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In the betting the Johnson recovery continues – politicalbetting.com

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  • DavidLDavidL Posts: 55,180
    darkage said:

    One outcome, which seems likely, is that they will 'win' by relying on extreme firepower and the worst type of weapons imaginable. They will bomb Ukraine to bits raising russian flags on the rubble. But it will be a phyrric victory, and they will never be able to control the country.
    Russian advances seem to have stopped over the last couple of days. That could be logisitical but I expect to see more stories of the Ukrainains retaking territory over the next week. The Russians will need to consolidate to reduce their attrition rate.
  • Fishing said:

    Starmer is certainly boring, but I'm not convinced he's at all competent. I think he made the wrong call at just about every stage during the pandemic, for example, when he actually bothered to offer any opposition to the government at all, which was rarely. Also his Brexit policy at the 2019 election was a dismal failure. And he ran on a Corbynite manifesto in 2019 and again on a Corbynite programme in 2020 before now posing laughably in front of the Union Jack at every opportunity.

    It MAY be enough if Boris messes up badly enough, but if the Conservatives recover significantly, I don't see him winning and he may not even come close.
    How about just 'boring and not the other guy' then?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,108
    Heathener said:

    Any idea why Tokyo and Singapore were fine when the Hang Seng slumped? The China link?

    The markets are very odd at the moment: London was fine on Friday when the US sank. Unusual.
    EH? London was up marginally on Friday, as was the Dow at the time the London market closed. It sank a little during the American afternoon, but only closed down 0.69%. So the difference, such as it is, is down to the time zones. And the US is trading historically at higher levels to begin with.

    The mystery is why markets around the world are still comparatively optimistic, when the sky is full of large and slow moving dark clouds
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,400
    Heathener said:

    I don't know a single person on here who is right all the time and you most certainly aren't. I probably treat your posts with about 60% seriousness, your father's at about 90%. You are, for example, very skewed to a US way of thinking which doesn't always, or readily, transfer this side of the pond. You've just come out with a constitutional howler about Boris Johnson which I've been more gentle with you over than you with I. You just can't resist playing the person 'eh?

    On covid I've been mostly right. No idea what you're talking about BA pilots: don't know any and don't recall ever having mentioned them in my life. I don't fly with BA (I go Qatar) and I don't have any contacts with BA.

    I think the only big mistake I've made since joining, and it's a huge one, was assuming that Putin wasn't mad enough to invade. Based that on him having insufficient troops in place to guarantee victory and because we always over-estimate Russian military equipment. So I was right about the reason but misjudged the man. But, then, how do you legislate for someone who has gone full tonto?
    And yet your IP address (51.89.xxx.250) shows up as compromised in https://www.whatismyip.com/blacklist-check/

    I like having you on board, but why don't you admit where you're sitting?
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754
    IanB2 said:

    EH? London was up marginally on Friday, as was the Dow at the time the London market closed. It sank a little during the American afternoon, but only closed down 0.69%. So the difference, such as it is, is down to the time zones. And the US is trading historically at higher levels to begin with.

    The mystery is why markets around the world are still comparatively optimistic, when the sky is full of large and slow moving dark clouds
    Shhhhhh
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,360
    rcs1000 said:

    Putin could probably have bled Ukraine dry if he'd funded opposition groups, bribed politicians, and continued to arm the separatists. Maybe a few Russian troops could have grabbed 20 miles here or there...

    Instead he went for invasion. And succeeded in uniting the decadent West.
    One trouble with a system based on lies (in this case, Great and Greater Russia) is that you start to believe your own propoganda. Reality always intrudes in the end, and war is an especially unforgiving reality.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,219
    DavidL said:

    If you think that this is another Afghanistan you are indeed deluding yourself. In Afghanistan there was virtually no organised or equipped regular forces against the Russians. There were Mujaheddin in the hills launching raids and using a trickle of western technology, usually anti aircraft missles. In the Ukraine they are fighting a well organised army with huge quantities of superior western kit which is currently being replaced at a prodigious rate.

    So, you have not only somewhat lesser logistical challenges but a very rapid attrition rate. At best the Russians are sustaining casualties, including kit, wounded and surrendered, of around 1% of their force a day. They either win soon or they lose. There is still a window of opportunity for them but it is closing.
    The battle is between the rate of collapse of the Russian economy (military and civil) and the rate at which the Ukrainians get ground down.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,400
    Heathener said:

    I don't know a single person on here who is right all the time and you most certainly aren't. I probably treat your posts with about 60% seriousness, your father's at about 90%. You are, for example, very skewed to a US way of thinking which doesn't always, or readily, transfer this side of the pond. You've just come out with a constitutional howler about Boris Johnson which I've been more gentle with you over than you with I. You just can't resist playing the person 'eh?

    On covid I've been mostly right. No idea what you're talking about BA pilots: don't know any and don't recall ever having mentioned them in my life. I don't fly with BA (I go Qatar) and I don't have any contacts with BA.

    I think the only big mistake I've made since joining, and it's a huge one, was assuming that Putin wasn't mad enough to invade. Based that on him having insufficient troops in place to guarantee victory and because we always over-estimate Russian military equipment. So I was right about the reason but misjudged the man. But, then, how do you legislate for someone who has gone full tonto?
    Also - what constitutional howler about Boris Johnson?

    I don't think I've mentioned him yet, except to say that he will be departing. A feature - not a bug - about democracies.
  • Heathener said:

    Any idea why Tokyo and Singapore were fine when the Hang Seng slumped? The China link?

    The markets are very odd at the moment: London was fine on Friday when the US sank. Unusual.
    Europe up, London flat.
  • Couldn’t agree more. The silence is deafening. It’s fine that Russian money and bot farms helped to deliver Brexit, it’s no problem that Russian money has financed the Tory Party and it’s client media for decades. The end justifies the means.

    The aims of the right chime with those of Putin, in as much as they both get hard for a strong, nationalist agenda, a return of Empire, of power, of prestige perceived to have been lost. Not collaboration with a weak, Woke, green EU. Fellow travellers on the anti-climate change bandwagon, for whom the profit available from digging up and burning fossil fuels is more important than the long-term health of the planet.

