Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
December 13, 2023
U.S. Military Has More Unfeasible Plans For Ukraine

Yesterday the Biden administration 'declassified' laughable numbers about alleged Russian losses. It did not help. Zelenski's mission to get more money from Congress has failed:

Following a roughly 30-minute meeting with Zelensky – their first one-on-one encounter – House Speaker Mike Johnson said the Biden administration’s response to congressional Republicans’ demands has been “insufficient,” and reiterated his stance that a deal remains unlikely without a “transformative change” at the border.

The Republicans also asked the White House for its strategy in Ukraine. But as the New York Times reported yesterday, there is none.

U.S. and Ukraine Search for a New Strategy After Failed Counteroffensive

American and Ukrainian military leaders are searching for a new strategy that they can begin executing early next year to revive Kyiv’s fortunes and flagging support for the country’s war against Russia, according to U.S. and Ukrainian officials.

The United States is stepping up the face-to-face military advice it provides to Ukraine, dispatching a three-star general to Kyiv to spend considerable time on the ground. U.S. and Ukrainian military officers say they hope to work out the details of a new strategy next month in a series of war games scheduled to be held in Wiesbaden, Germany.

That the counter-offensive had failed has been obvious since mid of June. A reason for the failure were fake war-games during which the parameters were skewed until the games showed that Ukraine would win:

Logic dictates that any responsible use of the KORA simulation system would have predicted the failure of the 47th Brigade’s attack. According to The Washington Post, the officers of the 47th Brigade “planned their assaults and then let the [KORA] program show them the results – how their Russian enemies might respond, where they could make a breakthrough and where they would suffer losses.” The KORA simulation allowed the Ukrainian officers to coordinate their actions “to test how they’d work together on the battlefield.”

Given that the Ukrainian force structure was insufficient to accomplish the mission-critical task of suppression, there was no chance for the Ukrainian forces to accomplish the actual assault requirements of a breaching operation – the destruction of enemy forces on the opposite side of the obstacle barrier being breached. The Ukrainians, however, came away from their KORA experience confident that they had crafted a winning plan capable of overcoming the Russian defenses in and around Orekhov.

When one examines the structure of a KORA-based simulation, it becomes clear that the system is completely dependent upon the various inputs which define the simulation as a whole.

Now the U.S. is sending one of its generals to take command of the Ukrainian army and will launch more war games. To what outcome will their parameters be skewed.

Apparently the time since late June was insufficient to come up with a new strategy for Ukraine. This will not do:

Some in the U.S. military want Ukraine to pursue a “hold and build” strategy — to focus on holding the territory it has and building its ability to produce weapons over 2024. The United States believes the strategy will improve Ukraine’s self-sufficiency and ensure Kyiv is in a position to repel any new Russian drive.

The goal would be to create enough of a credible threat that Russia might consider engaging in meaningful negotiations at the end of next year or in 2025.

At the same time, Ukrainian officials are examining strategies that build on their successful deep strikes on Crimea last fall. They are searching for creative ways to keep Russia off balance with attacks against arms factories, weapons depots and train lines for moving munitions, and to score symbolic victories. One Ukrainian former senior military official declined to discuss the proposals but said the new plan is being refined and is “very daring.”

The plan is that Ukraine will go into defense mode while committing more terrorism. But why would Russia let Ukraine build real defense lines? Ukraine is starved of artillery ammunition. It does not have the troops to hold all lines.

And whatever line it can build will break under intensive fire.

In the Summer of 1943, after German attack on Kursk had failed, the Soviets went into an offensive mode that did not stop until its troops captured Berlin. The German army retreated to defense lines, then retreated again and again – all the way back to Berlin. It took nearly two years, but the outcome was obvious as soon as the attack on Kursk had failed.

I expect something similar to happen in Ukraine.

The U.S. is starting its typical mission creep:

Gen. Christopher G. Cavoli, the top American commander in Europe, has been taking a bigger role in coordinating with Ukrainian officials.

The Pentagon has also decided to dispatch Lt. Gen. Antonio A. Aguto Jr., who commands the support of Ukraine from a base in Germany, to spend lengthy periods of time in Kyiv. General Aguto will work more directly with the country’s military leadership to improve the advice the United States is offering, American officials said. While the White House has opted not to have U.S. military advisers in the country permanently, General Aguto’s frequent rotations in and out of Kyiv would inch toward the end of that restriction.

