Most crewmembers of Russia's Caesar Kunikov large landing ship, which Ukrainian forces destroyed off the coast of Crimea in the Black Sea on February 14, have died. — Ukrinform.
I wonder what the actual condition of the Russian navy is at this point. I heard their ships were generally in poor condition even before the war (those reports of the Moskva’s air defense being crippled before it left port, for example), and now they’re losing so many trained crew. Last I heard their shipyards were roughly keeping pace with losses in terms of tonnage but you can’t just herd conscripts on a ship and expect it to function at all.
I wonder what the actual condition of the Russian navy is at this point. I heard their ships were generally in poor condition even before the war (those reports of the Moskva’s air defense being crippled before it left port, for example), and now they’re losing so many trained crew. Last I heard their shipyards were roughly keeping pace with losses in terms of tonnage but you can’t just herd conscripts on a ship and expect it to function at all.
Sure you can! Whether or not that expectation turns out to be true is another story altogether …
Okay, you got me there. Maybe Putin actually does think that, in the same way he expected tanks to drive to Kyiv without fuel.
The narcissist never considers their weakness or risk of failure, they merely blame others for the inevitable outcomes.
I mean the Russian navy has a history of being totally inept (https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Tsushima). Some things don’t seem to change that much.
Indeed, they even managed to lose a naval battle to a landlocked state that didn’t exist yet (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Lake_Baikal).