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  1. #2851
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    Outnumbered and Worn Out, Ukrainians in East Brace for Russian Assault

    Michael Schwirtz



    Tue, February 7, 2023 at 5:59 AM GMT+10:30·8 min read


    NEVSKE, Ukraine — In a tiny village in eastern Ukraine at the epicenter of the next phase of the war, Lyudmila Degtyaryova measures the Russian advance by listening to the boom of incoming artillery shells.

    There are more and more of them now. And they are coming more frequently, as Russian troops grind their way forward.

    “You should see the fireworks here,” said Degtyaryova, 61, as the sounds of artillery howled all around. “It is like New Year’s.”
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    Russia’s military is preparing to launch a new offensive that could soon swallow Degtyaryova’s village of Nevske, and perhaps much more in the eastern Ukrainian region known as the Donbas. But already the impact of Russia’s stepped-up assault is being felt in the towns and villages along the hundreds of miles of undulating eastern front.

    Exhausted Ukrainian troops complain they are already outnumbered and outgunned, even before Russia has committed the bulk of its roughly 200,000 newly mobilized soldiers. And doctors at hospitals speak of mounting losses as they struggle to care for fighters with gruesome injuries.

    The civilians standing in the way of Russia’s planned advance once again face the agonizing decision of whether to leave or to stay and wait out the coming calamity. This area in the northern Donbas was among the last to be liberated in a Ukrainian blitz offensive last fall that raised hopes among local residents that their months of trauma were over.

    But the war has come back. Two weeks ago, a Russian shell landed in Degtyaryova’s yard, and as she contemplated her future over the weekend, the remains of her barn still smoldered.

    She has rabbits, ducks and three pregnant cows to care for. A chicken, its feathers partly burned off in the recent strike, lay recovering in a bed of hay, its small injured foot in a homemade cast.

    If the Russians come back, she lamented, she’ll have to flee.

    “I’ve started to pack my things, if I’m being honest,” she said. “The soldiers will cover my back and I will leave. I’ll let my cows out and I’ll go. I don’t want to go back there.”

    When and where the new offensive will begin in earnest is still unclear, but Ukrainian officials are gravely concerned. Ukraine’s military defied dire assessments before the war, thwarting Russia’s early efforts to seize the capital, Kyiv, and eventually driving Russian forces back in the northeast and south.

    But the Russian military just keeps coming. Right now, the newly mobilized troops are finishing their training and entering the field; the forces include as many soldiers as took part in the initial invasion last year.

    They could be ready to fight in as little as two weeks, said Serhiy Haidai, the governor of the Luhansk region, which includes Nevske — much sooner than new Western weapons, including tanks and heavy armored fighting vehicles, are expected to arrive in Ukraine.

    “There are so many,” Haidai said of the new recruits. “These are not professional soldiers, but it is still 200,000 people who are shooting in our direction.”

    Russia is expected to punch hard, looking to reverse nearly a year of cascading failure. While a renewed attack on Kyiv is now considered improbable, Russian forces will likely try to recover territories they lost last fall. as well as take full control of the Donbas, a key objective of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

    Military analysts say that one likely scenario would be for Russian forces to swing down from the north and up from the south in an arc, creating a large claw that would cut off Ukrainian supply lines running east and west. That would put villages like Nevske in the direct path of Russia’s likely advance.

    For locals it would be a disaster. Out here at the far edge of Ukraine’s offensive, people have not experienced the fruits of liberation the way Ukrainians farther west have. There is still no power or water and the fighting has never subsided. Fields of black unharvested sunflowers are pocked with snow-filled craters, and the area is littered with burned-out tanks and unexploded ordnance and mines that frequently kill livestock. Passing through the region, one occasionally comes across their frozen bodies or bones.

    In Makiivka, just north of Nevske, five of Ruslan Vasilchenko’s cows have been killed, and those that remain were huddled on a recent day in a tiny barn that had been spackled with shrapnel. There was a burned tank in his garden and two destroyed cars in his courtyard. He said he expected things would get much worse soon.

    “Over the last few days, the soldiers have come by to tell us not to leave our homes,” he said.

    The first stages of the Russian offensive have already begun. Ukrainian troops say that Bakhmut, an eastern Ukrainian city that Russian forces have been trying to seize since the summer, is likely to fall soon. Elsewhere, Russian forces are advancing in small groups and probing the front lines looking for Ukrainian weaknesses.

    The efforts are already straining Ukraine’s military, which is worn out by nearly 12 months of heavy fighting.

    Troops say they have tanks and artillery pieces, but not enough of either, and have far less ammunition than their adversaries. Russian forces have also started to field more sophisticated weaponry, such as the T-90 tank, which is equipped with technology capable of detecting the targeting systems of anti-tank weapons like the U.S-made Javelins, limiting their effectiveness.

    Mostly, though, the challenge comes down to numbers.

    “It’s particularly difficult when you have 50 guys and they have 300,” said a 35-year-old infantry soldier named Pavlo, who was struck in the eye with a piece of shrapnel from a rocket-propelled grenade near Bakhmut. “You take them out and they keep coming and coming. There are so many.”

    Losses among Ukrainian forces have been severe. Troops in a volunteer contingent called the Carpathian Sich, positioned near Nevske, said that some 30 fighters from their group had died in recent weeks, and soldiers said, only partly in jest, that just about everyone has a concussion.

    “It’s winter and the positions are open; there’s nowhere to hide,” said a soldier from the unit with the call sign Rusin.

    At one front-line hospital in the Donbas, the morgue was packed with the bodies of Ukrainian soldiers in white plastic bags. In another hospital, stretchers with wounded troops covered in gold foil thermal blankets crowded the corridors, and a steady stream of ambulances arrived from the front nearly all day long.

    A military surgeon at that hospital, Myroslav Dubenko, 36, scrolled through photographs of soldiers with ghastly injuries: a lower jaw blasted off, half of a face missing. One soldier was rushed in with his throat sliced open from ear to ear. Dubenko was able to quickly repair the damage, and the soldier survived.

    “In civilian life, you know that no matter how horrible your shift is, it will end sooner or later,” Dubenko said. “Here, you never know when it will end.”

    It not just the influx of soldiers that is consuming doctors; civilians, too, are frequent victims of Russian attacks. For Andriy Drobnytsky, a 27-year-old military doctor, this is part of a deliberate strategy of overwhelming Ukraine’s military hospitals. Last week, a retired prison guard was rushed into the military hospital where Drobnytsky is deployed, his hand blown apart by a mortar shell that exploded while he was gathering firewood. Drobnytsky assisted in sewing his hand back together, probably saving his index finger.

    “If there are lots of victims, we’ll get distracted by them,” he said. “You just can’t abandon them, right?”

    Whether Russia will be able to capitalize on its strength in numbers is an open question. Russian soldiers, according to Ukrainian and Western assessments, are dying in far greater numbers. U.S. officials now estimate the number of Russian troops wounded and killed to be approaching 200,000, an astounding casualty rate.

    In his sleeping quarters at a base near Bakhmut, a soldier with the call sign Badger pulled out a cloth bag and dumped its contents onto a cot. Inside were half a dozen knives — one with a hilt made from a deer’s hoof — trophies he said he had taken from the bodies of dead Russian soldiers.

    “We also have losses, but they have huge losses,” Badger said. “We’ve wasted them all in huge numbers.”

    Back near Nevske, soldiers from the Carpathian Sich said they had enough ammunition to hang on for now. One soldier, with the call sign Diesel, showed videos on his phone of the bodies of Russian troops he had killed when they came too close.

    As they have since the beginning of the war, the Russians continue to make stupid mistakes, he said. From one dead officer, Diesel said, he took a tablet computer without an access code that had the coordinates of all of their mines and snipers.

    In a video he recorded from the front, Diesel approaches a body lying in the snow, his rifle muzzle trained on the Russian’s head.
    “Hello,” he whispers after determining the man was dead. “Did you sleep well?”

