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Ukraine war narrative doesn't add up

www.msn.com /en-us/news/other/austin-milley-address-loss-in-ukraine-counteroffensive/vi-AA1cBbva

If Ukraine is able to replace or recover damaged vehicles why is Zelensky still asking for more tanks (in Switzerland right now)? I thought the sanctions were going to trigger massive inflation and unrest in the Russian economy and their desire to support the war would disappear. I thought the Russians were out of ammunition last year and now they're bombing relentlessly. I though their morale was so low they were going to capitulate when this attack happened, yet their first main line of defensive trenches hasn't yet been touched. If Ukraine morale is high and Russian morale is low why are Ukrainians surrendering or refusing to fight on the front lines?

Austin told us all that he had high expectations for the counter-offensive two days before the Pentagon leaks revealed there were actually low expectations. Why believe the boy who already cried wolf, especially when his words don't align with reality? There's been too much lying. The war is costing too much in terms of tax payer dollars and Ukrainian lives. This Biden administration is stuck is a sunk cost fallacy and needs to stop.

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  • @IvanSkooby1, Ukraine didn't start this war, and Ukraine isn't the one continuing it. They have to fight or they'll lose their freedom and self-determination. Look again what happened in Bucha, where Russian forces had control.

    Simply rolling over and letting Russia win won't save Ukrainian lives, it'll cost a lot more of them.

    The only way this war ends is if Russia leaves, or loses. Any alternative goes against everything the USA and the west stand for.

  • So if your country's neighbors decide to murder you and abduct your kids, what would you like the rest of the world to do?

    • You are not "the world", it's just you and your group of white first world imperialists friends, samo, samo.

      • I guess the list of countries providing aid to Ukraine didn't fit your narrative?

  • It's not a sunk cost fallacy. We cannot let Russia run rampant over other sovereign nations. Make no mistake, there is 0 legitimate reason for them to be fighting Ukraine. Letting them do so sends the message to them that we are all talk no show, and also shows China the same thing.

    However, we've lucked into a great situation. Ukraine fought back fiercely; the US can just proxy war Russia through money now. No cost of human life, we aren't exactly going balls to the wall in sending equipment either. The EU gets the same benefit.

    Also, I don't know what you mean by the war is costing too many Ukrainian lives. RUSSIA INVADED UKRAINE. It isn't on the US to stop donating to force the Ukrainians to roll over and accept it? In what world do you tell the citizens to just lie down and take it for their own good? That's the most asinine thing I've seen.

  • So what’s your solution? Should the Ukrainians surrender and become a Russian vassal?

  • The entire goal from the US perspective is to make this conflict last forever. It's a lot like when the US armed Afghanistan against the soviets. The whole point is to get Russia to waste as many resources as possible.

    • Yeeeees. I'm sure the US would hate it if Muscovy decided to fuck off from Ukraine and stopped invading it's neighbours.

      The entire point of eliminating Russia's military potential is to force them out of Ukraine and prevent them from invading anyone for decades to come, you know?

    • We could've drone striked Putin a bajillion times by now

      • I don't think you understand how politics work, or wars, or attacks, or diplomacy.

  • The government of Russia is still committed to this war, and as long as this is the case the sanctions against Russia and the military support for Ukraine just continue.

    The fascists should not win this fight.

  • In April of 2022, people began to ask if Russia could run out of artillery shells. The arm-chair generals laughed, and said that Russia had enough shells stored up to keep this pace until December! Then October rolls around and the shelling decreases to a level just above their production.

    At the start of the war, every day there would be long range missile barrages. Now they save up what they produce over the course of 2 to 3 weeks and shoot them all at once (which is a better tactic, overwhelm anti-air, too bad they aren't hitting anything of military significance).

    At the start of the war, they were using brand new high tech tanks, and even having contests and parades using the old tanks. Now Soviet era tanks are on the front line. At the start of the war, when sanctions started, the Ruble went up! Now even Moscow is admitting a spending deficit. At the start of the war, Russian patriotically signed up to serve. Now Wagner can't even recruit prisoners with full pardons.

    Ukraine has near-infinite weapons and finite people. Russia has near-infinite people and finite weapons. The looser of the conflict will be who runs out first: Russia's weapons or Ukraine's people.

  • Who doesn't need more tanks? Seriously, who are you?

