I never asserted anything of the sort. — SophistiCat
In practice, how would you go about establishing the fact that the Russians thought it would be a short and easy 'operation'? — Olivier5
Feel free to quote what I actually say if you want to discuss what I actually say. — boethius
They've sent a 40 km armor column to simply surround Kiev, creating the required pressure on leadership to sign the deal they want, who will say they Ukrainians fought with honour, blah blah blah, but the bloodshed must end and the page must be turned ... sad, sad, sad ... end of speech — boethius
They've sent a 40 km armor column to simply surround Kiev, creating the required pressure on leadership to sign the deal they want, who will say they Ukrainians fought with honour, blah blah blah, but the bloodshed must end and the page must be turned ... sad, sad, sad ... end of speech — boethius
I am sorry I started this. You have shown that are quite capable of holding both sides of this imaginary argument that you are having with yourself, so you don't need me here. I'll continue to ignore you as I did before. — SophistiCat
They failed to surround Kyiv and could only shell its suburbs. — Olivier5
And these criteria do not apply to "the Russians believed it would be a short and easy operation" because? — Olivier5
check they have no glaringly obvious conflict of interest — Isaac
The EU, however, could serve as a foundation for world economic activity in a more peaceful way that actually solves problems (like environmental armageddon) with far higher mutual benefit to all parties involved. This is the US nightmare scenario and the reasons for treating Russia as an enemy to drive a wedge with the EU (and also reason for interfering in EU democratic processes since WWII). — boethius
To protect the world from itself, the world must remain at all costs a dangerous place. — boethius
I use the word surround rather than encircle — boethius
The other reason there's a pause is that Kiev has been nearly encircled, which means the affect of this will be tested diplomatically and also strategy rethought considering this strategic objective being achieved (consolidate, move forces around, decide and plan the next military operations). For example, Russia may decide Kiev is encircled "enough" and so dig in where they are now to focus on other objectives, or decide to storm the capital, or decide to fully encircle the capital. — boethius
Once Kiev is encircled the military, social and political dynamic will completely change.
Russians are going slowly by surely around Kiev, I would guess, precisely because that's where you may get a surprise counter offensive and your forces routed if you're not careful (as you say, no easy way to skedaddle if you have a 30km convoy on the highway, and a tactical retreat to regroup would be an embarrassment anyways). — boethius
Mainly on this occasion it's because there simply isn't any unbiased access to sufficient expert analysis of Russian intentions. Assuming you're continuing your analysis of my approach, you'll recall I specified...
check they have no glaringly obvious conflict of interest
— Isaac — Isaac
Any information which might be considered pro-Russian has been censored, all social media sites are enforcing active bans, — Isaac
What conflict of interest do Russian soldiers have, when they call their family and say in essence: "Our officers told us it would be a matter of a few days, but we are in this hell for X weeks now"? — Olivier5
This a rather paranoid picture you got there. How come the mage boethius can still post on TPF then? — Olivier5
Are you denying those censorship policies exist? If not, then on what platform do you expect experts contradicting the mainstream narrative to publish? — Isaac
I use the word surround rather than encircle, and use the word "pressure" rather than siege for a reason. — boethius
Why completing the siege of Kiev will change things considerably is that Putin is not insisting on taking the city, and if Russian lines (once setup around the city) cannot be practically broken from the outside, pressure will be pretty high to accept Russia's conditions of surrender. — boethius
Next time, quote the whole sentence. — Olivier5
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