HisArpy
Loose canon extraordinair
- Joined
- Jul 30, 2016
- Posts
- 42,579
The West and Ukraine would have done well to study the Battle of Stalingrad. Despite losing over 1.2 million people, the Soviets decisively destroyed the Wehrmacht’s 6th Army, then considered Nazi Germany’s most elite force, along with support from the 4th Panzer Army. By the time American boots hit Omaha Beach, the Red Army had already inflicted nearly 80% of Germany’s total World War II casualties. This wasn’t just a matter of brute force; it reflected something deeper about the Russian psyche. Historically drawn to authoritarian leadership, Russia has shown again and again a terrifying willingness to endure staggering losses when it believes the motherland is at stake. That doesn’t make them noble, but it makes them dangerous. And any nation contemplating conflict with Russia ought to grasp this reality before imagining war will follow a Western script. The West’s misreading of this mindset may be one of its greatest strategic errors in the Ukraine conflict.
You cannot beat an unstoppable hoard with tech. History is rife with all kinds of lessons in that.