Chance, on 14 July 2023 - 05:48 AM, said:
I think perhaps that neither Ukraine nor Russia are willing to do what is probably necessary to win the war outright in the short term for completely understandable reasons. So both of them are planning not to lose. Ukraine by nibbling at Russian capabilities so that they can't recover, taking any good opportunities they see. Russia by not collapsing by throwing sufficient bodies at the problem without a general mobilization. Most likely the force concentration or simply dudes per meter along the front is simply way too low on both sides for a military end to the war. Most of the action is happening on the company or at most battalion level. With the size of the front and the population of the nations involved it probably should be division or even corps level engagements which is two orders of magnitude up in size. Simply put even if Russia did win it doesn't have the manpower to occupy Ukraine and Ukraine does not have the forces whatever we wishes to force Russia to end the war without doing something radical.
Ukrainian potential manpower on the battle front is quite large: over 750,000 mobilised troops with around 300,000 more potentially available and waiting for training (both Ukraine and Russia have a massive logjam with training facilities, which Russia has overcome by not bothering or sending recruits to Belarus for training, which is pretty much useless), minus an estimated 50,000-100,000 killed and wounded (combined). Russia has larger manpower reserves but only accessible through further rounds of mobilisation, which the Kremlin is very wary of. There's already been a row this week between the regional governors and the heads of recruitment in Moscow and St. Petersburg, asking why the big cities are not contributing more and basically being told "we're more important than you plus you look Asian, so nobody cares if you die," which has gone down well.
Ukraine does have the military forces available to end the war fairly decisively, but it requires a series of victories where Russia sustains heavy casualties and Ukraine sustains relatively few, and Russia withdraws as they have done in the past from Kharkiv and Kherson. They have achieved this throughout the war so far but it's been very tough.
Macros, on 14 July 2023 - 06:55 AM, said:
Does Russia have the equipment for a general mobilisation now?
Does Putin have the public will behind him to do it?
I don't think so, ergo short of the nuclear option Russia can not win this war
Very difficult. General mobilisation or even further small mobilisations would entail drawing on recruits from the big cities. Doing that in the Afghan War is basically what led to the end of the war, when massive protests erupted in Moscow and St. Petersburg at the bodybags coming back from Afghanistan. Equipping them would also be a nightmare at this point. Russia is, right now, drawing on 1950s Soviet stocks (having exhausted or fully deployed its 1970s and 1980s stocks).
There are viable paths to Russia losing the war or eking it out to a stalemate. The viable paths to military victory are few and far between. And all the while the instabilities and challenges to Putin internally are mounting.