Will Schryver Profile picture
Jul 1 35 tweets 7 min read
🧵Why the US/NATO could never win and will never fight a war against Russia – unless the #EmpireAtAllCosts cult somehow seizes the reins of power, in which case, it will become the biggest catastrophe in US military history, and likely result in a nuclear war:

1/
For me, one of the most intriguing aspects of the unprecedented levels of propaganda beclouding the ongoing Ukraine War are the incessant claims, from the very beginning, of the alleged strategic, tactical, and logistical ineptitude of the Russian military.

2/
The theme of the bumbling Russians was clearly preconceived and coordinated, and commenced in earnest within the first 24 hours of hostilities. It is also apparent, to me at least, that it has emanated almost exclusively from the CIA/MI6 analyst/think-tank complex.

3/
CIA/MI6 fronts like Oryx, Bellingcat, and ISW have pumped out this narrative so relentlessly that it has now been ubiquitously enshrined as “received wisdom”, even to the point of entering into the body of assumptions embraced by many who I expected to be more discerning.

4/
It has given rise to countless evidence-free myths, from the #FakeNews downing of two IL-76 jumbo transports packed with Russian paratroopers, to hundreds of armored vehicles allegedly abandoned for mechanical failure, lack of fuel, or other logistical failures.

5/
One of the more inexplicable narratives included in this disinformation package has been the allegation that Russian troops are poorly trained conscripts, who are thrown into the meat grinder with antique weapons, little ammo, and so little food they are literally starving.

6/
These tall tales are then woven back into the main strand of the narrative: the Russian army is a disorganized mob of demoralized “orcs” whose only real talent is plundering household appliances, raping young women, and randomly gunning down old folks on the streets.

7/
Attached to this constant refrain are repeated comparisons to the allegedly incomparable professionalism, organization, training, and weaponry of US/NATO forces. The implication is that any company of American soldiers would be a match for an entire battalion of Russians.

8/
I’ve concluded this unrelenting narrative must have as its aim the persuasion of the public and policy-makers in NATO countries that western militaries are so vastly superior to their Russian counterparts that no one should have reservations about making war against them.

9/
And thus we continue to hear calls for immediate NATO intervention into the war; the establishment of a “no-fly zone” over Ukraine, and “boots on the ground” to teach the presumptuous and inept third-world Russian army a lesson it will not soon forget.

10/
Never mind the numerous reports from western mercenaries and foreign legion volunteers who managed to escape back to their home countries after brief and terrifying “tours of duty” in Ukraine, all of whom relate similar accounts.

11/
They talk about encountering overwhelming firepower for the first time in their military careers, and they soberly warn anyone else thinking of embarking on a “safari” to kill Russians that it was “nothing like Iraq” and they feel very lucky to have made it out alive.

12/
Never mind also the fact that, to my knowledge, there are few if any conscripts among the Russian forces in Ukraine, and few if any reports in Russian independent media sources of demoralized, under-supplied Russian battalions in any theater of the war.

13/
Quite to the contrary, every indication I have seen suggests that Russian morale is sky high, both among the soldiers doing the fighting and the Russian public at home. To be sure, there have been Russian casualties: best estimates are ~5000 RF and ~8000 DPR/LPR KIAs.

14/
These numbers pale in comparison to the western propaganda mill fantasies of ~100k total Russian casualties, including 35k – 50k KIAs, which, were it true, would be unmistakably reflected both in the morale of the army itself and the public at home – and it clearly is not.

15/
Nor is any of this manufactured narrative consistent with constant Ukrainian appeals for massive replenishment of lost heavy weaponry, and repeated mobilization of territorial guard troops and expansion of the conscript window to include 18 – 60 year-olds and even women.

16/
On the other side, Russian troops rotate out and back in to the battlefield, rested and refitted. Russia has not ordered a general mobilization, and has about the same number of soldiers in the theater that they started with (175k – 200k).

17/
So I leave the reader to judge the facts of the matter in terms of Russian military ineptitude and massive logistical failures.

And with that preface, let’s turn to the primary question: could NATO fight and win a war against the Russians on this same battlefield?

