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Topic: Ukrainian Post-Mortems Starting to Appear (Read 49 times)

legendary
Activity: 3990
Merit: 1385
January 06, 2024, 12:36:07 PM
#1
This is really sad for a once great nation. There are so many wonderful Ukrainian people in America, and now their country is being obliterated, more and more, day by day. What's worse is that more Ukraine funding will only make it worse by dragging out the war until all of Ukraine is completely destroyed.


Ukrainian Post-Mortems Starting to Appear



https://ronpaulinstitute.org/ukrainian-post-mortems-starting-to-appear/
Russia is methodically destroying Ukrainian factories set up to manufacture military tactical clothing, ammunition, drones and vehicles. Repair facilities also have been hit and obliterated. Ditto for military training facilities aka bases. Ukraine's recent use of cluster munitions on Belgorod and Donetsk killed a few civilians but enraged Putin and his military commanders. In response Russia has unleashed a devastating series of missile, drone and rocket attacks across the breadth of Ukraine and vowed to keep doing so. So much for Western hopes of building manufacturing plants in Ukraine to keep it in the war.

Panic among Western analysts about Ukraine's looming defeat has escalated. Robert Clark, writing in the U.K. Telegraph, wailed his lamentation in an op-ed titled, Ukraine's new year may end with a brutal Western betrayal. Clark blames Western leaders for Ukraine's debacle:

The mood in 2024 is very different. The counter-offensive failed to deliver a decisive blow to Putin's forces in the south. Russia's economy has withstood Western sanctions, rapidly militarising to provide an ongoing stream of munitions to the front. Ukraine, meanwhile, is undergoing one of the largest aerial bombardments since the war began, and its united front is beginning to fray as conscription takes its toll. . . .

To turn our backs now on the Ukrainian people, so swiftly after months of brutal fighting, is morally bankrupt and strategically negligent.

It is understandable, if not forgivable, that governments have begun questioning their levels of commitment to a deeply destructive war with no end in sight. At best there now appears to be a likely short to medium term stalemate across much of the 1,000 kilometre front line.

Meanwhile, Western economies and budgets are still grappling with recovery from the pandemic and last year's energy shock. Global supply chains are still in flux, and as the Middle East flares up the Houthis are increasingly able to dictate the terms of trade and passage in the Red Sea, delivering another blow to a fragile global economy.
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