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I don't know honestly. Here's some things that I think are possible.
Best case scenario would probably be Putin dying which would allow both sides to negotiate without looking weak.
After that, a frozen conflict is possible and not too bad
Ukraine might collapse and negotiate a separate peace under unfavorable terms. If this happens, it will be better if it happens sooner as fewer people will die. More likely it will happen after some years and there won't be much worth saving.
Russia might collapse. Unlikely but it's possible.
West sends boots on the ground. This unlocks a lot of different outcomes: from Russia being sent home with tail between its legs, to an embarrassing fiasco for NATO, to a nuclear exchange. <-- #5 is where I don't want to be.
Who knows. All those scenarios have risks for the most part of “something happens in Russia” and they decide to use nukes or an Ukraine collapse would trigger a dozen countries to get nukes.
The highest upside outcome would be US boots on the ground. Actually less insane that you make it sound. Outcomes
70% chance Putin sees that and immediately sues for peace. This actually provides Putin an out. Losing a war to Ukraine is disgraceful. Surrendering to the U.S. army is not disgraceful. No bullets get fired and lives are saved.
20-29% chance Putin is locked in and we get to see the liberation of Kuwait two. Few US casualties. American generals get to show off their toys and have a good time. China receives a strong message on Taiwan. America most comes together happy we slaughtered the dragon.
Some percent chance tactical nukes are used. Low percent chance he tries nuking population cities.
These assumptions seem far to optimistic to me.
Russia is not some backwater country like Iraq. They were a superpower just 35 years ago. U.S. boots on the ground will mean tens of thousands of U.S. casualties at a minimum. It will also result in the destruction of the GPS satellite network, as well as likely disruptions to shipping and all sorts of other unknown consequences.
Your scenarios say there is a 90-99% probability that everything goes well. I would put scenario 1 at less than 10% and scenario 2 at about 10%. Russia is not going to simply surrender until they determine whether or not the U.S. military is a paper tiger. By the way, is it?
The most likely outcome would be large casualties on both sites. Assume 10,000+ NATO casualties and 100,000+ Russian ones. A nuclear exchange would be unlikely, but still a high enough probability to dominate any calculation of mean expected deaths.
Even a 1% chance of a nuclear exchange = 1 million deaths.
This is madness. People who want this war should go fight it in.
If E(death toll) is dominated by the small probability of nuclear armageddon in the way you say it is, then the people supporting the war from their armchairs have plenty of skin in the game.
Personally, I think my personal risk of being nuked in my bed is lower if NATO responds robustly to Russian aggression in Ukraine than if every tinpot country with a land border with Russia or China acquires nukes yesterday as a matter of basic national survival.
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I am talking out of my ass of course. And would say you are doing likewise. Putting probabilities on things like this is an inexact science but my read on Russia has me in that camp.
Interesting though if the rest of my probabilities are correct a 1% chance of 100 million lives lost in a nuclear exchange added to my probabilities would still marginally favor American troops on the ground. Current war strategy on both sides of attritional warfare probably costs another 200-400k Ukranian lives and some multiple of that in Russian lives. Versus in my scenario the dominant probability is Russia backs down and sues for peace after a show of NATO force. The primary result of which would be Russia viewing Ukraine as no longer winnable.
"some multiple"? That's retarded. It's Ukraine not letting its men out and catching them on streets, not Russia. It's Ukraine who asked "all for all" POWs swap. Given how slow fronts are moving, losses are probably close to 1"1
In case "Russia backs down" you do not consider a number of deaths in civil war in Russia, just NATO shows and everything becomes good and sweet?
Why is Russia having a civil war. I am not sure why I have to account for deaths in a war that hasn’t happened.
I support better guns for Ukraine so they can win the war faster with fewer casualties.
Russia is not having, but they will if what you see as most desirable outcome happens.
I support ignorant war-mongers like you to go in trenches and fight.
I am advocating for peace. I don’t know how many times I need to repeat this.
"beat them up so they would beg for peace" (with option: to show an example for all potential troublemakers) isn't exactly a peace position.
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It looks like you're using Ukraine's mobilization intensity as the sole factor of judging losses, without considering that Ukraine is a lot smaller and has a smaller mobilization pool in the first place.
It looks like you're missed sliders1234's point "some multiple" (again: SOME MULTIPLE) which and that it's easier to recruit people for defensive war which would have offset Russia's population advantage.
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Let's expand on the surrender outcome. Putin is already pushing that Ukraine's surrender should include a promise to demilitarize.
3.1: Ukraine reluctantly agrees to this demand. What happens? The way I see it, in ~5 years, Russia invents a narrative the Ukraine broke the agreement, rolls right in and takes over Ukraine who lacks the ability to stop them.
3.2: Ukraine surrenders, but not from such an unfavorable position that they are forced to demilitarize, just forced to give up the territory they've currently lost. What happens? In this scenario Ukraine obviously has to up their military because there's no way they trust Russia not to do it again. Ukraine and Russia both use the time to rebuild their military. I strongly suspect Russia comes back to finish the job, using Ukraine's military buildup as justification.
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