itsmydamnation
Diamond Member
- Feb 6, 2011
- 3,028
- 3,800
- 136
Kinda agree with you, but I am concerned about loitering munitions and the affect on Bradleys. I feel tanks should have a higher survivability.i can see a middle ground , 1000 bradleys , 100k tows, tanks not needed
The most likely version to be transferred to Ukraine is the Leopard 2A4 standard which were produced between 1985-1992, so that’s pretty old. What’s worse is that not all A4s are created equal, the older ones have worse armour and Poland’s Leopard 2A4s have the older armour.Maybe the Leopards are not that good...![]()
Chicken shit apologists or downright Russkie agents.
I think at this point they are just looking for excuses not to send them. I think Germany is worried that Ukraine will use the MBT's to start seriously pushing Russia out of Ukraine including Donbas and Crimea and the Russians will go ape-shit nuclear and Berlin would be a target. Germany probably hopes that there can be negotiated settlement and they are willing to sacrifice chunks of Ukraine to keep the Russians happy.
In a recent interview, former chancellor Angela Merkel praised the Netflix drama Munich – The Edge of War for suggesting that Neville Chamberlain might be seen in a more positive light.
Seems Poland has a rather strong fear of becoming neighbors with Russia.
Probably because Russia is vowing, and has been seen preparing, to go absolutely all in with every last piece of meat they can throw at Ukraine.
Unless the war is forcefully ended, hundreds of thousands MORE Russians will invade Ukraine this year.
Poland ready to send tanks without Germany’s consent, PM says
Absolutely! If Scholtz still holds out at the Rammstein meeting, the US will need to forge ahead, IMHO. Two battalions of M1A2 should push the Germans over the edge. We have plenty. The problem is ramp up time, especially logistics as @IronWing alludes to. The Ukrainians could base one battalion each in Kyiv and Kharkiv to discourage a Russian attacks from the north through Belarus and eastern Russia - though it could be too late for that depending on Intel for the current 'exercises' in Belarus.We should just start installing APUs on older M1A2s (some already have them IIRC) and start shipping them to Ukraine. Enough with this nonsense.
Absolutely! If Scholtz still holds out at the Rammstein meeting, the US will need to forge ahead, IMHO. Two battalions of M1A2 should push the Germans over the edge. We have plenty. The problem is ramp up time, especially logistics as @IronWing alludes to. The Ukrainians could base one battalion each in Kyiv and Kharkiv to discourage a Russian attacks from the north through Belarus and eastern Russia - though it could be too late for that depending on Intel for the current 'exercises' in Belarus.
A bunch of M1s and Bradleys were recently spotted on trains heading to Poland. Eh, can't find the tweet. I'm sure the M1s are for Poland - not sure about the Bradleys.Nobody who matters would blame Poland for breaking the re-export agreement at this point. They've bought M1A2 SEPv3s and K2s (some of which will be locally produced through tech transfer). About the worst the Germans could do is block the remaining upgrades of their Leo 2s to 2PL but thats sort of irrelevant if they start transferring the fleet to Ukraine. They are not going to want to operate 3 entirely different MBTs long term anyway.
They could use them in combat. They'd just have to be shipped back to Poland for repairs if required. Poland is presently training up for the Abrams they're getting so it'd be good practice.
That feeling when your invasion is definitely going like you planned.
A bunch of M1s and Bradleys were recently spotted on trains heading to Poland. Eh, can't find the tweet. I'm sure the M1s are for Poland - not sure about the Bradleys.
Yes, of course. I'm just a bit concerned about Putin's desire to capture Kyiv and the recent activity in Belarus. The UA will, of course, use them where they are most needed and effective.
That feeling when your invasion is definitely going like you planned.
Wow, you really are omnipotent - and I thought that was a joke
Special Operation proceeding according to plan comrades.
Let's go one better, attach a big wooden mock structure up to a remote controlled vehicle of some kind and roll it around on the front lines. Either they run or waste ammo!Can we just like paint up some of the M1A1s the Poles are training on in Ukrainian camouflage/flags and drive them around the countryside near Liviv for a bit in front of lots of news orgs?
They could use them in combat. They'd just have to be shipped back to Poland for repairs if required. Poland is presently training up for the Abrams they're getting so it'd be good practice.
This isn't a lot different than the more sophisticated howitzer systems like the PzH 2000s which get shipped to Lithuania for repairs. Depots on Ukrainian territory would be a lot more efficient but due to Russian missile threats aren't really an option right now.