"I don't loathe LibCom contributors, xyzzzz. You're misreading this. I linked to that article FROM LibCom. The article is ABOUT leftist perspectives I loathe, and so (apparently) does LibCom. I made that very clear when I said you could search FOR the names of said leftists in an article ABOUT them. LibCom and I are in agreement when it comes to that article."
Lol ok it was a weird thing to bring up as a reaction to that news item.
― xyzzzz__, Sunday, 20 March 2022 21:01 (four years ago)
I will give a read of this later.
Even by the devastating standards of Russia's war in Ukraine, what's going on in Mariupol right now is pure horror.@GuyChazan spoke to survivors – and his story is free to read https://t.co/NNsbJhNE7w— max seddon (@maxseddon) March 20, 2022
― xyzzzz__, Sunday, 20 March 2022 21:10 (four years ago)
Whether or not banning pro-Putin parties during the invasion is a good look, it might not mean that much, with so much else for Zelensky to focus on. Does he have /can he spare means for surveillance, enforcement? Maybe it's more a warning for when he does have means, if they try to line up for puppet gov.(Last I read, 17 officials have been kidnapped, though a few have been released via prisoner exchange.)
― dow, Sunday, 20 March 2022 21:20 (four years ago)
xp The fall of Mariupol would allow Russian forces in southern and eastern Ukraine to link up. But Western military analysts say that even if the surrounded city is taken, the troops battling a block at a time for control there may be too depleted to help secure Russian breakthroughs on other fronts.
Three weeks into the invasion, Western governments and analysts see the conflict shifting to a war of attrition, with bogged down Russian forces launching long-range missiles at cities and military bases as Ukrainian forces carry out hit-and-run attacks and seek to sever their supply lines.
...“Battles took place over every street. Every house became a target,” said Olga Nikitina, who was embraced by her brother as she got off the train.
...“The block-by-block fighting in Mariupol itself is costing the Russian military time, initiative, and combat power,” the Washington-based Institute for the Study of War said in a briefing.
In a blunt assessment, the think tank concluded that Russia failed in its initial campaign to take the capital of Kyiv and other major cities quickly, and its stalled invasion is creating conditions for a “very violent and bloody” stalemate.
U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said Ukrainian resistance means Putin’s “forces on the ground are essentially stalled.”
“It’s had the effect of him moving his forces into a woodchipper,” Austin told CBS on Sunday....Estimates of Russian deaths vary, but even conservative figures are in the low thousands.
Russia would need 800,000 troops — almost its entire active-duty military — to control Ukraine for a prolonged period, according to Michael Clarke, former head of the British-based Royal United Services Institute, a defense think tank.
“Unless the Russians intend to be completely genocidal — they could flatten all the major cities, and Ukrainians will rise up against Russian occupation — there will be just constant guerrilla war,” Clarke said.
...Mariupol's city council said Saturday that Russian soldiers had forcibly relocated several thousand residents, mostly women and children, to Russia. AP could not confirm the claim.
Russia-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine said Sunday that 2,973 people have been evacuated from Mariupol since March 5, including 541 in the last 24 hours.
More about Mariupol and other areas:https://news.yahoo.com/zelenskyy-says-siege-mariupol-involved-060649180.html
More about Mariupol and other areas
― dow, Sunday, 20 March 2022 21:34 (four years ago)
I totally forgot that Mila Kunis was Ukrainian. She and Ashton Kutcher have apparently raised over $30 million for refugees, which is pretty cool.
― Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 20 March 2022 22:35 (four years ago)
rich US celeb actors are so fucking great, no limits to their selflessness and dedication to charity causes. So inspiring.
― calzino, Sunday, 20 March 2022 23:29 (four years ago)
Yeah, I wish they didn't do it, right?
― Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 20 March 2022 23:32 (four years ago)
I just wish you kept your consistently garbage posts to somewhere else tbh
― calzino, Sunday, 20 March 2022 23:34 (four years ago)
otmfm
― the cat needs to start paying for its own cbd (map), Sunday, 20 March 2022 23:36 (four years ago)
man.
― Josh in Chicago, Sunday, 20 March 2022 23:37 (four years ago)
or at least, not every fucking thread on this board. it would be so much easier to ignore your loudmouth birdbrain persona if you could control yourself a little bit.
― the cat needs to start paying for its own cbd (map), Sunday, 20 March 2022 23:37 (four years ago)
Hmm yes. Insulting and trash talking other posters. Definitely what I check into these threads for.
― FRAUDULENT STEAKS (The Cursed Return of the Dastardly Thermo Thinwall), Sunday, 20 March 2022 23:45 (four years ago)
For people who moralize others regularly you two seem like real resentful pieces of shit. Xp
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Sunday, 20 March 2022 23:50 (four years ago)
No sin worse than being normie, that’s what really matters in this world.
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Sunday, 20 March 2022 23:51 (four years ago)
"Hi, I'm an adult posting on a message board who can't just ignore comments that are harmless but seem LAME to me because they CRAMP MY STYLE"
― longtime caller, first time listener (man alive), Sunday, 20 March 2022 23:54 (four years ago)
posting about US celebs on a Ukraine thread that's already saturated with US domestic politics. stfu dickhead and reel your posh US lib neck in!
― calzino, Sunday, 20 March 2022 23:56 (four years ago)
There’s an adult way to express that feeling, and then there’s what you’ve been posting.
― FRAUDULENT STEAKS (The Cursed Return of the Dastardly Thermo Thinwall), Monday, 21 March 2022 00:06 (four years ago)
I, uh, have no idea why Josh is under attack right now
What if we all tried a little harder to treat each other like human beings here? The rest of the world might be an interpersonal shitshow but this message board doesn’t have to be
― Legalize Suburban Benches (Raymond Cummings), Monday, 21 March 2022 00:06 (four years ago)
just fyi Kunis & Kutcher are huge NFT shills
― rob, Monday, 21 March 2022 00:07 (four years ago)
To bring things back on track to a subject slightly less controversial and polarizing than ashton Kutcher… I agree that Zelensky banning a bunch of political parties does warrant some scrutiny. I know nothing about most these groups; but it does feel opportunistic given that I don’t see how this helps them fend off an invasion. Would it possibly be to delegitimize a possible puppet party, if Kiev and most of Ukraine fall?
― FRAUDULENT STEAKS (The Cursed Return of the Dastardly Thermo Thinwall), Monday, 21 March 2022 00:17 (four years ago)
Yeah, that's what I was thinking he might be doing, and I don't see how or where he could legally enforce a ban, with no parliamentary sessions or elections coming up soon, as far as I know---but sending a message to possible puppets, anyway (although yeah it does feel opportunistic)
― dow, Monday, 21 March 2022 00:28 (four years ago)
re: Zelensky
Just a wild guess, but it seems like having pro-Russia parties with pro-Russia politicians around, at a time when you're being invaded by Russia, is probably not helpful. Especially when said politicians are not merely "sympathetic" to Russia or vaguely "Russophile," but are friends of and/or have connections with Putin and Alexander Dugin (aka the Russian Nazi whisperer).
Once again, just a guess. It could be that Zelensky is showing his true face and cracking down on all leftist parties in Ukraine in a blatant attempt to use this war to consolidate his own power - a tactic he might have picked up from a certain long-serving Russian president.
― the sky was the color of television tuned to a woke channel (MoominTrollin), Monday, 21 March 2022 00:31 (four years ago)
Trying to envision a scenario in which a tactical nuke is not used on Kyiv…
― Elvis Telecom, Monday, 21 March 2022 00:32 (four years ago)
xp Just a wild guess, but it seems like having pro-Russia parties with pro-Russia politicians around, at a time when you're being invaded by Russia, is probably not helpful. Especially when said politicians are not merely "sympathetic" to Russia or vaguely "Russophile," but are friends of and/or have connections with Putin and Alexander Dugin (aka the Russian Nazi whisperer). Think we're all on the same page with this---though as for the other option you mention: maybe that's true as well, to an extent---but meanwhile, not nearly the main concern, of course.