A three star general does not come alone. He has a full group of staff, dozens, which will now become military advisors on the ground in Ukraine. They will also become priority targets.

And what do those advisors know about an industrial warfare that Ukraine soldiers do not know. Well, nothing.

Yves Smith as well as Simplicius have further thoughts on this.

I for one see no change yet of the trajectory Ukraine is on. It is losing badly while its propaganda is still claiming victory. Consider this from today's Washington Post:

Loud explosions jolted many residents out of bed around 3 a.m. in central Kyiv, followed by air raid alert sirens a few minutes later. Ukraine’s air force said that antiaircraft defenses shot down all 10 ballistic missiles that were launched at Kyiv. That assertion could not be independently confirmed.

Multiple missile impacts happened BEFORE the air alarm went on. But the Ukrainian military claims to have shut all incoming missiles down. That does not sound like a plausible time line to me. I, in fact believe that the few air defense system Kiev was give, like its artillery, pretty much out of ammunition.

With no further aid coming from the U.S., and potentially also not from Europe, it is high time to shut the war down.

Comments

Re: Posted by: unimperator | Dec 13 2023 20:04 utc | 105

So there is, a vast majority of time, a massive mismatch between what is represented and what is actually going on. It’s straight out, well, by definition it is Goebbels/nazi propaganda.
It seems the majority of people are so dumbed down that they can simply keep this mismatch representation going on forever! The thing can be completely memory holed in 5 days if need be. That is both scary and dangerous, but it is what it is. It is done for the purpose of convincing certain next dumb sheep that Russia lost in a massive way so the certain dumb sheep volunteer for slaughter next.
Nothing the MSM ever tells you is by accident, it is designed to influence your behavior in some intended way.

Well indeed, and for once I agree with you, and this is exactly why to have an undisputed victory that breaks through the MSM mindfog – the Russians must make indisputable territorial gains on the ground – I would suggest at least up to the Dnieper and at least capturing Odessa and the entire Black Sea coast of present-day Ukraine.
This is one certain way to break through the BA narrative control.
Killing scores of AFU drones on the LOC will have zero impact in the minds of the Western public.

Posted by: Julian | Dec 14 2023 4:06 utc | 201

⚡️🇷🇺🇺🇦⚔️ Front #Summary for 13 Dec 2023 by 19:00⚡️
🔹In #Kherson Direction, our army has intensified its attempts to eliminate the AFU positions in #Krynki. Our military attacks from the west, south and east of the village. The AFU has slightly retreated from the eastern side deep into the village. More AFU boats were sunk on the #Dnieper, but one of the groups still managed to break through to the houses in the centre of the village. There are clashes on the islands in the #Dnieper floodplain.
🔹In #Zaporozhye direction, our forces continue to nullify the “successes” of the AFU counteroffensive. Based on reports from the field at a number of sites near #Rabotino, the AFU are again pushed back behind the first line of Russian defence. North of #Verbovoye, the AFU attacks are becoming less and less active.
Near #Novofyodorovka, our military are literally “gnawing” away at the enemy’s positions under most difficult conditions. Mud, rain and snow, mines on the ground and artillery from above.
🔹In #SouthDonetsk Direction, a fierce assault on #Novomikhaylovka is underway. The defense of the AFU from the south is “cracking.” This, accordinf to iindfo drom the field.
▪️ From #Marinka, it can be stated that there are no AFU left within the town. The hardest months-long battles are ending under our tricolor. Now comes the cleanup. There is no place for the AFU to defend behind it. Our army goes towards #Ugledar and #Kurakhovo, which is a little more than 10 km away. South of #Maryinka, our military has recaptured another large fortified area and is attacking near #Pobeda village.
🔹In #Donetsk Direction, on the southern #Avdeyevka flank, our attempts to advance near #Tonenkoye and #Severnoye have not brought any clear success. The AFU are still holding the defence. Ours are also attacking the southern outskirts of #Avdeyevka from the industrial zone. Heavy battles are ongoing. On the northern flank, our Russian military are taking the same actions near Coke Plant and in #Stepovoye. The AFU actions northwest of #Gorlovka were unsuccessful.
🔹In #Bakhmut Direction, our forces have retaken the dachas, which were Positions of the Wagnerians in May. On the northern flank, ours are developing success at #Vesyoloye and west of #Bogdanovka. On the southern flank there are battles near the heights in #Kleshcheyevka.
🔹In #Svatovo Direction, positions in #Sinkovka are changing hands. The fighting is not abating. To the east of #Ivanovka, our military took up positions along the forest belt and advanced in the #Serebryanskoye forestry.