    The right can’t face up to this yet. Perhaps with time they will do.
    I enabled Corbyn and the hard left. Having grown disillusioned with Blairism and the endless triangulation I wanted some conviction politics. Voted for - and believed in - the wrong Milliband. Then having grown utterly disillusioned by Andy Burnham's campaign was persuaded by a good friend to look at Jeremy Corbyn who I knew literally nothing about.

    Less than a year into his tenure I realised what a fool I had been and how dangerous he was. Mea Culpa, Mea Maxima Culpa. I then switched sides and joined the insurrection against him, received warmly and with good grace by my colleagues who hadn't gone mad as I had.

    My point is that even having enabled Bad Things - like the Big Dog - these MPs can still redeem themselves. Forgiveness is a simple thing, you just need to be genuine in your repentance. Are any of them capable?
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754

    Europe up, London flat.
    A Brexit NI negotiation update?
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,770
    rcs1000 said:

    Oh come come come, @Heathener, don't be coy.

    You started here with some views on Covid cases and hospitalisations in Israel which turned out not to be - how to put this - entirely accurate. Then moved on to a story about BA pilots, which turned out to be... ah yes... not entirely accurate.

    And now you're onto "oh yes, I'm on your side, one of *you*, and I know it's hard to accept, but it would be better for all of us if the Ukrainians just accepted the inevitable and laid down their arms... after all, what chance do they stand?"

    It is a little tricky to take you seriously, and for that I apologise.
    At least she’s a better class of Russian provocateur. PB should feel flattered
  • That's generally how political careers work.

    If Ukraine manage a victory of sorts over Russia, then it won't surprise me at all if Boris says "I'm off in time for my successor to be crowned at the party conference". He will bask in the glow of being worshipped in Ukraine and having generally been seen to have done a good job in that war and on Covid. Downing Street parties will be a forgotten footnote - although his bad calls on being chummy with dodgy Russians less so.

    But he can go and make his millions on the talking circuit sooner rather than later, having departed on his own terms. I think he'd take that from where he was a month ago.
    A nice dream certainly.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    IanB2 said:

    EH? London was up marginally on Friday, as was the Dow
    Nasdaq was down -2.18% and the S&P down 1.3% on a day London was level, with no real reaction to the US which is unusual.

    Western European markets have frequently been taking a hammering whilst London has fared slightly better for obvious geographic reasons.

    I'm just curious, and was asking State Away or anyone knowledgeable, why Bombay and Tokyo for example closed UP 1.13% and 0.58% on a day when the Hang Seng closed down 5.5%? I guess it's the China comments but I'd have expected the rest of the Far East to take a beating.

    Anyone?
  • ". I've noticed an increasing amount of anger and abuse on here. "

    You weren't here in 2016. Or 2017. Or 2014. Or 2019. Or 2020. In fact, it's pretty much always been like this... ;)

    I'd argue PB is a rather decorous place compared to the Internet in general, especially as politics is being discussed. It's also more informative than most places.
    It ebbs and flows.

    I'd say the quality is high at the moment, and fairly decorous (young Malc notwithstanding). It also has a broader mix of political views than usual, although Scots Labour supporters are still as rare as hen's teeth.

    There are more women than ever before, but still by no means enough.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    Cicero said:

    Another difficult weekend as the Estonians contemplate still more refugees, over 1800 last night alone (of which over 700 children). Moldova is appealing for help, because that relatively poor country simply can not cope with the crisis they now have to deal with. Every front line country is now struggling to find places for the millions who have fled. An emergency coordination is being established, and rather than promise random numbers, the UK government needs to engage to help the situation in a practical way. The Home Office has rarely looked so stupidly bureaucratic as now. The pressure that many British people are putting on their government is a good sign, but the truth is that Britain will need to take several hundred thousand to match the other large countries in Europe. The numbers promised so far are lower than those Estonia, a country with about one fiftieth of the UK population, has already taken.

    I spoke to friends in Kharkiv, the brutality of the invaders is utterly shocking and amounts to wholesale murder of the civilian population. Meanwhile, despite a lot of talk, the Ukrainian army is not getting the flow of weapons it needs, and as you have seen on the news, the casualties amongst the defenders has risen quite sharply. Under the circumstances, the performance of the Ukrainians is simply heroic.

    As far as the wider strategic implications of this weekend are concerned, the fact that Russia has asked for military assistance from China now seems to be an established fact, however the Chinese use of the word "pragmatic" must be a pretty bad sign for Putin´s hopes of engaging China in his own military mess. More likely is China offering its good offices to establish a ceasefire. The timing is important, since it is critical to get the spring harvest, without which China, like the rest fo the world will see high food price inflation.

    Inside Russia there is now growing concern, even if the reality of the situation is still not widely understood. The regime continues to rely on Stalinist tactics, but one Russian expert here suggested that if the Russians do go for a ceasefire soon, his bet was that Putin would be gone very quickly. The increasing intensity of the Russian attacks perhaps reflects the growing crisis for the regime,

    There is something of a news blackout from Belarus, we hear rumours that Lukashenka is in considerable trouble.

    So in sum, it is touch and go. A Finn said to me that the Winter War of 1939-40 lasted three months, one week and six days and he thought that the "Spring War" might be quicker. If it leads to the defeat of the Putinist forces then the sigh of relief here will be audible in Stornoway.

    As ever, many thanks for your posts.
    I think 'touch and go' seems right. I would like to be solidly optimistic about the outcome, but it seem quite precariously poised to me, FWIW.

    Ukraine have counted over 2000 civilian deaths in Mariupol. Given the appalling conditions, there are possibly many more uncounted.
    https://twitter.com/EuromaidanPress/status/1503280012136439808
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 31,317
    edited March 2022
    Fishing said:

    Starmer is certainly boring, but I'm not convinced he's at all competent. I think he made the wrong call at just about every stage during the pandemic, for example, when he actually bothered to offer any opposition to the government at all, which was rarely. Also his Brexit policy at the 2019 election was a dismal failure. And he ran on a Corbynite manifesto in 2019 and again on a Corbynite programme in 2020 before now posing laughably in front of the Union Jack at every opportunity.

