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Politica UK Infopods

Politica UK Infopods

By: Politica UK
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#infopods — calm, factual briefings for complex times Politica UK Podcast
Independent analysis, non-fiction readings, and short-form explainers on geopolitics, economics, conflict, and social change. Featuring selected audiobook excerpts from the Tale Teller Club Press catalogue.

Authored and edited by
📚 Sarnia de la Maré FRSA

💬 Companion blog: https://politica-uk.blogspot.com/

🕊️ Daily insights on X: @taletellerclub © 2026 Tale Teller Club Press · All rights reserved.
Views expressed are editorial and educational in nature.Sarnia de la Mare
Political Science Politics & Government
Episodes
  • 🎧 Is Ukraine winning the war against Russia? An Infopod by Tale Teller Club Publishing #war
    Jun 29 2026
    Is Ukraine winning the war against Russia? An Infopod by Tale Teller Club PublishingNo, Ukraine is not winning outright, but neither is Russia achieving its objectives. The war remains a brutal, high-cost stalemate as of late June 2026, with Russia making very slow territorial gains at enormous expense while Ukraine demonstrates resilience through defensive successes, counteractions, and deep strikes. Territorial SituationRussia controls roughly 20% of Ukraine (including pre-2022 holdings in Crimea and parts of Donbas), with minimal net changes recently. In 2025, Russia gained ~4,000–5,000 sq km, mostly in the east (e.g., around Pokrovsk).In 2026 so far, gains have slowed dramatically: Russian forces advanced or infiltrated only ~40 sq km from Dec 2025–May 2026 in some assessments, while suffering net losses in controlled territory due to Ukrainian counteractions. Ukrainian forces have retaken settlements and hundreds of sq km in places (e.g., Oleksandrivka direction), halted much of Russia's spring-summer 2026 offensive, and conducted incursions into Russian territory (e.g., Kursk). Russia claims advances toward key spots like Kostyantynivka in Donetsk, but these remain limited infiltrations rather than consolidated control. Ukraine's "fortress belt" in the Donbas continues to slow Russian momentum. Military and Human CostsThis is primarily a grinding war of attrition:Russian losses: Estimates of ~1.2 million total casualties (killed, wounded, missing) since 2022, with ~500,000 killed per some Western/GCHQ assessments. Daily rates remain high (~1,000 per day in periods). Equipment losses are massive (thousands of tanks, etc.). Ukrainian losses: Substantial but lower ratio (~500k–600k casualties estimated through late 2025, with ongoing toll). Manpower shortages are a concern for both. Russia's advances average tens of meters per day in hotspots—extremely costly and slow by historical standards. Drones, artillery, and electronic warfare dominate, favoring defense and making large breakthroughs rare for either side. Other Factors Ukraine's strengths: Effective long-range drone/missile strikes on Russian logistics, oil infrastructure, Crimea, and rear areas. These disrupt supplies and impose economic costs. Ukraine has stabilized parts of the front and regained territory in 2026. Russia's strengths: Superior manpower (via recruitment, convicts, North Korean aid earlier), artillery/drone production, and willingness to absorb losses. It occupies ~20% of Ukraine and continues pressure in the east. Broader context: Western aid (~$188B US, ~$197B EU) sustains Ukraine but faces political/fatigue issues. Russia's economy is strained by war spending but adapted. Putin shows no sign of compromising core goals (e.g., control of Donbas, neutralizing Ukraine's NATO path). Overall AssessmentUkraine is not winning if "winning" means decisively expelling Russian forces or restoring 1991/2014 borders soon—Russia's occupation and attrition strategy prevent that without major shifts (e.g., escalated Western support or Russian collapse). However, Russia is also not winning: Its 2026 offensive underperformed prior years, Ukraine is hitting deep targets effectively, and the human/economic costs are unsustainable long-term for Moscow's maximalist aims. The conflict is in a dynamic equilibrium where Ukraine has improved its position relative to 2024–2025 lows through adaptation and strikes, but exhaustion, politics, and demographics loom. Diplomatic signals (e.g., mutual strike halts) exist, but incompatible goals make a clean resolution unlikely soon. The outcome will depend on endurance, aid, technology, and will—none of which point to a clear victor today.Are there any similar situations from WWIIYes, there are partial parallels to WWII, though the Ukraine-Russia war is more frequently compared to World War I due to its positional, attritional nature. WWII featured more fluid maneuver warfare (especially early on) mixed with brutal sieges and grinding campaigns. Here are the closest analogies, based on battlefield dynamics, costs, and strategic situations. Normandy Hedgerows (Bocage) Campaign, 1944 (Strongest Tactical Parallel)After D-Day, Allied forces (mainly US) faced a grinding stalemate in Normandy's dense hedgerows against prepared German defenses. Advances were extremely slow and costly:US forces took ~6 weeks to push just ~19 miles (30 km) inland toward Saint-Lô, with daily incremental gains amid heavy casualties.Similar to Ukraine: Small-unit assaults, high losses for limited territory, challenges with armor in constrained terrain, and reliance on attrition to wear down the defender before a breakout (Operation Cobra).In Ukraine, Russian advances often average 15–70 meters per day in hotspots (e.g., around Pokrovsk or Chasiv Yar), slower than even the Somme in some metrics but akin to Normandy's bocage fighting. Drones and precision fires in Ukraine act like WWII ...
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    9 mins
  • 🎧 Suez Crisis vs Strait of Hormuz 2026: Lessons from 1956 for Today's Oil Chokepoint Crisis.
    Jun 18 2026
    🎙️
    #infopods — calm, factual briefings for complex times Politica UK Podcast
    Independent analysis, non-fiction readings, and short-form explainers on geopolitics, economics, conflict, and social change. Featuring selected audiobook excerpts from the Tale

    Teller Club Press catalogue. Authored and edited by
    📚 Sarnia de la Maré FRSA

    💬 Companion blog: https://politica-uk.blogspot.com/
    🕊️ Daily insights on X: @taletellerclub © 2026 Tale Teller Club Press · All rights reserved.
    Views expressed are editorial and educational in nature.

    DISCLAIMER Politica UK publishes informational audio briefings and editorial commentary intended to provide context and understanding of political, economic, and social developments. Content is produced for educational and informational purposes only.

    It does not constitute financial, legal, or professional advice. Any references to public figures, institutions, or events are made in good faith, based on publicly available information, and presented for contextual analysis rather than persuasion.


    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    8 mins
  • 🎧 The Quiet Unravelling of Capitalism by Sarnia de la Maré FRSA an InfoPod for Politica UK
    Mar 30 2026
    https://sarniadelamare.com

    🎙️
    #infopods — calm, factual briefings for complex times Politica UK Podcast
    Independent analysis, non-fiction readings, and short-form explainers on geopolitics, economics, conflict, and social change. Featuring selected audiobook excerpts from the Tale

    Teller Club Press catalogue. Authored and edited by
    📚 Sarnia de la Maré FRSA

    💬 Companion blog: https://politica-uk.blogspot.com/
    🕊️ Daily insights on X: @taletellerclub © 2026 Tale Teller Club Press · All rights reserved.
    Views expressed are editorial and educational in nature.

    DISCLAIMER Politica UK publishes informational audio briefings and editorial commentary intended to provide context and understanding of political, economic, and social developments. Content is produced for educational and informational purposes only.

    It does not constitute financial, legal, or professional advice. Any references to public figures, institutions, or events are made in good faith, based on publicly available information, and presented for contextual analysis rather than persuasion.
    Show More Show Less
    7 mins
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