    © 2023 The New York Times Company
    Outnumbered and Worn Out, Ukrainians in East Brace for Russian Assault

    When you start reading stuff like this from the NYT, does that kinda tell you the writing is on the wall?
    Time to stop wasting lives.













    Last edited by sabang; 08-02-2023 at 05:05 AM.

  2. #2852
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    Russia Threatens U.S. Envoy With Expulsions Over Anti-War Posts

    The Russian Foreign Ministry warned the new U.S. ambassador to Moscow on Tuesday that it would begin expelling her staff if the embassy continued criticizing the war in Ukraine on its social media accounts, state media reported, citing a senior Foreign Ministry source.


    According to the RIA Novosti news agency, the Foreign Ministry served a notice to U.S. Ambassador Lynn Tracey accusing the embassy of “maliciously” spreading “inappropriate statements about the Russian leadership and false information about its Armed Forces” online.


    “Russia does not intend to put up with the rabid anti-Russian propaganda being replicated by the U.S. Embassy’s information resources and intends to use all available means to neutralize it,” the unnamed Russian source was quoted as saying.


    “U.S. diplomats were warned against trying to conduct subversive work, recruiting 'agents of influence' to sow discord and dissent in Russian society and incite anti-state speeches,” they added.


    Russia’s Foreign Ministry reportedly warned Tracey that U.S. diplomats accused of interfering in Moscow’s affairs would be expelled “regardless of their positions.”


    The U.S. embassy has openly criticized Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and its clampdown on free speech on its Twitter and Facebook pages since the Kremlin sent troops into its pro-Western neighbor almost a year ago.


    Tracey, the first woman to serve as the U.S. ambassador to Moscow, arrived in Moscow at a time when bilateral relations between the countries were at an all-time low and look set only to worsen over the Kremlin's protracted invasion of Ukraine.

    Russia Threatens U.S. Envoy With Expulsions Over Anti-War Posts - The Moscow Times

  3. #2853
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    ^ Brave New World.

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    It’s Possible 270,000 Russians Have Been Killed Or Wounded In Ukraine

    Far higher casualties on the Russian side.

    At least 200,000. As many as 270,000. That’s how many Russian troops have died, been wounded or gone missing in the first 11 months of Russia’s war in Ukraine, according to experts.

    It should go without saying that such steep losses could undermine Russia’s ability to sustain current operations—to say nothing of launching a new offensive.

    The New York Times last week quoted U.S. officials estimating Russian casualties as “approaching 200,000.” But the analysts at the Conflict Intelligence Team believe Russian losses could be closer to 270,000.

    CIT scrutinized media reports—in particular, the BBC’s own analysis of Russian obituaries—and concluded that Russian families since February 2022 have buried as many as 33,000 soldiers.

    Next, CIT estimated the number of Russian troops who are missing in action by applying the MIA ratio that the Russian 1st Tank Army reported in documents the Ukrainians captured last spring.

    After three months of hard fighting around Kyiv, the 1st Tank Army registered 61 dead and 44 missing. The same ratio, if it applies to the entire Russian war effort, points to tens of thousands of MIAs—most of whom actually are dead, in CIT’s estimation.

    In all, CIT assumes as many as 65,000 Russians have died or gone missing in the wider war on Ukraine. Historically, modern armies suffer three or four wounded-in-action for every one soldier who’s killed in action. Thus CIT’s 270,000 overall figure for combined wounded and dead.

    Put another way, it’s possible that—statistically speaking—every single Russian who marched into Ukraine 11 months ago has died or ended up in a hospital.

    Russia of course has mobilized hundreds of thousands of fresh troops in order to make good these losses—and also has authorized mercenary firm The Wagner Group to recruit convicts from Russian prisons.

    But the Kremlin isn’t sitting on limitless reserves of manpower. And absent a robust force-generation system, steep losses lead to even steeper losses as panicky commanders, desperate to maintain a certain pace of operations, spend less and less time training, and fewer and fewer resources equipping, their newest recruits.

    Consider Wagner’s experience on the Bakhmut sector. After the Ukrainian army destroyed most of Wagner’s well-trained and well-equipped battalions, the mercenary firm adopted a new, less regular force-structure. It organized 40,000 untrained ex-convicts into loose, lightly-equipped battalions led by small cadres of experienced troops.

    Instead of maneuvering for battlefield advantage—a practice that requires expensive, time-consuming training, a high degree of discipline among front-line fighters and creativity on the part of commanders—these battalions tend directly to assault Ukrainian positions.

    There’s a term for this tactic. A “human wave.” Human-wave assaults are an expedient—a fast, cheap approach to war by an army that doesn’t have the time or resources to do things right.

    They also are suicidal when your enemy is entrenched and supported by artillery, as the Ukrainians are in most sectors. It’s not for no reason that, according to Russian news site Meduza, Wagner has lost 80 percent of its forces in nine months of failed attempts to capture Bakhmut.

    Volunteering to fight for Wagner practically is a death sentence—and Russian convicts seem to know it. “Russian conventional and irregular forces may be increasingly struggling to recruit from Russian penal colonies due to high casualties among prior penal-colony recruits,” according to the Institute for the Study of War in Washington, D.C.

    “The high Russian casualty count for the war in Ukraine continues to have deleterious effects on the Russian military’s combat effectiveness and is likely in part prompting Russian officials to pursue a second wave of mobilization as the Russian military prepares for future offensives in Ukraine,” ISW noted.

    But every mobilization reaches deeper into an evaporating manpower pool. Roughly half of the one million or so people in the Russian army forces are professionals on long-term contracts. The other half is conscripts between the ages of 18 and 27.

    The conscripts serve just one year and, as a matter of policy, aren’t supposed to see combat. Of the million or so Russian young men who are in the age range for conscription, around a third are exempt for medical or educational reasons. Twice a year, the Kremlin taps roughly 200,000 of the 700,000 who are eligible for the yearlong military service.

    There’s not a lot of excess manpower in the conscription pool. Which is why, right before the first round of mobilization last year, Russian president Vladimir Putin signed a law removing the 40-year age limit on new recruits.

    Russian leaders many months ago realized they couldn’t replace their losses in Ukraine without drafting middle-age men and also recruiting prisoners. Now that tens of thousands of these older men and convicts are dead or wounded and the army needs yet more fresh bodies, will the Kremlin end education exemptions, target even older men or force prisoners to fight?

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidax...h=2626a1792eec

  5. #2855
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    Quote Originally Posted by bsnub View Post
    Kuleba gave no timeline for any of the deliveries. Time will also be needed for training with the tanks.
    so they might be ready for action early summer.

  6. #2856
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    Quote Originally Posted by malmomike77 View Post
    so they might be ready for action early summer.
    It'll all be over before that time.

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    Quote Originally Posted by HuangLao View Post
    It'll all be over before that time.

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    Ukraine-Russia war latest: Zelensky to address parliament during surprise trip to Britain

    Volodymyr Zelensky, the Ukrainian President, is heading to the UK to visit Ukrainian troops being trained in the country and to meet Rishi Sunak at Downing Street.


    The Prime Minister is expected to announce an expanded training programme for Ukrainian forces, as well as the delivery of longer range weapons to Kyiv.


    It is the first time the Ukrainian leader has visited Britain since the start of Russia's invasion almost a year ago.


    Mr Zelensky will address Parliament on Wednesday, before travelling on to Brussels.

    Ukraine-Russia war latest: Zelensky to address parliament during surprise trip to Britain

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    Quote Originally Posted by malmomike77 View Post
    Zelensky to address parliament during surprise trip to Britain
    More Challenger 2's!

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    I think he's getting a lot of AS90s, was a big refurb programme

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    Quote Originally Posted by malmomike77 View Post
    think he's getting a lot of AS90s, was a big refurb programme
    30 announced last month. That is big. That is a lot of new mobile artillery on the battlefield. Hopefully this visit will result in more kit for Ukraine.