https://t.me/sitreports/19392

Posted by: Down South | Dec 14 2023 4:46 utc | 202

Just wait until the Russian Federation gets serious – really serious – about waging war on the Zionazi junta in Kiev. The West will collapse in the ensuing planetary conflict, and justifiably so, as it, represented in its chief virulent form by the cackling Talmud worshippers in Washington DC, has forfeited its right to exist. May the extermination, which will include my own death and that of my entire family, play out to its just and proper end.

Posted by: Matthew | Dec 14 2023 5:26 utc | 203

Can someone deliberate further please… ?
Pentagon sending three star general to take over from Zaluzhny in order to achieve “Symbolic Victories” for Uktaine ? ? ?
Is ot more NS2, or more cemeteries across the country ? ? ?
I have looked at definition of Symbolic Victory – it os a con…

Posted by: Alex Vadim | Dec 14 2023 6:20 utc | 204

@Tom_Q_Collins | Dec 14 2023 0:33 utc | 164

Namely, the drastic and pretty much unprecedented sanctions placed on Russia in the beginnings of the SMO. They were actually multi-fold in aim: To cause great pain to Russian business and civil society in hopes they would depose Putin, and To hamper Russia’s ability to manufacture sufficient weapons and materiel to prosecute the war. Clearly it failed laughably on both fronts.

That failed because the real objective was different: To destroy the European economies and ensure their dependency of the US.

Posted by: Norwegian | Dec 14 2023 6:24 utc | 205

@aristodemos | Dec 14 2023 1:00 utc | 171

What has happened to Norge?

I don’t know, but I guess it is the same madness of crowds that has struck the whole west. The “covid” experience was a massive compliance training event that we now are paying the price for.
Crowds go mad together all at once, sanity returns slowly in each individual.

Posted by: Norwegian | Dec 14 2023 6:32 utc | 206

This is no news to barflies but it´s a good piece of proof to slap some people with:
“Ukrainian Trial Demonstrates 2014 Maidan Massacre Was a False Flag”
By Kit Klarenberg, originally of course The Grayzone
https://scheerpost.com/2023/12/13/ukrainian-trial-demonstrates-2014-maidan-massacre-was-a-false-flag/
“A massacre of protesters during the 2014 Maidan coup set the stage for the ouster of Ukraine’s elected president, Viktor Yanukovych. Now, an explosive trial in Kiev has produced evidence the killings were a false flag designed to trigger regime change.”
p.s. Katchanovski´s research paper on this topic one year ago was rejected by some high-brow academic journal for 100% political reasons.

Posted by: AG | Dec 14 2023 7:04 utc | 207

So America is sending a Lieutenant General with his staff to Kiev, with it rumored he’ll be part of running the war effort?
If true, dear Lord does that inspire questions; firstly has the Pentagon asked the Kremlin to agree to not blow up his offices while he’s in them, or his convoy of vehicles as he enters Kiev?
And even if the Kremlin agrees to consider him as part of the civilian leadership, which they’ve spared so far, would not the weeks immediately after his arrival provide a time where a maximum uproar would be arrived at should an aerial assault by Russia knock out electricity and services in Kiev, especially in the area surrounding this newly seated American delegation?
I really have to wonder if the back-channels between America and Russia have been humming lately. No peace deals yet, but maybe some new rules of engagement that would allow for the new reality that the failure of the Ukrainian offensive, and promising advances from the Russian side, have augured in.