    It MAY be enough if Boris messes up badly enough, but if the Conservatives recover significantly, I don't see him winning and he may not even come close.
    For all your analysis of Johnson's genius and Starmer's ineptitude you have forgotten one thing. The economy.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    rcs1000 said:

    While I appreciate your comment, I'm not banning people just for being Putin puppets.
    What about banning people who post articles that PB deems Russian propaganda?

    Here's another one. Again, gives a perspective that many won't like on here, not fitting the PB Russian military disaster narrative as it doesn't.

    https://intellinews.com/phase-4-of-ukraine-war-starts-as-rockets-rain-down-on-mariupol-but-peace-talks-are-ongoing-237909/?source=russia
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 9,012
    edited March 2022
    What replaces Putin when Russia retreats from Ukraine? Not any of his coterie because they are either all implicated in his policies or seen to be too weak to stand up to him. It will have to be someone with clean hands who can convince Russians and the world of their competence and integrity. Someone like the governor of the central bank Elvira Nabiullina perhaps. Though the FT's portrait sees her primarily as a technocrat with pragmatic loyalty to Putin for the good of the country.
  • pingping Posts: 3,805
    edited March 2022

    It ebbs and flows.

    I'd say the quality is high at the moment, and fairly decorous (young Malc notwithstanding). It also has a broader mix of political views than usual, although Scots Labour supporters are still as rare as hen's teeth.

    There are more women than ever before, but still by no means enough.
    Yeah. Shame @The_Apocalypse has disappeared.

    She added a lot to the quality of debate.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    rcs1000 said:


    I like having you on board, but why don't you admit where you're sitting?
    Robert I have someone close to the seat of power. I've only once shared something but I don't want to dump them in trouble. If I did an HYUFD, for example, it would not be cool for the person concerned.

    I hope you can live with that and I'm glad you like having me on board. It's mutual and it's a great place.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,553

    At least she’s a better class of Russian provocateur. PB should feel flattered
    Very well briefed, but still some holes. Not knowing "London Bridge"? Tut tut.....

    The faux reasonableness is very, very well done though.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,108
    Heathener said:

    Nasdaq was down -2.18% and the S&P down 1.3% on a day London was level, with no real reaction to the US which is unusual.

    Western European markets have frequently been taking a hammering whilst London has fared slightly better for obvious geographic reasons.

    I'm just curious, and was asking State Away or anyone knowledgeable, why Bombay and Tokyo for example closed UP 1.13% and 0.58% on a day when the Hang Seng closed down 5.5%? I guess it's the China comments but I'd have expected the rest of the Far East to take a beating.

    Anyone?
    As I said, most of the American falls came after London closed. You need to account for time zones.

    I don't know on Hong Kong, but their covid situation appears bad independent from the war.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,219
    My favourite work of his was *the* 1984 - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0087803/
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085
    edited March 2022

    At least she’s a better class of Russian provocateur. PB should feel flattered
    I loathe Putin to the depths of my being.

    Just because I think the west's response has been limp, and that I think regrettably that Putin's forces will eventually win this, don't for one second make me out to be an apologist for what Putin has done. It's evil beyond evil, from the chthonian depths.

    I mostly loathe the world of men.

    Words chosen deliberately.
  • For all your analysis of Johnson's genius and Starmer's ineptitude you have forgotten one thing. The economy.
    Which as I have been flagging since the start of this war is going to get acutely worse than it already was going to be. Saying "but its Putin's fault" when this war is behind us won't help the government.

    We also know that they will continue to screw up, continue to pointlessly incompetently screw over people and then lie about it. Hard political times are ahead.
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,508
    edited March 2022

    He's had s fantastic war. If he

    For all your analysis of Johnson's genius and Starmer's ineptitude you have forgotten one thing. The economy.
    Please show my analysis of Johnson's genius? Neither of them are exactly Margaret Thatcher. And I did actually mention Starmer on the economy in another post, saying I think his programme will make things much worse.

    (I think the Economist's verdict on Boris was very shrewd - he has flashes of genius, e.g. breaking the Brexit logjam or the vaccination programme but also too-frequent disasters. And if we move towards more settled times, he'd be the wrong leader. But I'm not convinced by any of the alternatives on the Conservative benches yet, and I don't think that Starmer is competent).

    We need to get away from the idea that just because somebody is boring, they're also competent. Gordon Brown should have blown that one to pieces.
  • I enabled Corbyn and the hard left. Having grown disillusioned with Blairism and the endless triangulation I wanted some conviction politics. Voted for - and believed in - the wrong Milliband. Then having grown utterly disillusioned by Andy Burnham's campaign was persuaded by a good friend to look at Jeremy Corbyn who I knew literally nothing about.

    Less than a year into his tenure I realised what a fool I had been and how dangerous he was. Mea Culpa, Mea Maxima Culpa. I then switched sides and joined the insurrection against him, received warmly and with good grace by my colleagues who hadn't gone mad as I had.

    My point is that even having enabled Bad Things - like the Big Dog - these MPs can still redeem themselves. Forgiveness is a simple thing, you just need to be genuine in your repentance. Are any of them capable?
    That's a great post, RP.

    If one can judge from the conservative party supporters who post here on PB, I should say that the love of Boris is not entirely blind.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,234
    Looks like the Chinese reponse to the planks about trading with the Russians militarily is "We don't know anything about that, now how about those bio labs"...

    OT "I don't like war movies" claimed my fiancee at the weekend. Sunday's movies ?
    Saving Private Ryan & Black Hawk Down :D
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,548
    Javier Blas
    @JavierBlas
    ·
    35m
    China placed the 17.5 million residents of the southern city of Shenzhen into a lockdown -- this is one of the world's most important manufacturing exports hubs, particularly for electronics (and the city is the 4th world's largest container port).
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,553

    For all your analysis of Johnson's genius and Starmer's ineptitude you have forgotten one thing. The economy.
    I still don't see political "blame" attaching to the economy. Mostly because Labour has offered no alternative. It supported the Government's measures on Covid, which are a large part of where we are. It supported the Government's measures on Ukraine, which are in large part dictating where we are headed. It has ruled out any materially different tack on Brexit.