18/
My answer is an emphatic NO, and for three distinct but equally disqualifying reasons:

1) There is zero evidence that NATO soldiers are superior to Russians.

2) Sufficient NATO forces could NEVER be assembled and equipped to defeat the Russians in their own backyard.

19/
3) Even the attempt to concentrate sufficient US forces in the region to take on the Russians would result in the disintegration of the global American Empire and rapidly accelerate the already-in-progress transition to a multipolar world.

20/
As to point #1 above, it bears repeating what I have argued multiple times in recent weeks: this war has seen the Russian military quickly evolve into a battle-hardened and surprisingly nimble and quick-to-adapt fighting force. The US has not faced such a force since WW2.

21/
Many believe the US is a “battle-hardened” force. This is utter nonsense. Of the many thousands of troops in current US combat units, only a minute fraction has experienced ANY battle, and NONE have experienced high-intensity conflict such as is taking place in Ukraine.

22/
I submit that one of the inadvertent and unforeseen byproducts of this war is that, even as the NATO-trained and equipped Ukrainian army has been devastated, the Russian army has been transformed into the single most experienced army on the planet.

23/
Needless to say, this is NOT what US/NATO strategists intended to achieve. But it does explain why we now see them doubling-down on efforts to prolong this war – both to (hopefully) degrade Russian capabilities, and to buy time for themselves to determine what to do next.

24/
You see, if NATO had to go to war today against Russia, and all their troops and equipment could be magically teleported to the battlefield, they simply could not sustain high-intensity conflict for more than about a month, as this analysis shows:

rusi.org/explore-our-re…

25/
The dim-witted will undoubtedly reply: “But muh awesome American air power would destroy them from the sky.”

The average Call of Duty warrior believes such nonsense, but I guarantee very few in the Pentagon harbor such delusions.

26/
To the contrary, they understand perfectly well that Russian best-in-class air defenses would savage attempted US/NATO airstrikes. It would be a massacre, the results of which after even the first 48 hours would see wiser heads calling for an immediate ceasefire.

27/
Not only that, but even attempted, but catastrophically failed NATO airstrikes against Russia would result in a massive series of counterstrikes against NATO bases and warships at distances never seen in previous wars. It would be a no-holds-barred affair.

28/
Staging areas in Poland and Romania would be hit hardest, but strikes would almost certainly range over all of Europe and the Mediterranean. Russian missiles and submarines would sink several ships within hours, including, almost certainly, a US carrier.

29/
This, of course, is the nightmare scenario – one which very conceivably risks an escalation to nuclear war.

But it also assumes that Russia would stand idly by as NATO concentrated forces in the region sufficient to launch a war.

30/
In my estimation, the Russians would NOT sit back and watch the US/NATO methodically conduct a Desert Storm-style buildup over the course of a year (or more) – which is how long it would take to assemble a force large enough to launch a war against Russia.

31/
Just as they preempted Ukrainian designs to retake the Donbass and Crimea, they would likewise strike NATO forces long before they reached a level of strength sufficient to conduct operations against Russia. (This pertains to point #2 above, in tweet #19.)

32/
One final observation on this whole notion of the US/NATO making war against Russia:

People neglect to consider the fact that US forces are dispersed all around the world, in over 800 foreign bases of varying sizes and strategic importance.

33/
In other words, most fail to appreciate the fact that US military might is *highly diluted*, and the only way to possibly concentrate a force sufficient to take on the Russians would be to literally evacuate almost every significant US base on the planet.

34/
Japan, Korea, Guam, Syria, Africa, Turkey, etc. A massive power vacuum would be created all around the world, and would constitute an irresistible temptation for “hostile powers” to exploit.

It would spell the end of American global empire and hegemony.

35/end

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More from @imetatronink

Jul 3
🧵The Strategic Irrelevance of Kiev

Given the myopic focus of the "Ukraine is winning" crowd on the alleged (and fallacious) Russian "defeat" at Kiev, I am reminded of how, during the US Civil War, Abraham Lincoln was ceaselessly frustrated with his early cadre of generals.

