who controls the lives and futures of millions. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By lorazepam: Originally Posted By Saltwater-Hillbilly: They're not wrong. I would add that a few quibbles (such as it tends to minimize Airborne's capability to rapidly reinforce isolated formations, which is something that Airborne is really good for at but the the US seldom trains for) which can rapidly increase "mass" of ground forces provided you can achieve local air superiority. This war is a real eye opener for what happens when no one can achieve total air superiority. Our leaders seem to bank on our ability to achieve this vs any foe. Not exactly a wise thing for someone who controls the lives and futures of millions. Because it is inconvenient. From a "guns/butter" perspective, no one writing, approving, or executing the budgetary process wants to hear the truth, that in the drone vs manned aircraft vs air defense argument, the answer to "which capability we need to prioritize" is "All of the above", or that much of the new capabilities we are seeing do not "replace" or supersede existing capabilities but instead create an entirely new dimension of the battlefield that needs to be addressed. War is expensive and is going to get a whole lot pricier! |
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Originally Posted By Prime: From his wife's Twitter https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/203719/DaVinci_JPG-2741740.jpg View Quote Heartbreaking. There was also a pic where the military CIC was kneeling before the wife at the funeral. I nearly lost it. |
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IPC-7711/7721 Certified IPC Trainer
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Originally Posted By Saltwater-Hillbilly: They're not wrong. I would add that a few quibbles (such as it tends to minimize Airborne's capability to rapidly reinforce isolated formations, which is something that Airborne is really good at but the the US seldom trains for) which can rapidly increase "mass" of ground forces provided you can achieve local air superiority. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Saltwater-Hillbilly: Originally Posted By HIPPO: Interesting lessons learned article: Lessons From Ukraine Many Don’t Want to Hear Click To View Spoiler Lessons From Ukraine Many Don’t Want to Hear Link to sauceU.S. Soldiers, assigned to 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment, train with the Integrated Visual Augmentation System and the Enhanced Night Vision Goggles during Project Convergence 2022 (PC22) at Fort Irwin, Calif., Nov. 7, 2022. PC22 brings together members of the All-Service and Multinational force to rigorously test the effectiveness and interoperability of cutting-edge weapons and battle systems. (U.S. Army photo by SGT Thiem Huynh) There is no shortage of commentary on the lessons to be learned from the war in Ukraine. There is an understandable debate unfolding given the tremendous amount of sacrifice, human loss, and suffering. The stakes are high and learning needs to occur. War is, and has always been, the best teacher. It has been nothing short of incredible what David has been doing to Goliath on the Steppes of Ukraine. There are indeed valuable lessons to learn from all sides. Yet, for Western militaries, it is more about the lessons they may not want to hear that will prove to be the most valuable in deterring, preparing, and if necessary, fighting the next war. Much of the West has over invested in other domains (e.g., maritime, air) and niche capabilities, at the expense of combat power on land. The war in Ukraine has validated the need for decisive land combat power to win large-scale wars. These types of wars are far from extinction and finding the right balance of capabilities to wage war in appropriate fashion, remains a fundamental security challenge for Western nations. Historically, military organizations have been known to cling to capabilities long past their ability to offer decisive returns. Put simply, there is a continual sin to fight the way one might wish rather than the way one should, and equally important, one might not know exactly where they might have to fight and in which domains. Conversely, there are continuities in war that do not change, and therefore, an alignment of military concepts and associated capabilities in a dynamic environment remains key. Ukraine is a harbinger of future warfare, and the world is paying close attention. In the face of adversity came extraordinary innovation. The following five lessons bear consideration for changes that need to occur today, not tomorrow, to create advantage in future war. 1. Mass Matters. Attrition warfare is not dead. This mode of warfare emerges when neither side can achieve a clear asymmetric advantage. Standing armies are the only instrument nations can use to prevent, deter, and fight invading aggressors. Mass is required in a war of attrition. Funding and maintaining land power may seem like an expensive insurance policy but doing the opposite is to risk state collapse. Wars can only be won on the ground where nations exist, and people live. Land power is an indispensable capability, even in the Pacific. A lack of appreciation for emerging threats over time has eroded land capabilities in the West. Power withers when it proves frail, and a perceived weakness invites aggression. Key capabilities such as armor, artillery, and engineers cannot be replaced by cyber, space, or any other information-related capabilities. The Ukraine conflict proved they were less decisive than expected. 2. Maritime Operations Are Vulnerable. Expensive naval forces are threatened by inexpensive weaponry. Ukrainian attacks have minimized the impact of the Russian Black Sea fleet and little by little the Russian Navy drifted further back toward the mainland. Naval experts proclaim this is “an unmistakable warning — that today’s run-of-the-mill missiles and commercial data systems can knock even the world’s top warships out of a fight.” China seeks this competitive advantage in the Pacific with “carrier killer” missiles. 