― dow, Monday, 21 March 2022 00:38 (four years ago)
FWIW, many of the Servant Of The People episodes revolve around President Goloborodko (Zelenskyy's character) playing off one suspicious oligarch against other suspicious ones without crossing too many moral corruption boundaries. Someone's paid politician gets a promotion without authorization and in the ensuing fracas, Goloborodko's reforms get through.
I haven't figured out who Ihor_Kolomoyskyi is supposed to be in the series (if at all), but if you stick around long enough to get to the full-length Servant Of The Nation / Sluga Naroda 2 it's a full-on lesson in Machiavellian politics - only told as a slapstick Hope/Crosby On The Road movie through Ukraine.
― Elvis Telecom, Monday, 21 March 2022 00:47 (four years ago)
Wouldn't it be Mariupol?
― anvil, Monday, 21 March 2022 00:54 (four years ago)
Kinda nervous about this 5 AM deadline
― frogbs, Monday, 21 March 2022 01:15 (four years ago)
I hear you.
― Mardi Gras Mambo Sun (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 21 March 2022 01:29 (four years ago)
Sotsialniy Rukh comrades cut through the bullshit about the ban on some political parties in Ukraine.SR explains how these parties are not meaningfully left, but conservative apologists for imperialism. Nevertheless, SR opposes blanket bans as an attack on civil liberties. pic.twitter.com/SCdK5vtv7f— Ben T (@IrateBen) March 20, 2022
And here is a machine translation of a message that was circulating through Ukrainian left channels today. pic.twitter.com/cUuStjmMlI— nikita (@pidranok) March 21, 2022
takes from actual ukrainian leftists (ones who aren't conservative pro-russian soviet nostalgists) fwiw
― ufo, Monday, 21 March 2022 01:50 (four years ago)
Thanks for the links, ufo, this is really good to hear.
― The Quantum Superposition Platform - For Life (MoominTrollin), Monday, 21 March 2022 02:20 (four years ago)
Most of it is covered in this thread. If some of the parties are small and "it's not clear why they were banned" then I wouldn't say that's so good to hear.
For international comrades on the banning of parties in Ukraine. Thread— Taras Bilous (@ahatanhel) March 20, 2022
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 21 March 2022 08:33 (four years ago)
Thanks for the links, ufo, this is really good to hear. To hear from, you know, from actual Ukrainian leftists, like ufo said.
I'd take a rest rather than post.
Take your own advice. Thanks for the Taras Bilous link, though - it's good to hear from another actual Ukrainian leftist.
― The Quantum Superposition Platform - For Life (MoominTrollin), Monday, 21 March 2022 08:47 (four years ago)
And leave you to cheer on nationalism? No chance.
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 21 March 2022 08:56 (four years ago)
If you don't understand why I'm happier to hear from real socialists instead of pro-Russian shill parties, perhaps I can let the poet Mayakovsky explain:
https://i.imgur.com/UvJlYnf.jpg
"Don't waste words on 'Slavic brotherhood -The brotherhood of the workers, or nothing!"
But you can willfully misread him too, if you want. It's not like he's going to kill himself over a communist for a second time.
― The Quantum Superposition Platform - For Life (MoominTrollin), Monday, 21 March 2022 09:02 (four years ago)
"If you don't understand why I'm happier to hear from real socialists instead of pro-Russian shill parties"
You are not fooling anyone about what you are most happy about.
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 21 March 2022 09:07 (four years ago)
You're really confused as to why a Russian raised in the Soviet Union would support Ukraine in this conflict, aren't you?
