You can tell Putin is far more scared of us than we are of him because of how much he talks about how he isn't scared of us and the regular threats that are made. It is the small dog putting up the big front, which is why so many small dogs tend to be yappy and "aggressive."
Given Russian performance so far, it is no wonder that we aren't that scared.... and he is.
You can tell Putin is far more scared of us than we are of him because of how much he talks about how he isn't scared of us and the regular threats that are made. It is the small dog putting up the big front, which is why so many small dogs tend to be yappy and "aggressive."
Given Russian performance so far, it is no wonder that we aren't that scared.... and he is.
I'd say it's the other way around given how squeamish the Biden admin has been about sending weapons into Ukraine in a timely manner, and how lackluster the international community's response has been to things like Syria using chemical weapons on its own people or Russia taking Crimea the year after. Western weakness--Syria, Crimea, Afghan withdrawal, etc.--signals to Russia that we're willing to allow him to get away with more than what he would have been able to pre-9/11 because we're increasingly isolationist and even squeamish about arming allies in a timely manner. "When you have nukes, they let you do it" is what Putin sees right now.
And I wouldn't sleep on the Russian military just yet. They're learning every month how to fight modern state-on-state conflicts in a way that we haven't had real experience in. What they're showing us is that they're able to mobilize a whole lot of people during high-attrition conflict at a time when our contract force isn't keeping up with the numbers it needs to recruit. How many Americans do you think are heading to the recruiting office if we get into a shooting war with Russia? Now compare that to the number of MOBICs they can drum up. Putin can stomp his feet and 5 months later 135,000 new conscripts come out of the ground. Can't do that here.
The administration is more fearful of domestic political outcomes than they are the Russians. Most (actually democratic) leadership groups are almost always more afraid of the domestic political blowback than the enemy.
The enemy can only kill you. ;) The domesstic politics can get you out of office/graft/influence/power.
The US lets people get away with shit because there is no domestic political will for action (and they know it) barring direct attacks on the US homeland. When a good quarter of your population is on the side of the enemy (for various domestic political reasons), you tread carefully. I think it is less "if you have nukes they let you do it," and more, crap doing something could cost us the next election.
There is a narrow path to tread there, and so far Putin has done a pretty good job treading it (and fostering domestic political problems in the US).
The Russian military is probably better now than it was at the start, simply because of experience gained and the various revelations of incompetence and corruption. It doesn't mean that it is great.
Russians have always been mass-oriented. It has been their go-to "strategy for basically forever--while the US (post industrial revolution) has been about machines fighting.. and the developments we have been seeing are kind of in our sweet spot, once you get past the traditional reluctance for military leadership to embrace change (especially when that leadership love being pilots and pilots are going to be among the first replaced).
"The US lets people get away with shit because there is no domestic political will for action (and they know it) barring direct attacks on the US homeland."
This is exactly what Russia knows, and it's exactly why they've been doing what they're doing since 2013 (helping Syria first and then the rest in Ukraine). They understand that after 20 years of GWoT failures, the American public's political reservoir for foreign conflicts is tapped out barring a fresh attack on the homeland or on our forces abroad or on NATO partners (And even that is iffy at this point), so all they have to do is commit harder than the American people are willing to in the conflicts they start with others and they can outlast us in terms of political will.
"The Russian military is probably better now than it was at the start, simply because of experience gained and the various revelations of incompetence and corruption. It doesn't mean that it is great."
They don't have to be great, they just have to inflict high enough casualties against the US in a US v Russia war and then wait for our recruiting structure to collapse. If we don't replenish the bodies they kill/wound then our military depletes itself via attrition. If we don't have a draft on the books and nobody is joining after the current contract force bites a real hard bullet then their task gets easier and easier with time--even if they have to conscript more MOBICs along the way due to what we attrite from them.
Being mass-oriented works if your enemy has to do an expeditionary campaign to the other side of the world that it can't continuously replenish because it doesn't have a conscription system. The same goes for other NATO members.
Obama's red line in Syria wasn't. I really, really wish I knew what was said between people who weren't officially at some bar in a European city that made the line go away while the casks of ammonia kept on dropping.