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    UK to Train Ukrainian ‘Fighter Jet Pilots and Marines:’ PM’s Office

    More great news...

    The UK will offer fighter jet training to Ukraine as Western allies debate how much military aid to give Kyiv amid warnings of an impending Russian offensive in the east.

    The news comes on the back of Volodymyr Zelensky’s announcement to visit the UK on Wednesday, in the Ukrainian leader’s second overseas trip since Russian troops invaded his country nearly a year ago.

    Downing Street said Zelensky would meet Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and address parliament, announcing that the UK was planning “to train fighter jet pilots and marines” from the Ukrainian armed forces.

    “The prime minister will offer to bolster the UK’s training offer for Ukrainian troops, including expanding it to fighter jet pilots to ensure Ukraine can defend its skies well into the future,” Sunak’s office said.

    The training would “ensure pilots are able to fly sophisticated NATO-standard fighter jets in the future”, it added.

    Sunak will also “offer to begin an immediate training programme for marines”, it added.

    In December, Zelensky flew to the United States on his first foreign trip since Russia’s invasion, where he appealed for long-term US support in Congress and held talks at the White House with President Joe Biden.

    He subsequently stopped in Poland on his return home for talks with Polish President Andrzej Duda.

    Zelensky has been pressing his Western allies for heavy tanks amid warnings that Russia is building up men and tanks for another major offensive in the east.

    Moscow said Tuesday that Russian forces were advancing towards Bakhmut and Vugledar — two key centers of fighting in the eastern Donetsk region of Ukraine, now the flashpoint of the war.

    On Tuesday, Denmark, Germany, and the Netherlands promised that Ukraine would get at least 100 tanks in the “coming months,” as the German defense minister visited Kyiv.

    The German, Dutch, and Danish government also said training and support would be sent for the Leopard 1 tanks, ahead of the delivery of more advanced tanks in the future.

    Downing Street said Sunak and Zelensky would “discuss a two-pronged approach to UK support for Ukraine, starting with an immediate surge of military equipment to the country to help counter Russia’s spring offensive, and reinforced by long-term support.”

    Last week, Sunak said sending the UK’s Typhoon and F-35 fighter jets to Kyiv would require “months if not years” of training and that he was looking for the most effective way of helping Kyiv secure victory.

    British Defense Secretary Ben Wallace has also warned that supplying fighter jets to Ukraine would not be a “magic wand” in the war, although he refused to rule anything in or out.

    The United States has so far ruled out any deliveries of F-16 warplanes to Ukraine, but other partners including Poland have shown themselves more open to the idea.

    Britain says it has already trained 10,000 Ukrainian troops “to battle readiness” over the past six months and would train a further 20,000 this year.

    The UK has already agreed to send 14 of its Challenger 2 tanks to Ukraine. Germany recently gave the green light for Leopard battle tanks to be sent but while Berlin has now moved, other nations that previously committed to sending the tanks now appear to be stalling.

    Zelensky last week urged Western countries to speed up deliveries of weapons — particularly long-range missiles — so his forces can fend off Russian advances in the Donetsk region.

    UK to Train Ukrainian 'Fighter Jet Pilots and Marines:' PM’s Office
    Last edited by bsnub; 08-02-2023 at 06:53 PM.

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    Britain will train Ukrainian pilots to fly fighter jets, Rishi Sunak to announce

    They will give the storm shadow missiles finally! This starting out to be a great day in the UK!

    Britain will train Ukrainian pilots on fighter jets, Rishi Sunak will announce on Wednesday during a surprise visit to Westminster by Volodymyr Zelensky.

    Ukraine has been pleading with the West to send it fighter jets to help turn the tide in its war against Russia.

    The pledge to offer training to Ukrainian pilots in “NATO-standard fighter jets” enhances the possibility Western fighter jets could one day be donated to Kyiv's armed forces.

    Mr Sunak will also offer Ukraine weapons with “longer-range capabilities” which are seen as vital in enabling Ukraine’s armed forces to hit Russia far behind enemy lines.

    The “long-range capabilities” mentioned in the statement could refer to the Storm Shadow cruise missile.

    Russia launches Ukraine invasion-licaq9a-jpg


    Launched from warplanes, the Storm Shadow is designed to be hard to spot on radar, making it very hard to shoot down. It also carries a 450kg warhead - twice the size of the warhead on a US ATACMS ballistic missile.

    Storm Shadow has a range of approximately 360 miles and its intended targets include command posts, ammunition depots, and bridges.

    Zelensky's arrival in Britain

    In a demonstration of how vital Britain’s support for Ukraine’s war effort has been, Mr Zelensky’s trip to Britain marks only the second overseas visit by the Ukrainian president since Russia invaded almost a year ago.

    In December, Mr Zelensky travelled to Washington to hold talks with President Joe Biden.

    He will meet the Prime Minister in Downing Street and then address MPs and peers in Westminster hall, the Government announced on Wednesday morning.

    As part of their talks, Mr Sunak will promise to ramp up the UK’s training of Ukrainian troops, extending the offering to fighter jet pilots and marines.

    Ahead of the visit, the Prime Minister said: “President Zelensky’s visit to the UK is a testament to his country’s courage, determination and fight, and a testament to the unbreakable friendship between our two countries.

    “Since 2014, the UK has provided vital training to Ukrainian forces, allowing them to defend their country, protect their sovereignty and fight for their territory.

    “I am proud that today we will expand that training from soldiers to marines and fighter jet pilots, ensuring Ukraine has a military able to defend its interests well into the future. It also underlines our commitment to not just provide military equipment for the short term, but a long-term pledge to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Ukraine for years to come.”

    Britain will also pledge weapons with longer-range capabilities, which Ukraine has said it desperately needs to target Russia’s fragile supply chains, hitting ammunition depots, warehouses and other infrastructure critical to supporting its invasion.

    The US has promised to send Ground-Launched Small Diameter Bombs that can strike targets, from the Himars rocket launcher, at a range of about 100 miles.

    But Kyiv has argued it needs to increase its range of attack to double that in order to properly disrupt the Russian war machine.

    As well as offers of weaponry, Britain will promise to double its training mission for Ukrainian troops.

    In the past six months, the UK, alongside a number of allies, has brought some 10,000 Ukrainians to battle readiness.

    Mr Sunak will tell his Ukrainian counterpart that Britain is ready to train as many as 20,000 Ukrainian soldiers this year.

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-ne...-jets-weapons/

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    Wow, this war is a warporners wet dream.

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    Quote Originally Posted by bsnub View Post
    Hopefully this visit will result in more kit for Ukraine
    Not sure, some senior UK Army figures are complaining the Navy and RAF aren't leaning in enough and they are down to their last stock of Bren Guns, a handful of Stens and 3 Scout Armoured Cars and one guided pea shooter

  16. #2866
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    Quote Originally Posted by sabang View Post
    Wow, this war is a warporners wet dream.
    Yes, be great if the high-heeled midget stopped it and fucked off, wouldn't it?

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    After bloody failures in Ukraine, Russians are reconsidering the role of their milita

    After bloody failures in Ukraine, Russians are reconsidering the role of their military's 'elite' paratroopers


    The heavy casualties suffered by Russian paratroopers in Ukraine has one Russian expert calling for a rethink of Russia's airborne units.

    Many of the recent criticisms about the performance of Russia's elite parachute force, known as the VDV, have been voiced about lightly armed airborne units since World War II.

    The problems range from poorly designed vehicles to parachute drops conducted without first suppressing enemy air defenses. But in Russia's case, they also indicate severe deficiencies in the VDV.

    "As after every war in the past, the future of the Airborne Forces is now being called into question," wrote commentator Alexander Timokhin in the Russian defense publication Military Review.

    Despite the Kremlin's crackdown on Russian media, it is notable that non-official bloggers and publications such as Military Review have been allowed to criticize Russia's poor military performance in Ukraine.

