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The fog of war – politicalbetting.com

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  • Chameleon said:

    Sounds like the Chechens may be on the ropes/demoralised:

    "I've been receiving messages from Chechen sources that after huge losses of Kadyrov's personal "army" (in particular: @ 70 of them were reported charred alive after a single Bayraktar strike), most of the rest returned across the border. Scenes like this corroborate such reports.:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J3TvMIIzdsw
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8IbPWwRAF-w"

    https://twitter.com/christogrozev/status/1497941632209108992

    First video (graphically) confirms that alongside the Chechens killed in the drone strike, many more were killed while dismounting.

    Interesting. But, Max Seddon (FT) is saying that Chechnya's Ramzan Kadyrov has asked Putin to allow special forces Chechen be let lose on Ukr with total destruction policy.

    Both could be true of course.

  • eekeek Posts: 29,737
    edited February 2022

    They would also be killing thousands of their own troops!
    Were anyone to launch a Nuclear bomb, killing a few of your own soldiers probably doesn’t enter into the top 10 concerns
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,043
    Farooq said:

    Your argument seems to be we mustn't provoke [person who would use nuclear weapons without being provoked] so that they don't use nuclear weapons.

    Are you aware that there's something of a glaring logical flaw in your argument or did you somehow miss it?
    We mustn't no as Putin as clearly ultra aggressive and near mad at the moment. We must just as Heathener correctly states hope the Russians get rid of him themselves.

    Only if he starts invading NATO nations would we have no alternative but to go to war
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,798

    The French SLBM warheads have similar yields to the UK warheads - neither country deploys a weapon as large as the W-88.

    The French missiles have a bit less range and the accuracy is supposed to be a bit less as well.
    But we have HYUFD. Who will scare the living squits out of anyone
  • IshmaelZIshmaelZ Posts: 21,830
    Chris said:

    While you're here, why don't you do something useful, and give us your expert opinion of what percentage of the Russian leadership is (1) as mad as Putin, (2) madder than Putin and (3) less mad than Putin.

    Oh, and maybe you happen to know whether there's a duty psychiatrist "on" the Kremlin?
    My impression is strongly that l'etat c'est Vlad so (1) is necessarily the answer.

    He has backed himself into the corner twice over. He can't back down over the Ukraine without imperilling his position as leader, and he can't imperil his position as leader because demotion and retirement are not options. If he retires he will do an Epstein. So he may have to nuke someone just as a way of shaking the snow globe and changing the landscape.
  • HYUFD said:

    As the UK has Trident nuclear weapons unlike the French, even if leased, the UK has the most powerful nuclear weapons under their disposal. So while Macron and Boris have a nuclear button of European leaders, Boris' nuclear button has longer range and more power.

    Macron and Boris might concern Putin, Sturgeon certainly never will. Hence it is so vital for Scotland it benefits from Trident in the UK
    Johnson’s micropenis is slightly larger that Macron’s micropenis.

    Welcome to PB: where the intellectual giants of the age engage in mortal combat.

    Honestly, it’s like seeing the lobotomised class dunce trying to out-arithmetic Carol Vorderman.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,392
    @PJohnson

    I can't help notice that you've ignored my earlier question about nuclear weapons.

    Wouldn't you agree that this war is deeply regrettable? And that if Ukraine was nuclear armed, it wouldn't have happened? And therefore wouldn't you agree that the right thing for Russia - so they can avoid the countrymen returning in bodybags - and for the world is for Ukraine to be given nuclear weapons?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,392
    HYUFD said:

    Russia has the biggest military in Europe, the biggest airforce in Europe, the most tanks in Europe and the biggest arsenal of nuclear weapons in the world.

    He has just invaded Ukraine and is now in Kyiv, its capital.

    Yet just a month ago you were saying Russia was no threat to a European nation like the UK at all and we should be more concerned about China which is on the other side of the world!
    As Dr Alex Comfort wrote, size isn't everything.
  • Chameleon said:

    Sounds like the Chechens may be on the ropes/demoralised:

    "I've been receiving messages from Chechen sources that after huge losses of Kadyrov's personal "army" (in particular: @ 70 of them were reported charred alive after a single Bayraktar strike), most of the rest returned across the border. Scenes like this corroborate such reports.:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J3TvMIIzdsw
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8IbPWwRAF-w"

    https://twitter.com/christogrozev/status/1497941632209108992

    First video (graphically) confirms that alongside the Chechens killed in the drone strike, many more were killed while dismounting.

    Che peccato.

  • Oliver Carroll
    @olliecarroll
    ·
    31m
    Signs of cracks in Russian elite. First Fridman, then Deripaska. Now Anatoly Chubais has just posted picture of Boris Nemtsov on his Facebook page. Nemtsov, seen by some as Yeltsin’s first choice 4 president, was murdered in front of the Kremlin seven years ago today

    https://twitter.com/olliecarroll
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,729
    rcs1000 said:

    @PJohnson

    I can't help notice that you've ignored my earlier question about nuclear weapons.