    The voters will be right to say nothing would be materially different with Labour. The Government unpopularity is down to the reaction to Boris's antics. Change Boris, and Labour are left gazing at their shoes....
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012
    Just noting Mr Meek's latest excellent offering, sorry if it has been linked before.


    https://alastair-meeks.medium.com/now-and-next-seven-things-to-think-about-following-the-russian-invasion-of-ukraine-7f8497774dbb


    The question I would ask of him as he is so positive about the EU's enhanced significance in this crisis is this:

    What is the EUs policy about what happens if there is a Russian attack of any sort on an EU neutral country - Finland/Sweden in particular?
  • FishingFishing Posts: 5,508

    How about just 'boring and not the other guy' then?
    People may be tempted to stick with the devil they know, as was probably the case in 1992.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,553
    Pulpstar said:

    Looks like the Chinese reponse to the planks about trading with the Russians militarily is "We don't know anything about that, now how about those bio labs"...

    OT "I don't like war movies" claimed my fiancee at the weekend. Sunday's movies ?
    Saving Private Ryan & Black Hawk Down :D

    She sounds a keeper!
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,219
    rcs1000 said:

    Putin could probably have bled Ukraine dry if he'd funded opposition groups, bribed politicians, and continued to arm the separatists. Maybe a few Russian troops could have grabbed 20 miles here or there...

    Instead he went for invasion. And succeeded in uniting the decadent West.
    I've been thinking about it. And I am quite convinced that he was going for a coup-de-main modelled on - Afghanistan.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Storm-333
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085

    The faux reasonableness is very, very well done though.
    I think, and I do mean this, you should take a look at yourself if you are 'really' going down that route because it's a very, very, dark place to go.

    If you start to think that anyone with whom you disagree displays the signs of being something other than sincere, a phantasm, a spectre, who is merely 'faux' reasonable then you are disappearing into a rabbit hole void the end result of which is a dystopian nightmare of narcissistic individualism.

    I don't agree with everything you post but I don't stoop to question your sincerity.
  • CookieCookie Posts: 14,821

    Very well briefed, but still some holes. Not knowing "London Bridge"? Tut tut.....

    The faux reasonableness is very, very well done though.
    Also well done for the occasional flashes of backstory.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited March 2022

    @Heathener

    'The reality is that we are ignoring Zelensky's pleas for a No Fly Zone and we're letting an entire country get pulverised.'

    No serious commentator is suggesting a NFZ. The reason is obvious, and has been stated on this forum clearly and frequently.

    NFZ is simply fluffy words to mean the West bombing Russia, which is a major escalation that gives Putin cover for his own escalation.

    Far, far better to keep shoveling all those Stinger ground-to-air missiles over into Ukraine. Get enough of them in theatre, and you end up with a no-fly zone by default.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,770
    Heathener said:

    Nasdaq was down -2.18% and the S&P down 1.3% on a day London was level, with no real reaction to the US which is unusual.

    Western European markets have frequently been taking a hammering whilst London has fared slightly better for obvious geographic reasons.

    I'm just curious, and was asking State Away or anyone knowledgeable, why Bombay and Tokyo for example closed UP 1.13% and 0.58% on a day when the Hang Seng closed down 5.5%? I guess it's the China comments but I'd have expected the rest of the Far East to take a beating.

    Anyone?
    Covid data from Hong Kong looks horrible. Friends of mine are leaving the city rather than be locked down
  • Fishing said:

    Please show my analysis of Johnson's genius? Neither of them are exactly Margaret Thatcher. And I did actually mention Starmer on the economy in another post, saying I think his programme will make things much worse.

    (I think the Economist's verdict on Boris was very shrewd - he has flashes of genius, e.g. breaking the Brexit logjam or the vaccination programme but also too-frequent disasters. And if we move towards more settled times, he'd be the wrong leader. But I'm not convinced by any of the alternatives on the Conservative benches yet, and I don't think that Starmer is competent).

    We need to get away from the idea that just because somebody is boring, they're also competent. Gordon Brown should have blown that one to pieces.
    The vaccination programme was Kate Bingham but the PM is entitled to take some of the credit. He gets enough shit for things that weren't necessarily his fault, so fairy nuff.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    .
    Cicero said:

    I think, post war, we will need to face up to the weaknesses of our own political system. The shameless lies from various politicians has absolutely created a fog of misinformation. The process of calling out Trump, Johnson, Farage, Le Pen, Salmond and many others needs to be carried through, and those who have served Putin, in whatever capacity, need to be removed from the political process entirely and where appropriate to face criminal trial.
    I don't think that's much to do with the political system.
    Western institutions are quite adequate, if we make use of them. It's how people engage - or don't - that counts.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085


    There are more women than ever before, but still by no means enough.
    It's not exactly a welcoming place for women tbh.

    There's far too much male aggression and downright rudeness, a failure to debate issues and always a tendency to attack the person.

    This place is like being on a rugby field of 30 men. And not in a pleasant fantasy way ;)

    I shall be off for a bit. The personal rudeness is tiresome and I have a life outside that feels a lot more wholesome.
  • HeathenerHeathener Posts: 7,085

    Covid data from Hong Kong looks horrible. Friends of mine are leaving the city rather than be locked down
    Eeek.

    Don't tell Robert.

  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    Heathener said:

    I think, and I do mean this, you should take a look at yourself if you are 'really' going down that route because it's a very, very, dark place to go.

    If you start to think that anyone with whom you disagree displays the signs of being something other than sincere, a phantasm, a spectre, who is merely 'faux' reasonable then you are disappearing into a rabbit hole void the end result of which is a dystopian nightmare of narcissistic individualism.

    I don't agree with everything you post but I don't stoop to question your sincerity.
    It's a strange phenomenon on PB, noted also by @Dura_Ace and @YBarddCwsc yesterday. Normally very thoughtful, enquiring minds have fallen into line over a preferred stance on Russia/Ukraine. Any deviation from that stance is met with disproportionate hostility.

    Perhaps it stems from a sense of frustration at our powerlessness. Change your profile picture to the Ukrainian flag and shout down those who don't agree with the chosen line on Ukraine (Russia doing dreadfully, imminent collapse of their war effort, dissent maybe even revolution at home, etc).

    It really is quite strange.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,108
    Heathener said:

    It's not exactly a welcoming place for women tbh.

    There's far too much male aggression and downright rudeness, a failure to debate issues and always a tendency to attack the person.

