Eddy
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Posts
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Joined
Posts posted by Eddy
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6 minutes ago, Battlefront.com said:
He is the only Russian MP that voted against the annexation of Crimea and, understandably, that meant he wasn't entirely welcomed to remain in Russia. He has been in exile in Kyiv since 2016 and now has Ukrainian citizenship. He is viewed with some degree of suspicion by many since he was part of the Putin regime's control apparatus. Since the war started he has been talking about issues related to Russian resistance to Putin. Since last year he's been a kinda spokesman for the Russian partisans, which at first seemed to be a PR stunt but is not clearly a real thing.
Steve
Ah ok thanks. So has some credibility about the no casualties then. Well more credibility than the Russian MOD at least!
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Report from Channel $ News in the UK
They spoke to Ilya Ponomarev (I have no idea who he has - presumably some one big in Freedom of Russia) who stated that there were NO casualties on their side on their jaunt into Belgorod.
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Speaking of Prigozhin this is a rather detailed and interesting first draft of history for the Battle of Bakhmut:
It's well worth the read although reasonably long. One assessment made by the author is that Wagner will need a couple of months to reconstitute as they are exhausted, which means they will not be available if the Ukrainians offensive starts soon
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11 minutes ago, The_Capt said:
Hmm, now why would the RA be conducting water xing drills way back there in the Crimea?
And that's the difference between a professional and a bloke sat on his sofa - I thought it was for obscuring the bridge somehow
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3 hours ago, TheVulture said:
Do drills normally involve a burning vehicle?
Apparently it is this:
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15 minutes ago, kevinkin said:
If asked how many UAVs the UA is going through, you be hard pressed to come with this number:
This thread is an explanation from one of the authors who came up with the 10,000 a month in the RUSI Meatgrinder report
TLDR: it's a plausible number (in the authors opinion)
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2 minutes ago, billbindc said:
Netherlands has 40 it is phasing out for F-35's. Pretty sure they will move them.
Ah ok thanks. So these are the equivalent of F16 C/D after the Mid Life Upgrade. Here's hoping ...
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But who's actually going to provide some F16s for Ukraine I wonder? Rather than just training I mean. Or have I missed something?
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56 minutes ago, DesertFox said:
Maybe they still have not forgotten the times of 1940-1942 when Britain was in a comparable situation with the Nazis at their throat and dependant on help from across the pond
Nah, we just take a dim view of people using deadly nerve agents in one of our cities. Bang out of line.
Edit: by which I mean the average Brit probably didn't have much of an opinion on Putin. After that they did, and it wasn't a good one.
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Rusi - Russian Tactics in the Second Year of the Invasion of Ukraine
Hot off the press. That's my afternoon sorted.
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Interesting, This fixation with Bakhmut is costing the Russian so much!
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37 minutes ago, alison said:
Garner said he spent months reaching out and interacting with younger Russians on social media sites, such as Telegram and VKontakte, who support their country's war of aggression against Ukraine.
Surely this would mean it's not representative, as he's only selected young people on social media who support the war enough to post about it? Or am I missing the point?
Either way, interesting read.
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8 minutes ago, Battlefront.com said:
Ukraine, I've never had the impression that Belarusians understand how much Russia is responsible for all of this and, therefore, aren't necessarily looking to separate from Russia.
I worked with a Belarusian team for a couple of years and this was not the impression I got. Tbf most of them were in their late 20s or early 30s and from Minsk but they were very anti-Russian and also quite bitter that the West would help Ukraine but not them. This was back in 2017-19 or so.
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10 minutes ago, Der Zeitgeist said:
How likely is it:
a) For Russian air defense to **** up and start sweeping the skies of everything because they think Storm Shadows are inbound
vs.
b) The Ukrainians set up an elaborate SAM trap to catch some special helicopters flying on the other side of the border?
I mean, come on, let's be serious.
Put like that my money's on b. Russian AD is one of the few things that seems to have got better. If it was one aircraft shot down, maybe, but not four, with two being slow moving helicopters.
Maybe the Ukrainians have got better capabilities, maybe the Russians got sloppy. Who knows
But it doesn't really matter what I think. What matters is what the Russian's know. If it was there own AD, then lessons learned. If it was Ukrainian something or other, then they'll have to change their behaviour.
