πŸ‘πŸ‘ Big shout out to our growing list of Patreons. For those of you want (and can) support our channel, here is how you can help: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=13016082
Here is the link for the 10% coupon code for TipRanks:
https://bit.ly/3BJA7KJ
You can now book a live 1X1 call with me via Clarity here: https://clarity.fm/tomnashv2
Gear List:
Camera
Sony A7Siii: https://amzn.to/3IW4AcF
Canon R5: https://amzn.to/3r9L06t
Lenses
Sony 16-35 GM: https://amzn.to/3g7o4i2
Sony 35M 1.4F GM: https://amzn.to/35Cbm8Z
Canon 24-70: https://amzn.to/3uensiD
Recorder
Ninja Atomos: https://amzn.to/3451Zya
Editing laptop
Razer Blade 15 Advanced: https://amzn.to/3ueTLOM
Headset
Beats Stuido 3: https://amzn.to/33X8yTz
Senheiser HD650: https://amzn.to/3uegMRS
Mixer
Rodecaster Pro: https://amzn.to/3KWUhqf
Microphones
Shure sm7b: https://amzn.to/3GfbasL
Rode Microphones DS1 Table Top Desk Stand for many Microphones: https://amzn.to/3IHxIUO
Cloud Microphones Cloudlifter CL-1 Mic Activator: https://amzn.to/3Hid6lx
Audio-Technica AT4053B Hypercardioid Condenser Microphone: https://amzn.to/32JLjvo
Sennheiser Pro Audio MKH416: https://amzn.to/3o7oTvF
Lights
Light Nova p300 C: https://amzn.to/3AIZb5M
Light Arri Skaypanel: https://amzn.to/3GdGDf6
Amaron 120D: https://amzn.to/34j9S2H
RX818 by Falconeyes: https://amzn.to/3ga7M7V
FalconeyesF7: https://amzn.to/3rdLjNw
Screens
Streamdeck by Corsair: https://amzn.to/3L10mlB
Samsung G9 Screen: https://amzn.to/3ga80vN
AORUS FI32U: https://amzn.to/3AL5LbL
Samsung Flip 2 WM55R 55: https://amzn.to/3KZZpdx
Keyboard and Mouse
Steelseries: https://amzn.to/3AI55Ec
ARTISAN Hien (Wine Red/XL) [FX-HI-MD-XL-R] FX MID (Japan Import): https://amzn.to/3s678hu
Chair
Herman Miller Aeron: https://amzn.to/3oc2mh6
Soudproofing
London 12 Room Kit – Primacoustics: https://amzn.to/3GeHYlN
TΓΆnnen 2-pack Acoustic Panel GRAY 3: https://amzn.to/3Hib70C
*Disclosure: I only recommend products I would use myself and all opinions expressed here are our own. This post may contain affiliate links that at no additional cost to you, I may earn a small commission.
DISCLAIMER: All of Tom's trades, strategies, and news coverage are based on his own opinions alone and are only done for entertainment purposes. If you are watching Tom's videos, please Don't take any of this content as guidance for buying or selling any type of investment or security. Tom Nash is not a financial advisor and anything said on this YouTube channel should not be seen as financial advice. Tom is merely sharing his own personal opinion. Your own results in the stock market or with any type of investment may not be typical and may vary from person to person. Please keep in mind that there are a lot of risks associated with investing in the stock market so do your own research and due diligence before making any investment decisions.

Hey this is tom, and you know the drill, don't click, nothing, don't smash; nothing don't buy nothing in today's video i'll show you why russia already lost and there's seven reasons that that actually happened and i'm not necessarily talking about the traditional warfare kind of style of Losing and winning i'm talking about the long term goals of russia and where this thing is headed, it's not a good place. Stick with me. Let's get this done hey. This is tom.

Thank you for staying with me, as you can see, i'm not at a hundred percent. I finally couldn't dodge the bullet. Um covet got me sorry, not a hundred percent. You can hear it in my voice, but i'm still here giving you the information and my own analysis.

So, as i mentioned in the beginning, there's seven distinct reasons why russia and vladimir putin actually already lost and i'll go over every single one of them. Some of them are more pathological as far as things that already happened, and some are kind of looking forward. As far as the inevitability of the laws, now again, i'm not talking about the traditional warfare. Obviously the russian military is ginormous and i think it's going to be very hard for the ukrainian army as limited as it is, even though they have insane spirit and they want to basically fight the less man and the less bullet the size.