3. Deep Attacks by Themselves Are Ineffective. There is a desire to employ rotary attack aircraft – and to some extent, fixed-wing aircraft - deep behind enemy lines for strategic effect. This tactic is practiced routinely in exercises, but it has been proven futile in past wars. In Ukraine, soldiers operating short range anti-aircraft defensive equipment and using small arms fire, have been taking out multi-million-dollar aircraft. Control of the air remains contested and this will be a continual feature of future conflict. Neither side was able to use aviation in a game-changing role. Russian attack regiments had to change their tactics and use aircraft in a combat support role. Likewise, the Ukrainians had to do the same to preserve combat power and support ground maneuver forces. Rather than pursuing deep attacks, the West would benefit more from the development of counter-unmanned aerial systems (UAS) tactics and technologies. Additionally, decades of experience from combat and modern gaming finds “the output of an entire joint force is amplified when synergistic integration across components increases.” Joint capabilities must work together, and in an allied context, strategic lethality can be achieved with the improved integration and interoperability of battle networks. 4. Airborne and Amphibious Warfare Has Been Minimized. These modes of warfare have their place in specialized units but the conduct of these methods at a large-scale, using thousands of soldiers and marines, is resource intensive, high risk, and perhaps even anachronistic. The Russian’s hesitance to execute an amphibious operation is for good reason. The potential gain from such operations is not worth the cost. This painful lesson was learned by Russia’s elite airborne forces, the VDV, at Hostomel airport last year. Their forces were decimated. It might not be time to write an obituary for these types of operations but their use on a large-scale in peer warfighting is limited with contested air space and ubiquitous stand-off weaponry. It might be worth Western nations evaluating their efficacy and determining whether it is time to repurpose these types of units for a role that has increased survivability and lethality. This leads to the next lesson. 5. Artificial Intelligence Has Arrived. It has been said that advanced algorithmic warfare systems equate to having a nuclear weapon. Ukrainian forces have compressed their “kill chains,” and used software engineers on the frontlines to calibrate algorithms for devastating effect. A.I. is not tomorrow’s problem. This enabling technology is being used today and will be more and more prevalent tomorrow. Western nations will need to induce a greater rate of digital transformation to make use of their data and build battle-winning algorithms. U.S. Army Futures Command is forward thinking in this space. The commander, General Rainey, proposes “formation-based lethality.” The future is about integration. In a past RCD article on Project Convergence, we proposed this could be accelerated through the use of experimental units. The Army could profit from emulating past examples like the 11th Air Assault Division (Test) which gave birth to air assault operations. Could a present day experimental unit do the same with manned and unmanned systems teaming, leveraging A.I.? And by possibly adding software engineers to unit formations, could this spark greater collaboration, integration, and testing of concepts? These are the questions to ponder when examining lessons from Ukraine. Conclusion The West can ignore these lessons at their own peril or use them to transform existing capabilities into future war-winning advantages. The danger of dominant military organizations is that, short of lessons learned in the unforgiving crucible of combat, they tend to fall back on comfortable assumptions and ignore any signals of change that contradict their most-cherished strategic beliefs. We can do worse than to listen and learn from the incredible innovation happening in the Ukraine. Matthew Van Wagenen is a major general in the U.S. Army currently serving as the Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations (DCOS OPS) in the NATO Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe (SHAPE). Arnel P. David is a colonel in the U.S. Army completing a PhD at King’s College London. He is the cofounder of Fight Club International. The views and opinions expressed are those of the authors and do not reflect any entity or organization of the U.S. Government or NATO. They're not wrong. I would add that a few quibbles (such as it tends to minimize Airborne's capability to rapidly reinforce isolated formations, which is something that Airborne is really good at but the the US seldom trains for) which can rapidly increase "mass" of ground forces provided you can achieve local air superiority. Short version of the change I think the Army has to make to survive the coming budget crunch and be ready: cut from 11 Abn battalions to 5, which would all be Rangers. Invest massively in new equipment that reduces crew requirements—autoloading tanks, SPHs and self propelled mortars. Slash the institutional Army by abandoning the idea that we will ever have a draft, move forces to a strategic and operational reserve and use a smaller active Army (but provide staff officers and higher level commanders for the reserve force from active). It would be a less ready Army but once mobilized, more powerful than we have today and at a substantially reduced cost. One of the more controversial ideas I have for reducing the institutional Army is to end ROTC. I hate the thought of ending the civil-military connection but I would largely make up for it by turning West Point into Sandhurst. Officer candidates would complete civilian education, apply to OCS, be selected, then go for 12 months at West Point. All line officers active and reserve would. |
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“If by chance you were to ask me which ornaments I would desire above all others in my house, I would reply, without much pause for reflection, arms and books.”