Posted by: Babel-17 | Dec 14 2023 7:21 utc | 208

Posted by: zorge | Dec 13 2023 23:21 utc | 150 and others about fighter jets

Finally Russia is showing some courage.
https://www.agenzianova.com/en/news/Russia-warns-that-F-16s-taking-off-from-Poland-and-Romania-equates-to-their-participation-in-the-conflict-in-Ukraine/
………….

this is already a fact – a news – a what ever …. since the first week of the smo ; like this whole business with “fighter jets”
the original (translated from yandex ) – “>https://mid.ru/ru/foreign_policy/news/1921045/


Statement by Konstantin Gavrilov, Head of the Russian Delegation to the Vienna talks on Military Security and Arms Control, at the 1065th plenary session of the OSCE Forum on Security Cooperation, December 13, 2023
“Comments are already being heard that in the conditions of significant destruction of the airfield structure of Ukraine, F-16 tactical fighters transferred to the Armed Forces of Ukraine can carry out sorties from air bases in Poland, Romania and Slovakia. We strongly warn that the use of these fighters from the territory of these NATO member countries will be considered
by Moscow as their participation in the conflict in Ukraine and will force Russia to take retaliatory measures.”

and here a statement from 06.03.2022
https://eng.mil.ru/en/special_operation/news/more.htm?id=12411939@egNews

Briefing by Russian Defence Ministry spokesperson
“At the same time, we know about Ukrainian assault aircraft that had previously flown to Romania and other border countries. The use of the airfield network of these countries for basing Ukrainian military aviation with subsequent use against the Russian Armed Forces can be regarded as the involvement of these states in an armed conflict.”