    This place is like being on a rugby field of 30 men. And not in a pleasant fantasy way ;)

    I shall be off for a bit. The personal rudeness is tiresome and I have a life outside that feels a lot more wholesome.
    Odd that you were challenged specifically on your IP address, and have dodged providing any sort of response?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,400
    Heathener said:

    Eeek.

    Don't tell Robert.

    Hong Kong has very poor vaccination rates in the elderly, has little natural immunity, and has been largely dependent on low efficacy Chinese vaccines.

    Do you want me to drag out your lies errors on Israel, or she we leave it there?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    IanB2 said:

    Odd that you were challenged specifically on your IP address, and have dodged providing any sort of response?
    By Robert?

    Has anyone else ever been "challenged specifically on [their] IP address"?
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,400
    algarkirk said:

    Just noting Mr Meek's latest excellent offering, sorry if it has been linked before.


    https://alastair-meeks.medium.com/now-and-next-seven-things-to-think-about-following-the-russian-invasion-of-ukraine-7f8497774dbb


    The question I would ask of him as he is so positive about the EU's enhanced significance in this crisis is this:

    What is the EUs policy about what happens if there is a Russian attack of any sort on an EU neutral country - Finland/Sweden in particular?

    They're against it.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,219
    Sandpit said:

    NFZ is simply fluffy words to mean the West bombing Russia, which is a major escalation that gives Putin cover for his own escalation.

    Far, far better to keep shoveling all those Stinger ground-to-air missiles over into Ukraine. Get enough of them in theatre, and you end up with a no-fly zone by default.
    Looking at what is happening and not happening in Ukraine, my theory on the air war, is that both sides have enough SAM systems to make medium and high level operations very dangerous. This is why the Russians appear to be flying very low. In part this is due to the Russian lack of real defence suppression capability (SEAD).

    We should (and I hope are) be looking at resupplying Ukraine with higher end systems than just Stinger. These would need be the various Russia systems such as (ironically, given the history) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buk_missile_system
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,644
    edited March 2022
    Nigelb said:

    .

    I don't think that's much to do with the political system.
    Western institutions are quite adequate, if we make use of them. It's how people engage - or don't - that counts.
    No, I don't agree Nigel, and I think you just about nail the problem yourself. People don't engage.

    Sorry to go all LibDem on this, but the voting system is fundamentally flawed. If we could just address that it would be a big step forward. I'm not holding my breath though.

    As for the rogues gallery - Trump, Johnson, Farage, Le Pen, Salmond etc - there's a decent chance of them getting their dues, I should say, once the full extent of their Russian links are exposed.

    I remain hopeful.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,400
    TOPPING said:

    By Robert?

    Has anyone else ever been "challenged specifically on [their] IP address"?
    Yes.

    I've pulled a number of posters (less than 5, more than 2) for having IP addresses that fail the blacklist check (https://www.whatismyip.com/blacklist-check/).

    Basically, it's compromised machines that are used by email (and forum) spammers.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,770
    Heathener said:

    I loathe Putin to the depths of my being.

    Just because I think the west's response has been limp, and that I think regrettably that Putin's forces will eventually win this, don't for one second make me out to be an apologist for what Putin has done. It's evil beyond evil, from the chthonian depths.

    I mostly loathe the world of men.

    Words chosen deliberately.
    And yet every twist you have advocated Putin’s agenda.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,400
    TOPPING said:

    It's a strange phenomenon on PB, noted also by @Dura_Ace and @YBarddCwsc yesterday. Normally very thoughtful, enquiring minds have fallen into line over a preferred stance on Russia/Ukraine. Any deviation from that stance is met with disproportionate hostility.

    Perhaps it stems from a sense of frustration at our powerlessness. Change your profile picture to the Ukrainian flag and shout down those who don't agree with the chosen line on Ukraine (Russia doing dreadfully, imminent collapse of their war effort, dissent maybe even revolution at home, etc).

    It really is quite strange.
    It's OK to have a dissenting opinion.

    But it's also a little suspicious when you have a dissenting opinion, have a record of spreading falsehoods (about BA pilots and vaccines, for example), and have an IP address that's listed in the blacklists.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,371
    TOPPING said:

    It's a strange phenomenon on PB, noted also by @Dura_Ace and @YBarddCwsc yesterday. Normally very thoughtful, enquiring minds have fallen into line over a preferred stance on Russia/Ukraine. Any deviation from that stance is met with disproportionate hostility.

    Perhaps it stems from a sense of frustration at our powerlessness. Change your profile picture to the Ukrainian flag and shout down those who don't agree with the chosen line on Ukraine (Russia doing dreadfully, imminent collapse of their war effort, dissent maybe even revolution at home, etc).

    It really is quite strange.
    I'd just like to remind you of what you said to me a week or so ago... ;) Perhaps you fall into the same trap?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,219
    TOPPING said:

    It's a strange phenomenon on PB, noted also by @Dura_Ace and @YBarddCwsc yesterday. Normally very thoughtful, enquiring minds have fallen into line over a preferred stance on Russia/Ukraine. Any deviation from that stance is met with disproportionate hostility.

    Perhaps it stems from a sense of frustration at our powerlessness. Change your profile picture to the Ukrainian flag and shout down those who don't agree with the chosen line on Ukraine (Russia doing dreadfully, imminent collapse of their war effort, dissent maybe even revolution at home, etc).

    It really is quite strange.
    Not really. There was a topic, that cut across party lines, that caused all kind of acrimony. People who had been stalwart supporters of a party for decades tearing up membership cards..... I can't recall exactly what it was. I don't think it was Pineapple-On-Pizza??
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754
    rcs1000 said:

    Yes.

    I've pulled a number of posters (less than 5, more than 2) for having IP addresses that fail the blacklist check (https://www.whatismyip.com/blacklist-check/).

    Basically, it's compromised machines that are used by email (and forum) spammers.
    In the sense that they ought to know they are compromised or in the sense they might just be an idiot with crap security who is confused why their “computer is so slow”?
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    TOPPING said:

    It's a strange phenomenon on PB, noted also by @Dura_Ace and @YBarddCwsc yesterday. Normally very thoughtful, enquiring minds have fallen into line over a preferred stance on Russia/Ukraine. Any deviation from that stance is met with disproportionate hostility.