    Wouldn't you agree that this war is deeply regrettable? And that if Ukraine was nuclear armed, it wouldn't have happened? And therefore wouldn't you agree that the right thing for Russia - so they can avoid the countrymen returning in bodybags - and for the world is for Ukraine to be given nuclear weapons?

    I’ve noticed they don’t answer awkward questions.
  • kle4 said:

    Its tourism sector is also booming, people are so desperate to visit they'll hitch a ride with any random military vehicle they can find.
    Liz Truss is offering free Boris Bikes.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,508
    dixiedean said:

    I seriously doubt he'll see a court. In fact I'm certain of it.
    He wins now or is dead. Literally not metaphorically.
    I heard a rumour the other day that Putin has a video of Gaddafi's last minutes on his phone and watches it from time to time.

    Probably nonsense, but if true gives an idea of his mentality.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,215
    dixiedean said:

    Top PB post at this difficult time...
    Deeply learned, pedantic, informative, utterly tangential to the point and irrelevant to the global situation.
    In the finest tradition.
    I salute you, Sir.
    Are you saluting his indefatigability?

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IIy_GmvUElE
  • Bloomberg: Russians Rush for Dollars as Sanctions Threaten Ruble Collapse
  • dixiedean said:

    For me the biggest surprise is how poor their propaganda has been.
    They don't even seem to have agreed a consistent line at home, let alone abroad.
    If their efforts here on PB are anything to go by their Propaganda Department is the pits!
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,798
    edited February 2022

    Nuking Kiev is a crime against humanity that NATO would have to take as an act of war.
    HYUFD is right. Unpalatable as it is, I don’t believe we would attack Russia directly if Putin nuked Kiev. Neither side wants MAD

    The world would instead head into the most freezing Cold War, which might last for a century?

    On the other hand, this is not the 1960s. There is a third player now. China. Far more powerful than Russian and able to match the USA economically, and soon militarily

    China wants to rise and rule the world, what’s the point of China’s efforts if the world is turned to glass and rubble? China is having fun. China is not mad.

    China will have a say. I wonder if Xi will have a menacing word with Putin

  • nico679nico679 Posts: 6,277
    Isn’t it rather embarrassing for Putin that his alleged massive army needs help from two gimp nations .

  • ChameleonChameleon Posts: 4,264
    https://twitter.com/olliecarroll/status/1497944338457939973

    "Signs of cracks in Russian elite. First Fridman, then Deripaska. Now Anatoly Chubais has just posted picture of Boris Nemtsov on his Facebook page. Nemtsov, seen by some as Yeltsin’s first choice 4 president, was murdered in front of the Kremlin seven years ago today."

    War and sanctions are bad for business...
  • Why are the peace talks not taking place over video conference nowadays rather than trying to find a "potentially" safe place in the middle of a war?
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,848
    Chameleon said:

    Sounds like the Chechens may be on the ropes/demoralised:

    "I've been receiving messages from Chechen sources that after huge losses of Kadyrov's personal "army" (in particular: @ 70 of them were reported charred alive after a single Bayraktar strike), most of the rest returned across the border. Scenes like this corroborate such reports.:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J3TvMIIzdsw
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8IbPWwRAF-w"

    https://twitter.com/christogrozev/status/1497941632209108992

    First video (graphically) confirms that alongside the Chechens killed in the drone strike, many more were killed while dismounting.

    Putin's relationship with Kadyrov is one of the cornerstones of his regime, so if the Chechens refuse to fight, he will be in real trouble.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161

    Both, of course. Zelensky's inspirational leadership has been a big factor. But I think the biggest surprise has been poor execution by the Russians.
    Yes. Leadership has been a topic on here over the years, and Zelenskyy is doing very well.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,232
    Some Serbian volunteers joining the Russians - source Telegram
  • kle4 said:

    Its tourism sector is also booming, people are so desperate to visit they'll hitch a ride with any random military vehicle they can find.
    Its to die for.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,311
    rcs1000 said:

    On topic, I'm no Johnson fan, but he's had a pretty good Ukraine crisis so far.

    A shaky start, a good middle game. Very like his Covid response.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,215
    BREAKING:

    The recent successes of the Ukrainian armed forces are due to the deployment of the terrible 344mm Lepage Crème Brûlée cannon.

    This successor to the legendary Lepage Glue Gun can spread French culinary culture across entire divisions with a single shot.

    A sobbing conscript reveals how "one minute the lads were all joking. Next minute they were denying the existence of truth, smoking Gaulois and quoting Sartre."
  • rcs1000 said:

    @PJohnson, I can't help notice that your IP address (92.40.198.210) is blacklisted as being a source of spam.

