Comments by "the truth hurts" (@thetruthhurts7675) on "Russian defeat in Ukraine is inevitable - ex-commander of US Army Europe" video.
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@danielhutchinson6604 Erm which Vietnam conflict do you mean? The Chinese invasion that was simply a rout of a Chinese army? The French debacle, The US debacle? Or the British one in which Vietnam was calmed the vietnamese beaten, and de weaponed in 18 months? Do go on these have all been since WW2 by the way China sent 100 tanks, 500,000 men a complete air division, and barely made their first objective, and were battered to a standstill, then shoved back to the border by just 80,000 old men, and young boys, the vietnamese border guards whilst Vietnam sent it's army to depose China's ally Pol Pot. Shame you actually know so little about REAL history isn't it?
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@aniksamiurrahman6365 Yes since last May. Where is the great Russian army now in Kherson? Cut off on means of getting food, water, or ammunition. Kherson which Russia mnade so much news about is about to become Ukrainian again.
Ahh Russia has invaded more countries since WW2 than the USA. Thank that famous Russian site Wikipedia for this information :
1945 Soviet–Japanese War (Part of World War II) Soviet Union
Mongolia Japan
Manchukuo Victory
Karafuto Prefecture is annexed by the Soviet Union and incorporated into Sakhalin Oblast.
Kuril Islands annexed to the Soviet Union
Liberation of Manchuria, Inner Mongolia and northern Korea, and collapse of Japanese puppet states there.
Partition of the Korean Peninsula.
Manchuria and Inner Mongolia are returned to China.
1946–1954 First Indochina War North Vietnam Việt Minh
Laos Pathet Lao
Cambodia Khmer Issarak
Supported by:
Soviet Union France France
• French Indochina Vietnam (1949–1954)
Cambodia Cambodia (1953–1954)
Laos (1953–1954)
Victory
Vietnam is partitioned between North (controlled by Việt Minh) and South (controlled by the State of Vietnam).
Geneva Conference
Departure of the French from Indochina.
State of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia gain official independence.
1950–1953 Korean War North Korea
China
Soviet Union United Nations
South Korea
United States
United Kingdom
Australia
Belgium
Canada
France
Philippines
Colombia
Ethiopia
Greece
Luxembourg
Netherlands
New Zealand
South Africa
Thailand
Turkey Ceasefire
Establishment of the Korean DMZ
Minor territorial changes
1955–1975 Vietnam War North Vietnam
Viet Cong and PRG
Pathet Lao
GRUNK (1970–1975)
Khmer Rouge
China
Soviet Union
North Korea South Vietnam
United States
South Korea
Australia
New Zealand
Laos
Cambodia (1967–1970)
Khmer Republic (1970–1975)
Thailand
Philippines Victory
Withdrawal of American forces from Indochina
North Vietnamese victory over South Vietnam
Dissolution of the Republic of Vietnam
Communist governments take power in South Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia
South Vietnam is annexed by North Vietnam
1953 East German Uprising Soviet Union
East Germany East Germany East German demonstrators Victory
Uprising suppressed
1956 Hungarian Revolution Soviet Union
Hungary ÁVH Revolutionaries Victory
Crushing of the revolution
1968 Invasion of Czechoslovakia Soviet Union
Bulgaria
East Germany
Hungary
Poland Czechoslovakia Victory
Moscow Protocol
Soviet military presence in Czechoslovakia until 1991
1969 Zhenbao Island Incident Soviet Union China Indecisive(status quo ante bellum)[7]
Tactical Soviet victory[8]
Strategic Soviet victory: Ceasefire Agreement Signed.[7]
1991 Sino-Soviet Border Agreement[7]
1969–1970 War of Attrition Egypt
Soviet Union Israel Inconclusive
Both sides claimed victory
Continuation of Israeli occupation of Sinai until 1982, when Israeli provisional control over the Sinai Peninsula ended in 1982 following the implementation of the 1979 Egypt–Israel peace treaty, which saw Israel return the region to Egypt in exchange for the latter's recognition of Israel as a legitimate sovereign state.