    Perhaps it stems from a sense of frustration at our powerlessness. Change your profile picture to the Ukrainian flag and shout down those who don't agree with the chosen line on Ukraine (Russia doing dreadfully, imminent collapse of their war effort, dissent maybe even revolution at home, etc).

    It really is quite strange.
    You make a very good point and I agree with you, even as one who supports 'the chosen line on Ukraine'.

    I do recognise that there is a large chunk of wish fulfilment in my thinking and I think it is entirely right you should be able to express a more cautious (more pessimistic?) view without being shouted down as a Russian stooge.
  • Morris_DancerMorris_Dancer Posts: 62,481
    F1: intriguing. Verstappen now favourite for the first race win, but Hamilton remains favourite for the title.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    Dmytro Kuleba, Ukraine Minister of Foreign Affairs:

    "To those abroad scared of being ‘dragged into WWIII’. Ukraine fights back successfully. We need you to help us fight. Provide us with all necessary weapons. Apply more sanctions on Russia and isolate it fully. Help Ukraine force Putin into failure and you will avert a larger war."

    https://twitter.com/DmytroKuleba/status/1503278351145918467?s=20&t=Nv_glxtsLe3uFlw7Y6QbiQ

    Interestingly, no mention of a NFZ.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,770

    I've been thinking about it. And I am quite convinced that he was going for a coup-de-main modelled on - Afghanistan.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Storm-333
    I think it’s the Georgia model

    Secure the self-proclaimed republics (including the water sources for the Crimea and the land bridge via Mariupol)

    Grab the capital and defenestrate the president

    Negotiate peace

    All done in 2 weeks
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,371
    TOPPING said:

    What about banning people who post articles that PB deems Russian propaganda?

    Here's another one. Again, gives a perspective that many won't like on here, not fitting the PB Russian military disaster narrative as it doesn't.

    https://intellinews.com/phase-4-of-ukraine-war-starts-as-rockets-rain-down-on-mariupol-but-peace-talks-are-ongoing-237909/?source=russia
    I'm unsure that that article really goes against what most of us have been saying on here. Yes, Russia is making small advances.

    However, many of us add: at what cost are those advances being made? And can Russia sustain that cost?
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,553
    Heathener said:

    I think, and I do mean this, you should take a look at yourself if you are 'really' going down that route because it's a very, very, dark place to go.

    If you start to think that anyone with whom you disagree displays the signs of being something other than sincere, a phantasm, a spectre, who is merely 'faux' reasonable then you are disappearing into a rabbit hole void the end result of which is a dystopian nightmare of narcissistic individualism.

    I don't agree with everything you post but I don't stoop to question your sincerity.
    OK, I'll say what others won't: fuck off, you Putin apologist. I'm not going to be lectured on "dark places" from someone who would have NATO bomb Russia's air defences inside Russia. That comes from a very dark place indeed.
  • TOPPING said:

    By Robert?

    Has anyone else ever been "challenged specifically on [their] IP address"?
    JackW was but it turned out he was operating from a cellar in LibDem HQ so Mike let the old scrote off.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,770
    Heathener said:

    Eeek.

    Don't tell Robert.

    Very different to the false data on Israel you repeatedly posted despite being called out
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,553
    Russia flattening the Antonov works today looks more like economic vandalism ahead of a forced-by-reality ceasefire, than it does any great military targeting.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,219

    I think it’s the Georgia model

    Secure the self-proclaimed republics (including the water sources for the Crimea and the land bridge via Mariupol)

    Grab the capital and defenestrate the president

    Negotiate peace

    All done in 2 weeks
    I think he was looking for 2 days - by the time the West got the first summit conference agreed, a fait accompli.

    Russia would be running Ukraine from the capital, installing a temporary government and recognising a range of "republics" covering large chunks of the Eastern part of Ukraine.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    Tonight Russian state TV’s flagship news show tells viewers Russian troops are in Ukraine to stop Ukraine joining Nato, getting a nuclear bomb, attacking Crimea & then southern Russia, ie Ukraine was a threat to Russia. Alternative reality. More of what host Kiselev said 👇

    https://twitter.com/BBCSteveR/status/1503048996205600769
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,219

    JackW was but it turned out he was operating from a cellar in LibDem HQ so Mike let the old scrote off.
    I though that was the Jacobite headquarters?
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,108
    edited March 2022
    TOPPING said:

    By Robert?

    Has anyone else ever been "challenged specifically on [their] IP address"?
    Robert seems to check them quite often. I remember being 'checked' when I was claiming to be posting from Sioux Falls. Which I was.

    The point is that someone has been challenged, and hasn't responded in any of the normal ways that a regular poster would (which might include some righteous indignation at being checked and assertions of being simply at home/at work as usual), but instead responded by dodging the issue with some bluster and then swiftly disappearing. Hardly reassuring.

    Robert has no reason to risk his credibility by making up false information about the IP address, so either there's an innocent explanation or mistake, or there isn't.

    What gets me with Heathener is that her posts are so repetitive and tiresome and then she wonders why people in the surrounding conversation sometimes seem a little irritated.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,770
    TOPPING said:

    By Robert?

    Has anyone else ever been "challenged specifically on [their] IP address"?
    @PJohnson
    @d_d

    Both were before they disappeared
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,422
    In a new Radio 4 podcast series, War on Truth, I follow people caught up in the extraordinary information war being fought over Ukraine.

    A denial of reality waged by trolls, state media, influencers.

    With @AdeaneAnt - first eps on Monday, trailer here.


    https://twitter.com/mariannaspring/status/1502298981552037898
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754

    Russia flattening the Antonov works today looks more like economic vandalism ahead of a forced-by-reality ceasefire, than it does any great military targeting.

    One of the problems the west has in air campaigns is literally running out of targets. You can see it in Kosovo and Libya in particular. The western solution is to step back and try to find some more military targets, and run more patrols looking for targets of opportunity. The Russian solution might be to strike any vaguely relevant target. Also, Russia not having a well deceloped target list may be part of the answer to why we haven’t seen so much of its airforce. Just a theory.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705

    Looking at what is happening and not happening in Ukraine, my theory on the air war, is that both sides have enough SAM systems to make medium and high level operations very dangerous. This is why the Russians appear to be flying very low. In part this is due to the Russian lack of real defence suppression capability (SEAD).