    Why do you think that might be?

    Day job as a Multi-Level marketer?
  • RazedabodeRazedabode Posts: 3,106

    Fake news.
    Presumably Putins propaganda has frazzled your brain already
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,509
    edited February 2022
    Fishing said:

    I heard a rumour the other day that Putin has a video of Gaddafi's last minutes on his phone and watches it from time to time.

    Probably nonsense, but if true gives an idea of his mentality.
    Given how paranoid Putin is (and probably in this case rightly so), I doubt he even has a personal phone.
  • Putin's nuclear alert part of 'pattern' of 'manufacturing threats': Psaki
    Russia put its nuclear deterrent forces on a state of heightened alert.

    https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/putins-nuclear-alert-part-pattern-manufacturing-threats-psaki/story?id=83130027
  • StuartDicksonStuartDickson Posts: 12,146
    edited February 2022
    dixiedean said:

    Top PB post at this difficult time...
    Deeply learned, pedantic, informative, utterly tangential to the point and irrelevant to the global situation.
    In the finest tradition.
    I salute you, Sir.
    Nah. Last night’s top story was… ta da… electoral reform in Alaska! You hear all the big stories first here at PB.
  • RazedabodeRazedabode Posts: 3,106
    kle4 said:

    Oh give off already.

    Responding to acts of war is rational behaviour.

    Refusing to respond because the aggressor wont like it is not.
    How much does Putin pay Russian bots nowadays? Presumably Sunday pays better for PJohnson
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,215
    rcs1000 said:

    @PJohnson, I can't help notice that your IP address (92.40.198.210) is blacklisted as being a source of spam.

    Why do you think that might be?

    It resolves to kremvax.com?

  • Oliver Carroll
    @olliecarroll
    ·
    31m
    Signs of cracks in Russian elite. First Fridman, then Deripaska. Now Anatoly Chubais has just posted picture of Boris Nemtsov on his Facebook page. Nemtsov, seen by some as Yeltsin’s first choice 4 president, was murdered in front of the Kremlin seven years ago today

    https://twitter.com/olliecarroll

    Not many left in the ‘give Putin what he wants or he’ll be mad’ crowd.

    There’ll probably be some holdouts on here month after the last oligarchs have bailed…
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809

    Well, to gain an idea of the other way of doing it: all we have to do is assure Putin that if he fires his nukes, we will, under no circumstances, fire back.
    Even if he rains nuclear fire on London and all of the UK - we won't do anything and will merely accept it.

    Personally, I don't think that would help.

    The reason that it's of value as a deterrent is that it is a second strike system. Which means that we would use it if we were already attacked.
    And we would therefore have nothing left to lose.

    Game theory came into existence because of the implications of this. We don't threaten to use it unless they use theirs first. At which point, it's no longer the actions of a madman to use it. Because what would we have lost? We'd already have incurred the loss.

    And they - their entire command chain down to the people who actually have to turn the keys - would know that the retaliatory strike would be coming if they went ahead.

    It may not be sufficient to deter. But its absence would certainly not have any prospect of deterrence.
    It fails game theory for me because a rational actor won't use it even if a mad one had used it first. There's nothing gained from that. It's just more loss. And a rational actor certainly won't use it preemptively. It therefore has utility only to the madman. In the hands of a madman it carries genuine threat and can be used as leverage. It's one-sided in this respect. This applies to all weapons to an extent, of course, but with the nuclear WMD it's especially so. Of great value to a lunatic, or somebody believed to be, of little value to everyone else - eg this situation here now (possibly).
  • rcs1000 said:

    @PJohnson, I can't help notice that your IP address (92.40.198.210) is blacklisted as being a source of spam.

    Why do you think that might be?

    Send him to join @TheJezziah .
  • I think the Chinese are going to have to stage an intervention.

    No way they want the devastating disruption to the world's economic system that a couple of nukes traded in europe will cause.

    Hard to export “MGs” (chortle) to a nuclear wasteland.
  • rcs1000 said:

    @PJohnson, I can't help notice that your IP address (92.40.198.210) is blacklisted as being a source of spam.

    Why do you think that might be?

    The Red's in Reading
    https://ipgeolocation.io/browse/ip/92.40.198.210
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    HYUFD said:

    Russia has the biggest military in Europe, the biggest airforce in Europe, the most tanks in Europe and the biggest arsenal of nuclear weapons in the world.

    He has just invaded Ukraine and is now in Kyiv, its capital.

