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I guess you haven't been paying attention to Russia destroying US 'smart' munitions, in flight, repeatedly.
My understanding is the Ukrainians have been able to penetrate Russian airspace pretty regularly and that a lack of munitions and the West desiring them to limit attacks on Russian soil are the limiting factors. Not the impressive performance of the Russian Air Force or air defense systems.
The US has a lot more aircraft and missiles that are far more capable than what the Ukrainians have.
It’s a bad sign that Russia has to source drones from Iran.
Yes, being able to occassionally hit targets inside of Russia with small plastic drones or sometimes even an ultralight plane means "Russia isn't controlling its airspace".
LLM tier understanding on display from you, so bye.
My guy you seriously tried to argue Russian forces didn’t have a numerical advantage in the opening phase of the war and now you think I have the LLM-tier understanding here?
Ahahaha https://breakingdefense.com/2024/04/ukraines-strikes-deep-into-russia-have-a-new-tool-a-small-commercial-plane/?amp=1
You think that makes Russian air defense look better? During an ongoing war a little civ aircraft just makes it through?
That’s the literal definition of Russia not controlling its airspace!
Russia demonstrably sucks at war fighting and here you are trying to pretend that somehow things would go better against an adversary far more capable than Ukraine is.
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Yes, letting armed planes and drones in means that they do not fully control airspace.
(Yes, the same applies even more to Ukraine regularly hit by missile and drone attacks - and also NATO territory where occasional drone or missile was happily flying through, with no shot downs. Turns out that airspace control is hard.)
A term as broad as to be essentially meaningless.
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