    Russia's huge airborne force, composed of 45,000 paratroopers in four divisions, is actually a separate military branch that serves as shock troops and a rapid-intervention force. Russia's invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022 began with a surprise VDV helicopter assault on Hostomel airfield northwest of Kyiv.

    Several helicopters were shot down by anti-aircraft missiles, but the Russians still managed to seize the base. It was supposed to be an airhead for cargo planes to ferry troops and vehicles in to support the isolated paratroopers, who would then advance on Kyiv.

    But the big Il-76 cargo planes never arrived. Ukrainian forces counterattacked and pinned down the paratroopers, who eventually retreated to the safety of armored columns advancing toward Kyiv.

    The VDV then became elite infantry spearheading the Russian armored columns — a role they were not designed for. Losses proved so severe that some paratroopers reportedly refused to fight.

    What went wrong? Timokhin lists several problems with the VDV.

    For one, the paratroopers were equipped with lightly armored, air-droppable armored vehicles such as the BMD-4 infantry fighting vehicle.

    "The BMD-4 has a cost approximately at the level of the T-90M tank," Timokhin said, referring to one of Russia's newest tanks. "However, it can be destroyed with small arms fire."

    It can be imagined what a Javelin or an NLAW anti-tank missile could do to a BMD-4 and its occupants. (This video shows an actual attack on one.)

    Parachute units naturally lack heavy weapons, such as main battle tanks and artillery, for combat against enemy mechanized forces. But VDV squads were too small and weakly armed to fight on foot, according to Timokhin. They also don't have adequate air-defense systems.

    Ironically, the Soviet-era VDV had an array of air-droppable equipment, including trucks and multiple rocket launchers.

    "Now the Airborne Forces have a lot of vehicles that cannot be dropped by parachute," Timokhin wrote. "There are tanks, but they are all light armored vehicles with weak armor. It is not clear how to rationally use all this."

    Despite having four divisions of paratroopers, Russia lacks sufficient transport planes to drop even a full division simultaneously. Nor does Russia's military have a clear concept of how to use airborne forces, such as ensuring air superiority over flight routes and the drop area or neutralizing air defenses, Timokhin added.

    The VDV also recruits a "large number of selected personnel who are much better trained and more expensive than in the ground forces, whose potential cannot be fully realized," Timokhin said. At the same time, the Russian military lacks adequate infantry "for operations in the mountains and in inaccessible terrain, as well as during assaults on cities."

    That point underlines the debate about the value of airborne forces — a debate that isn't unique to Russia.

    Dating back to the first use of paratroopers in World War II, critics in many armies — including the US and British militaries — complained that airborne units and special forces siphon off the best soldiers, leaving less-qualified personnel for the regular infantry.

    At the same time, parachute units are fragile. German Fallschirmjager were shot in their parachutes as they descended on Crete in May 1941. Though they ultimately seized the island, losses were so heavy that Hitler forbade airborne operations for the rest of the war.

    British paratroopers who jumped "a bridge too far" at Arnhem were surrounded and ultimately destroyed by German mechanized troops during Operation Market-Garden in September 1944. That battle, an ignominious Allied defeat, has stood as a lesson in the limits of airborne forces.

    Timokhin doesn't call for the abolition of Russia's airborne corps, calling instead for an assessment of what capabilities the force does and doesn't need, but his analysis does raise a question for military leaders in Russia and around the world.

    Given the level of attrition in Ukraine — where trench-bound soldiers are expending massive amounts of ammunition — does Russia need a few elite units to stiffen poorly performing regular ground troops during key operations or is better to spread the best soldiers around and raise the overall quality of the infantry?

    https://www.businessinsider.com/russ...-losses-2023-2

  18. #2868
    Guest Member S Landreth's Avatar
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    And some here have problem with Biden.





    President Biden on Wednesday said that Russian President Vladimir Putin has already lost Ukraine, adding that aid to Ukraine during the Russian invasion is open-ended.

    “There’s no way that Putin is going to be able to—he’s already lost Ukraine,” he said. “He thought that if he invaded Ukraine, first of all, he’d get a welcome by every Russian speaker, they’d say, ‘come on in.’ Secondly, he thought what would happen is that NATO would collapse, NATO would not to do anything, they’d be afraid to act.”

    “Go down the line, none of that’s happening,” he said in a PBS News Hour interview the day after he delivered the State of the Union address.

    Biden touted that NATO is coordinating in support for Ukraine, despite Putin thinking they wouldn’t.

    His comments come after he stressed his support for Ukraine amid Russia’s invasion during the State of the Union and recognized Oksana Markarova, Ukraine’s ambassador to the U.S., in the audience.

    Biden also pushed back on criticism from a small group of Republican lawmakers who have suggested that too much U.S. assistance is going to Ukraine. PBS’s Judy Woodruff mentioned Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) specifically, who has suggested money spent in Ukraine should go to Americans, to which Biden audibly laughed.

    “If these guys don’t want to help Ukraine, I get it, they don’t want to do that, but what are they going to do to when … Russia rolls across Ukraine or into Belarus or anywhere else?” he added.

    When asked if aid to Ukraine is open ended, Biden replied, “yeah, it is.”

    The first anniversary of the full-scale Russian invasion will be on Feb. 24. Since then, U.S. military assistance to Ukraine has exceeded an estimated $28 billion.


    16:10 into the video below

    Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.

  19. #2869
    Thailand Expat

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    Quote Originally Posted by sabang View Post
    Wow, this war is a warporners wet dream.
    Meanwhile Russian conscripts sent to reclaim Donbas regions from Ukrainian relief, are being bullied by their own regulars. Regulars who are embarrassed by the recapture of Donbas after Russia declared it an independent Russian province.

  20. #2870
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    Russia prepares 2,000 tanks and 300,000 troops for ‘huge invasion’ in Donbas

    Russia has prepared almost 2,000 tanks and 300,000 soldiers for a renewed offensive to seize Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region in the coming weeks, a Ukrainian intelligence officer has warned.

    The attack is expected to be bolstered by thousands more armoured vehicles, artillery systems, as well as hundreds of fighter jets and helicopters.

    For weeks, Ukrainian officials have warned of a pending Russian offensive in a bid by the Kremlin to regain the initiative after months of stalemate on the battlefield.

    The attack is expected to coincide with the one-year anniversary of Vladimir Putin’s launch of his full-scale invasion on Feb 24.

    Amid a surge in fighting, military analysts have claimed the long-awaited Russian offensive has already started and is expected to accelerate as the symbolic date approaches.

    'A huge invasion expected'

    “We expect in the next 10 days a new, huge invasion,” a Ukrainian military official told the Foreign Policy news website.

    Ukrainian military intelligence believes that Russia now has more than 300,000 troops inside the country, almost double the amount that were amassed on its borders before the start of the war, the official added.

    The Russian military has also prepared 1,800 tanks, 3,950 armoured vehicles, 2,700 artillery systems, 810 soviet-era multi launch rocket systems, 400 fighter jets and 300 helicopters for the fresh offensive, according to estimates made by Kyiv.

    “It’s much bigger than what took place in the first wave,” the official said. “They don’t pay attention to any casualties or losses on the [battlefield].”

    If correct, the estimates could mean Russia has more tanks than it originally entered Ukraine with.

    General Valery Gerasimov, who was last month appointed by the Kremlin as overall commander of Russian forces in Ukraine, is expected to focus attempts on capturing the remaining Donbas regions of Donetsk and Luhansk.

    Kyiv has desperately appealed for its Western allies to accelerate weapons deliveries in anticipation for Moscow launching vast waves of attacks to overwhelm defensive positions.

    Until now, Russian forces have only managed to secure incremental gains around Bakhmut, in Donetsk, at the cost of tens of thousands of troops, and Kreminna in neighbouring Luhansk.

