Mr Kobayashi
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 1 Oct 2020
- Messages
- 17,022
I think your confidence in your own analysis of the position on the ground is far too high, and likewise your position on my opinions.
[Largely off topic ramble follows]
I had the privilege to travel very widely this year, including through Albania, Kosovo, Bosnia, Serbia, France, Germany and many other countries.
There have been terrible conflicts and apparently intractable animosity between many of these countries.
In some, the wounds remain raw, and conflict perhaps not far below the surface.
In others, despite the most appalling history, there is peace, achieved not by accident but by a deliberate and considered project to prevent war ever being an option.
If this can be achieved despite the crimes of the past, there is no reason it cannot happen in future with Russia.
One thing which was constant in all the countries we visited was the helpfulness and warm welcome from the people. People everywhere are the same, including Russians (an unpopular opinion on this thread!)
What I don't believe is that capitulation to fascism brings peace. Of course, I could be wrong.
Here endeth thesermonramble.
I don't need to conduct primary analysis. At no stage did I purport to be a military analyst or armchair general.
There are plenty of sources out there that inform this view. The prevailing view among reputable western commentators is that Ukraine is holding on at best. Victory might be possible next year, if you want some optimism. But some said that last year too.
There hasn't been anything to change the situation significantly in favour of Ukraine. This is just basic reasoning of what the facts mean.
The Kursk operation was an opportunity to change that narrative, but I've already outlined why I don't think it does.