Baldassare Castiglione |
"We will always remember. We will always be proud. We will always be prepared so we may always be free." Ronald Reagan 1984
"Mitch the democrat bitch" "democrat voter fraud works and it makes Republicans look stupid" |
“If by chance you were to ask me which ornaments I would desire above all others in my house, I would reply, without much pause for reflection, arms and books.”
Baldassare Castiglione |
Originally Posted By Prime: The British mercenary Aslin, who was "sentenced" to death in the DPR and then released, is again fighting in the Armed Forces of Ukraine, now in the direction of Bakhmut. And all why? Because he knows that in the Russian Federation there are terpils who, if something happens, will send him back again, not forgetting to give him a new iPhone and feed him tiramisu. Here is your humanity. He's killing our soldiers again. https://t.me/Separ13_13/9229 https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FQZ0XtQUYAQK-n_?format=jpg&name=4096x4096 View Quote He is not back in Ukraine
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"Who is Vladimir Putin? | Al Jazeera - English" View Quote Who is Vladimir Putin? | Start Here |
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"I'd rather wear heavy equipment than wear the light ring of a slave around my neck."
quote: Cossack soldier of the Ukrainian Armed Forces - 2022 "Energy and persistence conquer all things." quote: Benjamin Franklin |
Originally Posted By Prime: Russian forces are located 1.2 km from the administrative center of Artemovsk, said Yevgeny Prigozhin
Prigozhin announces he's running for President in 2024. Of Ukraine.
https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/203719/DaIsGood_JPG-2741448.jpg https://ria.ru/20230311/miny-1857205531.html https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/203719/Good_JPG-2741451.jpg View Quote |
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"We will always remember. We will always be proud. We will always be prepared so we may always be free." Ronald Reagan 1984
"Mitch the democrat bitch" "democrat voter fraud works and it makes Republicans look stupid" |
Originally Posted By sq40: https://mil.in.ua/en/news/finland-will-consider-the-transfer-of-f-a-18-fighters-to-ukraine/ https://mil.in.ua/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/52489931382_73a1bf7608_o-1.jpg Finland will consider the transfer of F/A-18 fighters to Ukraine Aviation F/A-18 Hornet Fighter jet Finland Military assistance Ukraine The Finnish government, together with other allies, may consider providing Ukraine with F/A-18 Hornet fighters. The Prime Minister of the country, Sanna Marin, said that such a discussion could be raised in Finland, especially since the country was buying the newest fighter jets to replace the current ones. “I think we could discuss the Hornet fighters – whether it would be possible to offer them to Ukraine, what preparation is needed for this,” the Prime Minister said. View Quote Well that sure is interesting. The Fins sure do want to finish of Russia. |
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Only God will judge me.
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Originally Posted By THOT_Vaccine:
View Quote Jeezes. I wonder how many if any of the original VDV are still alive. |
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Originally Posted By lorazepam: They look like they are 16 or 17 to me. But I am old, and cannot judge ages so well anymore. View Quote I didn’t even look at the people, but I can’t think of a better way to introduce debris into a normally reliable rifle than to store full magazines in a pile of loose dirt. |
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I've been battling some internal demons this week, so far I'm 0 for 6.