    'There is continuous firing'

    On Thursday, Serhii Haidai, the regional governor of Luhansk, said Russia had launched a major offensive in an attempt to break through Ukrainian defences near Kreminna.

    He told Ukrainian television that Russian troops were trying to push westwards through snow-covered forests.

    “These attacks are practically a daily occurrence. We see small groups of Russian soldiers trying to advance, sometimes with the support of heavy armour – infantry fighting vehicles and tanks – and sometimes not. There is continuous firing,” Mr Haidai said.

    He claimed however that Russian forces “haven't had any success”, as Ukraine's troops held out against the onslaught.

    Highly-trained divisions sent into Luhansk

    Analysts at the US-based Institute for the Study of War reported that Russia had likely regained the initiative in Luhansk after pouring several highly-trained divisions into the area.

    “The commitment of significant elements of at least three major Russian divisions to offensive operations in this sector indicates the Russian offensive has begun, even if Ukrainian forces are so far preventing Russian forces from securing significant gains,” ISW said in its daily report.

    Svatove and Kreminna were originally captured by Moscow last spring, before being won back last year during the Ukrainian counter-offensive.

    The 90th tank division, one of Moscow’s most illustrious military units, was said to be involved in the fighting, in a sign the Kremlin has shifted away from using mercenaries from the Wagner Group to seize Ukrainian territory.

    Formations from the so-called Donetsk and Luhansk people's republics are also being sidelined in favour of more conventional forces by Moscow, ISW reported.

    Russia prepares 2,000 tanks and 300,000 troops for ‘huge invasion’ in Donbas

  21. #2871
    Thailand Expat harrybarracuda's Avatar
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    Grab a coffee...

    What Russia Got Wrong

    Three months before Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine, CIA Director William Burns and U.S. Ambassador to Russia John Sullivan met in Moscow with Nikolai Patrushev, an ultra-hawkish adviser to Russian President Vladimir Putin. Burns and Sullivan informed Patrushev that they knew of Russia’s invasion plans and that the West would respond with severe consequences if Russia proceeded. According to Burns, Patrushev said nothing about the invasion. Instead, he looked them in the eye, conveying what Burns took as a message: the Russian military could achieve what it wanted.

    Once home, the two Americans informed U.S. President Joe Biden that Moscow had made up its mind. Not long after, Washington began publicly warning the world that Russia would attack Ukraine. Three months ahead of the invasion, the Kremlin knew that the United States had discovered its war plans and that the world would be primed for an assault—yet Putin decided to deny his intentions to Russia’s own troops and most of its senior leaders. They did not learn of the invasion until several days or even hours before it began. The secrecy was a mistake. By orchestrating the attack with just a small group of advisers, Putin undercut many of the advantages his country should have had.

    These strengths were substantial. Before the invasion, Russia’s military was larger and better equipped than Ukraine’s. Its forces had more combat experience than did Kyiv’s, even though both had fought in Ukraine’s eastern territories. Most Western analysts therefore assumed that if Russian forces used their advantages wisely, the Ukrainians could not withstand the attack for long.

    Why Russia did not prevail—why it was instead stopped in its tracks, routed outside major cities, and put on the defensive—has become one of the most important questions in both U.S. foreign policy and international security more broadly. The answer has many components. The excessive internal secrecy gave troops and commanders little time to prepare, leading to heavy losses. Russia created an invasion plan that was riddled with faulty assumptions, arbitrary political guidance, and planning errors that departed from key Russian military principles. The initial invasion called for multiple lines of attack with no follow-on force, tethering the military to operational objectives that were overly ambitious for the size of its forces. And the Kremlin erroneously believed that its war plans were sound, that Ukraine would not put up much resistance, and that the West’s support would not be strong enough to make a difference. As a result, Russia was shocked when its troops ran into a determined Ukraine backed by Western intelligence and weapons. Russian forces were then repeatedly beaten.

    But as the war drags on into its second year, analysts must not focus only on Russia’s failures. The story of Russia’s military performance is far more nuanced than many early narratives about the war have suggested. The Russian armed forces are not wholly incompetent or incapable of learning. They can execute some types of complex operations—such as mass strikes that disable Ukraine’s critical infrastructure—which they had eschewed during the first part of the invasion, when Moscow hoped to capture the Ukrainian state largely intact. The Russian military has learned from its mistakes and made big adjustments, such as downsizing its objectives and mobilizing new personnel, as well as tactical ones, such as using electronic warfare tools that jam Ukrainian military communications without affecting its own. Russian forces can also sustain higher combat intensity than most other militaries; as of December, they were firing an impressive 20,000 rounds of artillery per day or more (although, according to CNN, in early 2023, that figure had dropped to 5,000). And they have been operating with more consistency and stability since shifting to the defensive in late 2022, making it harder for Ukrainian troops to advance.


    Russia has still not been able to break Ukraine’s will to fight or impede the West’s materiel and intelligence support. It is unlikely to achieve its initial goal of turning Ukraine into a puppet state. But it could continue to adjust its strategy and solidify its occupied holdings in the south and east, eventually snatching a diminished variant of victory from the jaws of defeat.


    TOO MUCH AND NOT ENOUGH


    Before the war in Ukraine began, the Russian military had several known structural problems, each of which undermined its ability to conduct a large invasion. Over a decade ago, Moscow deliberately dismantled its army and turned it into a smaller force designed for rapid response operations. The transformation required massive changes. After World War II, the Soviet Union maintained an enormous force designed to wage protracted, vast conflicts in Europe by conscripting millions of soldiers and creating a huge defense industry to menace NATO and enforce communist rule in allied states. The Soviet military suffered from endemic corruption, and it struggled to produce equipment on par with the West’s. But its size and sprawling footprint made it a formidable Cold War challenge.

    When the Soviet regime collapsed, Russian leaders could not manage or justify such a large military. The prospect of a land battle with NATO was fading into the past. In response, starting in the early 1990s, Russia’s leaders began a reform and modernization process. The goal was to create a military that would be smaller but more professional and nimble, ready to quickly suppress flare-ups on Russia’s periphery.


    This process continued, on and off, into the new millennium. In 2008, the Russian military announced a comprehensive reform program called “New Look” that intended to restructure the force by disbanding units, retiring officers, overhauling training programs and military education, and allocating more funds—including to expand the ranks of professional enlisted soldiers and to acquire newer weapons. As part of this process, Russia replaced sizable Soviet divisions designed to fight major land wars with less-cumbersome brigades and battalion tactical groups (BTGs). Moscow also worked to reduce its dependence on conscripts.

    By 2020, it seemed as if the military had met many of its benchmarks. Russian Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu declared that 70 percent of his country’s equipment was new or had been modernized. The country had a growing arsenal of conventional precision munitions, and the military possessed more professional enlisted personnel than conscripts. Russia had conducted two successful operations, one in Syria—to prop up the regime of Bashar al-Assad—and another to take territory in eastern Ukraine.

    But the 2022 wholesale invasion of Ukraine exposed these reforms as insufficient. The modernization effort neglected, for example, the mobilization system. Russia’s attempts to build better weapons and improve training did not translate into increased proficiency on the battlefield. Some of the ostensibly new gear that left Russian factories is seriously flawed.

    Russia’s missile failure rates are high, and many of its tanks lack proper self-defense equipment, making them highly vulnerable to antitank weapons. Meanwhile, there is little evidence that Russia modified its training programs ahead of its February 2022 invasion to prepare troops for the tasks they would later face in Ukraine. In fact, the steps Russia did take to prepare made proper training more difficult. By deploying many units near the Ukrainian border almost a year before the war and keeping equipment in the field, the Russian military deprived its soldiers of the ability to practice appropriate skills and conduct required equipment maintenance.


    Russia’s modernization efforts also failed to root out corruption, which still afflicts multiple aspects of Russian military life. The country’s armed forces frequently inflated the number of prewar personnel in individual units to meet recruiting quotas, allowing some commanders to steal surplus funds. The military is plagued by missing supplies. It generally has unreliable and opaque reporting up and down the command chain, which possibly led Russia’s leadership to believe its forces were better, quantitatively and qualitatively, than they really were at the start of the invasion.

