Russian President Vladimir said Wednesday he would re-deploy military forces along the border with Finland in response to the country becoming a member of the NATO alliance in April.
Yes, you can make the argument that a hyper-modern vehicle is a vastly more effective weapons system, so the disparity in cost is justified.
That isn’t what we are seeing in Ukraine - relatively modern NATO-standard tanks are being knocked out by old artillery, immobilized by old mines, and killed by cheap drones. Industrial warfare in the vein of WWI and WWII is clearly not dead yet.
This isn’t to say Russia would win a direct conventional war against the west, but we also can’t sit here smugly and claim it would be a steamroll like Gulf Storm given the observations from Ukraine.
Iraq has shown that with air superiority, you can completely crush any large opposing force with ease if it’s executed well. The reason why this turned into a conventional war is because neither side has air superiority. If Russia did, this war would’ve been over ages ago. That is also why I think in a Russia vs NATO showdown, Russia doesn’t stand a chance, not even remotely when it comes to capabilities.
relatively modern NATO-standard tanks are being knocked out by old artillery, immobilized by old mines, and killed by cheap drones.
“Force multiplier” doesn’t mean invincible. By “Gulf Storm” I assume you mean “Desert Storm” during the Persian Gulf War. The coalition forces still lost a lot of tanks, APCs, and airplanes even in victory.
The US in particular sent only 31 Abrams tanks to Ukraine, and none of them were “relatively modern”. Those tanks may have actually been in Desert Storm they’re so old!
These few tanks are designed to work in concert with massive artillery and air superiority fighter bombers, which Ukraine doesn’t have. Right now neither side has a substantial advantage in the air, and Ukraine just doesn’t have enough planes to attack with them.
So the actual thing Ukraine needs is more expensive “force multipliers”, like Patriot missile systems and F-16s. Artillery shells, mines, and drones can’t protect you from those.
Yes, you can make the argument that a hyper-modern vehicle is a vastly more effective weapons system, so the disparity in cost is justified.
That isn’t what we are seeing in Ukraine - relatively modern NATO-standard tanks are being knocked out by old artillery, immobilized by old mines, and killed by cheap drones. Industrial warfare in the vein of WWI and WWII is clearly not dead yet.
This isn’t to say Russia would win a direct conventional war against the west, but we also can’t sit here smugly and claim it would be a steamroll like Gulf Storm given the observations from Ukraine.
Iraq has shown that with air superiority, you can completely crush any large opposing force with ease if it’s executed well. The reason why this turned into a conventional war is because neither side has air superiority. If Russia did, this war would’ve been over ages ago. That is also why I think in a Russia vs NATO showdown, Russia doesn’t stand a chance, not even remotely when it comes to capabilities.
“Force multiplier” doesn’t mean invincible. By “Gulf Storm” I assume you mean “Desert Storm” during the Persian Gulf War. The coalition forces still lost a lot of tanks, APCs, and airplanes even in victory.
The US in particular sent only 31 Abrams tanks to Ukraine, and none of them were “relatively modern”. Those tanks may have actually been in Desert Storm they’re so old!
These few tanks are designed to work in concert with massive artillery and air superiority fighter bombers, which Ukraine doesn’t have. Right now neither side has a substantial advantage in the air, and Ukraine just doesn’t have enough planes to attack with them.
So the actual thing Ukraine needs is more expensive “force multipliers”, like Patriot missile systems and F-16s. Artillery shells, mines, and drones can’t protect you from those.