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#1 |
Sub Test Pilot
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Invasion of mother Russia
Ok here is the scene NATO have declared war on the Russian federation for some disagreement over oil in the arctic, the USA have decreed they will not enter the war unless absolutely necessary so that major power is out. How do you think The Russians will fare against NATO in a defensive posture? Could you plan the defensive position using land sea and air units effectively to stop NATO units advancing? How do you think Moscow will react to the invasion threat by NATO and do you think the war between NATO and Russia will go nuclear? Please discuss in a civilised manner possible out comes for this hypothetical war.
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#2 |
Seasoned Skipper
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You might as well ask what will happen if the Flying Spaghetti Monster declares war on the Federated States of Micronesia. I can't see any situation where NATO's European allies attack Russia while the US sits there on the sidelines.
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#3 |
Let's Sink Sumptin' !
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Exactly. If they're not too keen on being in Afghanistan right now fighting lowly tribesmen I don't see much for them to love in a conflict with a former superpower still armed with nuclear weapons.
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#4 |
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It will be quite hard to NATO to invade Russia. The only land links are Northern Norway (An easy enough position to defend) and the Baltics, a concentrated defence of those is not at all beyond Russia's ability. Naval invasions don't pose too much of a threat as much the coastline freezes in the winter, making supply almost impossible, and sufficient air cover could prevent an invasion from getting through in the first place (Especially if the US carrier fleets are out).
All this providing it is not nuclear, if it is than all this doesn't matter and the war will be over in 2 hours. Then again, I cannot see any reason for NATO to attack Russia... EDIT: Whoops, forgot that Russia has no border with Turkey anymore... ![]() Need more sleep...
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#5 |
Ocean Warrior
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For a Russian defense I'd go with the tried and true. Scorched Earth and a Russian winter. It stopped Napoleon, it stopped Hitler, it'll stop NATO too. If it went nuclear it would be over in less than 2 hours, I give it 30 minutes with Russia still standing.
Oh and if you take the US out of NATO you just get the EU. ![]() EDIT: Finally not that gay looking medic dude anymore!
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#6 |
Seasoned Skipper
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#7 |
Rear Admiral
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NATO is a pretty pathetic fighting force of you remove the US of A. Half the reason most countries refuse to leave it is that the US will protect them, which in turn results in ever decreasing defense budgets since they increasingly rely on the USA. THe UK may be the only force left with an ever dwindling offensive force and they alone can't take on the bear.
I have to vote with Russia stomping the crap out of everyone. They alone are way more capable than the rest of NATO. If it's nuclear though, it's over in an hour because the US will launch too. Half the worlds population gone in 1 hr's time. -S |
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#8 | |
Admiral
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#9 |
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#10 |
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Hmm... has anyone inverted a missile system to intercept a missile...
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#11 |
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No, inverting a missile would mean it would launch towards the ground and therefore create an unnecessarily large mess for some miserable people to clean up...
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#12 |
Rear Admiral
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... a system that makes the missiles navagation systems make it go into space one it gets in the air.
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#13 |
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No, that wouldn't work, you can (Most likely) shoot down ICBMs these days though
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#14 |
Stowaway
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I haven't read the other replies but IMHO it would be difficult for Nato to soundly beat Russia and get a unconditional surrender out of them. Russia is the kind of country that thrives under duress and a war would unite them, pretty much like it has in the past.
If it'd be a nuke-fest then it'd be even more difficult to predict. Those Topols pack a punch. ![]() |
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#15 | ||||
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I made your text in white so I could actually read it.
