GrauGeist
Generalfeldmarschall zur Luftschiff Abteilung
I stopped reading at: "defence production in Russia, Iran, North Korea and China is overwhelming that of the West".I know I'm ashamed.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules
I stopped reading at: "defence production in Russia, Iran, North Korea and China is overwhelming that of the West".I know I'm ashamed.
I stopped reading at: "defence production in Russia, Iran, North Korea and China is overwhelming that of the West".
Good point as to ramping up.Damn you stopped almost at the end .
The sad thing is that he is right, at least for now. It's not a problem of capability but of (political) will and pouring economic resources where is needed. Defense companies are not going to rump-up production without long term contracts.
My feeling is that the west got complacent with the 2022 success of Ukraine and expected the war to be over by late 2023, now it's obvious that this will be a long term war of attrition. Unfortunately we (our politicians actually) wasted 2 years. Ramping-up is not something you do in a matter of weeks, it takes years. And I'm afraid we will lose another year, you know this thing called elections has its perks ...
For ammo yes, it seems we are starting to ramp-up. For other things ramp-up is extremely slow.Good point as to ramping up.
For example, US production of 155mm shells went from around 14,000 per month in 2022 to 28,000 per month
in 2023. This is rising all the time and this year will reach 80,000 per month.
As stated throughout this thread these things take time to do. Throwing money won't help with that but the wake up
call has been answered and the flow from all sources will increase ( a lot).
Most of the ones that won't reach 2% are increasing their budged too, wich is a plus.18 out of 30 NATO countries are increasing their defence budgets to the required two percent of GDP. This will have
a big effect on production in Europe as well.
Let's hope so, I want to remain optimistic. I have confidence in Ukrainians will, but not so much on western will.Other assets which could not be used until training was completed will also start to arrive (F-16's etc).
The combination of these factors will have the much needed impact.
My worry is that US politicians are repeating the interwar 1918-1939 failures. Imagine how different the 1920s and 1930s would have been had the US not abandoned their lead in the League of Nations. The US pushed for the creation of Poland, but then did nothing to protect it. The increasingly isolationist Congress of today reminds me of the Congress of 100 years ago, where by 1924 the US had thoroughly turned its back on Europe. Had it not, perhaps the 552,117 U.S. casualties (104,812 KIA) in the European theater of operations might have been saved, and millions of others. Let's not repeat history.My feeling is that the west got complacent … Unfortunately we (our politicians actually) wasted 2 years.
My worry is that US politicians are repeating the interwar 1918-1939 failures. Imagine how different the 1920s and 1930s would have been had the US not abandoned their lead in the League of Nations. The US pushed for the creation of Poland, but then did nothing to protect it. The increasingly isolationist Congress of today reminds me of the the Congress of 100 years ago, where by 1924 the US had thoroughly turned its back on Europe. Had it not, perhaps the 552,117 U.S. casualties (104,812 KIA) in the European theater of operations might have been saved, and millions of others. Let's not repeat history.
According to the latest rumors/claims Ukrainians used S-200 to kill the A-50. According to the available vid there were probably two S-200 in the area with one hit and one miss (hitting a flare or something else flying there). Too far away for Patriot.