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This might be a little tougher than Putin thought...

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"Putin anthem: Start the morning with a hymn to Putin: Ooh great Putin, ooh leader of the peoples, of humans brought into the world fertilizes the earth restoring centuries you shine of my spring, oh you, Sun reflected by millions of hearts."

 
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Starting to confirm they have in fact lost that many of their prewar trained troops and equipment. Turns out you can't really do much with a bunch of untrained soldiers and limited and dated equipment they can barely operate. Not much you can do even if you mobilize a million untrained men with machine guns with no training and modern fighting equipment, especially when you are playing offense. We may be reaching some sort of endgame, because all signs point to a big time counter offensive coming to take back the gains that created the land bridge from Dontesk to Crimea along the black sea coast. Ukraine is going to split that front I am quite certain and work things back to 2014 and it will become apparent to even the drunkest Russian that they have lost.
 



Hungary also removed many officers recently.

https://www.ft.com/content/95cd008e-f5e6-4f36-a440-88113cb49db3

" Colonel István Juhász served more than 36 years in the Hungarian military, including several tours in Iraq and Afghanistan and culminating with a job leading his country’s mission to Nato’s warfare development centre in the US. So when Prime Minister Viktor Orbán launched a purge of the top brass, Juhász had reason to think he would be spared. He and hundreds of others were wrong. Come March, they will be unemployed. “Everything is over,” he said at the end of a video recounting his decades in the military on his Facebook page. “I have become too old.” The law adopted by the Orbán government allowing the defence minister to sack anyone over 45 has raised eyebrows among Nato allies, as it potentially decimates a generation that spent most of its career within the military alliance. Juhász, like other affected military leaders contacted by the Financial Times, would not discuss the government decision. But the ranks were stunned by the speed and ruthlessness of the process, according to military insiders, even as they acknowledge that reform of the bloated senior ranks was overdue.
 
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