It is a truism that every person has their biases, and journalists are no exception. Yet this does not mean that all journalism is equally biased. Here we are publishing an article which is typical of those that appear in the mainstream Western media; naturally, our aim is not to endorse the arguments, but to demonstrate their limitations, as a guide for the unwary.
The primary problem with the article is that it relies so heavily on the ignorance of its audience to maintain its credibility. Journalists should educate and inform, but that is only possible if the journalists are knowledgeable and honest. The author either does not know, or is hiding the fact, that ‘technical superiority’ as a concept goes far beyond firing range, also encompassing the difference between battle performance and test performance, durability, repairability, ergonomics and other similar criteria. Taking these factors into account, Western weapons are actually inferior. Similarly, much of the author’s argument relies heavily on propaganda that has already been discredited – that the Ukrainian air defense has prevented the erosion of critical infrastructure, and that it has been capable of shooting down hypersonic weapons. Again, at this stage of the war one can only maintain these fictions with ignorance or obfuscation.
The author also performs an interesting sleight of hand. He cannot avoid admitting that Western weapons are indeed being destroyed on the battlefield – that would stretch credulity too far – so he has come up with an ingenious explanation. The weapons are being destroyed because there is a high propaganda value attached to destroying them! The implication is that Russians only destroy them because they try extra hard to do so. Moreover, the author skates over the fact that Western weapons were ill-prepared for the kind of drone-heavy war that is being fought in Ukraine, by hinting that the provided weapons were older versions of more modern varieties that would have been ideally suited to such conditions – if only they had been provided! As anyone familiar with the groundbreaking nature of the Ukrainian war knows, this is certainly untrue.
These are not the only problems with the article – this short introduction does not claim to be exhaustive – but they reveal an important pattern. Western and Russian war propaganda shares a propensity to claim moral superiority, but only Western propaganda has been so heavily reliant on notions of technical superiority. This narrative is now looking very threadbare. It will be interesting to see if it ever breaks down completely, and if this happens, what impact this will have on the institutions that have become so reliant on it for their self-belief, and even survival.
Enjoy the article!
Written by Łukasz Michalik, journalist for Wirtualna Polska
Does Western military equipment really give the Ukrainians an advantage over the Russians? In terms of technical parameters, many models of Western weapons seem to be superior to their Russian counterparts. However, comparing tables with data, it is easy to draw false conclusions.
At the end of April, the world heard about the withdrawal of Abrams tanks from the front line by the Ukrainians. The American equipment, sometimes portrayed in the media as a super-weapon, seemed to be embarrassingly vulnerable on the Ukrainian frontlines.
How is it possible that one of the most vaunted tanks in the world could not withstand direct confrontation with the Russians? Is a weapon for which Poland has been willing to pay billions of dollars really a piece of junk? Nothing could be further from the truth, and the answer to these questions was given, among others, by General Waldemar Skrzypczak in an interview with Wirtualna Polska journalist Mateusz Tomczak.
Priority target for the Russians
There are no indestructible tanks – only badly damaged ones. In the Abrams, because it is a little easier to take the tank out of combat (ammunition is stored in the turret recess, which is high and therefore vulnerable to a hit), the crew’s lives are protected above all else.
Ammunition accumulation in the hull, as in Russian or some Western tanks, somewhat reduces the risk of hitting the magazine, but once this happens, the risk of crew death and total destruction of the tank increases.
The Western tanks transferred to Kiev were delivered without elements that have become standard on the most modern vehicles, namely the active protection systems, and electronic jammers, now widely used in Ukraine.
As a result, these vehicles are vulnerable to attack by drones or anti-tank guided missiles, and since the destruction of either has propaganda value, they have become a priority target for the Russians.
Few modern tanks
Equally important is the negligible number of modern Western tanks, which includes mainly Abrams tanks, Challenger 2 tanks, and only 21 Leopard 2 (Leopard 2A6 variant) tanks.
Let’s not forget that the Leopard 2A4 is a tank that represents the protection and technical level of almost 40 years ago – it is a vehicle built in the mid-1980s. This is only a few years younger than the Stridsvagn 122, the Swedish Leopard 2A5 with reinforced armor.
Equipment torn from the ecosystem
The same fate as the Abrams could befall the F-16s, to which the Ukrainian authorities have imparted legendary powers. Ukraine needs the new fighters because its air force has been almost completely destroyed, and their delivery is one of the conditions for continuing effective resistance to the invasion.