    We should (and I hope are) be looking at resupplying Ukraine with higher end systems than just Stinger. These would need be the various Russia systems such as (ironically, given the history) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buk_missile_system
    The Article That Must Not Be Named also posited that the reason the Russians are flying low might be because there is precious little communication/coordination with their own anti-aircraft weapons and they don't want to get shot down by their own side.
  • "Let's put this into context for a moment. In the last 30 days, there have been a little under 200 individual posters on PB. Of these, three have IP addresses that are flagged in https://www.whatismyip.com/blacklist-check/: @PJohnson, @d_d and @Heathener

    Coincindence? "

    Oops.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,400
    IanB2 said:

    Robert seems to check them quite often. I remember being 'checked' when I was claiming to be posting from Sioux Falls. Which I was.

    The point is that someone has been challenged, and hasn't responded in any of the normal ways that a regular poster would (which might include some righteous indignation at being checked and assertions of being simply at home/at work as usual), but instead responded by dodging the issue with some bluster and then swiftly disappearing. Hardly reassuring.

    Robert has no reason to risk his credibility by making up false information about the IP address, so either there's an innocent explanation or mistake, or there isn't.

    What gets me with Heathener is that her posts are so repetitive and tiresome and then she wonders why people in the surrounding conversation sometimes seem a little irritated.
    I actually have a Python script that runs once a week (and which I occasionally manually run). Most of the time it comes back with no hits, but since the Ukraine invasion, it has chirped on a couple of occasions.
  • BenpointerBenpointer Posts: 35,296
    IanB2 said:

    Robert seems to check them quite often. I remember being 'checked' when I was claiming to be posting from Sioux Falls. Which I was.

    The point is that someone has been challenged, and hasn't responded in any of the normal ways that a regular poster would (which might include some righteous indignation at being checked and assertions of being simply at home/at work as usual), but instead responded by dodging the issue with some bluster and then swiftly disappearing. Hardly reassuring.

    What gets me with Heathener is that her posts are so repetitive and tiresome and then she wonders why people in the surrounding conversation sometimes seem a little irritated.
    Speaking as a bloke, @Heathener does make a good point about the 'maleness' of PB at times.

    Indeed, it's not so much 'maleness', more 'puerile-teenage-boy-ness'. As an example, the inane 'willy-warmer' conversation the other night made me cringe tbh.

    It would be good to have more women posting on here but we don't make it very encouraging at times.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,705
    rcs1000 said:

    It's OK to have a dissenting opinion.

    But it's also a little suspicious when you have a dissenting opinion, have a record of spreading falsehoods (about BA pilots and vaccines, for example), and have an IP address that's listed in the blacklists.
    Absolutely and it's your site so them's the rules. Perhaps it is a mark of the sophistication of spammers that @Heathener's posts seem to me to be genuine and I could point to other posters who are equally contentious for many on PB, not to say equally provocative.
  • Sandpit said:

    NFZ is simply fluffy words to mean the West bombing Russia, which is a major escalation that gives Putin cover for his own escalation.

    Far, far better to keep shoveling all those Stinger ground-to-air missiles over into Ukraine. Get enough of them in theatre, and you end up with a no-fly zone by default.
    I am not an expert on war but in regard to the 30 or so cruise missiles that hit near the Polish border are there defence systems that can intercept them and are there any deployed in Ukraine ?
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754
    rcs1000 said:

    Oh, it's entirely possible there is an innocent explanation.

    People's machines get hacked all the time.

    On the other hand, it is odd how many posters appear with certain... hobby horses... and which also have IPs that are flagged.

    Let's put this into context for a moment. In the last 30 days, there have been a little under 200 individual posters on PB. Of these, three have IP addresses that are flagged in https://www.whatismyip.com/blacklist-check/: @PJohnson, @d_d and @Heathener

    Coincindence?
    Well it gives me confidence that I pick safe porn sites.
  • geoffwgeoffw Posts: 9,012
    Meeks's article is excellent. Even if he's not on here he is at least putting out his thoughts and aperçus in the market place of ideas. Better than many a commentator in the mainstream media.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,219
    biggles said:

    One of the problems the west has in air campaigns is literally running out of targets. You can see it in Kosovo and Libya in particular. The western solution is to step back and try to find some more military targets, and run more patrols looking for targets of opportunity. The Russian solution might be to strike any vaguely relevant target. Also, Russia not having a well deceloped target list may be part of the answer to why we haven’t seen so much of its airforce. Just a theory.
    One of the curious phenomenon of dictatorships is the way their armed forces become a series of competing fiefdoms. This is great for The Boss - since a fragmented military is less of threat. But getting them all to dance to the same tune is then problematic.

    I wonder if this is an issue in Russia.
  • pingping Posts: 3,805
    I’ve had a few problems with betting sites since enabling my iPhones “private relay” - I think it’s basically a VPN with a scrambled IP address. Anyone else had similar problems?
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754

    I am not an expert on war but in regard to the 30 or so cruise missiles that hit near the Polish border are there defence systems that can intercept them and are there any deployed in Ukraine ?
    Yes, patriot is deployed in Poland.

    And - probably not anything comparable, but they might have a bit of ex-Soviet capability.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Russia flattening the Antonov works today looks more like economic vandalism ahead of a forced-by-reality ceasefire, than it does any great military targeting.

    A plane factory could definitely be a useful asset in a longer war, but it does look like the Russians have decided that Ukraine won’t be allowed to have nice things. It’s symbolic more than strategic, same as the An225 they blew up a couple of weeks ago.
  • Tonight Russian state TV’s flagship news show tells viewers Russian troops are in Ukraine to stop Ukraine joining Nato, getting a nuclear bomb, attacking Crimea & then southern Russia, ie Ukraine was a threat to Russia. Alternative reality. More of what host Kiselev said 👇

    https://twitter.com/BBCSteveR/status/1503048996205600769

    I should think that most sentient Russian viewers will be able to deduce from that precisely why Russian troops are in Ukraine.