    Modernization may have helped Russia in its smaller, 2014 invasion of Ukraine and its air campaigns in Syria. But it does not appear to have learned from its operational experience in either conflict. In both, for instance, Russia had many ground-based special forces teams to guide incoming strikes, something it has lacked in the current war. Russia also had a unified operational command, which it did not create for the current invasion until several months after it began.

    In at least one case, the modernization effort was actively incompatible with high-intensity warfare. As part of its scheme to cultivate trust with the Russian population after its wars in Chechnya, the Kremlin largely prohibited new conscripts from serving in war zones. This meant that Russia pulled professional soldiers from most units across the country and deployed them as BTGs to staff its Ukraine invasion. The move was itself a questionable decision: even a fully staffed and equipped BTG is not capable of protracted, intense combat along an extended frontline, as many experts, including U.S. Army analysts Charles Bartles and Lester Grau, have noted. On top of that, according to documents recovered from the invasion by the Ukrainian military, plenty of these units were understaffed when they invaded Ukraine. Personnel shortages also meant that Russia’s technically more modern and capable equipment did not perform at its full potential, as many pieces were only partly crewed. And the country did not have enough dismounted infantry or intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance forces to effectively clear routes and avoid ambushes.


    The resulting failures may have surprised much of the world. But they did not come as a shock to many of the experts who watch the Russian military. They knew from assessing the country’s force structure that it was ill suited to send a force of 190,000 personnel into a large neighboring state across multiple lines of advance. They were therefore astonished as the Kremlin commanded the military to do exactly that.

    To understand how Russia’s bad planning undermined its performance and advantages, it is helpful to imagine how the invasion of Ukraine would have started if Moscow had followed its prescribed military strategy. According to Russian doctrine, an interstate war such as this one should begin with weeks of air and missile attacks against an enemy’s military and critical infrastructure during what strategists call “the initial period of war.” Russia’s planners consider this the decisive period of warfare, with air force operations and missile strikes, lasting between four and six weeks, designed to erode the opposing country’s military capabilities and capacity to resist. According to Russia’s theory, ground forces are typically deployed to secure objectives only after air forces and missile attacks have achieved many of their objectives.

    The Russian Aerospace Forces (VKS) did conduct strikes against Ukrainian positions at the war’s beginning. But it did not systematically attack critical infrastructure, possibly because the Russians believed they would need to quickly administer Ukraine and wanted to keep its leadership facilities intact, its power grid online, and the Ukrainian population apathetic. Fatefully, the Russian military committed its ground troops on day one rather than waiting until it had managed to clear roads and suppress Ukrainian units. The result was catastrophic. Russian forces, rushing to meet what they believed were orders to arrive in certain areas by set times, overran their logistics and found themselves hemmed in to specific routes by Ukrainian units. They were then relentlessly bombarded by artillery and antiarmor weapons.


    Moscow also decided to commit nearly all its professional ground and airborne forces to one multiaxis attack, counter to the Russian military’s tradition of keeping forces from Siberia and the Russian Far East as a second echelon or a strategic reserve. This decision made little military sense. By attempting to seize several parts of Ukraine simultaneously, Russia stretched its logistics and support systems to the breaking point. Had Russia launched air and missile strikes days or weeks before committing ground forces, attacked along a smaller frontline, and maintained a large reserve force, its invasion might have looked different. In this case, Russia would have had simpler logistics, concentrated fires, and reduced exposure for its advancing units. It might even have overwhelmed local groups of Ukrainian air defenses.

    It is difficult to know exactly why Russia deviated so wildly from its military doctrine (and from common sense). But one reason seems clear: the Kremlin’s political interference. According to information obtained by reporters from The Washington Post, the war was planned only by Russian President Vladimir Putin and his closest confidants in the intelligence services, the armed forces, and the Kremlin. Based on these accounts, this team advocated for a rapid invasion on multiple fronts, a mad dash to Kyiv to neutralize Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky through assassination or kidnapping, and the installation of a network of collaborators who would administer a new government—steps that a broader, more experienced collection of planners might have explained would not work.

    The Kremlin’s ideas were obviously ineffective. Yet it delayed important course corrections, likely because it believed they would be politically unpopular at home. For example, the Kremlin tried to entice ad hoc volunteers in the early summer to plug holes created by severe battlefield losses, but this effort attracted far too few personnel. Only after the September collapse of the military’s front in Kharkiv did Moscow order a mobilization. Later, the Kremlin did not allow a retreat from the city of Kherson until months after their positions became untenable, risking thousands of troops.


    HOW RUSSIA PLAYED ITSELF


    Before and during wars, countries rely on operational security, or OPSEC, to keep crucial aspects of their plans secret and to reduce vulnerabilities for their own forces. In some cases, that entails deception. In World War II, for instance, the Allies stationed troops and decoys on a range of beaches in the southern United Kingdom to confuse the Nazis as to which location would be used to launch an attack. In other instances, OPSEC involves limiting the internal dissemination of war plans to lower the risk that they will go public. For example, in preparation for Operation Desert Storm, U.S. pilots who would later be assigned to eliminate Iraqi air defenses trained for months to conduct such strikes but were not told about their specific targets until days before the attack began.

    The Kremlin’s war plans, of course, were made public months before the war. As a number of news outlets have reported, including The New York Times and The Washington Post, U.S. intelligence agencies uncovered detailed and accurate outlines of Russia’s plans and then shared them with the media, as well as with allies and partners. Rather than abort the invasion, the Kremlin insisted to journalists and diplomats that the large contingents of troops massed on Ukraine’s borders were there for training and that it had no intention of attacking its neighbor. These claims did not fool the West, but they did fool most Russians—including those in the armed forces. The Kremlin withheld its war plans from military stakeholders at many levels, from individual soldiers and pilots to general officers, and many troops and officials were surprised when they received orders to invade. A recent report by the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI), a British defense and security think tank, which was based on extensive fieldwork and interviews with Ukrainian officials, found that even senior members of the Russian General Staff were kept in the dark about the invasion plans until shortly before it started.

    Because most military leaders were not brought into the planning effort until the last minute, they could not correct major mistakes. The government did not appear to undergo what is referred to in Russian strategy as a “special period”—a time of categorizing, stockpiling, and organizing resources for a major war—because its planners did not know they needed to get ready for one. The excessive secrecy also meant that Moscow missed several key opportunities to prepare the defense industry to produce and store essential ammunition. Even after they were stationed near Ukraine, Russian units were not staffed or supplied at appropriate levels, likely because planners believed the troops were conducting training exercises. And because the military did not have time to coordinate its electronic warfare systems, when Russian forces attempted to jam Ukraine’s communications, they also jammed their own.

    Prewar secrecy led to problems that were especially pronounced in the air. Before the invasion, Russian pilots had experience fighting in Syria, but operations there had taken place over uncontested territory, most often in the desert. The pilots had virtually no experience fighting over a larger, forested country, let alone against an adversary capable of hitting their jets with layers of air defenses. They were given little to no training in such tactics before the invasion. That inexperience is partly why, despite sometimes flying hundreds of missions per day, Russia has been unable to dismantle Ukraine’s air force or air defenses. Another factor was how Russia decided to employ its forces. Because Russia’s ground troops were in grave danger within days, the VKS was quickly reassigned from suppressing Ukrainian air defenses to providing close air support, according to RUSI analysis. This adjustment helped prevent Russia from establishing air supremacy, and it forced the Russians to fly at low altitudes, within reach of Ukraine’s Stinger missiles. As a result, they lost many helicopters and fighter jets.


