FTFY, since this:The Village Idiot wrote:I lack analytical ability and objectivity.

would have been way too subtle for you.
FTFY, since this:The Village Idiot wrote:I lack analytical ability and objectivity.

Charles the XII of Sweden defeated Frederick the Great (And 100% of his other opponents to that moment)in every battle, except the last one. The Turks serially rode north across the steppe and looted various cities holding portions of Ukraine and modern Russia for different period of time. The British + Ottomans won the Crimean war.Burning Petard wrote:"...
Russia has a long history of wars. For the last 300 years, I agree that Russia has not been defeated militarily. ... "
snailgate
More:The Treaty of Brest-Litovsk was signed on 3 March 1918. The signatories were Soviet Russia signed by Grigori Yakovlovich Sokolnikov on the one side and the German Empire, Austria-Hungary, Bulgaria, and Ottoman Empire on the other.
The treaty marked Russia's final withdrawal from World War I as an enemy of her co-signatories, on severe terms. In all, the treaty took away territory that included a quarter of the population and industry of the former Russian Empire [28] and nine-tenths of its coal mines.[29]
Russia renounced all territorial claims in Finland (which it had already acknowledged), Baltic states (Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania), Belarus, and Ukraine. The territory of the Kingdom of Poland was not mentioned in the treaty, because Russian Poland had been a personal possession of the Tsar, not part of the Empire.
The treaty stated that "Germany and Austria-Hungary intend to determine the future fate of these territories in agreement with their populations." Most of these territories were in effect ceded to Germany, which intended to have them become economic and political dependencies.



Read the rest here.The headline figures for Russia’s Vostok (or “East”) military exercises, which began yesterday, are dramatic: 300,000 soldiers, 36,000 tanks and other vehicles, 80 ships, and 1,000 aircraft operating across more than half the country. That’s double the size of the British armed forces. It’s also twice the size of the last Vostok war games, held back in 2014. As if that weren’t enough, some 3,200 Chinese troops and 30 aircraft are also involved, along with a small Mongolian force.
Vostok will take the form of a week-long clash between two sides, fought on land, in the air, and in the waters off the Russian Far East. The drills will include staging parachute jumps, conducting “anti-terrorist operations,” and shooting down cruise missiles. The exercise will conclude with a review of the forces in the field, a photo opportunity featuring row upon row of tanks, troops, and miscellaneous hardware. In a way, that’s the whole point. Vostok is not just a big military-training drill — it’s a massive psychological-warfare operation and a geopolitical gambit, being undertaken by Russia as it regains much of its martial mojo and its ability to mount and coordinate complex operations.
That said, there’s a difference between showing off your hardware and testing your new tactics, and actually going to war. We shouldn’t assume that Russia actually wants to fight some major conflict. If nothing else, while Vostok’s scale shows that Moscow has regained the capacity for a continental-scale operation, it could hardly afford to fight one for real. It would have a hard time mustering this kind of army during wartime, when railway lines and communication hubs would be primary targets.
(......emphasis mine)
Bicycle Bill wrote:Taken from theatlantic.com, and originally dated 9/12/18Read the rest here.The headline figures for Russia’s Vostok (or “East”) military exercises, which began yesterday, are dramatic: 300,000 soldiers, 36,000 tanks and other vehicles, 80 ships, and 1,000 aircraft operating across more than half the country. That’s double the size of the British armed forces. It’s also twice the size of the last Vostok war games, held back in 2014. As if that weren’t enough, some 3,200 Chinese troops and 30 aircraft are also involved, along with a small Mongolian force.
Vostok will take the form of a week-long clash between two sides, fought on land, in the air, and in the waters off the Russian Far East. The drills will include staging parachute jumps, conducting “anti-terrorist operations,” and shooting down cruise missiles. The exercise will conclude with a review of the forces in the field, a photo opportunity featuring row upon row of tanks, troops, and miscellaneous hardware. In a way, that’s the whole point. Vostok is not just a big military-training drill — it’s a massive psychological-warfare operation and a geopolitical gambit, being undertaken by Russia as it regains much of its martial mojo and its ability to mount and coordinate complex operations.
That said, there’s a difference between showing off your hardware and testing your new tactics, and actually going to war. We shouldn’t assume that Russia actually wants to fight some major conflict. If nothing else, while Vostok’s scale shows that Moscow has regained the capacity for a continental-scale operation, it could hardly afford to fight one for real. It would have a hard time mustering this kind of army during wartime, when railway lines and communication hubs would be primary targets.
(......emphasis mine)
So stick that in your pipe and smoke it, liberty. Turns out the big bad Russian bear you're so concerned about is not some fearsome, raging grizzly but more of an old, fuzzy, patchwork Winnie-the-Pooh.
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-"BB"-
Who was saying that in 1939?1939: NAZI Germany has nothing to gain by going to war; there is no need to prepare it will never happen.



https://visitpearlharbor.org/didnt-amer ... y-join-warLord Jim wrote:Who was saying that in 1939?1939: NAZI Germany has nothing to gain by going to war; there is no need to prepare it will never happen.
I don't find that quote anywhere - can you please provide the source for it?liberty wrote:1939: NAZI Germany has nothing to gain by going to war; there is no need to prepare it will never happen.
?I tell you that I'm not dictatorial, I'm not intolerant, I'm not overpowering! You're all wrong, wrong, wrong, I tell you! I'm the most relaxed and understanding of people! None of you, I insist, must ever say I'm dictatorial again!
Roosevelt was already preparing for war by the end of 1939 and had proposed sending planes to England in 1938.and Stalin had a large standing army already. Stalin had signed a pact to carve up Poland together with Hitler so he KNEW Hitler was going to war.wesw wrote:or roosevelte or stalin....
I have always been inclined to give Chamberlain a pass on the appeasement. He was wrong of course, but the horrors of the great war were very recent - less than 20 years. To give that some context, the Gulf war (Saddam's invasion of Kuwait, Schwarzkopf's Hail Mary, 11 million barrels of oil in the Persian Gulf and on the desert, and all that) was now 27 years ago. Britain had lost a generation and I think that most of us in Chamberlain's shoes might have made the same bargain with the devil.MajGenl.Meade wrote: Chamberlain . . . after the shameful back-down over Czechoslovakia.
You can only say it was his failure if he had better choices. And Chamberlain had very few choices. England was poorly prepared for a war in the center of Europe. The moral corruption of the League of Nations had shown it was toothless against even Italy; Italy could have been completely prevented from attacking Ethiopia by shutting the Suez canal ( or an effective oil embargo but it was Roosevelt who failed there he allowed US producers to increase shipments to Italy). Instead they coughed up the secret Hoare-Laval agreement. Hitler knew that the League was gutless.ex-khobar Andy wrote:
I have always been inclined to give Chamberlain a pass on the appeasement. He was wrong of course, but the horrors of the great war were very recent - less than 20 years. To give that some context, the Gulf war (Saddam's invasion of Kuwait, Schwarzkopf's Hail Mary, 11 million barrels of oil in the Persian Gulf and on the desert, and all that) was now 27 years ago. Britain had lost a generation and I think that most of us in Chamberlain's shoes might have made the same bargain with the devil.
... " .