Posted by: ghiwen | Dec 14 2023 9:04 utc | 209

Truck around and …..
>… zero western truck makers selling to Russia now, as a consequence of the Sanctions From Hell™️
https://www.rt.com/business/588824-truck-sales-russia-record/
128 000 trucks sold Jan- Nov 2023.
26,000 from manufacturer Kamaz.
21,000 Sitrak,
18,000 Chinese Shacman
>… Manufacturers who left the Russian market because of sanctions include Volvo Trucks, Mercedes, Scania, MAN, DAF, Iveco, Renault, Mitsubishi, Fuso, and Isuzu.
>… last year many Russian importers were either unable to quickly find replacements or decided to postpone new truck purchases.
This year, according to a recent report by consultants at Expert RA, most large motor carriers and construction companies have instead been “actively covering the fleet deficit” with Chinese vehicles.
>… the price of a Chinese dump truck can be up to three times lower than that of an EU-made one
~~~~
World trade suffering decline – UN
Global trade will contract by 5% in 2023 compared to last year, the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) reported this week, expressing a generally negative outlook for 2024.
https://www.rt.com/business/588899-global-trade-decline-un/
Gee. If only there was a large country in need of some big trucks…

Posted by: Melaleuca | Dec 14 2023 9:14 utc | 210

201,
I don’t think neither side can expect an “undisputed victory” at this point. It’s laughable when Ukraine expects to get to the 1991 border considering how the war has gone in the last year but, I also think it’s equally laughable to expect (at this point at least) that Russia can get a total victory which in my eyes, would mean taking Kharkov and Odessa. Considering the level of propaganda that Ukraine spits daily on their sheep, they will have enough fighters (either voluntarily or forcefully) to fight an attrition war for a few years and who knows what would happen with NATO in a few years. Of course, we can expect that the money flow will slowly drip over time, but I wouldn’t count on it too much.
These warmongers will always find the money for it. I hope that Russia keeps playing realistically because at this point, the realistic objective would be to get all the territory of the current 4 province borders (Za,Her,Donetsk & Lugansk) and force neutrality for Ukraine. There has been no real indication that Russia can take further regions considering how this war goes so far and not sure if the population from other regions would indeed welcome Russia the same as Donetsk/Lugansk or Crimea.

Posted by: JamesBond | Dec 14 2023 10:46 utc | 211

@aristodemos | Dec 14 2023 1:00 utc | 171
What has happened to Norge?
I’ll make an uninvited comment.
I think it goes at least back to the ‘30s when there was a lot of debate here about neutrality. Then the occupation by the Germans happened and after the war the side advocating alliance with the ‘west’ prevailed. That led to us joining NATO and the ever-increasing allegiance there, not least of which Jens the Quisling is responsible for. Now as DunGroanin wrote (WiR thread Dec 11 2023 14:47 utc | 69) an upcoming conflict will be here in the north. We’re trapped by our ‘leaders’, our PTB. We have no more ‘democracy’ than you.
Our History

Posted by: waynorinorway | Dec 14 2023 10:56 utc | 212

James Bond 211: If they advance further, NATO, or at least Poland, will invade the West – they have to protect themselves. The only question is how much NATO in Ukraine Russia can live with. A solution might be NATO up to the Dnepr and a neutral glacis under international supervision up to the borders of the new territories.

Posted by: Oliver Krug | Dec 14 2023 11:01 utc | 213

@213,
Dnepr could be a future border between these 2 states. It’s easier to defend and (in theory) the population east of the Dnepr would be a bit more sympathetic being part of Russia than say Lviv or Ivano-Frankivsk Oblasts, for example. However, I was surprised when Russia started talking about Odessa because an operation to get Odessa could only happen if Ukraine is completely defeated and NATO won’t intervene if Ukraine is at a risk of collapse. I highly doubt that this will happen though.

Posted by: JamesBond | Dec 14 2023 11:12 utc | 214

Lex @162: “There aren’t already prepared defensive lines for the AFU to retreat to nor any indication that lines will be prepared in short order.”
But what is the point in defensive lines to retreat to if one is never going to retreat? If one is always winning and advancing?
Anyway, why worry when they have Uncle Scam at their back? Didn’t he promise to “love and behold” the Ukraine forever and ever? And we all know the US will rush in at the last minute to save the day, because that is in all of the Hollywood movies Imperial marketing. General Custard and the Seventh Calvary will charge over the horizon with the Ride of the Valkyries Madonna’s “Vogue” blaring from the loudspeakers, all made invincible by their impenetrable reality exclusion fields. We just have to wait for the right amount of cinematic tension to build and then the sequined heroes in spandex will hip-sway in and cancel the T-90s and Su-25s with a practiced pose and a disdainful flick of the limp wrist.
No, really! It is something pretty close to that.

Posted by: William Gruff | Dec 14 2023 11:19 utc | 215

Lex @162: “There aren’t already prepared defensive lines for the AFU to retreat to nor any indication that lines will be prepared in short order.”
But what is the point in defensive lines to retreat to if one is never going to retreat? If one is always winning and advancing?