    Prewar secrecy and lies were not the only ways that the Kremlin played itself. Once troops began rushing toward Kyiv, Moscow could no longer deny the fact of its invasion. But for months, it continued to obscure the conflict or delay important decisions in ways that hurt its own operations. At a basic level, Russia has refused to classify the invasion as a war, instead calling it a “special military operation.” This decision, made either to mollify the Russian population or because the Kremlin assumed the conflict would end quickly, prevented the country from implementing administrative rules that would have allowed it to gain quick access to the legal, economic, and material resources it needed to support the invasion. For at least the first six months, the false classification also made it easy for soldiers to resign or refuse to fight without facing desertion charges.


    PAY NO HEED


    The Russian government appears to have assumed that the Ukrainians would not resist, that the Ukrainian army would fade away, and that the West would not be able to help Kyiv in time. These conclusions were not entirely unsupported. According to The Washington Post, the Russian intelligence services had their own prewar covert polling suggesting that only 48 percent of the population was “ready to defend” Ukraine. Zelensky’s approval rating was less than 30 percent on the eve of the war. Russia’s intelligence agencies had an extensive spy network inside Ukraine to set up a collaborationist government. (Ukraine later arrested and charged 651 people for treason and collaboration, including several officials in its security services.) Russian planners may also have assumed that Ukraine’s forces would not be ready because the Ukrainian government did not move to a war footing until a few weeks before the invasion. They likely thought that Ukraine’s artillery munitions would quickly run out. Based on the West’s response to Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 and its relatively small arms provisions during the run-up to the war in 2022, Moscow might reasonably have assumed that the United States and Europe would not provide major support for Ukraine, or at least not in time.

    But the Kremlin was evaluating data points that simply allowed it to see what it wished to see. The same intelligence services poll, for instance, suggested that 84 percent of Ukrainian respondents would consider Russian forces to be occupiers, not liberators. The United States and its allies broadcast Russia’s plans and various attempts to generate a pretext for invasion, and they warned Russia privately and publicly that the country would face enormous repercussions if it started a war. Yet apparently, no one in Putin’s inner circle convinced him that he should revise Russia’s approach and prepare for a different, harder type of conflict: one in which Ukrainians fought back and received substantial Western assistance.

    Such a conflict is exactly what happened. The Ukrainians rallied to defend their sovereignty, enlisting in the military and creating territorial defense units that have resisted the Russians. Zelensky, domestically unpopular before the invasion, saw his approval ratings skyrocket and became a globally recognized wartime leader. And the Ukrainian government succeeded in getting historic amounts of aid from the West. As of late January 2023, the United States has provided $26.8 billion in security assistance to Ukraine since Russia’s invasion, and European states have contributed billions more. The Ukrainians have been stocked with body armor, air defense systems, helicopters, M777 artillery, and High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems (HIMARS). They are receiving Western tanks. The massive and diverse weapons provisions enabled Ukrainian forces to gain a qualitative edge over Moscow’s troops in terms of battlefield awareness during Russia’s initial push to Kyiv, and it allowed Ukraine to conduct precision strikes on Russian logistics depots and command centers in its eastern regions.
    Washington also began providing a stream of what U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary Kathleen Hicks described as “vital” and “high-end” intelligence to Kyiv. The director of the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency claimed that intelligence sharing with Ukraine has been “revolutionary” in nature, and the director of the National Security Administration and U.S. Cyber Command testified that he had never seen a better example of intelligence sharing in his 35 years of government service. (According to the Pentagon, the United States does not provide intelligence on senior leader locations or participate in Ukrainian targeting decisions.)

    This intelligence sharing has mattered at several pivotal points in the war. In congressional testimony, CIA director Burns said he informed Zelensky about the attack on Kyiv before the war, and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned Zelensky about Russian threats to him personally. These alerts gave Ukraine time to prepare a defense that was essential to protecting both the capital and Zelensky. According to senior defense officials, the United States also provided planning and war-gaming support for Ukraine’s September counteroffensives in Kharkiv and Kherson, both of which ended with tremendous success.


    THE BEAR IS LEARNING


    Ukraine’s supporters have had many reasons to celebrate in 2022, and joyful scenes have emerged from recently liberated Ukrainian land. But difficult scenes followed. Ukrainian and international investigators have uncovered evidence of war crimes in recently liberated cities such as Bucha, Izyum, and Kherson. And despite hopes to the contrary, it is too soon to say that Russia’s campaign will collapse. Putin is certainly digging in for the long haul, and although wounded, the Russian military is still capable of complex operations, adaptive learning, and withstanding a level of combat that few militaries in the world can. Sustained high-intensity, high-attrition combined-arms warfare is extraordinarily difficult, and Russia and Ukraine now have more recent experience with it than any other country in the world.

    Take, for example, the VKS. Although its pilots have failed to suppress Ukraine’s air defenses, analysts must remember that such missions are notoriously time-consuming and difficult, as U.S. pilots have noted. The VKS is learning, and rather than continuing to waste aircraft by flying more-conservative and less-effective missions, it is trying to wear down Ukrainian air defenses by using empty Soviet-era missiles and Shaheed drones purchased from Iran.


    The Russian military also appears to be getting better at performing one of the most dangerous army maneuvers of all: crossing rivers under fire. Such operations require planned withdrawals, discipline, force protection plans, and tight sequencing that few others demand. When these operations are executed poorly, many soldiers can die; in May 2022, the Ukrainian military destroyed a Russian BTG as it attempted to cross the Donets River. But the military’s November withdrawal across the Dnieper River was comparatively smooth, partly because it was better planned. Despite coming under artillery fire, thousands of Russian forces successfully retreated east.

    Russia has learned to correct for past mistakes in other areas, as well. In late spring, Russian forces finally succeeded in jamming Ukrainian communications without jamming their own. During September, the Kremlin declared a partial mobilization to compensate for personnel shortages, pulling 300,000 draftees into the armed forces. The process was chaotic, and these new soldiers have not received good training. But now, these new forces are inside eastern Ukraine, where they have shored up defensive positions and helped depleted units with basic but important tasks. The government is also incrementally putting the Russian economy on a wartime footing, helping the state get ready for a long conflict.

    These modifications are starting to show results. Russia’s defense industrial base may be straining under sanctions and import restrictions, but its factories are intact and working around the clock to try to keep up with demand. Although Russia is running low on missiles, it has expanded its inventory by repurposing antiship cruise missiles and air-defense missiles. The Russian military has not yet improved its battle damage assessment process or its ability to strike moving targets, but it is now hitting Ukraine’s electrical grid with precision. As of January 2023, Russian strikes have damaged roughly 40 percent of Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, at one point knocking out power for more than 10 million people.


    The Ukrainians’ learning curve has also been steep, and through experimentation, they have been able to keep Russian forces off balance. The military has shown creativity in its planning, and it has hit Russian air bases and the Black Sea Fleet. Ukraine’s pilots and soldiers, like Russia’s, have garnered remarkable and unique combat experience. Ukraine has benefited more from external support than has Russia.

    But Russian forces have successfully adapted and experimented as they have assumed a defensive posture. After weeks of devastating HIMARS attacks during the summer of 2022, Russia moved its command sites and many logistics depots out of range. Russian forces have shown more competence on the defensive than on the offensive, particularly in the south, where they created layered defenses that were difficult for Ukrainian forces to fight through. General Sergey Surovikin, who was named Russia’s overall commander in October, was previously the commander of the southern operational group, and he brought this experience to other regions that Russia partly occupies. Troops have dug extensive trenches and created other defensive positions.

    Notably, Russia withdrew from the city of Kherson and transitioned to defense only after Surovikin was appointed as the war’s commander. Putin also began admitting that the conflict will be challenging once Surovikin assumed charge. These changes suggest that Putin may have received more realistic appraisals of the situation in Ukraine under Surovikin’s tenure.