You can tell Putin is far more scared of us than we are of him because of how much he talks about how he isn't scared of us and the regular threats that are made. It is the small dog putting up the big front, which is why so many small dogs tend to be yappy and "aggressive."
Given Russian performance so far, it is no wonder that we aren't that scared.... and he is.
I'd say it's the other way around given how squeamish the Biden admin has been about sending weapons into Ukraine in a timely manner, and how lackluster the international community's response has been to things like Syria using chemical weapons on its own people or Russia taking Crimea the year after. Western weakness--Syria, Crimea, Afghan withdrawal, etc.--signals to Russia that we're willing to allow him to get away with more than what he would have been able to pre-9/11 because we're increasingly isolationist and even squeamish about arming allies in a timely manner. "When you have nukes, they let you do it" is what Putin sees right now.
And I wouldn't sleep on the Russian military just yet. They're learning every month how to fight modern state-on-state conflicts in a way that we haven't had real experience in. What they're showing us is that they're able to mobilize a whole lot of people during high-attrition conflict at a time when our contract force isn't keeping up with the numbers it needs to recruit. How many Americans do you think are heading to the recruiting office if we get into a shooting war with Russia? Now compare that to the number of MOBICs they can drum up. Putin can stomp his feet and 5 months later 135,000 new conscripts come out of the ground. Can't do that here.
The administration is more fearful of domestic political outcomes than they are the Russians. Most (actually democratic) leadership groups are almost always more afraid of the domestic political blowback than the enemy.
The enemy can only kill you. ;) The domesstic politics can get you out of office/graft/influence/power.
The US lets people get away with shit because there is no domestic political will for action (and they know it) barring direct attacks on the US homeland. When a good quarter of your population is on the side of the enemy (for various domestic political reasons), you tread carefully. I think it is less "if you have nukes they let you do it," and more, crap doing something could cost us the next election.
There is a narrow path to tread there, and so far Putin has done a pretty good job treading it (and fostering domestic political problems in the US).
The Russian military is probably better now than it was at the start, simply because of experience gained and the various revelations of incompetence and corruption. It doesn't mean that it is great.
Russians have always been mass-oriented. It has been their go-to "strategy for basically forever--while the US (post industrial revolution) has been about machines fighting.. and the developments we have been seeing are kind of in our sweet spot, once you get past the traditional reluctance for military leadership to embrace change (especially when that leadership love being pilots and pilots are going to be among the first replaced).
"The US lets people get away with shit because there is no domestic political will for action (and they know it) barring direct attacks on the US homeland."
This is exactly what Russia knows, and it's exactly why they've been doing what they're doing since 2013 (helping Syria first and then the rest in Ukraine). They understand that after 20 years of GWoT failures, the American public's political reservoir for foreign conflicts is tapped out barring a fresh attack on the homeland or on our forces abroad or on NATO partners (And even that is iffy at this point), so all they have to do is commit harder than the American people are willing to in the conflicts they start with others and they can outlast us in terms of political will.
"The Russian military is probably better now than it was at the start, simply because of experience gained and the various revelations of incompetence and corruption. It doesn't mean that it is great."
They don't have to be great, they just have to inflict high enough casualties against the US in a US v Russia war and then wait for our recruiting structure to collapse. If we don't replenish the bodies they kill/wound then our military depletes itself via attrition. If we don't have a draft on the books and nobody is joining after the current contract force bites a real hard bullet then their task gets easier and easier with time--even if they have to conscript more MOBICs along the way due to what we attrite from them.
Being mass-oriented works if your enemy has to do an expeditionary campaign to the other side of the world that it can't continuously replenish because it doesn't have a conscription system. The same goes for other NATO members.
See Korea in the 50s and the stalemate the Chinese forced. And we and our allies had ongoing drafts, not to mention reservists.
Yup. The Chinese had us surrounded something like 9-to-1 at the Chosen Reservoir.
Obama's red line in Syria wasn't. I really, really wish I knew what was said between people who weren't officially at some bar in a European city that made the line go away while the casks of ammonia kept on dropping.