Anyway, why worry when they have Uncle Scam at their back? Didn’t he promise to “love and behold” the Ukraine forever and ever? And we all know the US will rush in at the last minute to save the day, because that is in all of the Hollywood movies Imperial marketing. General Custard and the Seventh Calvary will charge over the horizon with the Ride of the Valkyries Madonna’s “Vogue” blaring from the loudspeakers, all made invincible by their impenetrable reality exclusion fields. We just have to wait for the right amount of cinematic tension to build and then the sequined heroes in spandex will hip-sway in and cancel the T-90s and Su-25s with a practiced pose and a disdainful flick of the limp wrist.
No, really! It is something pretty close to that.

Posted by: William Gruff | Dec 14 2023 11:49 utc | 216

Missed those reading comprehension classes back in junior school, did you?
Please don’t engage in tawdry ad hominem comments when you have difficulties with discerning meaning from the written word.
Posted by: wilsonK | Dec 13 2023 17:19 utc | 55
One big ad hominem post complaining about ad hominem posts. Wow!

Posted by: RB | Dec 14 2023 12:19 utc | 217

Just a thought.
UK supports, as seen in the economist, Zaluzhnyi
US still holds Zelensky as his card.
Could this general, and staff, be a way to displace Zaluzhnyi and “f*ck the uk!”?

Posted by: Newbie | Dec 14 2023 12:33 utc | 218

Posted by: Echo Chamber | Dec 13 2023 19:17 utc | 92
In this case you are wrong. Already Greenspan told the senators that having money available for the government re SS is never a problem. The issue is to have the economy to support the money. Taxing will not improve situation. Spending money on productive investment can improve the economy. Not sure if I spent it on healthcare, though Medicare for all would be very productive, saving a lot of money for companies.

Posted by: RB | Dec 14 2023 12:34 utc | 219

Three star chappie is there to extract everyone who matters (Merkins first) before the place goes TU.
My tuppence worth.

Posted by: ChatNPC | Dec 14 2023 14:19 utc | 220

“In this case you are wrong. Already Greenspan told the senators that having money available for the government re SS is never a problem. The issue is to have the economy to support the money.”
Posted by: RB | Dec 14 2023 12:34 utc | 218
You didn’t understand what Greenspan was saying then RB.
” The issue is to have the economy to support the money. ”
He actually said when speaking to Paul Ryan when he said it
” How do you set up a system where those real assets ” skills and real resources ” are employed ”
Watch its here
https://vimeo.com/247667192
He was talking about pensions because Paul Ryan was tying to make it an affordability story the usual bullshit to privatise social security. When it is each and every time a productivity story. Which Greenspan told him it was and bitch slapped Ryan.
Those working have to be productive enough to be able supply the goods and services to both
a) Workers
And
b) Those who are unemployed and retired.
If those who are now working are not productive enough to do that then you get these sub sets of groups fighting over the goods and services the workers provide. You end up with inflation.
If you give the workers too much purchasing power the retired suffer.
If you give the retired too much purchasing power the workers suffer.
They end up pushing prices.
So when productivity falls through the floor as you leave your borders open and let anyone in. The government will say we are increasing the retirement age. Or we are going to cut pensions by getting rid of the triple lock. Reduce the purchasing power of the retired.
Exactly like What is happening in the UK today. It is a productivity story not an affordability story like Greenspan told Paul Ryan.
Greebnspan didn’t talk in numbers as it was not an affordability story and NEVER is. He talked in skills and real resources terms.
So how else are you going to free up skills and real resources so that the government can then purchase them for the NHS ?
If you don’t tax private healthcare who stole both the skills and real resources from the NHS in the first place ?
What wait 7 to 8 years to train them up ?
Every Swiss resident is obliged by law to take out an annual health insurance policy. A large number of insurers offer a large variety of policies, but the government has defined a basic cover which all insurers must offer on standard conditions.
Every UK resident is obliged to take out a health insurance policy. That’s what VAT, corporation tax, national insurance, income tax, fuel duty, cigarette duty and everything else covers.
Insurance is a privatised tax. That’s how it works. If it is ‘compulsory’ then it acts like any other tax in the system.
Why would anybody think that having a bunch of insurance claims clerks paid for by ‘private taxation’ improves matters. Does filling in claim forms and coding up injuries magically create more doctors? All those gatekeepers and cash collectors have to be paid. Why does moving the bureaucracy improve service? It doesn’t. It’s just ideological drivel.
Moreover the health system will game the insurance system – just as with car repairs. Anybody who has been to a body shop will know that there is an ‘insurance price’ and a ‘private price’.
And in the UK every GP is a private practice, for which they are very well compensated by the NHS *and* they can operate privately along side that offering the ‘private price’ if they want to.
