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originally posted by: shalao
a reply to: JAY1980
The US has a lot of equipment on paper but only a very small fraction of that is operational. The rest are in boneyard. Out of 2000 Abrams probably not even 100 are operational. The US was only able to send 31 ex marines M1A1 from the 80s to Ukraine and even that was extremely challenging.
originally posted by: Turquosie
a reply to: putnam6
I think this is half the reason (besides the west keeping their influence in Ukraine) that there was so much push for supporting Ukraine. Even my old work had donation options for customers and employees to donate to Ukraine.
Granted, Russia's invasion was wrong, but people didn't bat an eye before when countless other lives were lost in ME countries that the U.S. played a role in.
Saudi Arabia committed human rights violations in Yemen and even openy killed a journalist. Yet, we still sold them millions in weapons. And we did this all after Trump hypocritically spoke against the MIC.
Not sure how soon we'll get a peaceful end to Ukraine when Putin is deadset on taking Ukraine at any human cost, and the west has $$ signs in their eyes.
originally posted by: putnam6
The American and NATO MIC is loving this, production on all military equipment, arms, munitions, and systems has been ramped up. All these countries are dumping their old stuff and it will be replaced by shiny new stuff.
Not to mention In many ways it is propping up the Western economies, it's definitely doing so in the defense industries communities in America.
originally posted by: paraphi
originally posted by: putnam6
The American and NATO MIC is loving this, production on all military equipment, arms, munitions, and systems has been ramped up. All these countries are dumping their old stuff and it will be replaced by shiny new stuff.
A lot is end of life anyway, or on the verge of obsolescence. UK Challenger tanks are being replaced in a couple of years, as is Stormshadow, for instance. Plus, there is the "evaluation factor", where some kit is being battle tested to see if it does what it was sold to do. I think mostly the results have been good, eh, as the broken Russian war machine will attest.
Not to mention In many ways it is propping up the Western economies, it's definitely doing so in the defense industries communities in America.
No, the war in Ukraine has had a negative impact on world economies. The cost of transferring weapons and munitions to Ukraine is a tiny proportion of the GDP of donor countries.
War Stocks Are Surging As Russia-Ukraine Conflict Rages On: Lockheed Martin, Northrop Up 20%
Sergei Klebnikov
Forbes Staff
Updated Mar 7, 2022, 03:24am EST
TOPLINE Shares of major U.S. aerospace and defense companies, which have jumped since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine last week, should continue to surge higher as global defense spending budgets increase in response to the conflict in eastern Europe, analysts predict.
originally posted by: putnam6
I think the key word here is propping up,