    Yet just a month ago you were saying Russia was no threat to a European nation like the UK at all and we should be more concerned about China which is on the other side of the world!
    And look at how badly it's going for Russia, they're already asking for peace talks. It turns out those of us who thought Russia a spent force were correct.
  • The Red's in Reading
    https://ipgeolocation.io/browse/ip/92.40.198.210
    Any nice cathedrals to visit in Reading?
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    One for Leon, TSE (though sadly not a redhead) and other red-blooded males and gay females, I see that Anastasiia Lenna the former Miss Ukraine has taken up arms to fight Putin's evil army. For those of you who want inspiration of various kinds, this may provide it:

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10556975/Kyiv-stands-Ex-Miss-Ukraine-takes-arms-fight-Putins-army-capital-survives.html

    Am I right in thinking that Ukrainian women are the tallest in the world? Sure I read that somewhere.

    Ukrainians of all kinds at the moment are an inspiration.
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,918
    Farooq said:

    Your argument seems to be we mustn't provoke [person who would use nuclear weapons without being provoked] so that they don't use nuclear weapons.

    Are you aware that there's something of a glaring logical flaw in your argument or did you somehow miss it?
    If people really think he's capable of using nuclear arms essentially because he's annoyed that the Ukrainians are defending themselves and making him look stupid, then there's a certain logic to the argument that the priority should be his removal from power, not avoiding provoking him.
  • Dmitry Grozoubinski
    @DmitryOpines
    We got a million dumb as fuck takes about how keeping the door open to membership of NATO or the EU "poked the bear".

    Where are all the "poking the bear" articles about how NATO was slumbering away peacefully until Putin decided to poke it so hard even the Germans woke up?
    https://twitter.com/DmitryOpines/status/1497875580515094528
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,311
    edited February 2022
    HYUFD said:

    I assume not under Biden, if Trump returns as President in 2024 that is a possibility
    If Putin falls, all the Kompromat harvested through two way mirrors in Moscow hotel rooms might become public domain material.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,798
    kinabalu said:

    It fails game theory for me because a rational actor won't use it even if a mad one had used it first. There's nothing gained from that. It's just more loss. And a rational actor certainly won't use it preemptively. It therefore has utility only to the madman. In the hands of a madman it carries genuine threat and can be used as leverage. It's one-sided in this respect. This applies to all weapons to an extent, of course, but with the nuclear WMD it's especially so. Of great value to a lunatic, or somebody believed to be, of little value to everyone else - eg this situation here now (possibly).
    If Britain has just been vaporised I would be quite angry. Indeed, madly, psychotically angry. I would certainly push the button

    So deterrence works even with sane actors, because nuclear attack will drive the sane mad
  • Heathener said:

    One for Leon, TSE (though sadly not a redhead) and other red-blooded males and gay females, I see that Anastasiia Lenna the former Miss Ukraine has taken up arms to fight Putin's evil army. For those of you who want inspiration of various kinds, this may provide it:

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10556975/Kyiv-stands-Ex-Miss-Ukraine-takes-arms-fight-Putins-army-capital-survives.html

    Am I right in thinking that Ukrainian women are the tallest in the world? Sure I read that somewhere.

    Ukrainians of all kinds at the moment are an inspiration.

    Dutch.
  • Given how paranoid Putin is (and probably in this case rightly so), I doubt he even has a personal phone.
    He doesn't apparently. Indeed, he doesn't like paper too much either. Trusts nothing.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    How much does Putin pay Russian bots nowadays? Presumably Sunday pays better for PJohnson
    About double today what they’ll be paid tomorrow, by the looks of the currency markets.

    Moscow’s many money exchanges have likely run out of proper currency already.
  • dixiedeandixiedean Posts: 29,939

    I think the Chinese are going to have to stage an intervention.

    No way they want the devastating disruption to the world's economic system that a couple of nukes traded in europe will cause.

    Quite a demand for building materials, coal and those little plastic brush and dustpan combos, mind.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,215
    Heathener said:

    One for Leon, TSE (though sadly not a redhead) and other red-blooded males and gay females, I see that Anastasiia Lenna the former Miss Ukraine has taken up arms to fight Putin's evil army. For those of you who want inspiration of various kinds, this may provide it:

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10556975/Kyiv-stands-Ex-Miss-Ukraine-takes-arms-fight-Putins-army-capital-survives.html

    Am I right in thinking that Ukrainian women are the tallest in the world? Sure I read that somewhere.

    Ukrainians of all kinds at the moment are an inspiration.

    Shiny AR platform
    Nice trigger discipline
    Shooting glasses a good touch.
  • Let's suppose the sanctions do lead to Putin getting ousted by the oligarchs, is it realistic than any successor would hand Crimea back to Ukraine if it was a condition of the sanctions being lifted? Strategically and emotionally it's going to be much tougher to get Russia to give it up than the Donbass even if Putin is gone.
  • Pulpstar said:

    Some Serbian volunteers joining the Russians - source Telegram

    Here we go.