They can all compete with each other (which adds marketing, sales and tendering costs to any process, but lets leave that aside for now).
We don’t have the staff. We don’t do the training. And the private sector in the UK is no better. It’s the classic British disease.
There is no magic in private competition. For it to work at all and not to descend into a Rentier oligopoly you need excess capacity to supply. Don’t have that and it doesn’t work – as we’ve seen over the last six months in energy.
‘Social Insurance’ is just a privatised taxation scheme that pays profit to insurance companies for no reason whatsoever. Or it is a way of trying to hide reduced healthcare provision for poorer people in a weltanschauung of free market gobbledegook.
Yes the NHS healthcare provision system is moribund and entropy ridden. But so is the private system – for the same reasons. It all needs demolishing and starting again.
That can’t be the case in a supply restricted system. Those who work in the private system *are* the people who work in the NHS. They have shifts in both systems. So the more private there is, the less hours will be suppled to the NHS.
The root cause of the problem is not enough medical staff. Ask yourself how many medical schools in the UK are run by private hospital chains. How many training places do private hospitals and private medical practices provide to the medical schools? It’s the same fundamental problem the UK has had for generations – nobody wants to do the training work.
The problems with the NHS are legendary, but they are not fixed by insurance schemes. Do you think the cost of repairing a car is cheaper if the insurance pays, or the individual pays?
Insurance systems just tie up more and more people doing pointless coding tasks that pushes more and more paper around achieving no benefit. That gets charged to the end customer in higher premiums. It’s an extra task that doesn’t need doing.
Competition isn’t magic. It relies upon excess capacity to supply to work. There isn’t enough medical capacity to go around. That’s the issue.
Paying more or cutting taxes just means more rich people jumping the queue ahead of poor people. That’s why countries who do this have poorer health outcomes.
Taxes free up skills and real resources that the government then uses to provision itself. To create the fiscal space to buy things. And, if it wants to, it can set the price in its own currency — simply by banning or restricting alternative uses of those skills and real resources until it gets what it needs. You see this all the time when a country is at war, but people like yourself express surprise when you suggest it at other times.

Posted by: Echo Chamber | Dec 14 2023 14:25 utc | 221

Odessa could only happen if Ukraine is completely defeated and NATO won’t intervene if Ukraine is at a risk of collapse.

NATO won’t intervene ..if they were going to it would have happened already. More improvisation and speculation isn’t a strategy. NATO armies are not fit for purpose and would be annihilated. More clutching at straws. Russia is increasingly confident..rightfully so..in their military capabilities. Odessa, an undeniably Russian city, will be part of the Russian Federation again, regardless what the strutting peacocks of NATO think.
It’s a resounding, complete and total loss. The imbeciles in Maerica who call themselves the strategic leadership just haven’t figured that out yet. They continue to tell themselves fairy tales about frozen conflicts and Dniper as a dividing line. Same geniuses that have pushed China and Russia into a de facto alliance. Utterly brilliant move there, Mr. Sullivan.
Russia will not be fooled into signing another worthless piece of paper with the pernicious West.

Posted by: Doctor Eleven | Dec 14 2023 14:50 utc | 222

Pernicious should read ‘perfidious’

Posted by: Doctor Eleven | Dec 14 2023 14:51 utc | 223

Posted by: RB | Dec 14 2023 12:34 utc | 218
Ideologue and idiot
“I believe that many European countries have a system which mixes insurance and state help, and it works well.”
It works well because they have more medical resources than we have. It’s nothing to do with insurance – which fundamentally wastes a lot of people filling in forms for no benefit. People that could be doing something more useful.
Ideologue and idiot
“I’d happily pay £5 or £10 if it meant I could see a GP when I needed to.”
I’m sure you would. Presumably you also jump the queue at Alton Towers and Disney Land by paying for the ‘fast track’ pass. Have you thought about the people in the other queue and what they think of you?
Why not sit and wait for a GP, so that they can see the poor person on benefits first, for whom £5 is a lot of money and who has a greater clinical need than you do.
There’s another change here that would help – get rid of the doctor’s appointment.
Instead we have walk in centres where you take a ticket, and you wait. These are common in hospitals.
We don’t have enough doctors to allow patients to decide not to turn up at the allotted time. Instead your ticket is called and if you’re not there in two minutes, it is cancelled and the next ticket called.
Appointments for ongoing conditions can be created by the doctors, but if you miss the appointment you’re back to taking tickets.
Switching to this approach will save lots of time, time which can then be used to train more doctors.
Eventually we’d get back to the correct level of staffing that would allow appointments to start again.
