alexjones wrote:I don't see how people think Russia is losing this war. Regardless of the war goals as to what will constitute a victory they are in essence winning this war.
Ukraine has been preparing fortified positions in depth since 2014 and are at near full mobilisation. Not to mention receiving huge world wide support.
Russia on the other hand have nowhere near fully mobilised and is receiving basically no support.
Just like in WW1 on the western front. Things are a slow grind during trench warfare until the major breakout happens then things move very quickly.
Remember the hundred day offensive during August and November 1918 that saw massive allied victories? Combined with Germanys revolution that basically ended the war.
A few tactical victories for Ukraine but the strategic victory is still looking like Russia has it. The only variable is who wins the USA election on November 3.
No suport?
Are you living in a cave alexjones?
Here is an excerpt of just
some of those supporting putin, doesn't mention the 45th, but he's probably putin's biggest dickboy, and when he returns......OBs graphic.
From Wikipedia ( cue the scoffing)
Belarus, a close ally of Russia, has supported Russia in its invasion of Ukraine. Before the start of the offensive, Belarus allowed the Russian Armed Forces to perform weeks-long military drills on its territory; the Russian troops did not leave Belarus after the drills were supposed to finish. Belarus allowed Russia to stage part of the invasion from its territory, giving Russia the shortest-possible land route to Ukraine's capital Kyiv.[339][340][341][342] The Russian forces withdrew within two months, ending land-based military operations originating from Belarus and resulting in Ukraine's recapture of territory on its side of the Ukraine/Belarus border.[343] Despite this, the situation along the border remained tense; Ukraine closed the border checkpoints leading into Belarus, bar special cases.[344]
Belarus initially denied involvement with the conflict but has since said it allowed Russian missile launchers stationed on its territory to shoot at Ukrainian targets. Several reports from the Belarusian opposition and Armed Forces of Ukraine said Belarusian troops were fighting with Russians in Ukraine but Belarus's leader Aleksander Lukashenko dismissed them and said the Belarusian Armed Forces (BAF) would not directly participate in the conflict. As of early 2023, the BAF had not been involved in fighting against Ukraine and had remained within Belarus during the conflict. Lukashenko stated he would not send soldiers into Ukraine unless attacked first.[344][345]
According to the Ukrainian foreign ministry, Lukashenko assured Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy at the start of the invasion he would not to involve his nation's armed forces on the side of Russia.[346] In early 2023, Lukashenko stated Ukraine had offered to formalize this arrangement with a non-aggression pact.[347]
The involvement of Belarus was condemned in Western countries; the EU, the US, the UK, Canada, and Japan imposed sanctions against Belarus. According to Chatham House, Belarus's participation in the military conflict is unpopular among the general population;[348] protests were held on 27 February, the day of the constitutional referendum that asked the populace to revoke Belarus's non-nuclear-country status, but were quickly dispersed. Hackers targeted Belarusian government agencies and the country's critical infrastructure with the aim of disrupting the Russian war effort in Belarus.