    How many days until Replubka Srpska kicks off?
  • The Red's in Reading
    https://ipgeolocation.io/browse/ip/92.40.198.210
    Erm surely that just tells you Three Mobile lives in Reading and nothing whatsoever about the user?
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,509
    edited February 2022

    He doesn't apparently. Indeed, he doesn't like paper too much either. Trusts nothing.
    TBH, I find rather baffling how lax in terms of obvious cybersecurity many western leaders / important politicians are.
  • Leon said:

    HYUFD is right. Unpalatable as it is, I don’t believe we would attack Russia directly if Putin nuked Kiev. Neither side wants MAD

    The world would instead head into the most freezing Cold War, which might last for a century?

    On the other hand, this is not the 1960s. There is a third player now. China. Far more powerful than Russian and able to match the USA economically, and soon militarily

    China wants to rise and rule the world, what’s the point of China’s efforts if the world is turned to glass and rubble? China is having fun. China is not mad.

    China will have a say. I wonder if Xi will have a menacing word with Putin

    Do China still have disputed borders with Russia? Just sayin'
  • Heathener said:

    One for Leon, TSE (though sadly not a redhead) and other red-blooded males and gay females, I see that Anastasiia Lenna the former Miss Ukraine has taken up arms to fight Putin's evil army. For those of you who want inspiration of various kinds, this may provide it:

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10556975/Kyiv-stands-Ex-Miss-Ukraine-takes-arms-fight-Putins-army-capital-survives.html

    Am I right in thinking that Ukrainian women are the tallest in the world? Sure I read that somewhere.

    Ukrainians of all kinds at the moment are an inspiration.

    Sentences you will never read on PB

    - “Scots of all kinds at the moment are an inspiration.”
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085

    Dutch.
    Actually that's Dutch men. Apparently it's Latvian women who are the tallest

    https://www.imperial.ac.uk/news/173634/dutch-latvian-women-tallest-world-according/
  • Belarus poised to declare war on Ukraine as special forces are 'loaded onto planes in preparation for major air assault on Kyiv'

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10557221/Ukraine-war-Belarus-poised-declare-war-special-forces-loaded-planes-in.html
  • Leon said:

    But we have HYUFD. Who will scare the living squits out of anyone
    Including his mum.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045
    kinabalu said:

    It fails game theory for me because a rational actor won't use it even if a mad one had used it first. There's nothing gained from that. It's just more loss. And a rational actor certainly won't use it preemptively. It therefore has utility only to the madman. In the hands of a madman it carries genuine threat and can be used as leverage. It's one-sided in this respect. This applies to all weapons to an extent, of course, but with the nuclear WMD it's especially so. Of great value to a lunatic, or somebody believed to be, of little value to everyone else - eg this situation here now (possibly).
    Unfortunately, human psychology is such that retaliation is always seen as worthwhile.

    There are famous behavioural economics experiments where people willingly accept less in order to punish someone who is seen as acting unfairly.

    That is - if you give one party (Party A) £1000 to split between themselves and Party B, and tell both parties that Party A can offer any split they like whilst Party B can merely "accept" or "reject" - and "reject" means both lose everything, then one would assume, rationally, that Party A could offer, say, £990-£10 in their own favour.

    Because Party B can either gain £10 (by accepting) or gain nothing by rejecting.
    However, if the offer is too lopsided, Party B inevitably rejects and both lose.

    It is believed that the reason for this is down to instinctive heuristics that both share. And as Party A is aware of this, they will temper their offer to not be too lopsided.

    It's the same heuristic that's programmed into us for vengeance even if it costs us our own lives. And as it's one we all share, we're all aware of it.

    If you leave the opponent with nothing, they have nothing left to lose.
  • An interesting intervention from a Belorussian retired military figure:

    https://twitter.com/DmitryOpines/status/1497951222917128193

    I imagine similar views are being expressed in private in the Russian military. Putin is a self-cornered rat, who is now seen as a loser. That's both encouraging, and very dangerous.
  • MaxPB said:

    And look at how badly it's going for Russia, they're already asking for peace talks. It turns out those of us who thought Russia a spent force were correct.
    except they have a lot of nuclear weapons. If Russian cannot take Ukraine one of the options for an ending to this has gone - What are the others - Putin removed ? hopefully but no indication likely , at the moment Putin is hinting at another option and it will result in the end of everything. However distasteful if Putin cannot be toppled internally he has to be offered a face saver for the literal sake of humanity .
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,821

    So Tobias Ellwood is the answer to the question of which politician is calling for radically higher UK defence spending. More power to his elbow.

    We don't need 'higher defence spending', we need greater defence capabilities. Ellwood and others need to argue what they think we need, and then work backwards as to what it will cost. 'We need to spend more' is just a blank cheque for lousy procurement, white elephant projects and chucking money at defence contractors.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,311
    dixiedean said:

    Quite a demand for building materials, coal and those little plastic brush and dustpan combos, mind.
    Oh no, fast track government contracts for dustpan and brushes. What can possibly go wrong?
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,043
    MaxPB said:

    And look at how badly it's going for Russia, they're already asking for peace talks. It turns out those of us who thought Russia a spent force were correct.
    Putin has just raised Russia's nuclear deterrent to 'special alert' and Russian troops are still fighting in Ukraine.