Difference is going to be very difficult for the ukrainian army, but again i'm not a military strategist, and i don't know how this plays out. But i'm not here to talk about the military and the war stuff. I think russia eventually could win the battlefield, but will it win the actual war as far as the stuff that it actually wanted to get out of this? Well, i think not and there's seven distinct reasons why so the first element is the ukrainian national identity or lack thereof, as per the russian strategist or on the vice versa, the russian people's support for this or lack thereof, let's start with the ukrainian side first. So, let's start with the ukrainian side, i think the working assumption for russia was well.

Ukrainians are divided, some haters, some love us at least 50 percent of the population will see us as liberators and the ukrainian army will basically be divided and will fall apart after we do the initial polarization of the first couple of hours, something that completely didn't happen. So is the assumption about the ukrainian army? That's going to basically scatter once they hit some. You know, roadblocks also didn't happen, they're holding strong, they're, tough as nails and also about the government. The government also didn't fall apart and run away like a bunch of mice.

They're staying put now here's the thing. Russia basically had this assumption that there is no ukrainian nationality and there's a lot of divide within and once they actually hit and hit it hard. It's going to fall apart, like a house of cards that didn't happen and that put russia in the major blunder. So the facts are that the ukrainian army is still fighting.
The president is still in kiev and kiev is still held by the ukrainians. So none of these initial goals have been met even in the second week of this war. Now, even if russia eventually takes ukraine, which might happen, in fact, it seems now more likely than not given how much sheer size russia has, what will they do with ukraine? They're unable to hold the country, this literally hates them, they're going to vomit them out much like it happened in afghanistan and other places. You can't hold the country of actual identity and actual hatred towards the russians, even though you might initially conquer it.

Holding ukraine is gon na, prove much more difficult and even that they can't really achieve yet they haven't even conquered it not to mention hold it. It's a ginormous country that now also hates you. You have to understand. Ukrainians, never really hated russia.

Of course, there was a few extremists on both sides, but i mean there wasn't really hate or animosity between ukrainians and russians. Now that this invasion happened, i mean russians are not really liked in ukraine, anymore, in fact, they're prison and non-grata. Not talking about the russians who live in ukraine, i mean russia's russians from russia, so this war in fact strengthened and unified ukrainian identity, which is exactly what putin didn't want to achieve so kind of weird right. The problem is beyond that: it's going to be unpleasant for russia once the ukrainian people decide, they hate you absorbing.

Ukraine is part of russia, which is putin's biggest dream. Is not gon na be possible. You can't absorb a country that literally hates your guts. Now, on the russian side, i think putin expected a similar reaction to what happened with crimea when putin annexed crimea.

His support levels in russia went through the roof, and the big difference is crimea was predominantly russian, so that made a lot of sense when you go after western ukraine, which is culturally nationalistically and for any sort of arguments and reasons has nothing to do with russia And you know the russian people aren't really for that. I mean they're being fed by obviously local controlled media, so they don't have all the facts. I'm sure some definitely like putin, but there's not a lot of kind of ongoing support in russia as far as rallying behind the flag going after ukraine, unlike crimea. This time the people aren't rallying behind putin with this adventure, and the problem is that, even though you might have a few protests here and there - i mean it's not really, this national movement against the war, none of that is happening in russia right now.

However, there's also not a lot of support. People are basically saying well what the hell and that's not the kind of spirit you want from your people when you're trying to go to war, that's definitely going to be sustainable long term. The second point is the complete underestimation of the us intelligence by the russian strategist. I think they see the us as weak as divided.
Does you know? Democracy is their weakness. I think they completely blew it now. U.S actually called invasion way before everybody else, including myself. Most experts said that this is highly unlikely and i said it myself guilty as charged.

However, the u.s administration based on u.s intelligence, kept saying this is going to happen. This is going to happen and eventually it did exactly like they warned. So i think putin didn't anticipate that the more important part is that the us actually came out and said: hey, there's a false flag event. That's going to happen when russia going to blame ukraine for something, and it's going to be a justification for them to invade by doing that, essentially, do is basically took the whole sting out of operation that doesn't really make sense anymore.

That's why i think it might not have happened this way, basically living putin with some de-notification kind of weird religious justification of invading ukraine. That doesn't really make a lot of sense, so they did a good job of anticipating putting moves before him, basically making the invasion from day. One look at complete nonsense. People are basically saying what is this: why you're invading ukraine that was based on u.s intelligence? Now the second part is where basically, he said.

Well, you know what i'm raising my nuclear awareness now that's a threat. That's traditionally is kind of taken seriously in the west. I mean we don't like to think of nuclear wars. I mean that is scary, but the u.s administration based on their intelligence, said well, we think you're, bluffing and so far it seems that they were right.

