SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Brumar89 who wrote (1372570)8/31/2022 4:34:59 PM
From: Bonefish  Respond to of 1583503
 

Trump knew



To: Brumar89 who wrote (1372570)8/31/2022 6:21:21 PM
From: Tenchusatsu  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1583503
 
Brumar,
And Brandon SHOULDN'T make that commitment, nor should any American President. Its their war to wage, not ours.
Oh bullshit. It's now OUR proxy war.

Thanks to OUR weapons, Zelensky is making his big push.

Thanks to OUR lend-lease program and OUR $40B in aid (and growing), Zelensky is able to promise Crimea and the rest of Ukraine to his people.

We're training them. We're adapting their MiG-29 fighter jets with American HARMs. We're providing intelligence so that Ukraine can his RuZZian ammo depots with pinpoint accuracy.

And it's not just Ukraine, either. We are also expanding NATO. Sweden and Finland are about to join. No one other than the GQP opposes that. Remember when NATO expansionism was opposed because it might incite RuZZia? That's now a moot point.

We are in it to win it not just because we give a Brandon about the Ukrainians.

We are in it to win it because it's going to benefit US and the rest of the free world, including NATO but also our Asian allies like Taiwan, Korea, and Japan.

Don't tell me you're on the side of Zelensky, then back out by saying, "It's their war to wage, not ours."

That's pure chickenhawk chickenshit.

Tenchusatsu



To: Brumar89 who wrote (1372570)8/31/2022 6:51:16 PM
From: Tenchusatsu  Respond to of 1583503
 
In case you still harbor any illusions over RuZZia's ability to continue PooTin's war of choice ...

Key takeaways:
  • "They have a lot of equipment but few men." That is the exact reverse of what I expected.
  • Despite the cutting off of supply routes, the RuZZians in the Kherson region are still very well-equipped and can put up a fight, despite morale issues.
  • Morale is extremely high among the Ukrainian soldiers. God bless them.
  • However, they're all fighting in hopes to bring a quicker end to the war. What that looks like is anyone's guess.

No way this could have been possible without American assistance.

On the other hand, no way PooTin is going to sweat this setback. Another few tens of thousands of dead RuZZians? No problem, he says. I have reserves.

*******

Ukrainian Soldiers Say They Are Advancing in the South, but at a Cost - WSJ

Ukrainian army units pushing toward Kherson in the south are retaking ground held for months by Russia’s invading troops amid extremely fierce fighting, according to Ukrainian soldiers taking part in the offensive.

Russian soldiers seemed well equipped and were putting up stiff resistance, the Ukrainians said.

“They’re throwing everything against us,” said a 22-year-old Ukrainian soldier who said Russians were fighting with artillery, tanks, helicopters and mortars. “They have a lot of equipment but few men.”

Interviews with eight soldiers who took part in fighting—and were being treated for injuries at a hospital behind the front lines—offered the most detailed on-the-ground picture yet from an offensive that Ukraine hopes will help it seize the initiative in the conflict and show its Western backers, and its own people, that its military can take on Moscow’s army and win.

Ukrainian officials are saying little publicly about the offensive, citing the need for secrecy in military operations.

The Pentagon’s assessment, given at a briefing by its spokesman Wednesday, appeared to support the soldiers’ cautious optimism.

“We are aware of Ukrainian military operations that have made some forward movement, and in some cases in the Kherson region we are aware in some cases of Russian units falling back,” Air Force Brig. Gen. Patrick Ryder told reporters.

The soldiers and medics at a hospital in southern Ukraine agreed to speak on condition that their identities and location wouldn’t be revealed. All took part in the offensive that began Monday with the aim of seizing the initiative in the war.

The attacks Monday at several points along the front lines came after weeks of softening-up Russian forces with long-range rocket attacks.

Ukraine’s long-awaited thrust in the south is advancing into territory that the Russians occupied in the early days of their invasion, according to soldiers who took part in fighting. But it’s a hard slog against a well-equipped enemy, they said.

Ivan, a 32-year-old private, said his unit’s task was simple: “Go in, f— them up, retake what’s ours.”

He said the offensive started well for his unit, which seized a village from the Russians in the early hours of fighting.

But that same day, Monday, he wound up in hospital with a concussion after a teammate fired a rocket launcher a few steps from where he stood.

“The guys are in a fighting mood,” said Ivan, a former construction worker from southwest Ukraine. “They’re moving forward.”

Some Russian troops are fleeing their positions, he said, abandoning equipment and booby-trapping the bodies of dead comrades they leave behind. Ivan showed footage that he said was sent to him by comrades on the front line, appearing to show dead Russian soldiers on the outskirts of a village that he said was seized by Ukrainian forces on Tuesday.

Ivan said Ukrainian forces had thrust toward Kherson, the regional capital, and were trying to clear villages along the way.

Russian military bloggers who are close to the country’s defense ministry have noted another Ukrainian advance, across the Inhulets River to the northeast of Kherson. The Russian Defense Ministry has described Ukraine’s offensive as a failure.

“We’re advancing in some areas and being battered in others,” said Pavlo, a 22-year-old soldier who was concussed in a battle on Tuesday and says he now hears a sound akin to a broken television in his head.

The head of the intensive-care unit where some of the soldiers were being treated said the military warned him of the offensive a week in advance, spurring hopes of imminent victories.

“But when they started bringing in such a large number of wounded, then, honestly, I felt sorry for them and I started wondering if this was worth doing at such a cost,” said the doctor. “I don’t know. There’s no right answer here.”

Ukrainian officials and military analysts have said that Ukrainian losses, even if the offensive is successful, could be high as they are assaulting an entrenched enemy with significant firepower that can quickly chew up troops.

At the intensive-care unit, six servicemen in comas occupied beds in two adjoining wards separated by a thin wall. In one, doctors were fighting to save the life of a 47-year-old armor crewman badly injured when his tank was hit Tuesday, his chest heaving as surgeons performed a tracheotomy in a bid to restore his breathing.

One Ukrainian soldier lay in his bed clutching the Russian bullet that had just been plucked from his body after traveling through his left shoulder and exiting through his pelvis. He was shot as he lay on the ground seeking cover from a Russian attack in a village.

“We had a feeling that we’d be going into battle, that we were planning something big,” the 30-year-old soldier, Petro, said of the days that preceded the offensive as he struggled to speak under the influence of heavy anesthesia. “We all hope the war ends as soon as possible.

The doctor said he spends some nights on a small couch in his office after more than half his staff stopped coming to work following a Russian rocket attack on the hospital in August. He said he felt on the verge of a breakdown as he has dealt with more soldiers than at any time since the first weeks of the war.

Faced with the influx, doctors are fighting to save the lives of those in critical condition before sending them on to better-equipped hospitals once they are stable.

The head of the intensive-care unit said that on Monday he took in a 27-year-old soldier with a broken leg, concussion, torn lung and a ruptured liver, stomach, colon and bowel. “Head, chest, limbs, stomach, concussions, they come with all kinds of injuries,” he said. “The effect of an explosion damages everything.”

But among the injured, the doctor said he was most struck by their desire to continue fighting as soon as they are physically able.

Ivan, the 32-year-old private, said his concussion on Monday was his third since he was mobilized at the start of Russia’s invasion, and it was only because his commander ordered him evacuated that he ended up at the hospital.

“I want to get back to our guys,” he said, playing down his injuries despite struggling to hear. “I wanted to return the moment I left.”

Michael R. Gordon contributed to this article.