Putin's Army is Exhausted - But Will Brittleness Lead to Collapse or More Grind? - Silicon Curtain
Silicon Bites Ep277 | 2025-12-20 | Russias Army Is Exhausted we examine some major articles that have come out that claim the Russian army is reaching a significant point of degradation in morale, cohesion and effectiveness. We unpack what that claim means, what the evidence is, and what it changes.
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Summary of "Russia's Army is Exhausted" Analysis
This video examines claims that Russia's military is reaching critical degradation in morale, cohesion, and effectiveness despite Kremlin propaganda suggesting otherwise.
Key Arguments
The Exhaustion Thesis
Russia is "grinding" rather than winning, with its army being consumed by the war effort
Exhaustion is measurable through manpower constraints, psychological degradation, and operational limitations
The Russian military increasingly fights "from absence of alternatives" rather than conviction
Three Main Evidence Points
1. Manpower Crisis
Russia avoids full mobilization due to political risks (remembering 2022's mass exodus)
Relies on expensive contract recruitment with regional bonuses
Some regions are reducing signing bonuses due to economic strain
The system functions like a "military meat dispensing vending machine" requiring endless funding
2. Cohesion Problems
Army cohesion maintained through fear, which is inherently brittle
Soldiers expect punishment, see no future, and face pervasive corruption
Even claimed recruitment of 410,000 contract soldiers in 2025 doesn't negate systemic exhaustion
3. Operational Limitations
Russia cannot sustain simultaneous offensives across multiple directions
Increased use of disposable light vehicles (motorcycles, buggies) - "10 times more than last year"
Forced into strategic tradeoffs about where to attack
Strategic Implications
Russia's exhaustion creates leverage - if Western allies choose to exploit it through tighter sanctions and sustained military aid
Exhaustion doesn't guarantee defeat - Russia can remain lethal while degraded
Russia's military spending is unsustainable - 15.5 trillion rubles in 2025, cushioned by partnerships with India and China
The West should accelerate Russia's limits rather than assume inevitable Russian victory
The analysis concludes that treating Ukraine's survival as essential to Western deterrence posture is the correct strategic response.