كافر. |
"Drone targets Russians who were carrying wounded by boat --- They tried to escape by jumping into the water" View Quote Drone targets Russians who were carrying wounded by boat -they tried to escape by jumping into water |
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"I'd rather wear heavy equipment than wear the light ring of a slave around my neck."
quote: Cossack soldier of the Ukrainian Armed Forces - 2022 "Energy and persistence conquer all things." quote: Benjamin Franklin |
nothing of value here
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Originally Posted By Brok3n: Jeezes. I wonder how many if any of the original VDV are still alive. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Brok3n: Originally Posted By THOT_Vaccine:
Jeezes. I wonder how many if any of the original VDV are still alive. Most pre-war Russian units have likely been reconstituted multiple times at this point due to casualties. I recently saw videos of VDV near Kreminna, and their performance was basically indistinguishable from mobiks, TDF, etc. I think between the initial failed push to Kyiv, defending the right bank of the Dnipro around Kherson, and fighting around Kreminna/Savatove, the pre-war VDV has basically ceased to exist. |
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All international laws are invalid, meaningless attempts to constrict American power.
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Different Russian group hunted to extinction at night.
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It's not stupid, it's advanced!!
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Originally Posted By HIPPO: He is not back in Ukraine
View Quote Good. Not sure where he got this rumor from, but it’s part of a larger theme from him, one that honestly reminds me of things heard in GD. Turkey has increased the supply of weapons to Kyiv! Brilliantly! And the Ministry of Emergency Situations sent cuckolds there, and the Turks were pitied. Here is the answer to all of you, here is your humanity spilling sideways. And I said that it was impossible to feel sorry for them, that no rescuers needed to be sent there, but everyone sang the same song: "we are not like that." Well get it! They will only repay your kindness with evil. And the grain deal will be extended ... https://t.me/Separ13_13/9287 The enemy cannot be pitied, you need to spoil his life in every possible way, kill, blow up, create sabotage, poison, do everything to make them smaller, not take them prisoner. But the traitors play "deals", "giveaways", only they pay for it with the lives of ordinary guys, and the relatives of these traitors at this time are sitting in Dubai, riding yachts... Is this fair? https://t.me/Separ13_13/9288 Different channel claims he was seem “on video”. If history teaches us anything, it is only that it teaches no one anything. Exchanged British mercenary John Cuxucker Aiden Aslin has been identified on video as commanding a troop of crests. But he swore that he revised his attitude and would work as a military commissar. Did the gentlemen fuck us? This has never happened before... A platoon of Ukrainian soldiers in Bakhmut is commanded by an exchanged Briton Aslin Aslin is seen at the end of a video posted online showing Ukrainian troops carrying a wounded man from the front line to the trenches. On June 6, 2022, a court in the DPR sentenced the captive Aiden Aslin to death. And in September, Aslin, along with other captured foreigners, was exchanged for Russian prisoners of war and Viktor Medvedchuk. The Telegraph notes that "a key role" in the release of Pinner and Aslin was played by Roman Abramovich, who personally took them to Saudi Arabia aboard his plane. Along the way, he fed them steaks and tiramisu, talked about football, and gave them an iPhone. And already in early November 2022, Aslin and his colleague Sean Pinner returned to Ukraine. He promised not to take up arms, but to work as a war correspondent, making videos for his YouTube channel. Source: link
Seems to be all based on this image. |
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“If by chance you were to ask me which ornaments I would desire above all others in my house, I would reply, without much pause for reflection, arms and books.”
Baldassare Castiglione |
3 hrs ago.
11 min ago.
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It's not stupid, it's advanced!!
