In a rare interview, a Ukrainian military commander and his top lieutenant describe disillusionment, deprivations and a sense of certain death among their troops on the front lines in Donbas.
Using the war as a distraction from the failing domestic policy does seem like it was part of the original reasoning for goading Russia into it. They clearly expected Russia to collapse economically due to sanctions and to have a quick win under their belt. Clearly nobody bothered to consider what would happen if Russia didn’t fold and now panic is starting to set in as economic blow back is driving public unrest across the western world.
People aren’t going to care about a war half way across the world when they can’t put food on the table, pay their rent, or fill up their car. And once people start connecting that with the war there’s going to be hell to pay.
I always question the wisdom of “Russia will collapse” angle. Ideology aside, do you really want a nuclear state to collapse? Sounds like a recipe for armageddon.
Using the war as a distraction from the failing domestic policy does seem like it was part of the original reasoning for goading Russia into it. They clearly expected Russia to collapse economically due to sanctions and to have a quick win under their belt. Clearly nobody bothered to consider what would happen if Russia didn’t fold and now panic is starting to set in as economic blow back is driving public unrest across the western world.
People aren’t going to care about a war half way across the world when they can’t put food on the table, pay their rent, or fill up their car. And once people start connecting that with the war there’s going to be hell to pay.
I always question the wisdom of “Russia will collapse” angle. Ideology aside, do you really want a nuclear state to collapse? Sounds like a recipe for armageddon.
Exactly, I find people end up being blinded by their ideology and just lose all ability to think straight.