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Comments by "" (@tekannon7803) on "Will Putin win a war of attrition?" video.
Simon Jenkins from the Guardian, one of the finest commentary writers of our time, said that an iron maxim of war is to imagine what the enemy most wants you to do, and not do it. A North American Indian proverb says to take everything that comes at you as a lesson; learn fast: move on. This advice is all the Ukrainian President and armed forces need to stay alive and eventually win back captured territory. War outcomes cannot be predicted so we’ve got to use 24-hour increments as the most realistic way forward in this dangerous confrontation between a super power pulling out all the stops and a sovereign nation reeling from 24/7 bombings and missile attacks. Let’s quit predicting when the Ukrainians will have this or that weapon system because what they’ve got today is all that matters. You have to use what you have in hand. Telling the Ukrainians things are on the way is frustrating, what must be done is to use whatever weapons one has and fight on as if its all you’re going to get. America's committment to help the Ukrainians will go down in history as the straw that broke the camel's back from Putin's invasion of a sovereign state. Now for the tricky part: the money. The Ukrainians need 80 billion USD to make it through the next 12 months; there economy has been severely damaged. What is the solution? We have to go for the juglar. When a tiger attacks a deer there is very, very little time to save the fragile creature from the tiger's powerful jaws. Only taking the tiger's life at the moment it attacks the defenseless animal will save it. You win against invaders in the same way. The war must move to the offensive in every possible way and hit back so hard it makes the invading army cringe and run for cover.
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@jlock9085 GGGGGGGGGGGGGGreat to hear from you. There are millions of people who see it your way. There are always two sides of an argument.
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