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Originally Posted By Ryan_Scott: Short version of the change I think the Army has to make to survive the coming budget crunch and be ready: cut from 11 Abn battalions to 5, which would all be Rangers. Invest massively in new equipment that reduces crew requirements—autoloading tanks, SPHs and self propelled mortars. Slash the institutional Army by abandoning the idea that we will ever have a draft, move forces to a strategic and operational reserve and use a smaller active Army (but provide staff officers and higher level commanders for the reserve force from active). It would be a less ready Army but once mobilized, more powerful than we have today and at a substantially reduced cost. One of the more controversial ideas I have for reducing the institutional Army is to end ROTC. I hate the thought of ending the civil-military connection but I would largely make up for it by turning West Point into Sandhurst. Officer candidates would complete civilian education, apply to OCS, be selected, then go for 12 months at West Point. All line officers active and reserve would. View Quote Airborne forces are economical. 2000 jumpers x minimum of 4 jumps per year, divided by 100 jumpers per C-17, 90 minutes flight time. 23k$ per flight hour. It’s the cost of less then one half of one tank. To train a light brigade as airborne, per year. Parachutes are paid for. Compared to the amphibious option, it’s much cheaper to maintain and concentrates capabilities and focus. |
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Originally Posted By Saltwater-Hillbilly: Because it is inconvenient. From a "guns/butter" perspective, no one writing, approving, or executing the budgetary process wants to hear the truth, that in the drone vs manned aircraft vs air defense argument, the answer to "which capability we need to prioritize" is "All of the above", or that much of the new capabilities we are seeing do not "replace" or supersede existing capabilities but instead create an entirely new dimension of the battlefield that needs to be addressed. War is expensive and is going to get a whole lot pricier! View Quote I look forward to the day that we create a bird sized drone that can travel 200km with a dragon fly sized drone payload. Takes it to a destination and drops it off. It would leave the area and self destruct. The payload can "hibernate" and wake up via satellite up to 3 months, and be used to take out a single target at say, a public event. That could cause some panic. |
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World ain't what it seems, is it Gunny?
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What have the Romans ever done for us?
TN, USA
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Originally Posted By AlmightyTallest: Different Russian group hunted to extinction at night.
View Quote Savage AF. |
Panem et Circenses
I have also learned from experience that the greater part of our happiness or misery depends upon our dispositions, and not upon our circumstances. |
World ain't what it seems, is it Gunny?
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Originally Posted By kncook: I’m not sure Trump/MAGA is actually conservative anymore. They admit it. MAGA is a values system that is separate from conservatism. It’s its own thing and many will GLADLY tell you that and call you a RINO if your beliefs do t align with MAGA. This isn’t something that people outside of MAGA came up with. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By kncook: Originally Posted By amanbearpig: Originally Posted By Auto5guy: This will rustle some jimmies. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Fq4dcd8aQAA4uM4?format=jpg&name=medium I never thought I'd see the day when ANYBODY right of center would want to be associated with russia Lol attacking Trump and conservatives isn't going to get them to side with you I’m not sure Trump/MAGA is actually conservative anymore. They admit it. MAGA is a values system that is separate from conservatism. It’s its own thing and many will GLADLY tell you that and call you a RINO if your beliefs do t align with MAGA. This isn’t something that people outside of MAGA came up with. Rush was right. |
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DeSantis 2024
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A take on Bakhmut. See also recent ISW assessments on Bakhmut. |
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Originally Posted By lorazepam: I look forward to the day that we create a bird sized drone that can travel 200km with a dragon fly sized drone payload. Takes it to a destination and drops it off. It would leave the area and self destruct. The payload can "hibernate" and wake up via satellite up to 3 months, and be used to take out a single target at say, a public event. That could cause some panic. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By lorazepam: Originally Posted By Saltwater-Hillbilly: Because it is inconvenient. From a "guns/butter" perspective, no one writing, approving, or executing the budgetary process wants to hear the truth, that in the drone vs manned aircraft vs air defense argument, the answer to "which capability we need to prioritize" is "All of the above", or that much of the new capabilities we are seeing do not "replace" or supersede existing capabilities but instead create an entirely new dimension of the battlefield that needs to be addressed. War is expensive and is going to get a whole lot pricier! I look forward to the day that we create a bird sized drone that can travel 200km with a dragon fly sized drone payload. Takes it to a destination and drops it off. It would leave the area and self destruct. The payload can "hibernate" and wake up via satellite up to 3 months, and be used to take out a single target at say, a public event. That could cause some panic. I'm wondering when the first terror attack with drones will happen. These fuckers are taking notes. |
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„From a place you will not see, comes a sound you will not hear.“
Thanks for the membership @ toaster |
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