Actually, even Russia state media indicates that it’s not going as smoothly as they hoped (as you’ve indicated) but that measures are being taken to rectify mistakes such that those who are ineligible (untrained as reservists, unfit, of disqualifying age, etc.) are not mobilized. Whether these mistakes get rectified or not, as claimed, remains to be seen. More importantly, whether these mistakes are of such a magnitude that the war is lost for the Russians and/or Putin is overthrown also remains to be seen. Of course yourself and a lot of western sources claim to believe that this means that the Russian war effort is necessarily doomed, but I prefer to wait and see.
Interestingly though, we can see similar problems in Ukrain’s conscription efforts. Do their problems likewise doom the Ukrainian armed forced to ultimate defeat, or are the ardently pro-Ukrainian New York Times suddenly lying to support Putin?
Here the NYT tells us:
‘A nationwide campaign is underway in Ukraine to recruit, register and draft men — a predictable response for a country at war. That campaign includes fanning out on the streets to find potential soldiers and issuing summonses ordering them to report to recruiting offices.
But the effort, especially the street recruiting, is drawing accusations that it is secretive and arbitrary, that it violates the government’s own rules and that it sometimes drafts the unwilling while spurning the willing. It has also led to a cat-and-mouse game between recruiters and men trying to avoid them...
A petition signed by more than 25,000 Ukrainians, the threshold for requiring President Volodymyr Zelensky to respond, requests a ban on issuing summonses at checkpoints, gas stations and other public places. It asks him to establish a transparent process for when people might be called up...
Critics say that conscription has not been as selective as officials make it out to be, and that with the military in charge of recruitment, registration and drafting, the process is shrouded in secrecy, with little transparency about the standards applied to each step...
There is also disillusionment with a system that turns away some who want to fight, while taking in others who are unwilling and unqualified...
Last month, the Kyiv police chief, Ivan Vyhivskyi, said that police and military commissars raided two nightclubs that were violating curfew and issued 219 summonses for military registration to men they found there...
[Sergeant Markus] wrote that soldiers and officers who put their lives on the line were demoralized by a chaotic recruitment process that drew draftees with poor qualifications or little inclination to serve. Sergeant Markus said he had personally faced situations where draftees’ alcoholism or other problems endangered other soldiers’ lives.
(New York Times archived link used to bypass paywall):
https://archive.ph/rwy4I
Oh dear. It seems that you’re in sharp disagreement with some pro-Ukrainian western journalists and even pro-Ukrainian western institutions such as West Point. Here’s a smattering of examples that claim, contrary to your avid beliefs, that Ukrainian troops have been sent to the front line with little or no training:
West Point:
‘The battalion commander shrugged helplessly when we advised him that five days was a completely inadequate amount of time in which to train his soldiers. “This is all we have—they are needed on the front,” he replied with grim finality. A few days later, on a separate course that we were running for his medics, half of our class disappeared on the second day... Even in units that fall within the Ukrainian special operations command, most soldiers are sent to the front line with very little training. In one such unit, we estimated that just 20 percent had even fired a weapon before heading to combat.’
[andy6025’s note: Yikes! That’s only 2-5 days of training!]
https://mwi.usma.edu/time-is-not-on-...on-in-ukraine/
The Washington Post:
‘Stuck in their trenches, the Ukrainian volunteers lived off a potato per day as Russian forces pounded them with artillery and Grad rockets on a key eastern front line. Outnumbered, untrained and clutching only light weapons, the men prayed for the barrage to end — and for their own tanks to stop targeting the Russians [because it will give away their positions and the Russians will fire back]... Ukrainian leaders have projected and nurtured a public image of military invulnerability — of their volunteer and professional forces triumphantly standing up to the Russian onslaught.... But the experience of Lapko and his group of volunteers offers a rare and more realistic portrait of the conflict and Ukraine’s struggle to halt the Russian advance in parts of Donbas... They were handed AK-47 rifles and given training that lasted less than a half-hour.
“We shot 30 bullets and then they said, ‘You can’t get more; too expensive,’ ” Lapko said... “We had no proper training,”
[andy6025’s note: So now we have some training lasting from less than 30 minutes to 5 days.]
(Washington Post archived link to avoid paywall):
https://archive.ph/6UNwK
The Times (UK):
‘Ivan received five days of training that consisted of being given a uniform, learning how to use a tourniquet, firing ten rounds from a machinegun and a lot of moving boxes and sitting around. Then he was deployed to Donbas in southeast Ukraine. All the men we interviewed said they wanted to fight to defend their country, but they felt that by being sent to the front in a war dominated by artillery and airstrikes with virtually no training, and with barely any idea how to use a gun, they were of no use to the war effort, and simply cannon fodder.
(Archived link from The Times to avoid paywall):
https://archive.ph/simqs
NPR (National Public Radio - An American Public Broadcaster):
‘Young volunteers and recruits often enter the war with little training or preparation... “I enlisted on March 22, and by April 4, I was in Sievierodonetsk," says Oleksandr, a civil engineer by training who now works setting and clearing mines. "I had to learn everything."
[andy6025’s note: this is remarkably better, but still less than 2 weeks].
https://www.npr.org/2022/07/18/11121...njuries-morale
I was referring to the fact that Blackwater and Wagner are both “Private Military Companies” (PMS) rather than part of the government operated military systems, but if you want to argue that Wagner soldiers are more “Elite” than the now disbanded Blackwater company then it’s neither here nor there to me. I guess you missed the fact that I commented that, like Zalensky, Wagner was recruiting prisoners which might actually impair their quality, but if it’s good with you then it’s good with me.
Oh dear. Out of curiosity, do you suspect that West Point, The New York Times, The Washington Post and NPR are paid Russian agents as well? All lies I tell you!
On a more optimistic note, it’s being reported that yesterday President Biden might be blinking first. He said that the US is looking for a way to give Putin an “off-ramp” while saving face and remaining in power in Russia. Bloomberg reports that ‘Biden said: “He [Putin] is not joking when he talks about potential use of tactical nuclear weapons or biological and chemical weapons, because his military is, you might say, significantly underperforming,” Biden added. “I don’t think there’s any such thing as the ability to easily use tactical nuclear weapons and not end up with Armageddon.”
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/artic...ear-armageddon
Maybe this means they can all get to the negotiating table and strike a deal that satisfies all parties.
But then again, maybe Biden didn’t say that at all because, u know, Bloomberg news is full of paid Russian agents that are lying to us.
Don’t forget to check under your bed tonight. There might be one hiding under there.




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