The belief that even a few dozen old F-16s (since they will be F-16AM/BM variants, albeit – possibly – with a newer radar replaced) will change the fate of the war may be overly optimistic.
This is especially the case as the capabilities of these aircraft in Ukraine will be limited by being excluded from the NATO ecosystem: Ukraine’s use of donated weapons will be less effective than that of, say, the Netherlands or Norway, which have NATO intelligence support, technical assets, or even flying tankers.
Perhaps more important than the planes themselves will be the weapons integrated with them and given to Ukraine.
Advantage through technology
So are Western weapons and the technological advantage that some of them provide irrelevant? The honest answer is that it depends on the situation. The war in Ukraine has provided several examples where weapons from the West have really made a difference in the fate of a battle.
The first can be considered the summer of 2022, when the delivery of just a dozen HIMARS launchers to Ukraine led to a prolonged paralysis of Russian logistics and a broken supply chain. This forced the Russians to move their own warehouses dozens of kilometers away from the battle lines, creating the chaos that allowed Ukraine to launch a brilliant summer offensive.
Another weapon, or rather Western equipment, of great importance has been the Starlink satellite internet system. Regardless of Elon Musk’s statements and personal views, his product provided Ukraine – especially in the first months of the war – with an information advantage over the enemy.
On the basis of Starlink, a system was developed to control artillery fire and transmit information about targets detected by drones. Given the weakness of military communications – on both the Russian and Ukrainian sides – Starlink’s hard-to-deactivate, infrastructure-less operation proved an invaluable advantage. Unfortunately, the Russians are now using it as well.
Storm Shadow missiles have also proven to be an extremely important weapon. Their use – combined with the use of maritime drones – led to the unusual situation where a country with no navy or air force of its own was able to effectively lift the naval blockade, drive enemy warships out of Sevastopol, and eventually push the Russian Black Sea Fleet back to bases on the eastern coast of the basin.
Weapons that have not given Ukraine an advantage in the war, but have allowed it to survive, are also anti-aircraft systems of various kinds. They range from Soviet-era equipment that allows Ukraine to resupply itself, to old Cheetahs that do a pretty good job against drones, to new Western systems that allow Ukraine to defend itself against Russian hypersonic weapons.
While effective anti-aircraft guns are too few (and, in recent months, catastrophically few) to be equally effective in defending both combat troops and the country’s major cities and economic centers, they have allowed Ukraine to protect critical infrastructure and, among other things, prevent defenders’ morale from plummeting while defending cities.
Old Weapons Matter Too
In assessing the effectiveness of Western weapons in Ukraine, it is also important to note that, for the most part, these are not modern weapons that NATO would fight with in the event of war. Of course, there are exceptions, such as some artillery systems – the Polish Kraby, the German PzH 2000, the French CAESAR or the Swedish FH77BW Archer. Their technical superiority over the Russian systems is undeniable – they have a firing range at least several kilometers longer.
However, this doesn’t always translate into an advantage in combat: to take advantage of the longer range, you need effective reconnaissance, which isn’t always possible with Russian air superiority, and very effective jammers that make it difficult for drones to operate.
Most of the support, however, consists of weapons that are simply outdated and not technically superior to Russian equipment. Leopard 1 tanks, M113 transporters, old M109 howitzers, or VAB reconnaissance vehicles do not provide a technical advantage, but because of their numbers and availability, they allow Ukraine to fight.
War is a clash of states, not of tanks.
Therefore, when you see tables of technical data published – including by the Ukrainian side – demonstrating the alleged advantages of one piece of equipment over another, it is worth remembering that little is made of them. Technical superiority is important, but its significance should not be overstated.
As the historian and popularizer of military knowledge Norbert Bonchik has repeatedly noted, “war is a system. It is not individual types of even the best weapons that fight, but states and their industrial bases. Therefore, an isolated Ukraine – despite the heroism of its defenders and numerous impressive successes – will be doomed to defeat in a clash with Russia.
What matters to the West is not the occasional delivery of a battalion of new tanks, but long-term economic assistance, the development of its own arms industry, the creation of repair facilities, or an effective training system. Providing Ukraine with some of these resources would allow Kiev to defend itself effectively and preserve its sovereignty, regardless of whether Abrams, Leopards, or just plain old T-72s are used in combat.