But of course, here look. Every nuclear threat is serious and scary, as i'm not gon na sit here and pretend, like. I know what this guy's gon na do i mean if he gets desperate, who knows, but at least so far they've basically been cool about it. They said.

Okay, let's see they didn't jump, the gun basically raised their awareness and then you know started the whole snowball. They basically were really cool about it, which i think is something that putin didn't expect to ask to be cool, calm and collected. I don't know what kum is: let's move on now. The third part is a complete misunderstanding of how bad the impact of the sanction will be on the russian economy.

I don't think russia anticipated how fast it will come, how hard it will come and what the scope of this thing will be. Now russia knew that nobody's going to attach oil and gas. It's a double-edged sword. Nobody wants to mess with that.

It's in both sides interest to keep the gas and the oil flowing. It's definitely not as bad as it should be to completely stop russia from basically doing this, they could have easily done that by cutting off oil and gas, but that can't be done because it's a double-edged sword. The west needs the gas and oil more the eu than the u.s. The u.s is pretty much not really dependent on russian oil.
Only about three percent of you know their imports coming from russia, but the eu really needs russian gas so that doomsday weapon hasn't been pulled out yet, but the sanctions were much broader and came down much faster than putin anticipated. This wasn't the child's play that we saw in 2014. These were real sanctions and they're, taking a toll on the russian economy. Now everybody likes to talk about the central bank of russia and their reserves.

The war chest 640 billion dollars in foreign currency for the war, that putin has basically prepped for now there have been sanctions on that reserve and in fact most of it is inaccessible to russia. Apart from about 130 billion in gold and a few other stuff, it's mainly frozen because mostly it's in g7 countries and that thing is shut down. So putin can really access that. However, it's not as bad as it would seem because it still has access to all the money, as all prices keep going up rated 115 for crude oil.

I mean he actually gets quite a lot of money from basically selling oil because look in reality. High oil prices serve russia, they're getting forex, they'll survive that so the problem is in the inflation part and look it's not like things were great. Before this whole thing started. Russia was flirting with double digit inflation before this war about nine percent, even worse than the us, and now with the supply chain, shortages in russia.

Basically, everybody claws shop in russia, no more goods coming in or out. It's gon na get much worse. So, even though it actually gets money from oil and gas, the supply chain issues and basically the ruble going to zero, is now going to create massive inflation in russia, not nine percent, not ten percent experts are saying twenty thirty forty percent insane inflationary impact on russia. We've seen this before in 1998 and how destructive it can be if it doesn't get solved fast.

However, at this point it doesn't seem like a solution is in sight. I mean a proper solution would be putting going back home, which is something he can't afford. So basically, he has to decide between the complete destruction of his currency and his economy or taking ukraine both options he can't live with or without it's like a marriage pretty much now. The next point is kind of ironic, because the whole purpose of why putin went to war is to create more peaceful borders for himself.

He doesn't want nato on his border right, but the problem is that this whole operation, this whole war, basically created a more unsafe border for russia to begin with, because the entire eu, which was basically asleep at the will, decided that this is the end of the Peace era, because since world war ii for the past 80 years, europe has been underspending on military. They basically said why we don't need it spending two three percent on gdp on the military, basically creating a very safe environment for putin. That means that he actually can put more money into infrastructure education, healthcare stuff - that countries really want to spend on. No country really wants to spend on military unless they have a choice right, so he invades ukraine in the hopes of getting that.
Instead, he gets germany, which is the leader of europe, saying hey, we're doubling our spending on military and we're only going to get stronger and stronger support from this, because the coalition, the opposition, everybody in germany is saying. Yeah yeah people are trying to join nato. Finland, sweden, trying to join nato. I mean switzerland is supporting ukraine, they didn't take size in world war ii.

I mean the entire eu and nato is more unified than ever, which is exactly the opposite of what putin tried to achieve, because when putin went to ukraine, he basically thought that germany is going to be in the collision course with the us, because germany would say Well, we're going to keep russian gas, don't sanction, the us will say well sanction and then they're going to have a fight completely. You know killing nato or at least weakening nato or destabilizing nato, but instead he got the most unified nato ever, including all of his borders. All of his neighbors are now joining nato and spending more on military, which is the opposite, literally the opposite of what he wanted now. The next mistake was a pr mistake.

I think putin really wanted for people to believe the whole nato expansion caused. This narrative, he tried to push it a lot. However, it never really took, of course, there's a few experts on the west who still push this narrative and understand why, but it never really caught on for multiple reasons, for example, in his own invasion speech, he never even brought it up. He talked about nationalistic stuff.