In the early days of the invasion, Belarus was also involved in peace initiatives, holding Russo-Ukrainian talks on its border. Despite some preliminary agreements, the talks did not result in a lasting ceasefire.[349]
Belarusian territory has also been used to launch missiles into Ukraine.[350]
Materiel to Russia from Iran
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Amirabad Port, Iran, has been identified as a source of materiel that was shipped northward across the Caspian Sea to the Port of Astrakhan. The Russian-flagged ships Musa Jalil and Begey carried 200 containers of materiel to Russia in a €140-million cash transaction from 10 January 2023, arriving in Astrakhan on 2 February 2023.[351][352][353]
Iran has sent to Russia thousands of HESA Shahed 136 drones; Russia has little-to-no domestic UAV industry. Russia plans to build new industrial plants in the Alabuga Special Economic Zone to allow it to produce domestic its own Shahed 136 and Shahed 131 drones, leasing the design from Iran and hoping to produce 6,000 Shahed drones per year by 2025. Russian domestic production has encountered several problems, such as a lack of semiconductors and circuitry required to produce the drones. As of 17 August 2023, the Alabuga Shahed production plant had enough materials to produce 300 drones; Russia domestically produces only four of the 130 necessary components.[354][355][356]
development and interests of their country against the imperialists' high-handed and arbitrary practices".[368][369] North Korea has also issued support for the Russian government during the Wagner Group rebellion and blamed the war in Ukraine on the US's "hegemonic policy".[370]
On 27 July 2023, during North Korea's 70th celebration of its Day of Victory in the Great Fatherland Liberation War, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu was received in Pyongyang to join the military parade.[371][372][373][374][excessive citations] This was the first time a Russian defense minister had visited North Korea since the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991. During his visit, Shoigu and Kim promised closer military corporation between the two countries, and Kim showed Shoigu North Korean nuclear missiles.[375][376][377][excessive citations] Afterward, Shoigu and Kim toured a weapons exhibition, as Russia seeks to outfit its declining supplies with North Korean weaponry and ammunition.[378][379][380][381]
Representatives from various countries attended the Army-2023 arms exposition the Russian Ministry of Defense in held in Moscow. These included dignitaries from China, Iran, and India, and representatives from Myanmar, Pakistan, Cambodia, Laos, Bangladesh, and Djibouti. These delegates met with Russian deputy defense minister Alexander Fomin and had discussions to improve bilateral defense relations. Chinese defense minister Li Shangfu was one of the speakers; he used the forum to celebrate Russian-Chinese strategic cooperation and to signal Chinese readiness for further cooperation.[398] As part of the bilateral talks during the forum, Russian and Iranian dignitaries discussed the removal of US military bases from northeastern Syria.[355]
Sergey Lavrov and Djibouti Minister of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Mahmoud Ali Yusuf. The talks concluded with a bilateral military agreement under which the Djibouti Armed Forces would be trained by Russian advisors, and equipped with Russian arms and vehicles.[392] In 2021 Russia and Djibouti entered an agreement on cooperation in politics, trade, the economy, investment activity, education, and healthcare.[393] On 25 January 2022, the summit "Russia-Ethiopia-Djibouti: Prospects for Business Development" was held between dignitaries from Russia, Ethiopia and Djibouti, and was hosted by the Coordinating Committee for Economic Cooperation with African Countries of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of the Russian Federation to further the presence of Russian companies in the region.[394]
Russia's investments in Djibouti increased after Russia invaded Ukraine, and Djibouti became one of Russia's few open allies in the region. On 15 March 2023, Russia, China, and Iran held joint naval exercises in the Gulf of Oman, operating out of the Chinese naval base in Djibouti City.[395] Russia was planning to build its own naval base in the city because Russian warships routinely use the port to resupply, and China has stated Russia is free to use the Chinese base to dock its ships, such as the Admiral Kuznetsov. The Russian paramilitary Wagner Group also maintains a presence in Djibouti, further straining relations with the United States, which maintains its own military base Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti.[396] As part of the Black Sea Grain Initiative, most of the grain being exported by Ukraine in agreement with Russia was sent to Djibouti to be distributed to the rest of the Horn of Africa under Russia's supervision.[397]
Libyan Tobruk government
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On 22 August 2023, in Libya, Marshal Khalifa Haftar hosted a Russian delegation that included Deputy Defense Minister Colonel General Yunus-Bek Yevkurov to discuss bilateral cooperation in combating international terrorism and other issues.[399] Part of Yevkurov's visit's goal was to persuade the Libyan House of Representatives to cut ties with the Wagner Group, which has been providing military aid since 2018, in favor of a new Russian state-affiliated group.[400]
Most of the dictators in the world are on Russias side.
The Ukrainians are doing the fighting and dying and we've been giving them just enough to not lose, the massive attrition on Rusdian forces suits the west more than saving the Ukrainians ftom slavery