- cross-posted to:
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- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
Equipment to integrate Western launchers, missiles, and radars with Ukraine’s systems;
Additional High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems(HIMARS) and ammunition
155mm and 105mm artillery rounds
Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicles
M113 Armored Personnel Carriers
Mine Resistant Ambush Protected (MRAP) vehicles
Trailers to transport heavy equipment
Tube-Launched, Optically-Tracked, Wire-Guided (TOW) missiles
Javelin and AT-4 anti-armor systems
Precision aerial munitions
High-speed Anti-radiation missiles (HARMs)
Small arms and additional rounds of small arms ammunition and grenades
Demolitions munitions and equipment for obstacle clearing
Coastal and riverine patrol boats
Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear protective equipment;
Spare parts, training munitions, maintenance, and other ancillary equipment.
Well Afghanistan and Iraq are really the only two wars which the boomers can be said to have “fought” in the sense of being the largest voting bloc, well represented in the administration - basically running things.
They were post-WW2 children so they weren’t really running things during Korea and Vietnam, or the Cold War generally. The two conflicts you mentioned are just about the two best examples of “Boomers’ Wars” you can find, so to say “they don’t count” is funny because it should at least illustrate why the current situation is not so surprising. They don’t know how to fight a war - they were born when their parents just won a fucking big one.
Hah, yeah, you have a point. I was thinking of “participated in, and generally socially aware of”, but in terms of leadership experience you’re spot on.
Not to be all: “well ackshually”, but actually, my dad is the definition of a baby boom kid - born shortly after WW2, (the baby boom) and served in the navy during Vietnam.
It might be more fair to say: “They don’t know how to win a war”