Originally posted by duncan
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Ukraine
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It seems that Russia intends to 'clarify' where the new Ukraine-Russia 'border' is after annexation. It's hard to see how they can claim Kherson, Zaporizhia or Donestk when they aren't in control of anything like the whole of those regions. Luhansk is the only one they largely control and even that's now threatened by the Ukrainian advance.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Many thanks for the maps and suggestions.
In Kherson Ukraine has apparently taken most of Dudchany (the tip of the arrow on Duncan's map) as well as broadening their salient. This will make it very difficult for Russia to hang on and will probably force a retreat to lines further south around Beryslav. Time will show whether the under-supplied Russian forces will stabilise their front.
In the north-east Ukraine continues to by-pass strongpoints and aims to envelop Kreminna next. The Russian lines of communication north are being overrun. Svatove will soon be under threat and this has catastrophic implications for the Russian control of northern Luhansk.
This is not the end, but...
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Originally posted by Historian View PostMany thanks for the maps and suggestions.
In Kherson Ukraine has apparently taken most of Dudchany (the tip of the arrow on Duncan's map) as well as broadening their salient. This will make it very difficult for Russia to hang on and will probably force a retreat to lines further south around Beryslav. Time will show whether the under-supplied Russian forces will stabilise their front.
In the north-east Ukraine continues to by-pass strongpoints and aims to envelop Kreminna next. The Russian lines of communication north are being overrun. Svatove will soon be under threat and this has catastrophic implications for the Russian control of northern Luhansk.
This is not the end, but...
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View Post…the beginning of the end?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Mario View PostI’m no military expert, but would the international military intelligentsia consider this effort by the Russian army to be an absolute joke?
I cannot pretend to know much about war tactics (nor do I have much desire to learn these), but is it no surprise that Russia got it all so wrong?
This lesson shouldn't be lost on whoever eventually leads Russia in the wake of Putin.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post...
This lesson shouldn't be lost on whoever eventually leads Russia in the wake of Putin.
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Originally posted by Mario View PostI’m no military expert, but would the international military intelligentsia consider this effort by the Russian army to be an absolute joke?
I cannot pretend to know much about war tactics (nor do I have much desire to learn these), but is it no surprise that Russia got it all so wrong?
It was a surprise, at first, but increasingly unsurprising as Russian forces persist in their error.
The initial assumption of Ukrainian weakness by Putin was unfounded and from this almost everything else followed. One of my teaching colleagues asked me recently whether we had all been too afraid of Russia in the 1980s. It doesn't necessarily follow, but their armed forces at present have major problems which they will not be able to sort out in time to turn round the war against Ukraine. Their situation has been made much worse by political decisions made by Putin (e.g. holding on to Kherson instead of a phased withdrawal) with the results we now see.
Russian forces and their plans have been inflexible, whereas Ukraine has recently been mounting very successful combined arms operations using infantry, tanks and artillery to punch holes through Russian positions, bypass strongpoints and envelop them leading to chaotic Russian retreats. Everything has been made much worse by the Russian logistics failures which led to the breakdown of, for example, their attack on Kyiv, long before Ukraine was able to strike effectively using HIMARS multiple launch rocket systems (MLRS) from July. The Russian Air Force has been largely ineffective as the battlefield is full of lightweight surface-to-air missile launchers. This has effectively nullified a theoretical advantage of Russian airpower. Russian aeroplanes really press home their attacks and when they do they often get shot down. Even the Black Sea Fleet has ben remarkably ineffective, losing its flagship (Moskva) and being forces out of it Sevastopol base.
Ukraine has embraced new technology (drones/UAVs) much more effectively than its opponents. They have also proved more adept at using older weapons including tanks. In sum, the Ukrainians have fought Russia to a standstill and are now taking back their country.
[Sorry, Mario: it seems I rather ignored the second sentence of your message.]
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Originally posted by richardfinegold View PostApparently the Ukranians are using artillery shells that have GPS guidance, which cost considerable, but as opposed to the Russian carpet bombing technique, these are precision munitions designed to take out supply and infrastructure targets
The Russians have had some success with heavy bombardments of towns and cities where accuracy is less important than overwhelming weight of fire. However, Ukraine's destruction of Russian supply lines has reduced the effectiveness of this tactic, which is also heading towards a war crime even when the civilian population is not directly targeted.
The next but one series of battles in Kherson Oblast may be easier for the Russians in so far as they will have better supply lines east of the Dnipro river, at least to start with. However, Ukraine's artillery is getting stronger and more effective, while Russia's is being systematically degraded. That's not including the large numbers of artillery pieces that they have left behind as 'gifts' in the north-east.
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Interesting headline today: Russia warns US of direct military clash risk
'Russia's ambassador to the US, Anatoly Antonov, said it was an "immediate threat" to Moscow, describing the US as "a participant of the conflict"'.
Just imagine if Russia weren't 'a participant of the conflict'.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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