1974–1991 Eritrean War of Independence Ethiopia Ethiopia
Cuba (until 1989)
Soviet Union (until 1990)
South Yemen ELF
EPLF Withdrawal (limited involvement)
Independence of Eritrea after the fall of the communist government in Ethiopia
1975–1991 Angolan Civil War MPLA
Cuba
Brazil
Soviet Union
граница SWAPO
граница MK South Africa
UNITA
FNLA
FLEC Stalemate (limited involvement)
Three Powers Accord
Withdrawal of all foreign forces from Angola
Independence of Namibia
1977–1978 Ethio-Somali War Ethiopia
Cuba
South Yemen
Soviet Union Somalia Somalia
WSLF Victory
Somalia broke all ties with the Second World except for China and Romania
1979–1989 Soviet–Afghan War Soviet Union
Afghanistan Afghanistan Afghan Mujahideen The operation of the Red Army in Afghanistan failed to change the situation in the country
Geneva Accords of 1988
Withdrawal of Soviet forces from Afghanistan
Continuation of the Afghan Civil War
Russian Federation (1991–present)
Date Conflict Location Russia (and its allies) Opponent(s) Result
1991–1993 Georgian Civil War Georgia Georgia (country) Georgia
Russia Georgia (country) Zviadists Victory
Zviadist revolt crushed
1991–1993 War in Abkhazia Abkhazia Russia
Abkhazia Georgia Victory
Abkhazia gained de facto independence
1992 Transnistria War
PMR trucks on the bridge between Tiraspol and Bendery
Transnistria Transnistria
Russia
* 14th Guards Army (elements)[9][10][11][12]
* Don Cossacks[13]
* Kuban Cossacks
Ukrainian volunteers
* UNA-UNSO.[14][15] Moldova
Romanian volunteers and military advisers
[9][16][17] Victory
Transnistria gained de facto independence
1992 East Prigorodny Conflict North Ossetia-Alania Russia
North Ossetia-Alania[18] Ingush militia Victory
Expulsion of ethnic Ingush from Prigorodny by Ossetian militia
1992–1997 Tajikistani Civil War
Spetsnaz troops dismount an APC during the war
Tajikistan Tajikistan/ Tajikistan
Russia/ Russia
Uzbekistan
Kazakhstan/ Kazakhstan
Kyrgyzstan/ Kyrgyzstan
Turkmenistan/ Turkmenistan
United Nations UNMOT
Austria
Bangladesh
Bulgaria
Czech Republic
Denmark
Ghana
Hungary
Indonesia
Jordan
Nepal
Nigeria
Poland
Switzerland
Ukraine
Uruguay
Supported by:
Belarus/ Belarus[19] (weapons supplies)
China
India
United Tajik Opposition
Islamic Renaissance Party
Democratic Party
Party of People's Unity
Rastokhez Popular Movement
Lali Badakhshan
Gorno-Badakhshan[20]
Jamiat-e Islami (until 1996)
Afghanistan Afghanistan (until 1996)
Hezb-e Islami Gulbuddin (until 1996)
Afghanistan Taliban factions[a]
Supported by:
al-Qaeda[22]
Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan
Victory
United Nations-sponsored armistice
1993 Russian spillover into Azerbaijan Azerbaijan Russia
Azerbaijan
Huseynov's Forces
Withdrawal
Reassurance of National Security
Huseynov's Forces are kicked out
Russia establishes peace for now in Azerbaijan
Strengthens ties with Azerbaijan
1994–1996 First Chechen War
A Chechen militiaman takes cover behind a burned-out Russian BMP-2 armoured vehicle
Chechnya Russia
Chechnya Chechen Opposition
граница Ichkeria
Mujahideen Defeat[23]
Withdrawal of Russian forces from Chechnya
Khasav-Yurt Accord
De facto independence of the Chechen Republic of Ichkeria, but de jure it remained a part of the Russian Federation
1999 War of Dagestan
Russian federal Spetsnaz forces in Dagestan
Dagestan Russia
Dagestan
IIPB Victory
Start of the Second Chechen War
1999–2009 Second Chechen War
A farewell ceremony for the 331st Airborne Regiment of the 98th Airborne Division withdrawn from Chechnya
Chechnya Russia
Chechnya
граница Ichkeria
Caucasian Front
Mujahideen Victory
Russia regained control over Chechnya
2008 Russo-Georgian War
Tank-like vehicle with soldiers aboard
Russian BMP-2 from the 58th Army in South Ossetia
Georgia, South Ossetia and Abkhazia Russia
South Ossetia
Abkhazia Georgia Victory
Occupation of Abkhazia and South Ossetia
2009–2017 Insurgency in the North Caucasus
FSB Spetsnaz members during an anti-terrorist operation in Makhachkala, Dagestan
North Caucasus Russia
Chechnya
Dagestan
Ingushetia
Kabardino-Balkaria
North Ossetia-Alania
Caucasus Emirate ISIL (from 2015) Victory
Defeat of Islamists
2014–present Russo-Ukrainian War
Russian unidentified special forces take control of a Ukrainian military garrison in Crimea
Donetsk People's Republic militiamen checking with civilians in a cellar during the Battle of Ilovaisk (2014)
DPR elite Republican Guard troops during the 2018 Victory Day parade in Donetsk
Ukraine (incl. Crimea) Russia
Donetsk People's Republic
Luhansk People's Republic
Ukraine Ongoing
2014 Russian annexation of Crimea
Russo-Ukrainian War
Minsk Protocol, an un-implemented ceasefire agreement