    Yet in January 2023, Surovikin was demoted in favor of General Valeriy Gerasimov. Although the reasons for this command change are unclear, palace intrigue and cronyism may be behind it rather than any specific failure of Surovikin’s leadership. And no Russian commander has been able to break Ukraine’s will to fight even though Russia continues to launch missiles that inflict suffering on the Ukrainian people. But the bombings and entrenchment may well degrade Ukraine’s capacity, making it harder for the country to reclaim more of its land.

    KNOWN UNKNOWNS


    The Kremlin, however, aspires to do more than just hold the land it has already taken. Putin has made it clear that he wants all four provinces that Moscow illegally annexed in September—Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk, and Zaporizhzhia—and in a televised meeting last December, he indicated that he is prepared to undergo “a long process” to get them. Putin’s downsized objectives and sudden candor about the campaign’s length show that the Kremlin can adapt to its weakened position and condition its population for a long war. Russia, then, is either evolving or buying time until it can regenerate its forces. The question is whether its changes will be enough.

    There are reasons to think the shifts will not salvage the war for Russia, partly because so many things need to change; no single factor explains why the war has gone so poorly for Russia thus far. The explanations include problems that are not easy to address because they are intractable parts of the Russian system, such as the self-defeating deceit illustrated by the Kremlin’s decision to prioritize secrecy and domestic stability over adequate planning. And Moscow has, if anything, doubled down on silencing frank discussion of the conflict, even going so far as to criminalize assessments of combat deaths and forecasts about how the war might unfold. Although officials can safely talk about some problems—for example, Russian military leaders have called for an expansion of the armed forces—others remain decidedly off-limits, including the larger issues of incompetence and the poor command climate that has led to the military’s horrific problems inside Ukraine. This censorship makes it hard for the Kremlin to get good information on what is going wrong in the war, complicating efforts to correct course.


    Some of the major issues for Russia are largely beyond Moscow’s control. Ukrainian resolve has hardened against Russia, something the Russian military, for all its brutality, cannot undo. Russia has also been unable or unwilling to interdict Western weapons flows or intelligence to Ukraine. As long as these two factors—Ukrainian resolve and Western support—remain in place, the Kremlin cannot turn Ukraine into a puppet state, as it originally sought to do.

    The Russian military has, however, corrected certain important problems. To overcome a bad plan, it fixed its command structure and changed many of its tactics. It has consolidated its positions in Ukraine after heavy losses while adding more personnel, which will make Ukrainian counteroffensives more costly. Russian military leaders announced their intention to bring back many of the larger divisions from before the 2008 reforms to partly correct for force structure problems. As the Russian economy mobilizes, the defense base could better produce more equipment to make up for wartime losses. Western defense industries, meanwhile, are straining under the demands of replenishing Ukraine. Russia may calculate that it can shore up its position while biding time until Western supplies are exhausted or the world moves on.

    But analysts should be careful about forecasting outcomes. The classic adage still holds: in war, the first reports are often wrong or fragmentary. Only time will tell whether Russia can salvage its invasion or whether Ukrainian forces will prevail. The conflict has already followed an unpredictable course, and so the West should avoid making hasty judgments about what went wrong with Russia’s campaign, lest it learn the wrong lessons, devise incorrect strategies, or acquire the wrong types of weapons. Just as the West overestimated Russia’s capabilities before the invasion, it could now underestimate them. And it could overestimate a similarly closed system, such as the Chinese military. It takes time for analysts to learn how a combatant adapts and changes its tactics.


    Experts should not, however, toss out the tools they now use to evaluate military power. Many standard metrics—such as the way a force is structured, the technical specifications of its weapons, and the quality of its training programs—are still valid. But although these factors, along with a military’s doctrine and previous operations, are important, they are not necessarily predictive. As this war and other recent conflicts have shown, analysts need better ways to measure the intangible elements of military capability—such as the military’s culture, its ability to learn, its level of corruption, and its will to fight—if they want to accurately forecast power and plan for future conflicts.


    Unfortunately, analysts will likely have plenty of time to develop and hone such metrics. Because for all the uncertainty, this much is clear: as Russia continues to mobilize and Kyiv and its supporters dig in, the war is poised to continue.

    https://www.foreignaffairs.com/ukrai...k%20-%20112017

  22. #2872
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    Pity The Russians Who Get Assigned To The Ill-Fated 90th Tank Division In Ukraine

    Quote Originally Posted by malmomike77 View Post
    The 90th tank division, one of Moscow’s most illustrious military units, was said to be involved in the fighting
    Most of those units have been smashed already and have had to be reconstituted with untrained conscripts using second rate equipment. Not the same forces that Russia invaded with at the start of the war. They are mostly all dead. In regard to the 90th tank division, it has had its teeth kicked in by the Ukrainians time and time again. See here...

    Pity The Russians Who Get Assigned To The Ill-Fated 90th Tank Division In Ukraine

    There are a lot of unlucky assignments for Russian soldiers in Ukraine these days. But few unluckier than posting with the 90th Tank Division, a formation with a recent history of repeated, decisive defeat.

    The 90th TD, with its three tank regiments and single motorized infantry regiment, on paper possesses nearly 300 T-72 tanks plus BMP-2 and BTR-82 fighting vehicles and self-propelled artillery, all manned by around 10,000 people.

    In concept it’s a powerful unit. In practice, in Ukraine, it mostly has rolled from disaster to disaster. Most recently, several battalion tactical groups from the division deployed around Kharkiv, in northeastern Ukraine, in a failed effort to stop a determined Ukrainian counteroffensive that kicked off on Sept. 6.

    It wasn’t long before the 90th TD’s battalions had joined the wider Russian retreat from Kharkiv Oblast—a retreat that arguably has reshaped the 200-day war.

    But that wasn’t the first embarrassment to befall the division, normally based in Chebarkul in southwestern Russia. In early March, the 90th TD was part of the Russian offensive aiming to capture Kyiv and dismantle the Ukrainian government.

    On the evening of March 9, a column from the 90th TD—dozens of T-72s, BMPs and BTRs in orderly straight lines—rolled into the town of Brovary, adjacent to Kyiv on the left bank of the Dnipro River.

    Ukrainian artillery targeted the vehicles at the front and rear of the column, striking several of them and forcing the Russians to retreat. Fighting raged for three weeks around Brovary until the 90th TD joined the rest of the Russian force in a hasty retreat from around Kyiv. One of the 90th TD’s regimental commanders reportedly died in the long battle.

    In the months between Kyiv and Kharkiv, the 90th TD gained a handful of Russia’s rarest and best BMP-T fighting vehicles and fought alongside airborne forces around the city of Lysychansk, in eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region. The Donbas fighting is the brightest chapter in the 90th TD’s tragic recent history.

    With its retreat from Kharkiv, the 90th TD now has a one-in-three record in Ukraine. One somewhat successful campaign and two decidedly unsuccessful ones.

    It’s not alone, of course. The 3rd Army Corps—a reserve formation made up of middle-age men, drunks and ex-prisoners—had its baptism of fire around Kharkiv and also got beat, making it oh for one.

    Of course, better units with better records also suffered humiliation as a dozen eager Ukrainian brigades punched through Russian lines east of Kharkiv last week. The 1st Guards Tank Army, arguably the best of Russia’s conventional formations, lost half its T-80 tanks in the counteroffensive.
    Pity The Russians Who Get Assigned To The Ill-Fated 90th Tank Division In Ukraine

  23. #2873
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    Snubski’s gamechangers better arrive quickly. The Russkies look like they are about to get down to business.

  24. #2874
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    Quote Originally Posted by bsnub View Post
    The “long-range capabilities” mentioned in the statement could refer to the Storm Shadow cruise missile.
    I believe storm shadow is only cleared on UK Tornado and Typhoon aircraft. Tornado and tranche 1 Typhoon are pretty much end of life so I guess they could afford to give them to Ukraine.

  25. #2875
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    ^^^ all anecdotal as we know but nobody, not even you knows what is next. I don't really want to think about phase 2, coz that is what is coming in spring/summer.

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