Probably because he's secretly a Ukrainian right wing nationalist, and not because he's tired of watching his country circling the drain while imposing itself violently on neighboring countries? Probably because he's a Nazi fanboy who you're vigilantly guarding this thread against, and not because this war is the biggest disaster for Russia in the last thirty years? Probably because he smiles at the thought of banning political parties, and not because his own homeland has thoroughly extinguished any real political opposition and is currently in a cultural suicide spiral while sending 20 year olds who've never seen the USSR to die in a foreign country for the imperial fantasies of a diseased old man?
I'd love to continue this conversation but there's not enough room up your ass for the both of us.
― The Quantum Superposition Platform - For Life (MoominTrollin), Monday, 21 March 2022 09:24 (four years ago)
Don't talk about me being confused and then fantasize about things no one has said on this thread. Like I said, take a break.
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 21 March 2022 09:36 (four years ago)
And leave you to fantasize about what I think regarding a conflict between countries where I lived - countries you're too ignorant to know anything about - while telling me that I'm the one who's not "fooling anyone?" No chance.
Looks like it's roomier in here than I thought.
― The Quantum Superposition Platform - For Life (MoominTrollin), Monday, 21 March 2022 11:44 (four years ago)
Thread and separate one-off comment by an analyst/researcher who’s been one of my go-tos.
What happens around Mariupol in the next few days should reveal alot about the state of the Russian Army--in a ghastly way. The 'demand' that the city be surrendered was really a plea. Saying to the Ukrainians, 'we really dont want to send our army into the town.' pic.twitter.com/hzoQyF7wzv— Phillips P. OBrien (@PhillipsPOBrien) March 21, 2022
This repositioning by Russia makes sense. Failure of first strategy, dial down to seize parts of east and south Ukraine and demand Ukraine neutralization. The problem is that Ukraine can say no, and Russia is stuck in a long war with its economy in tatters. https://t.co/HfNT1GGSCw— Phillips P. OBrien (@PhillipsPOBrien) March 21, 2022
― Ned Raggett, Monday, 21 March 2022 11:58 (four years ago)
No party with the word Socialist in its name could be that bad right
― symsymsym, Monday, 21 March 2022 15:11 (four years ago)
Ukraine can say no, and Russia is stuck in a long war with its economy in tatters.
The leverage Russia has in this 'long war' scenario is simple. The long war would be happening in Ukraine, not in Russia, so Ukraine would suffer profoundly and both its economy and its infrastructure would be in tatters. There is no scenario where Ukraine will invade or conquer Russia. Putin bet the farm. Now Russia and Ukraine are in a serious no-win situation, because, politically, Putin cannot choose to simply disengage and pull out without serious concessions which, politically, Ukraine cannot give him until both nations have been put through the meat grinder.
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Monday, 21 March 2022 15:23 (four years ago)
wut pic.twitter.com/zcREqwCJLA— Olivier Knox (@OKnox) March 21, 2022
― xyzzzz__, Monday, 21 March 2022 16:19 (four years ago)
Putin, Putin, Putin, PutinI'm beggin' of you please don't take my land
― takin' care of bismuth (Ye Mad Puffin), Monday, 21 March 2022 16:22 (four years ago)
Get all the hot topics in one tweet for maximum shares
― Evan, Monday, 21 March 2022 16:34 (four years ago)
we can all agree that Dolly Parton and Vladimir Putin have so much to learn from each other
― symsymsym, Monday, 21 March 2022 16:35 (four years ago)
they're like Islands in a Warm Water Port zone
― Chappies banging dustbin lids together (President Keyes), Monday, 21 March 2022 16:37 (four years ago)
Workin' nine to five what a way to make a livin'Barely gettin' by it's all takin' and no givin'They just use your flag and you never get the creditIt's enough to drive you crazy if you let itNine to five, yeah, they got you where they want you
There's a better life and you think about it, don't youIt's a rich man's war no matter what they call itAnd you spend your life Putin money in his wallet.https://i.imgur.com/iNza981.png
― The Quantum Superposition Platform - For Life (MoominTrollin), Monday, 21 March 2022 17:20 (four years ago)
what's up with the soviet flag?