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well done. a great imitation of the western journalism style.
often the information that they present itself is not completely biased, but the headlines and the tone of speech is designed to make the reader believe a certain thing or think in a certain way.
keep up the great work!
obvious, isn’t it?
tons of ‘wirtualna’ hopium and copium in the polska article. much too heavy for the ukrainian steppes.
i believe all polska jokes
how many poles does it take to turn on a radar array?
three. two to hold the dish steady while one one drives the truck in circles to home in on the signal.
ding ding ding. we have a winner 🏆
se hai la superiorità tecnica vinci, perché l’urss non è caduta nel 1960 era superiore tecnicamente, nel 90 era di gran lunga inferiore agli usa e li pregarono di non fare lo scudo stellare, gli usa con la bomba atomica piegarono il giappone, tu hai la bomba atomica usala e vinci altrimenti laissie stai a cuccia, e aspetta il tuo padrone americano. saluti e buone feste a tutti e tutte anche agli amici e amiche commentatrici, davvero auguri.
western media bias is pervasive, but so is sheer ignorance. journalists interviewing other journalists rather than those with expertise is now very standard, presumably to assist their brand recognition therefore future employment. also, too, those who don’t follow the editorial line become unemployed.
western roman empire in pont of fact.
gen z and millennials just doing bullshit stuff for their pesos. nothing to see here 🤫💩💩
usual bs by drago bullshito.
so the polish media basically tell their men to not fear war with russia cause they have the whole package that ukraine did not have. great why would all those armys not killl their leaders and end the damn wars. put all polititians heads on a pike like vlad dracul would do.
that’s charles s ancestor.he’s very proud of his lineage.
presumably you mean charles is related to the envoys sent by the ottoman and british empires to threaten vlad if he did not surrender his throne and convert to catholicism. as usual the majority of the history about vlad is propaganda from the holy roman empire – the west has been at it a very long time.
the poies have always aspired to being a regional hegemon. they’ll do anything for anyone that pats them on the head and says, ‘that’s a fine goal to aspire to, sonny.’
problem is, they usually piss off so many of their neighbors before long that they end up being dissected. seems they have a lot in common with ukrainians after all.
no excuse for russians not having a proper satellite constellation and proper awacs/command control resources. if the russians had proper intel kursks wouldn’t happen
russians had everything as the sowjets but it consisted of different parts. those parts of their ability that were outside of russia were all lost. some they recovered by bringing the people who worked their to russia others switched sides to the west. while some stuff was just lost. the capability to build large nonsubmarine ships was lost just like some plane and missile tech. they were still in the process of replacing them when they stumbled into this war.
russians realized a long time ago that in modern warfare large surface ships are a waste of money. that is why they concentrate on submarines such as the belgorod – currently sitting off long island sound.
no use sitting there. do some practice drills and get the uni-arseholes moving.
keep grinding out the kursk meme. it’s really working for you.
so, it was just pure luck for the russians that it did, i guess.
“a brilliant summer offensive” – that’s pure kool-aid, straight from bullshistan.
yes most likely and these genius webinar designers should try to remember little things like about 800 million people are left handed, when they design their works.
early daze nothings what it seems.
excellent intro, and the rest is manifesting a narrative, as revealed by the intro. trying to brag about weapons, is weak cake psyop rambling… posting results… that’s what russians are doing in spades…
another inferior talibanned amerikunt tantrums at sf
mic propaganda is bad for both sides. the ruble to dollar difference and nature of the nato and russian economies makes the match up different. end of the day its inhumane to waste that much money killing people. clausewitz and many others would tell you these wars are supposed to end quickly. i’d wager it will be half a decade from now when the real costs are tallied for both sides.
should focus more on healthcare. undercutting u.s cancer medication is like declaring war on judaism. to the last shekel every free industrial state can beat uncle sam like the jewish whore he is……
i believe everything my amerikunt jew masters tell me—i am bitter mean retired toilet scrubber no pension must beg for shekels from teansgenders saxon ramses
the other side of the coin is, that russian army is portrayed as superior force in many articles, without mentioning losses of manpower or equipment. we as the public are tired of this media bias.
objectivity is an illusion for the media. every journalist has a personnal viewpoint, that influence his style and then there are editorial policies.