  • Sunk cost fallacy implies that the West is supporting Ukraine for profit. They are supporting Ukraine because it’s the right thing to do.

    • Do you think helping create and fund coups is "the right thing to do"? Do you think we'd be in the situation we're in right now if not for that? The USA is supporting Ukraine as an extension of what got us to this point: expansionist policy driven by greed for profit.

      Helping build a bulwark against anything that challenges the hegemony of the Western Free-Market Economy is also another huge factor, and arguably the primary reason for Russia's participation in the war as well. The USA is absolutely terrified of a competing ideological and economic system simply existing; the USA doesn't destroy communist movements because they think they're evil incarnate, they destroy them because they threaten their existing structure by offering an alternative (this is why sabotaging communist movements has proven so useful: if you make it look like they're all bound to fail, you can perhaps prevent them from gaining as much support in the first place).

  • Just because you haven't been paying attention to developments doesn't mean things don't add up. You seem to be unaware that sanctions are only mildly effective, Iran and China and North Korea are helping Russia, Russia is losing ground and poised to lose all of their gains since this invasion and possibly even into the 2014-era holdings like Crimea, but they're also entirely committed to it and Crimea specifically is a peninsula that will be very hard to take from the outside.

    Sunk cost fallacies don't apply when your side has achieved 80%+ of its objectives despite starting out in a situation where a full and immediate loss was expected on all sides. The sunk cost fallacy is actually on Putin's side: just because he had tanks occupying large parts of Ukraine doesn't mean that continuing to fight will ever result in substantial gains again. If anything he's poised to maim every soldier-aged man in his country for nothing.

    • Sunk cost fallacies don’t apply when your side has achieved 80%+ of its objectives

      That's precisely how sunk cost fallacy works. You're using past results to justify continuing: it doesn't matter if you had been steadily winning or steadily losing, the sunk cost fallacy comes in to play when you say that your actions to continue or quit are based on that history of winning or losing. You've fallen in to the exact trap of sunk cost fallacy but somehow you think you have managed to avoid it.

      Now I'd also agree that sunk cost fallacy could be applied to Putin, but it's simpler than you say. On both sides, identically, the idea that you must keep going because otherwise what you've already done will be wasted effort, is precisely where the fault lies. That is sunk cost fallacy.

  • More tanks are always good.

    The sanctions are working. But in a sense of turning Russia into a bigger NK or Iran. They don't have inflation because they immediately restricted capital exchanges preventing any capital flight. They also increased their federal fund rate by a lot, which will prevent inflation but still hurt their economy.

    Russia is suffering from ammunition shortages, which is why they are firing much less compared to the start of the war.

    Ukraine made more progress in the last two weeks than Russia did in the last 6 months. It was always gonna be hard. Unlike with the Kharkiw counteroffensive Russia expects it and is dug in having built up defence in depth. It was always gonna be hard, specially in the early days. More like how the Kherson counteroffensive went which took over a month of heavy fighting to get going.

    I'm not aware of Ukrainians just surrendering and refusing to fight. To me it looks like they are fighting quite effectively so far.

    Lastly, if you are actually worried about the loss of Ukrainian live (which I doubt tbh) than maybe, just maybe you should instead support your Biden administration and encourage them to send more material so that Ukrainians can better defend themselves.

    • if you are actually worried about the loss of Ukrainian live (which I doubt tbh) than maybe, just maybe you should instead support your Biden administration and encourage them to send more material so that Ukrainians can better defend themselves.

      If you actually care about the loss of any lives (Ukranian and Russian), then you should not support any action which does not immediately end the war. Providing more ammunition causes more deaths (what is ammunition used for? they aren't shooting trees, they're shooting and killing humans). How can you not see how hypocritical it is to suggest that more arms would lead to less death?

      • If the Russian soldier wants to survive he can just surrender or go home (although he might get shot by their own men).

        If the Ukrainian wants to survive, he has to drive the Russians out of his country.

        And you are right, I do not care whether the invaders survive or not. They decide to invade their peaceful neighbour to murder and rape the civilian population. Have you all forgotten Bucha already? I have not, and there are hundreds of Buchas in the occupied territories.

        Are you seriously telling Ukraine they should just let the Russians genocide and rape them in peace instead of fighting for their survival? That's a sickening take.

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