― Andy the Grasshopper, Monday, 21 March 2022 19:05 (four years ago)
Random Russian vehicles were spotted with them over the course of the invasion. It looks like it is just something certain soldiers are doing?
― Evan, Monday, 21 March 2022 19:15 (four years ago)
This is down in the middle of a CNN round-up, doesn't have a link of its own, so I'll put most of it here:From Katie Bo Lillis and Zachary Cohen
The US has been unable to determine if Russia has designated a military commander responsible for leading the country's war in Ukraine, according to multiple sources familiar with the matter — something that current and former defense officials say is likely a key contributor to the apparent clumsiness and disorganization of the Russian assault.
Without a top, theater-wide commander on the ground in or near Ukraine, units from different Russian military districts operating in different parts of Ukraine appear to be competing for resources rather than coordinating their efforts, according to two US defense officials.
Units participating in different Russian offensives across Ukraine have failed to connect, these sources say, and in fact, appear to be acting independently with no overarching operational design.
Russian forces also appear to be having significant communication issues. Soldiers and commanders have at times used commercial cell phones and other unsecure channels to talk to each other, making their communications easier to intercept and helping Ukraine develop targets for their own counterstrikes.
It's all led to what these sources say has been a disjointed — and at times chaotic — operation that has surprised US and western officials.
"One of the principles of war is 'unity of command,' said CNN military analyst retired Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling, a former commander of the US Army in Europe. "That means someone has to be in overall charge— to coordinate fires, direct logistics, commit reserve forces, measure the success (and failure) of different 'wings' of the operation and adjust actions based on that."Historically, there have been instances in which Russia has publicized this kind of information, but the Ministry of Defense has not made any reference to a top commander for operations in Ukraine and did not respond to CNN's request for comment on the topic.
And while it is possible that Russia has quietly designated a top commander to oversee the invasion — even if the US has been unable to identify that individual — the state of combat operations would suggest "he's inept," according to Hertling.
The Russian invasion has also been marked by an inordinate number of casualties among high-ranking Russian officers.
The Ukrainians say they have killed five Russian generals during the first three weeks of the war, a claim CNN has not independently confirmed. Still, any military general being killed in combat is a rare event, Retired US Army Gen. David Petraeus told CNN's Jake Tapper during Sunday's State of the Union.
Col. Sergei Sukharev, the commander of an elite Russian airborne unit, was also killed in battle in Ukraine, Russian regional state TV network GTRK Kostroma reported Thursday.
"The bottom line is that their command and control has broken down," said Petraeus.
The sheer size of the invasion has only made things worse. Coordinating operations along a front that measures over 1,000 miles requires "extensive communication capability and command, control and intelligence resources that the Russians just don't have," Hertling added.
"I can't see that anything the navy is doing is coordinated with the anything the air force is doing or anything the land force is doing," said retired Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges, another former commander of the US Army in Europe, who cautioned that he had no inside knowledge of the US understanding of Russia's command structure.
"The Russians have had tremendous difficulties with command and control during this operation at all echelons," echoed a US source familiar with the situation on the ground. "Some of this may be due to actions by the Ukrainians themselves."
On the ground, Russian troops in the field have often been cut off from their senior commanders, sources said.
"The guys in the field go out and they have their objective, but they have no way to radio back [if something goes wrong]," said another source familiar with the intelligence, who added that western officials believe this is part of the reason that some Russian troops have been observed abandoning their own tanks and armored personnel carriers in the field and simply walking away.from https://www.cnn.com/europe/live-news/ukraine-russia-putin-news-03-21-22/h_5e530ceb435619a4e65b65662de96271
― dow, Monday, 21 March 2022 19:43 (four years ago)