2021–22 Russo-Ukrainian crisis
2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine
2015–present Russian military intervention in the Syrian Civil War
Two Tupolev Tu-22M3s bombing ISIL command posts and weapon warehouses in the Deir ez-Zor area, 2017
Sukhoi Su-30 pilot talking to a Russian Air Force technician in the Khmeimim Air Base
Syria
Russia
Syria
Iran
границаHezbollah ISIL
Ahrar al-Sham
Tahrir al-Sham Syrian Opposition Ongoing
Preservation of the Syrian government headed by Bashar al-Assad.[24]
Syrian Armed Forces recapture more than 30,000 square kilometres of area, including Latakia, Aleppo and Palmyra, break the three-year-long siege of Deir ez-Zor and take control of that city[25][26]
2018–present Central African Republic Civil War
Delivery of Russian BRDM-2 armored vehicles to Central African Republic, October 2020
Central African Republic Russia
Central African Republic
Rwanda Central African Republic Coalition of Patriots for Change
Horrendous isn't it? Just like the rest of Russia's aggressive history of invading near neighbours!! Sorry but in this the truth really does hurt doesn't it?
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@bobmorane2082 What does the UK give? or the EU, orAustralia Canada, or Poland, or Sweden, or Norway, or Finland? Luckily for you South Africa hasn't yet sent it's long range guns that can stike from 76 KM away twice the distance of any Russian artillery. You forget that Russia has allowed NATO to proxy fight against it. Most of the new Ukrainian NATO weapons out distance all of the Russian artillery so you can have as much artillery as you like shooting back at Ukrainian artillery, but it cannot reach them. So piece by piece the Russian positions and artillery are picked off at leisure, and range. russia has basically run out of it's strategic reserves of ammunition, or we would see more than 70k a day shot into Ukraine. Plus 70k along a front like stretching for the entire Donbass is actually very small amounts in any one area. In Ukraine Russia is slowly but increasingly, and more importantly more speedily losing ground, lives, troops, and the war.
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@aniksamiurrahman6365 LOL. I am NOT a blind western Idiot, as you claim. I have quoted to you what China is saying. You still quote from where exactly? No where to be brutal here!! Look I honestly don't care whether they are ferries, fairies, or pontoons. You have to keep moving them from place to place, or they will be destroyed As the Russian army found out at Stalingrad. They won there because the General in the field started moving ferries from one landing place to another, because 90% of ALL Russian ferries crossing the river were destroyed as they crossed by indirect long range German fire. Honestly this is not advanced Nuclear physics, or quantum mechanics we are discussing here. It is very simply a matter of simple but partially effective military strategy. You have two pontoon, or Ferry bridges, leave them there long enough and they will be hit by your enemy, and thus consequently to you useless. Stop with the lunacy that Russia can just do as it (or you thinks it can) wants, it cannot. To put your stupidity to the point here If a pontoon bridge is inside the effective artillery range of your enemy for over 4 hours then expect direct hits every 20 minutes, if you are slightly clever and you move it to somewhere nearby every three hours then you have a chance that it will remain intact. Something as I said Russia learned the hard way at Stalingrad. no one has yet come up with a fool proof way of stopping enemy artillery hitting static targets repeatedly. Your knowledge of simple military tactics is about as much as the Russian tactics at the start of this was stupid. You keep repeating the same things I have told YOU CHINA says the resuply is inermittent, not Western media. To be brutal here I am the kind of person who buys two extremes of the daily news reads both then looks at various channels to find out the truth. Russia is NOT telling anything like the truth about Ukraine. Let us just start with the fact that a fascist state (Russia) tried to claim that Ukraine was right wing. Well if Ukraine was right wing then even the Communist party must have been a centreist party justifying it's existence by proclaining the rights of the individual (which everyone knows is NOT the case). Putin and his regime are almost as far right as the Nazi party were, and he the world's ultimate Russian right wing oligarch.
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