The numbers make it look like Russia went in undermanned against a defender and has taken substantial land mass from Ukraine so far. Before the war I assumed Ukraine would win. That they've lost so much land to Russia has been a surprise to me.
So these "Russia is underperforming" ideas seem just weird to me.
There's a very big selection bias you're not accounting for, the amount of people in the russian military who are alcoholics might be significantly lower than that of the overall population. An obvious explanation could be that people who have steady jobs (in the army) are less likely to become alcoholics.
> I was pondering the reported ineffectiveness of Russia’s military, so I did a quick search on alcoholism across the world.
This is not really a scientific way of going about things: you shouldn't go thinking about possible conclusions, and then start looking for data supporting your claims. You need a theory that fits the evidence, not evidence that fits your theory.
I have been lectured by a fellow who did serve in active conflicts about the various military traditions he experienced; he analyzed them by unit cohesion. How big can a team in an army be? How long does it take for a new squad of thrown together strangers to become a team? and so on. With no fondness for the American command structure, he still rated the American armed forces as pretty good because real, problem focused teams can be large ("up to several hundreds of people!"), and assemble quickly. Other forces he characterized as "lost individuals with occasional supply drops."
1) Putin apparently thought the Ukrainian military officers had been bribed by the Russian FSB, but they had not, so he didn't expect as much resistance as he got (and thus wasn't ready for it)
2) The West (including non-NATO members such as Sweden and Finland) have contributed much more modern armaments (e.g. man-portable anti-tank weapons) than Russia (or maybe even the West) expected
3) Putin did not prepare Russia psychologically for a prolonged campaign, so most of the Russian soldiers did not expect to be sent to one, and were resentful upon discovering themselves in Ukraine for a fierce and prolonged fight
I'm sure alcoholism doesn't help with any of that. But, it doesn't seem necessary to explain Russia's performance.
Russia's military is subject to extreme corruption. Logistical supplies were sold instead of being stockpiled for wartime needs. Equipment in long-term storage had its parts stripped and sold. That means Russia is running into the same problem that doomed Hitler - unable to feed troops and fuel its vehicles.
One really bad problem Russia has is communications. Its encrypted radios are non-existent due to corruption in the contract that was supposed to provide them and so it's communicating military orders over open air. Ukraine has encrypted radios.
So, why is Russia faltering? It is relying on the Soviet Army tactics while Ukraine adopted NATO-like tactics. The problem with Soviet tactics is they assume the entire heavy industry is in war mode and they do not value soldiers' lives. Each battalion-tactical group is a self-contained unit that heavily relies on military vehicles. When those vehicles get destroyed, which is what Ukraine excels at with its drone-guided artillery, these groups become under equipped infantry and thus useless in achieving their objectives.
Russia was able to produce 60 modern tanks per year. They lost 23 years of tank production so far. These are absolutely catastrophic losses that are unrecoverable, but Ukraine can't win yet because it doesn't have the weapons it needs to cut off Russia's ability to mount attacks. Those weapons are MLRS, which is what Russia is using to rain terror upon our cities. In fact, Ukraine has captured many tanks and MLRS systems from Russia.
According to conservative estimates by Ukraine's ministry of defense, the total combat losses of the enemy from 24.02 to 29.05 were approximately:
personnel - about 30150 (+150) persons were liquidated, tanks ‒ 1338 (+8) од, APV ‒ 3270 (+12) од, artillery systems – 631 (+3) од, MLRS - 203 (+0) од, Anti-aircraft warfare systems - 93 (+0) од, aircraft – 207 (+0) од, helicopters – 174 (+0) од, UAV operational-tactical level - 504 (+1), cruise missiles - 116 (+0), warships / boats - 13 (+0) од, vehicles and fuel tanks - 2240 (+14) од, special equipment - 48 (+0).
Ukraine will win, but it's taking a long time to get the long range weapons it needs. Want to help? Figure out how to accelerate delivery of MLRS.