this post was submitted on 03 Mar 2025
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me_irl

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 hours ago (1 children)

Modern example. Sure. Desert storm 1991. The Kuwaitis sure didn't have to deal with an insurance after the Iraqis were kicked out.

And that's one thing all your examples have in common. A guerrilla insurgency fighting an invading or occupying force. That's not what will happen in Ukraine.

Give them what they need to win

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 hour ago* (last edited 1 hour ago) (1 children)

The Korean war didn't involve an insurgency to a large extent. Or russias last conventional war, which they won through attrition and throwing bodies at the line.

The thing about the gulf war, and the six day war, was they relied on overwhelming aerial superiority and a quick end to the conflict. That strategy only works for so long because eventually the enemy can take out your aircraft and modern planes are hard to build so it takes a while to build up again, so you have to use them sparingly. Even if we gave ukraine f22s the Russians have jets of there own and SAMs to take them down. Both sides have ramped down there air campaigns because both sides have ways to take down the planes which are very expensive. Again this is a war of artillery, drones and armor, both sides have them and no magical million dollar weapons system from Lockheed Martin will change that.

Shock and awe only works for so long, and once it's worn off you can find yourselve in a quagmire and running out of troops.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 35 minutes ago

Didn't Iraq have jets of their own? Didn't Iraq have the latest SAM systems?

I love how you're just making shit up and moving the goalposts