1/
Much like the vast majority of current western military “experts”, Lincoln’s early generals were illogically focused on the objective of “taking Richmond” – the capital of the Confederacy. This obsession dominated the strategic focus of the Union for most of the war.

2/
Lincoln, on the other hand – notwithstanding there is no evidence he ever read von Clausewitz – intuitively and correctly understood that it was not a city, nor any piece of territory, per se, that was the objective upon which his West Point-trained generals should focus.

3/
Read 19 tweets
Jun 28
🧵Observations on the Ukraine War
2022-06-28

I've watched a LOT of drone footage from this war. I've seen, from a bird's eye view, the construction and logic of the field fortifications Ukraine constructed, with US guidance, over the course of eight years.

1/
The logic of these ubiquitous pre-prepared fortifications harkens back to the 1864-65 Battle of Petersburg (US Civil War), with many WW1 innovations – a logic where victory depends on:

- you not running out of men and ammo

- the enemy being comparatively stupid

2/
Of course, when you think about it, the revealed logic of Ukraine’s long-prepared strategy for this war is, in many ways, a reflection of American military delusions and vanities, which multiplied and solidified over the course of the brief and fleeting “unipolar moment”.

3/
Read 29 tweets
Jun 23
🧵Ukraine War Update
June 23, 2022

Multiple sources now reporting that ~2k AFU + foreign fighters trapped at Azot plant in Severodonetsk are begging to surrender. They are completely surrounded and being pounded by artillery 24/7. Many dozens have already surrendered.

1/ Image
Remember it was just two weeks ago that Zelenskyy said “the fate of eastern Ukraine” would be decided in Severodonetsk. Well … that’s very close to being true. A disorderly collapse has commenced all along the front in the Donbass.

2/

thehill.com/policy/interna…
There are also, reportedly, several hundred foreign mercenaries trapped in Severodonetsk. It will be fascinating to see how many and who they really are when the inevitable “evacuation” to Russian detention camps occurs in coming days.

3/
Read 5 tweets
Jun 22
🧵The Geostrategic Importance of Kaliningrad

So the most recent move on the RISK board sees the US and its dutiful NATO vassals opting to play the Suwalki Gap card.

Let’s explore the likely perspectives of the respective combatants.

1/
For Russia:

Kaliningrad is a geostrategic imperative. Its defense would entail all the levels of escalation on the meter.

For the US/NATO:

“Restoring” Kaliningrad to the west would represent a *major* geostrategic setback for Russia.

2/
I recently stumbled on this brief post. I’m not familiar with the site, whether it is prominent or obscure. It doesn’t matter. What I recognized in these few paragraphs was the textual imprint of a likely intel / propaganda operation.

americandefensenews.com/2022/05/07/kal…

3/
Read 17 tweets
Jun 10
🧵Ukraine War Summary – June 10, 2022

Reports now emerging that Ukrainian troops trapped in the industrial zone of Severodonetsk are seeking dialogue pursuant to surrender. Meanwhile all AFU resistance in the Donbas is rapidly collapsing.

Let’s review what led us here:

1/
The US spent eight long years and billions of dollars attempting to turn Ukraine into a radicalized proxy army they believed could deal an existential blow against Putin and Russian geopolitical resurgence. It was made into the largest and best-armed army in Europe.

2/
The US knew this would become a provocation the Russians could not abide. And yet Putin was extremely patient, until the US persuaded Ukraine in late 2021 they were now powerful enough to reclaim the Donbas and Crimea, which they began to position to do.

3/
Read 24 tweets
Jun 10
🧵Ukraine War Update – June 9, 2022

The following thread is based on a reply I made to a follower in response to him linking me to a tweet by @KimDotCom:



1/
The US spent eight long years and billions of dollars attempting to turn Ukraine – and especially its 100k+ neo-Nazi troops – into a proxy army they believed could deal an existential blow against Putin and Russian geopolitical resurgence.

2/
Although Russia dealt severe blows to Ukrainian air power in the first few hours of hostilities, I think the Russians were genuinely surprised by Ukrainian competence and firepower … for about a week. No more.

3/
Read 17 tweets

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