Ukraine also has a unique situation in that they have the soviet concepts and training in the past and now the western NATO concepts and training. They can and are going to be creating a new way of fighting that will be likely a hybrid of the both. As long as they keep getting western equipment we will keep seeing new and interesting uses of such.
America has never had to fight a defensive battle against an invading force, period*. Yes, they're one of the most tactically advanced armies in the world, but they win through sheer force. "Shock and awe" wasn't a joke. Ukraine can't do that. They don't have the equipment for it, but more importantly they aren't just fighting to reclaim, but also to preserve. Yeah they could throw everything and everyone at Russia and probably win quicker, but the costs wouldn't be worth it.
*ok, maybe you could argue the Civil War or the War of 1812, but that was 200 years ago
Also depends if you count our colonies or not. We got absolutely trashed by Japan in the Phillipines and Guam in the early war. Also an honorable mention for the Aleutian campaign.
The soldiers believe that instructors have never fought a war like Russia's invasion of Ukraine — the first clash of two heavily-armed militaries for decades.
Most Western forces have experience of very different conflicts, like those in Iraq and Afghanistan where their side had huge advantages in resources and far superior technology.
Well, that makes sense. Not every tactic and strategy works for every situation, battlefield, the arms at location and enemy.
The Western army fought no army on the same level as them for quite a while. Always inferior ones. And all memes aside, the Russian army is not that far away from the Ukrainian army, despite all incompetency and corruption. It's also rare for Western armies to not have air superiority.
While the UK were superior on paper, the specifics of the situation meant that it was a lot closer than it should have been.
If Argentina had been a little more brash in their tactics against the task force then it could have went badly for the UK.
If I remember correctly just a single functional older Type 209 submarine was a major nuissance for the British and to this day the Argentinian side insists to have shot a salvo of several torpedos at one the British carriers that missed because of a technical malfunction...
I think that "first clash of two heavily-armed militaries for decades" is quite misleading here.
They always manage to make this sound like idiot Westerners are decades behind as they haven't fought a serious war for so long they have no clue. When the reality is the opposite: Their instructors don't remember how to fight trench wars 1950s style with only light infantry and very limited support... because why would they?
I would really hope that Western forces providing the training understand that, but I'd guess there's a lot of ooh-rah super proud tough guys that don't like hearing they're wrong.
I'm curious what exactly was so wrong with our trench-clearing techniques.
Western allies of Ukraine have offered training to thousands of troops in the hope of steeling them for battle against Russia's invasion force.
Most Western forces have experience of very different conflicts, like those in Iraq and Afghanistan where their side had huge advantages in resources and far superior technology.
In some cases, Ukrainian soldiers have decided to ditch their training completely because it proved ineffective on during their slow-moving counteroffensive, The New York Times reported earlier this year.
A report published by the UK-based Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) earlier this month argued that Western nations should stop training Ukrainians to become NATO-style officers.
Drills should focus on the conditions on the battlefield Ukrainians are fighting on, RUSI warned, instead of NATO-standard norms because it could increase the risk of things going wrong during live operations.
The 35-day crash course basic soldier training is mostly held in Germany and the UK, an unnamed source involved in the process told the outlet.
The original article contains 432 words, the summary contains 162 words. Saved 62%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!
I mean, it's not exactly that Iraq and Afghanistan operations went all that well...
I wonder if Afghani talibans are doing any pressure on Iran eastern border with all that's been left behind after nato left Afghanistan.
yeah no. until there's a foreign invader, any act against the invader is war. war ends with the annihilation of relevant parties or when the invader leaves.