Citat:
Ursprungligen postat av
Moretex
Vapenproduktion är inte ett problem för Ryssland om du nu inte visste det. Stor industrikapacitet, energi och råvaror har dom själva i massor. Jämför med Europa som skulle kunna kriga i två månader och sen är det över så vi får väl hoppas att Ryssland inte utnyttjar vår svaga läge nu med korkade politiker, energibrist och "just in time" industri. Vad det gäller NATO så får man väl citera Zelenskyjs rådgivare Oleksij Arestovitj, en leksaksarmé.
Men massor av komponenter kommer ifrån väst. Här har du ett 23 sidigt dokument som går igenom delar som ryssarna använder som kommer just ifrån väst:
https://static.rusi.org/special-report-202204-operation-z-web.pdf
"An examination by the technical labs of the Ukrainian intelligence community of
the Aqueduct family of Russian military radios (R-168-5UN-2, R-168-5UN-1 and R-168-5UT-2),
which form the backbone of the Russian military’s tactical communications, for instance, reveals
critical electronic components manufactured in the US, Germany, the Netherlands, South
Korea and Japan.56 The pattern is universal. Almost all of Russia’s modern military hardware is
dependent upon complex electronics imported from the US, the UK, Germany, the Netherlands,
Japan, Israel, China and further afield.57 In some instances these components are civilian
dual-use electronics that can be procured commercially. In many more, however, they are pieces
of military or specialised technologies for which there are a small number of regulated suppliers."
"Academy of Sciences conducted an examination of communications architectures in Russian
military vehicles including for the Il-76 transport aircraft. In this aircraft’s communications suite
alone it identified 80 components that could not be replaced with manufactured parts in Russia"
MEN
"It is certainly reasonable to assume that the West will have some difficulty in restricting access to
some sensitive components of Russia’s weaponry. Although Russian weapons are full of Western
manufactured components, it is not clear that the companies manufacturing them knew that
the Russian military was the end-user. Many components are dual-use technologies. Meanwhile,
Russia has established mechanisms for laundering these items through third countries. Restricting
access, therefore, likely means preventing export to countries such as India of goods that are
in some instances used for civilian purposes."