    The rest are just the Russian equivalent of Daily Mail readers.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,733
    IanB2 said:

    As I said, most of the American falls came after London closed. You need to account for time zones.

    I don't know on Hong Kong, but their covid situation appears bad independent from the war.
    Probably the news that Foxconn has suspended production as a result of the latest lockdown has something to do with it ?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,219

    I am not an expert on war but in regard to the 30 or so cruise missiles that hit near the Polish border are there defence systems that can intercept them and are there any deployed in Ukraine ?
    Depends on the missiles. Older Soviet era system tend to be less good against low flying, terrain hugging planes and missiles.
  • boulayboulay Posts: 6,155
    rcs1000 said:

    Oh, it's entirely possible there is an innocent explanation.

    People's machines get hacked all the time.

    On the other hand, it is odd how many posters appear with certain... hobby horses... and which also have IPs that are flagged.

    Let's put this into context for a moment. In the last 30 days, there have been a little under 200 individual posters on PB. Of these, three have IP addresses that are flagged in https://www.whatismyip.com/blacklist-check/: @PJohnson, @d_d and @Heathener

    Coincindence?
    I think you are forgetting that Heathener worked in intelligence for three years, on Russian military manoeuvres no less, and so is using her spy-craft to disguise who she is in case the FSB track her IP address and find out where she lives….

    Clearly she is posting sceptical posts with a Russian flavour so that she can flush out people who agree and catch those wily Russian 5th column chaps who post on PB.

    Never forget Heathener worked in intelligence for three years…..

    And just to remind you in case you’ve already forgotten, Heathener worked in intelligence for three years.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,937

    Tonight Russian state TV’s flagship news show tells viewers Russian troops are in Ukraine to stop Ukraine joining Nato, getting a nuclear bomb, attacking Crimea & then southern Russia, ie Ukraine was a threat to Russia. Alternative reality. More of what host Kiselev said 👇

    https://twitter.com/BBCSteveR/status/1503048996205600769

    And Russians are buying it. I keep hearing from Russian and Ukrainian colleagues about their frustrating calls with elderly relatives in Russia, who are just parroting the Kremlin lines wholesale. It's as bad as the capture of a large chunk of the US population by Trumpism and QAnon.

    It means any short term hope for Putin to fall from grace is just wishful thinking. We are at the start of a long, tedious, painful, occasionally dangerous period of containment that may last decades. It may evolve in time into a full on US-China cold war as Russia becomes increasingly like the Austro-Hungarian or Ottoman empires from 1914 onwards - a convenient ally for the real rising power.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 127,062
    edited March 2022
    Zero chance of Boris calling a general election this year or even next year unless the Tories regain a big lead in the polls. Otherwise, even if he won it would be with a significantly reduced majority.

    Note too after 10 years of their party in power no PM has called a general election before the full 5 year term of their government is up. See 1964, 1992, 1997 and 2010 (not all of them were defeated, Major won a shock re election in 1992)
  • Peter_the_PunterPeter_the_Punter Posts: 14,644
    edited March 2022
    TOPPING said:

    Absolutely and it's your site so them's the rules. Perhaps it is a mark of the sophistication of spammers that @Heathener's posts seem to me to be genuine and I could point to other posters who are equally contentious for many on PB, not to say equally provocative.
    P Johnson and d-d were laughably obvious, but Heathener less so.

    I thought she was stupid, but harmless. Guess she's gone now.
  • IanB2IanB2 Posts: 51,108
    rcs1000 said:

    I actually have a Python script that runs once a week (and which I occasionally manually run). Most of the time it comes back with no hits, but since the Ukraine invasion, it has chirped on a couple of occasions.
    You'd think that during the pandemic these trolls should be working from home? ;)
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    I am not an expert on war but in regard to the 30 or so cruise missiles that hit near the Polish border are there defence systems that can intercept them and are there any deployed in Ukraine ?
    It was reported last week that a missile defence system has been set up close to the Polish border, using the US Patriot system. Presumably it’s going to be used to stop stray missiles heading for Poland, rather than to take out Russian missiles in Ukraine.

    https://edition.cnn.com/2022/03/10/politics/us-patriot-missile-defense-system-explainer/index.html

    It’s interesting how, with the exception of the attack on this base at the weekend, Russia has been quite sparing with the long-range missiles. My suspicion is that they have only a few hundred of them.
  • turbotubbsturbotubbs Posts: 18,630
    TOPPING said:

    By Robert?

    Has anyone else ever been "challenged specifically on [their] IP address"?
    Yes, the more obvious trolls, in recent weeks. Its quite common.
  • bigglesbiggles Posts: 6,754
    edited March 2022
    Sandpit said:

    It was reported last week that a missile defence system has been set up close to the Polish border, using the US Patriot system. Presumably it’s going to be used to stop stray missiles heading for Poland, rather than to take out Russian missiles in Ukraine.

    https://edition.cnn.com/2022/03/10/politics/us-patriot-missile-defense-system-explainer/index.html

    It’s interesting how, with the exception of the attack on this base at the weekend, Russia has been quite sparing with the long-range missiles. My suspicion is that they have only a few hundred of them.
    It’s what it would look like if we or the French were acting unilaterally I think (the lack of cruise missiles I mean - we wouldn’t now resort to gravity bombs). We’ve all got so used to watching US led Ops with unlimited munitions that we’ve missed that these things are costly and stocks need managing.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 45,371
    Sandpit said:

    It was reported last week that a missile defence system has been set up close to the Polish border, using the US Patriot system. Presumably it’s going to be used to stop stray missiles heading for Poland, rather than to take out Russian missiles in Ukraine.

    https://edition.cnn.com/2022/03/10/politics/us-patriot-missile-defense-system-explainer/index.html

    It’s interesting how, with the exception of the attack on this base at the weekend, Russia has been quite sparing with the long-range missiles. My suspicion is that they have only a few hundred of them.
    A video the other say said that Russia had launched only 100 missiles in the first ?day? of the war - when they are most effective at hitting concentrated defenders. In comparison, the US launched 350 in the first day of the Iraq War twenty years ago.

    (Apols if I've misremembered / misunderstood those figures.)

    If that's right, you do have to ask why: and lack of missiles might well be a factor.
This discussion has been closed.