Are we doing it again?
[Afternoon update]
Blake Powers seems to be continuing to recover from the lightning strike, with an essay on the Ukrainian puzzle pieces.
Are we doing it again?
[Afternoon update]
Blake Powers seems to be continuing to recover from the lightning strike, with an essay on the Ukrainian puzzle pieces.
This is interesting. They did a pretty good job of gaming it out.
[Update Monday morning]
Your feel-good story of the day, if true: Russia has no options for victory, only defeat.
Oh, and by the way, I don’t think this would be “World War III.”
Trent Telenko says it’s not going well for that Russian convoy.
[Update a few minutes later]
Unfortunately, as noted at the end, it’s going to get worse before it gets better.
[Sunday-morning update]
Day 8 of the column held hostage.
This isn’t a debacle for the Russian military; it’s a disaster.
“The crisis is not merely that Russia is invading Ukraine; it is that Russia is invading Ukraine in particularly reckless, destructive, and catastrophic ways. It is as if Vladimir Putin is an obsessed and abusive lover, determined to destroy what he cannot possess.“
Thoughts from Laughing Wolf (who seems to finally be starting to recover from the literal lightning strike).
[Update a couple minutes later]
Bryan Caplan has thoughts on enticing desertion at his shiny new blog.
A history you won’t read much of anywhere else.
There should be hearings on this when the Republicans take back Congress.
[Update a few minutes later]
Broken link fixed, sorry.
[Update a while later]
Kyiv is holding out, and Putin is furious.
I’ll bet he is. He believed his own propaganda about Ukraine, and Ukrainians.
[Update a couple minutes later]
Putin’s failure.
[Update later afternoon]
An assessment of the current situation. The Ukrainians have surprised everyone, and for Putin the surprise is quite unpleasant.
Thoughts on the implications of the invasion, from Bob Zimmerman.
[Friday-morning update]
The repercussions of this for the space industry could be broad and unforeseeable.
It was always a mistake to make ourselves so reliable on Russian/Ukrainian hardware.
[Afternoon update]
Ukrainian invasions have affected our own space policies in the past.
As Jeff notes, if the Russians pull out of ISS, their human spaceflight program wouldn’t have much to do.
[Mid-afternoon update]
Yet.
[Saturday-morning update]
Eric Berger runs through the potential implications for space.
…showcases Joe Biden’s failures.
[Thursday-afternoon update]
The Ukraine invasion was the result of a quarter century of appeasement.
[Update a couple minutes later]
From June through last month, I had been working with a bunch of young Ukrainians in Kiev (men and women). I suspect that some of them have enlisted. And the Russians are protesting the war in Moscow and St. Petersburg.