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The promised mailbag is here.
To new subscribers: the mailbag is my occasional perk for the paid pledgers, where they get to ask a question that I customarily answer in a much more thought-out and long-form manner than the typical comments reply allows. It helps us pass the time in the lulls, while also branching out into interesting new avenues that perhaps the usual articles don’t quite cover.
Please recall that due to the sheer volume of subscribers we now (thankfully) have, the rule is: only one question per person. Maybe a second corollary question if it is closely tied to the first one. I’ll try to counterbalance this by having more frequent mailbags, which will give paid subscribers more opportunities for further questions.
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Paid Subscriber Mailbag Questions - 9/11/23
Ok, here is my question, which bothers me for a long time. So, to have a properly functional, integrated army, you need a long time to train not only soldiers but also a cooperations between units, etc. This is what is argued as the problem for the Ukrainian arm forces. But when I am thinking about the Soviet Army, during the WW II, surely there was not this luxury of time. I am missing something, somewhere. And I do appreciate that soldiers also learn via combat. Can you, please, explain? Maybe this is a non-question, but I would like to know why it would be a non-question. I do hope I make sense here. Thank you!
The consensus seems to put the number of severely wounded Ukrainians both civilian and military at around 60 000. If that's the case who looks after rehabilitation of these people as well as providing ongoing care and support. Is it left up to individual families and communities on a local level & is it dealt with differently in Russia.