Denatifying, ukraine, that ukraine doesn't have right to exist, blah blah blah all that stuff, not a word about nato, so that weakened this whole thing beyond the fact that ukraine wasn't even on the brink of joining nato. I mean this wasn't on the table right now. Why now of all times, mostly because nato is a defensive alliance, i mean, except from 1998, ever since it existed in the 40s, it never did anything even in 1988, it just bombed to stop massacre to stop a genocide. They never invaded anyone.

That's the whole idea. Article 5, basically, nato is a concept, it's just a concept that if one country's attacked everybody come to their defense, there's not an offensive use for nato, and i think putin knows this, and the only explanation of why would nato want to basically suffocate putin is basically Predicated on some sort of an ancient belief that the us wants to destroy russia, which is obviously not true, because nobody in the us really gives a story about russia before this whole thing. Nobody cares about russia. It's not that big of a deal.
There's no people sitting around the u.s trying to think of ways to destroy russia. It doesn't work that way, so this whole narrative, as elaborate as it was never caught on in the western media, completely killing his plan to divide public opinion in europe in the u.s. Another major failure and, of course we can't ignore the logistical nightmare that he created for himself. Look russia, definitely miscalculated the logistics of this.

I'm not a logistical expert, i'm not a military strategist. All i can tell you is they didn't think of how strong of a logistic system they'll need to invade a big ass country like ukraine, now the soviet army before them, and the current russian army is known to be weak, logistically outside of its own borders? It's basically relying on their own railway system when they get far from it, especially into a country where it's, basically, you know going full on scorched earth and destroying bridges, roads, railways, they basically get stuck in the mud. I mean they're kind of terrible at logistics, especially in the country like ukraine and what the ukrainian people have been doing. Basically slowing them down.

They're literally stuck in the mud. Look we're in the second week of this, and still kiev is standing. The government is standing. The ukrainian army is standing every day that this goes on.

The logistical nightmare for his army becomes much much worse, which unfortunately kind of raises the odds of more aggressive action, which is something i definitely don't want to see. But this is a scary thought and the last point i think was completely misunderstanding: how china is going to respond with this look. China is basically sitting here, saying: hey we're friends, but we're only friends as long as it suits our interests. They're saying look.

Ukrainian is a sovereign country. You should not have invaded. However, look the west, you shouldn't be pushing nato in the backyard of putin. You guys need to work it out, they're, basically implying that putin has a point, and the west has a point: they're, basically not taking the side of putin.

Now putin definitely sees them as a potential replacement for eu craze, but that thing is going to take a decade to set up logistically and even though not sure that china really wants that. I mean they're going to sanction up the wazoo by the entire g7. If they do that, but even if they do that, not sure if putin wants that, i mean do they really want to be 100 dependent on china from now going forward. What does it do to his clout in europe? So it's a whole complicated story with china.
I think he anticipated way more support from the chinese, but basically they're. Looking at saying, hey, we don't really want to go to war here because look we have our own thing with the us. We don't want any mess, let's just keep it going the way it is because look. China doesn't really want more sanctions from the us based on its friendship with russia.

They want to keep things as low yield as possible. They want to keep things calm and they're, not going to be here sitting on the fence. Saying: hey: go putin, it's not gon na work. This way and again, a mistake, that's being done strategically now, as always, this is just my opinion.

Every time i talk about geopolitics, 50 of you may think, i'm a complete idiot. Let me know below i'm fine with it share with me. Your opinion i'll see you tomorrow.

By Stock Chat

where the coffee is hot and so is the chat

30 thoughts on “7 mistakes that may cost russia the ukraine war”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Phil C says:

    Great update Tom. Can’t fault your work ethic; get well soon.

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Vedran Pevec says:

    β€œWar, in the end, is always about betrayal, betrayal of the young by the old, of soldiers by politicians, and of idealists by cynics.”

    -Chris Hedges.

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars De-Centralized says:

    Tom, love your Russian-American perspective on Putin. Can't wait until he's gone and you can pivot all the way back to Palantir and the rest of your financial focus.

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars william woo says:

    Tom, the Russian army will run out of food and water and beg the Ukrainian people to feed them. So the best thing that can happen is starve them out and very little killing will be required. So Stall the Russian army is what I think would work

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Bribe says:

    Aggressors will always lose; the only question is how long it will take them to do so.

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Moon says:

    They will lose anyway, no matter how long it takes.

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Dewiz says:

    Thanks, Tom, for giving me another input for me to make my own assessments. We’re all operating in the fog of war. . .

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars CORRUPTION CZAR NETWORK says:

    Russia is not financially strong what most people think( not big power) they are just equal to Italy's economy. Putin miscalculate, he is Done now! if he just goes after just corrupt politicians he could get away with the invasion, his big mistake going after citizens.