    Does not look like a man about to sue for peace, looks more like the most dangerous period for the world since the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,729
    Heathener said:

    Actually that's Dutch men. Apparently it's Latvian women who are the tallest

    https://www.imperial.ac.uk/news/173634/dutch-latvian-women-tallest-world-according/
    We look up to them all.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085

    Belarus poised to declare war on Ukraine as special forces are 'loaded onto planes in preparation for major air assault on Kyiv'

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10557221/Ukraine-war-Belarus-poised-declare-war-special-forces-loaded-planes-in.html

    Yep it's not just the nuclear threat, we are right on the verge of a huge escalation dragging in other countries.

    The western world, probably the whole world, stands right now on the edge of a precipice.

    The best hope is that Russian generals see sense and remove the madman. We need to incentivise them to do so.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161

    Do China still have disputed borders with Russia? Just sayin'
    I have no idea what politics is like in Georgia at the moment, but I imagine they are watching the travails of the Russian army with some interest.
  • Leon said:

    If Britain has just been vaporised I would be quite angry. Indeed, madly, psychotically angry. I would certainly push the button

    So deterrence works even with sane actors, because nuclear attack will drive the sane mad
    You are assuming you are sane.

    There is evidence to the contrary.
  • darkagedarkage Posts: 5,398
    Scott_xP said:

    I understand that Liz Truss's surprising comments on Brits going to fight in Ukraine this morning took No 10 by surprise...
    https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/foreign-secretary-liz-truss-back-26341016

    This was a fascinating development. The government saying (presumably accidentally) that people would be supported to go to Ukraine to fight with the Ukranian army.

    I have thought about this a bit, and concluded that as an overweight 40 something with no language skills or combat experience and who recently had to take time off work with mental health problems I would not be a great deal of help to the war effort. A very convenient conclusion for me, which permits me to carry on living in England without putting myself at risk of premature violent death or torture upon capture by the Russians. But it has dawned on me that this peace and prosperity we enjoy comes at a price, which is currently being paid by Ukranians. As such, I am going to donate serious amounts of money to this cause, in the hope that the Ukranians prevail and Putin is overthrown. I still feel like a decadent coward, but perhaps slightly less so than other people around me.
  • IanB2 said:

    Just out from our (former) Meeks:

    - Brexit as a war of words between the UK and the EU is over. Both have realised that the other offers more to them than they realised;

    - EU expansion is back on the agenda. Poland is pushing for Ukraine to be given candidate status. The EU will surely look again at speeding things up with the western Balkans and Moldova, and perhaps Georgia. Ditto NATO expansion. Pushing Finland and Sweden towards NATO membership is astonishingly counterproductive of Russia;

    - Russia’s social media capability has been shown to be utterly inadequate at making a positive case for Russia’s policies. It seems to be good at attack, but useless at defence;

    - Judging by the number of denial of service attacks on Russia’s banking and government infrastructure (and perhaps other infrastructure, we wouldn’t get to see that), the West’s cyber capabilities are in excellent shape;

    - If, as now looks likely, Russia faces strategic defeat in Ukraine at some point, it will put renewed strain on Russia’s control not just of its so-called near abroad but also of the country within its own boundaries.

    The semi-colons are mine. Proper punctuation remains important even in difficult times.

    Bring Antifrank back. PB was much, much better when he was around. The irritating little turd.
  • Who is 'We'?

    Most posters on PB know each other, in many cases personally but otherwise through reputation and thousands of posts. On the evidence of a handful of posts I should say you are a troll, and your views - if indeed they are yours - have attracted well-merited contempt.

    You don't speak for anybody except yourself and whoever might be marking your card.
    I speak from a deep knowledge of history and human nature...my concern is humanity as a whole...many posters on here are superficial
  • WhisperingOracleWhisperingOracle Posts: 9,938
    edited February 2022
    It might very well have been Xi and the Chinese that put the pressure on for a no-conditions-all-on talks, just a few minutes after Putin started threatening this afternoon. Who else has that level of leverage of him at the moment, offering him an economic lifeline and political survival - very likely, no-one.
  • The Red's in Reading
    https://ipgeolocation.io/browse/ip/92.40.198.210
    How convenient. He/she/it should be able to get down to the PB gathering in London next week.