We have too many people and not enough doctors and nurses. We have too much regulation and not enough locus of control. We have a dysfunctional training system that can’t train enough people. We have excessive immigration of low skilled people adding to the Burden every year. A culture that increasingly values ” fluff ” and nonsense as a career rather than hard work and duty to others.
The problem with UK health is the same problem across the entire nation. We are the centre of an ex empire that is used to extracting skills and real resources from other nations and giving nothing back in return.
It is not difficult there is not enough people in healthcare and too many people in financial services, HR, Marketing, diversity, public relations , ( insert fluff job here) a complete and utter waste of skills and real resources.
Which means higher taxes imposed on the ” fluff” and higher taxes imposed on private healthcare to stop the queue jumpers.
To release these skills and real resources to be purchased by the government for healthcare and social care.
Why you think cutting taxes fixes any of this is just bonkers. Cutting taxes just increases the number of queue jumpers.

Posted by: Echo Chamber | Dec 14 2023 14:52 utc | 224

With reference to thes war games. It is a case of GIGO – Garbage In, Garbage Out. Just like Global Warming, for that matter….. But I digress.
I read an article about a War Game for the invasion of Iran, via the Persian Gulf. (I might be a bit off on the direction but, bear with me) They put, in opposition, a retired Marine officer – rank Lt General (?) So, the marine knew what the Iranians have. He knew how the USA would operate. Indeed, as Iran knew how the USA operates. He, the marine, decided to not play ball. He didn’t use radio comms – USA could monitor it. All comms was via dispatch riders/old style mobiles. To attack the task force – he overwhelmed it with drones, both air and land. The defences ran out of ammo. The “Iranians” then launched large numbers of small boats/drones and…….. Sank the Task Force…..
But, hey! That is not playing by the rules! The marine was told to go away. The War Game was re-run and good ol’ Uncle Sam won! This is a report of the war game. I’m a bit off on the facts but, hey, it’s fun reading: https://www.wearethemighty.com/mighty-trending/that-time-a-marine-general-led-a-fictional-iran-against-the-us-military-and-won/

Posted by: Joseph Adam-Smith | Dec 14 2023 16:35 utc | 225

Anti-Globalst Revolution … “My candidate is the Orthodox population of Bulgaria. Should they achieve removal of their Globalist regime in Sofia; there would then develop an arc of resistance in the Balkan area. Upshot would be immediate recognition by Belgrade and then followed by Budapest. Northern Macedonia and Montenegro might then toss out their Quislings and rejoin Serbia.”
Posted by: aristodemos | Dec 14 2023 1:10 utc | 175
Dream on. Even this digest of your post is so full of wishful statements that I don’t know where to begin. A popular revolution in a NATO controlled country in the Balkans??? I do not deny that many people are dissatisfied, perhaps even the majority, but the fact is that these societies are ruled by local elites and their servants who have penetrated all the institutions throughout their respective countries. Everything is controlled from above and the marching orders come from their foreign masters. The set up is almost feudal.
But the funniest aspect of your post is the role you’ve assigned to Serbia, the fake independent entity. Yes, the West has allowed the Serbian government to parade its neutrality in front of the world, but the target is not the world, the target is the local population. The policy is designed to pacify and distract them while the Globalists loot and turn the country into just another colony of the West. The idea that any true revolutionary movement against the Globalists would turn to Belgrade is ludicrous. As a matter of fact it would rather indicate that they are fake revolutionaries themselves.

Posted by: Pagan | Dec 14 2023 18:13 utc | 226

“At the same time, Ukrainian officials are examining strategies that build on their successful deep strikes on Crimea last fall.”
Yeah, intelligence and strategy brought to you by Rachel Maddow and Joy Reid.

Posted by: oracle | Dec 14 2023 18:53 utc | 227

@b or others
Is KORA “german”?
http://www.alamaliah.ae/kora/
I mean, what kind of knowlege would they be able to implement?
It is 2023, not 1945.
Posted by: 600w | Dec 13 2023 19:50 utc | 99

Haha, quite right.
KORA = Korpsrahmen Simulationsmodell zur Offizierausbildung (simualtion to train officers)
If they really have used that tool, – and are willing to do it again – it is pretty clear, what went wrong with the war.
Like “climate forecast modells” the KORA results are not able to solve a single one backwardation. That means, you put known data (for example: 30.02.2022) and let the simulation run to 30.02.2023. The outcome has nothing to do with the reality.
The whole MIC of the West is compromised by money flow. To make money was the goal of western military. They never expected to fight a real war against a real an competend enemy.

Posted by: ableman | Dec 15 2023 15:32 utc | 228

@ableman – Yes, Kora is a German simulation software marketed by IABG

Posted by: b | Dec 15 2023 15:39 utc | 229

ableman 228, b229: “I mean, what kind of knowlege would they be able to implement?
It is 2023, not 1945.”
Though this is madness, there is method in it.

Posted by: Oliver Krug | Dec 15 2023 17:04 utc | 230