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Filip Tino says:

    Putin took Crimea from Ukraine, NATO took Kosovo from Serbia. Don't be a hypocrite.

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Top Ev says:

    Hi Tom, I believe Ukrainian going mountain a gorilla warfare within the heart of Moscow bring the fight to Putin because I don’t believe if Russia win the war that Ukrainian people not gonna stop fighting, this is over yet because I believe Ukrainian going to re-coup put some sort of special forces together to fight Russia from within Russia they most likely going to target Moscow, when you want to kill a dragon you gotta cut your head off.

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars romica1972 says:

    Your'e my favourite russian – get healthy fast we need your voice!!!

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Nathaniel alaburg says:

    China just announced some large naval exercises…….. here goes Taiwan….. Battle field 4 all over again…..

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Corn Pop says:

    The Cossack Squabble. I'm all for Ukraine…. but Putin isnt entirely wrong they have some very major issues, and that Zelensky is not in as much control as the west pretends he is. We should be careful we dont created and arm something we don't understand, for Romania's sake. Imagine in say 10 years if EU countries start actually shooting at each other.

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Debbie Grazioso says:

    Get well soon! And thanks for all your great info!

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars mcrayfourd says:

    I look at it this way the Cuban missile crisis USA was willing to go to war for having missiles on their back door whats the difference with Russia potentially having nukes on their back door ? The end goal is just to put a huge strangle hold on the Russian financial system which screws the average Russian

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Andrew Alexander says:

    B.S! I COULD TELL THE TRUTH BUT I'LL BE REMOVED! HENCE YOUR VIDEO IS STILL UP, WHICH DSAYS IT ALL! RUSSIA WILL BE BETTER OFF IN THE LONG RUN WITHOUT BIOLOGICAL AND NEUCLEAR WEAPONS 300miles FROM MOSCOW! NATO A DEFENSIVE ALLIANCE? ONLY IN NAME DUDE, ONLY I NAME!

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Echoeversky Ü says:

    I will take 2 million Russian soldiers to occupy Ukraine.

  18. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Susan L says:

    Appreciate a viewpoint that isn't coming from politicians and MSM!

  19. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars T&D Tesla says:

    What’s the end game Tom?
    Wishing you a swift recovery & praying for the end of the war πŸ™ πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡¦

  20. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars lover and a hater says:

    Destroying the nazi training camps in Ukraine. Yeah maybe that would be nice… but the fact you aren't against the sanctions against the Russian people and fucking with global trade is a sure path to world war. Moronic

  21. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Qingyu Hu says:

    Zelensky should figure out a way to de-escalate and give Russia a way out to reduce suffering all people involved. Putin's goals will never be achieved and Ukraine can't be concurred, both are extremely clear by now so the question is how do we move on without sparking a nuclear war and suffering for all including both the Ukrainian and Russian people. Even the Russian military has demonstrated their inability to be called world military power so from how on no one will take them seriously as a threat besides their nuclear bombs. Best thing to do is let Putin get "something" and go back to live out his days in a bunker. Salute to Zelensky and the Ukrainian people, time to be even smarter.

  22. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Hritek adhikari says:

    Zelensky is smarter than putin thought.
    Zelensky has fled to poland but is just pretending he is in ukriane ( supposedly in a bunker). That guy is definitely an american puppet.

  23. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Moises Huerta says:

    Putin has already won on many fronts.
    -He tricked Ukraine into focus on defending Kiev. And it's not even being attacked.
    -This left the South basically undefended. A walk over for the Russian forces there.
    -The west is being flooded with a Million refugees a week coupled with unsustainable energy price hikes, followed by insane inflation.

  24. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Stanislav Kostadinov says:

    Don’t click nothing is the friendly reminder I need to click it.. πŸ˜‰

  25. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Hritek adhikari says:

    How about china supporting russia financially.
    Looking at china's usd reserve they definitely are looking forward to financing russian war intrest.

  26. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Music Cloud says:

    Get well and speedy recovery, Mr. Nicest guy in internet πŸ™‚

  27. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Special Education says:

    Aggressors always lose. The only question is how long it takes

  28. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Daniel C says:

    Unfortunately no one wins in this conflict… but there's no doubt that militarily occupying a nation for a long period never works. Just look at Russia/ US/UK in Afghanistan. Occupation never works.

  29. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Oscar Cobio says:

    I just click the like button .sorry good content deserves.

  30. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Shine says:

    Every time you say don’t click nothing, I click like. πŸ˜‚

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.