    We'll be able to exchange views personally. :smile:
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,161

    We don't need 'higher defence spending', we need greater defence capabilities. Ellwood and others need to argue what they think we need, and then work backwards as to what it will cost. 'We need to spend more' is just a blank cheque for lousy procurement, white elephant projects and chucking money at defence contractors.
    I agree, yes, but given the reality of what is happening with the British defence budget, with capability being cut back here and there to pay for higher priorities elsewhere, it's inevitably the case that we do need a higher level of overall spending.

    But we need to start the discussion with one of what capabilities we require, and then work out what level of increased spending is needed to deliver that - rather than haphazardly paring back what we deliver to fit into the constrained size of the budget.
  • IanB2 said:

    Just out from our (former) Meeks:

    - Brexit as a war of words between the UK and the EU is over. Both have realised that the other offers more to them than they realised;

    - EU expansion is back on the agenda. Poland is pushing for Ukraine to be given candidate status. The EU will surely look again at speeding things up with the western Balkans and Moldova, and perhaps Georgia. Ditto NATO expansion. Pushing Finland and Sweden towards NATO membership is astonishingly counterproductive of Russia;

    - Russia’s social media capability has been shown to be utterly inadequate at making a positive case for Russia’s policies. It seems to be good at attack, but useless at defence;

    - Judging by the number of denial of service attacks on Russia’s banking and government infrastructure (and perhaps other infrastructure, we wouldn’t get to see that), the West’s cyber capabilities are in excellent shape;

    - If, as now looks likely, Russia faces strategic defeat in Ukraine at some point, it will put renewed strain on Russia’s control not just of its so-called near abroad but also of the country within its own boundaries.

    The semi-colons are mine. Proper punctuation remains important even in difficult times.

    Re: Meeks 1st point, we have to hope that Northern Ireland can be sorted out in the near future with greater ease
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,823
    HYUFD said:

    Putin has just raised Russia's nuclear deterrent to 'special alert' and Russian troops are still fighting in Ukraine.

    Does not look like a man about to sue for peace, looks more like the most dangerous period for the world since the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962
    Desperation. I refuse to believe that the commanders would fire a nuke. If anything the order to fire from Putin would result in him hanging by a lamppost outside the Kremlin. There's simply no way the Russian military command will go along with an actual first strike.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,798
    Heathener said:

    Yep it's not just the nuclear threat, we are right on the verge of a huge escalation dragging in other countries.

    The western world, probably the whole world, stands right now on the edge of a precipice.

    The best hope is that Russian generals see sense and remove the madman. We need to incentivise them to do so.
    Yes. This feels awfully dangerous now. We are one or two geopolitical missteps from a massive war across eastern Europe. And a couple more errors from actual nuclear conflict

  • pigeonpigeon Posts: 5,173

    Do China still have disputed borders with Russia? Just sayin'
    They do if Mad Vlad says so. He could easily hallucinate about some Russians being subjected to genocidal terror in Changchun at any time. Or, for that matter, in Buenos Aires, Hyderabad, Rabat, Welwyn Garden City or craters on the Moon. Bastard bloody headcase.
  • Heathener said:

    Yep it's not just the nuclear threat, we are right on the verge of a huge escalation dragging in other countries.

    The western world, probably the whole world, stands right now on the edge of a precipice.

    The best hope is that Russian generals see sense and remove the madman. We need to incentivise them to do so.
    You may well be right, but I'm not sure Belarus joining in with Putin is a sign of that. Everyone knows the country is now just part of Putin's empire.
  • Andy_CookeAndy_Cooke Posts: 5,045
    PJohnson said:

    I speak from a deep knowledge of history and human nature...my concern is humanity as a whole...many posters on here are superficial
    A deep knowledge of history that somehow failed to notice that Ukraine had voluntarily given up its nukes.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,627
    PJohnson said:

    41 % of uk adults want nato military involvement...incredible...do they want nuclear war

    These People are fucking idiots. This is why governance by opinion poll or allowing opinion polls to influence policy is crackers.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    HYUFD said:


    Does not look like a man about to sue for peace, looks more like the most dangerous period for the world since the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962
    It's even more dangerous that that, surely? And by some margin? We have an actual war not a stand-off, with blood being spilled in bitter battle on the ground. We have far more widespread and capable nuclear weaponry. We have other countries about to be dragged in to the war. And we have a complete lunatic at the Russian helm who is beginning to look and sound desperate.

    I mentioned Russian generals but I think Leon's right about President Xi and people like Peter Hitchen are totally wrong.

    We probably right now need to go to Xi and incentivise him for the sake of the human race to exert maximum pressure on Putin to stand down.

    I know this would stick in the throat but it's the lesser of evils.
  • Leon said:

    Yes. This feels awfully dangerous now. We are one or two geopolitical missteps from a massive war across eastern Europe. And a couple more errors from actual nuclear conflict

    Agreed Leon russias concerns should have been listened to more before they invaded Ukraine...
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,552
    dixiedean said:

    Quite a demand for building materials, coal and those little plastic brush and dustpan combos, mind.
    Matt Hancock has a contact who can supply 100m.....
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,108
    edited February 2022
    darkage said:

    This was a fascinating development. The government saying (presumably accidentally) that people would be supported to go to Ukraine to fight with the Ukranian army.