Quote:
Alright, I'll make an honest effort. Quote:
Extremely difficult to say without a comprehensive knowledge of asset disposition on the eve of the war, but I'll try. Assuming that NATO adopts a Barbarossa-style buildup, the Russians would certainly be alerted to their presence well before the attack, so I'll rule that out in favor of a slight augmentation of exsisting troop strenghts and a troop buildup in the guise of a wargame held in southeastern Poland. The Polish buildup offers a major advantage in that Ukraine, tank-country at its' finest, is readily accessible. Assuming that Ukraine does not join the war on the Russian side, violation of its' neutrality is still acceptable, primarily because invasion of Russia through any exsisting EU-Russian border would face major terrain hurdles and could only offer a narrow attack front. Although the main thrust of the attack would be through Ukraine, there would have to be a secondary attack through the shared border between Estonia, Latvia, and Russia. Belarus can be ignored if it remains neutral because there is little to gain from advancing through the vast marsh there, especially if the invasion takes place in the spring or early summer. Better yet, if the Russians counterattack through Belarus, they will be throwing themselves into a marshy, forested salient betwtixt the two prongs of the attack, making them vulnerable to encirclement. They will have more to worry about than bad terrain, however. The Belorussians will almost certainly offer some resistance, further slowing them. Even if they make it to the Polish border, they still have to cross the Vistula to make a decisive thrust into EU territory and if the EU forces can hold the relatively defensible ground along Poland's Northern and southern borders, the Russians will be throwing themselves into yet another salient where they can be encircled in short order. Russia also suffers from a lack of force-readiness and military infrastructure at the moment. Shall I assume that in this hypothetical scenario that they have remedied those shortcomings? It would make a big difference. Quote:
Assuming that Russia's military is in readiness, and that the EU pursues the initial strategy outlined above........no. There is very little the Russians could do to stop the EU from advancing rapidly into Ukraine, and most of their units lack the reliability and organization neccesary to conduct modern mobile defence. They also lack the numerical superiority required to counter schwerpunkt NATO attacks, particularly of the combined-arms and vertical envelopment variety. However, Russia could eventually stop the NATO advance, if they play their hand right. Much as in the Second World War, Russia would have to adopt a general policy of shifting troops eastward and drawing their opponents in. Despite advances in transportation engineering and air-supply, the NATO forces would be severely hampered by their long supply lines. This is doubly true if Belarus remains neutral. Modern armies, for all their advancements, are even more reliant upon supplies than 20th-century forces. They need more fuel, more finished products, more technical support, and most of all, more communications. The latter is NATO's greatest strength and greatest weakness. If NATO could launch a devestating strike against Russian military communications centres and headquarters units with long-range precision-strike aircraft, they could cripple the Russian military (in the West, maybe even as far as the Caucuses) in one fell swoop for weeks, maybe even months. NATO possesses the aircraft to make this strike, even though their ability to deliver such a strike is somewhat hampered by the buffer states of Ukraine and Belarus. If Russian units were prepared for such a strike, the effectiveness of it would be minimal. HQ's were moving about or taking cover because an attack was imminent, it would be difficult to effectively pin most of them down and eliminate them. As a consequence, the Russian defence would be coordinated, and NATO would run into stiff opposition sooner or later. Stiff opposition that would ruin any chance of victory over Russia. Russia's ally is time, and NATO cannot afford to let Russia utilize that ally. As I said, NATO's superiority in battlefield communications is also their greatest weakness. The Russians would be hard-pressed to launch effective strikes against NATO comm units and HQ's because NATO units have access to some of the most advanced communications equipment known to man, and their comm centers will be far behind the lines (if they can be called lines in modern warfare) and protected by significant, advanced, air defense artillery, orbital surveillance, aerial surveillance, quick-reaction forces, and exceptional air-superiority fighters. Russian anti-radiation artillery fire is not even a concern when you have radio, microwave, and sattelite communications that can transmit traffic to units 100 miles away in adverse circumstances and anywhere on the planet in ideal circumstances. The weakness lies in the fact that NATO units are so reliant upon constant battlefield communication. It only takes about 5 minutes (assuming that one has access to electrically conductive wire) to set up a field-expedient jamming array whose range is limitd only by the power source you provide it with. Sure, NATO anti-radiation artillery fire or airstrikes will destroy the array within minutes (or hours, if the range of the array is such that it requires a planned airstirke and anit-air artilery is in place), but ground forces and combined-arms support are stalled in the meantime. Whether Russian units are trained in the form of electronic warfare, I do not know, but I do know that if they were to use it, they could cripple a NATO offensive before it gained any significant ground. Again, time is Russia's ally, and the longer they can delay a decisive NATO offensive, the more likely they are to stave it off or reverse it. Quote:
Then again, it depends upon the administration in power, and the political climate. If oil were in very short supply and the E.U. had an oil trade arrangement with the U.S. and the electorate didn't go bonkers about the whole situation, the U.S would probably intervene on behalf of the E.U. That is pure conjecture, though. After that, I only have more conjecture to offer in regards to whether or not the war would go nuclear. The only thing I know for certain is that a nuclear exchange would bring the U.S. in on one side or the other. Common sense might dictate that the U.S. stay as far away as possible from nuclear exchanes, but there would indubitably be a strong reactionary sentiment that would deman a nuclear strike. The fear of nuclear weapons and the assurance of U.S. superiority is too great for it to be othwerwise. I have no doubt that within the current political climate, the U.S. would nuke the hell out of whatever it considered to be the offending party, and it would do so very quickly. I imagine that Russia and the E.U. are aware of this, and would not allow the war to escelate into a nuclear conflict. That, however, is only a cursory view of the scenario. There are many, many, factors to be considered beyond that, including whether or not troops of whichever faction the U.S. allies with are going to be markedly affected by U.S. nuclear fallout, the state of readiness for nuclear attack by the target nation(s), the degree of success or failure of U.S. diplomatic efforts (another thing I am sure would be pursued), and the level of nuclear exchange. Even after all this, things would be very much more complex and deserve more elaboration, but I will await your response and feedback before I go further.
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