    I have thought about this a bit, and concluded that as an overweight 40 something with no language skills or combat experience and who recently had to take time off work with mental health problems I would not be a great deal of help to the war effort. A very convenient conclusion for me, which permits me to carry on living in England without putting myself at risk of premature violent death or torture upon capture by the Russians. But it has dawned on me that this peace and prosperity we enjoy comes at a price, which is currently being paid by Ukranians. As such, I am going to donate serious amounts of money to this cause, in the hope that the Ukranians prevail and Putin is overthrown. I still feel like a decadent coward, but perhaps slightly less so than other people around me.
    Don’t underestimate yourself. By presenting a larger target for some Russian to shoot at, you might have saved the life of some Ukrainian freedom fighter who would go on to achieve great things?

    But good on you for the donations, regardless. There are a lot of good and relevant causes worth supporting, right now.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,798
    edited February 2022
    The world teeters on the edge of catastrophe. Meanwhile I am here. Having a wine by
    the river at Hammersmith, and london feels joyous and free

    It’s a poignant contrast






  • state_go_awaystate_go_away Posts: 5,850
    edited February 2022
    Leon said:

    Yes. This feels awfully dangerous now. We are one or two geopolitical missteps from a massive war across eastern Europe. And a couple more errors from actual nuclear conflict

    When it comes nuclear war will be quick - Hopefully governments in the west are toning down their (understandable) reaction so far and offering Putin a way out .Its sad but Ukraine holding out has made the world a more dangerous place. Escalation here can go exponentially within a couple of hours
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,809
    Leon said:

    If Britain has just been vaporised I would be quite angry. Indeed, madly, psychotically angry. I would certainly push the button

    So deterrence works even with sane actors, because nuclear attack will drive the sane mad
    That is such a precarious assumption, though, when stacked against the risks and the costs. And the logic still doesn't work. We instinctively know the world would be a more dangerous place of all countries had the nuclear deterrent, don't we? So how can it be a deterrent? It isn't. It's only a deterrent against itself.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    PJohnson said:

    Agreed Leon russias concerns should have been listened to more before they invaded Ukraine...
    I don't think that's what Leon said at all and really does sound like something straight out of Putin's derriere ...
  • ChrisChris Posts: 11,918
    MaxPB said:

    Desperation. I refuse to believe that the commanders would fire a nuke. If anything the order to fire from Putin would result in him hanging by a lamppost outside the Kremlin. There's simply no way the Russian military command will go along with an actual first strike.
    That's why I asked the Putin apologist about the percentage of the Russian leadership who were as mad as Putin. You have to be pretty mad to sacrifice not only your own life but the whole world to save a politician's career. I doubt Putin's that mad, even though the career is his own. Even if he were, it beggars belief that enough other people in the leadership would be mad enough to go along with it.
  • kle4kle4 Posts: 98,570

    Peter Hitchens' wasp metaphor doesn't work well for anyone who knows even a little bit about wasps. Most species of wasps live by preying on insects and spiders, which they kill by stinging them -- whether or not the prey has "provoked" them.

    There are even species of wasps that prey on other wasps, as I learned from a February 22nd article in the New York Times. The first wasp comes along and deposits its eggs in a plant, where the form a "gall". Then other wasps come along and lay their eggs in the developing wasp larvae. (These secondary parasites were thought to be a single species, Omyrus Labotus, but it turns out there are at least sixteen different species which look very much alike.)

    Almost as though people using the analogy, or the bear analogy, are actually just trying to excuse the inexcusable by presenting it as some inviolate natural law even without the addition of having human sapience as well as instinct.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,821
    HYUFD said:

    Russia has the biggest military in Europe, the biggest airforce in Europe, the most tanks in Europe and the biggest arsenal of nuclear weapons in the world.

    He has just invaded Ukraine and is now in Kyiv, its capital.

    Yet just a month ago you were saying Russia was no threat to a European nation like the UK at all and we should be more concerned about China which is on the other side of the world!
    You are spinning like mad here. I suspect what BR said was that China was the bigger threat to the UK, not to 'a European country like the UK', and that remains the case. Ukraine shares a large land border with Russia, has pockets of ethnic Russians, and has at times been under Russian control. If we were Ukraine, clearly Russia would be the bigger threat. We're not Ukraine, we don't have any of those features, so any hard headed assessment would conclude that China is the bigger threat to us.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    MaxPB said:

    Desperation. I refuse to believe that the commanders would fire a nuke.
    I refused to believe that Putin would be stupid enough to invade ...
This discussion has been closed.