The one thing I can say with absolute certainty - it wasn't me!
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Interesting RUSI article on the TDF in the early(ish) days. Think its from a guest writer.
What stuck me was when the Russian's shifted to artillery intensive offensives, the poor sods where armed with mgs and ags and basically couldn't fight back. Now wonder some of them struggled.
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15 minutes ago, Huba said:
Here's TheDrive article about it, probably as good as analysis as we can get at this time:
https://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/ukraines-storm-shadow-missiles-are-a-big-problem-for-russiaGood article from the operational view. However I haven't seen much about the strategic level (might even be the grand strategy level - I get confused). Russia's theory of winning seems now to be based on
- War weariness within Ukraine
- The 'West' growing bored
- Russia sticks it out
There is no sign from what I gather of the first one. But what this does is clearly display that rather than material support from the West declining, it's actually increasing. And that comes a couple of days after Blinken and Cleverly stating we are in this for long haul thus backing up their statements. There is no evidence, none whatsoever, that the West is rowing back on supporting Ukraine.
From the Russian point of view there must come a point where they start thinking 'oh crap, are assumptions about the West are wrong on this one'.
As for the third point, Russia sticks it out: it's hard to tell the damage that is being done to the Russian economy but it is pretty significant. That utter bilge from the IMF earlier this year about 2% growth was just that - bilge. I'm not convinced they can stick it out multi year. And that's just the economic domain, let alone capability, will etc.
Just for a laugh I'd like to see the UK announce another 14 Challengers sometime in about late August, just to ram home the message that we're not giving up on this one. We probably haven't got another 14 working Challengers but the Russkis don't know that!!
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12 minutes ago, The_Capt said:
This is starting to look like preparations for that time honored core staff principle of war "selection and maintenance of the blame".
Or the world's worst soap opera.
I find it astonishing that he is allowed to get away with these security breaches - shell shortages, units abandoning their positions etc - this is all valuable info for the Ukrainians. Surely even his elite backers would be telling him to shut up.
It's almost like to those in power that the palace politics is what's important and the war is some minor distraction.
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At long last a comment from publicity shy Prigozhin!
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Interesting thread on a report from independent Russian media on Russia's failing attempt to increase tank production
To paraphrase:
- Can't get the workers as wages are not attracting people
- Falsely advertising wages so new workers leave after a month once they see the actual take home pay
- 'Voluntary-compulsory contributions' reduce worker's take home pay even more
- Lack of space is a constraint. Two new plants were promised but not built for example
- Difficult to get electronic components - normally 90% are imported
Admittedly this evidence is from talking to workers at the various plants and not hard numbers but it does point to talk from Medvedev about 1500 annual tank production being complete and utter bollocks.
The low wages is just weird. I would have thought with the war going as it is the Russian govt would be absolutely chucking money at anyone who can make any sort of tank. And the company would be absolutely chucking money at anyone who can even spell 'welding' to attract them. So either the govt. have big financial issues, don't think things are going that badly so why pay over the odds or the company's management are fleecing the workers. Whichever it is, long may it continue.
And the 'voluntary-compulsory contribution' - that's a theft in all but name.
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25 minutes ago, Lethaface said:
This was publicided yesterday, first time Dutch MoD has created a official list of the depth and breadth of the support send to Ukraine (although it's not exhaustive, opsec remains leading principe):
https://www.defensie.nl/onderwerpen/oostflank-navo-gebied/militaire-steun-aan-oekraine
Not much stuff there that wasn't known here, but some numbers are new I think:
15 Bailey bridges and 6 pontoons will come in handy. What is a hefttruck please? Tried to translate and I got handle truck!
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Report from the Atlantic Council on what are and are not game changers from this war in the authors opinion:
Game-Changers-or-Little-Change-Lessons-for-Land-War-in-Ukraine-.pdf (atlanticcouncil.org)
By and large a lot of what has been mentioned on here but with a bit more detail. There's a more detail on the Integrated Command and Control that I found particularly interesting. Also mentions Mass Precise Fires as a game changer which I know has been brought up here a lot.
Anyway food for thought, perhaps.
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Latest preliminary lessons from RUSI. Haven't read it yet but appears to about the intelligence and unconventional war
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2 hours ago, Tux said:
To encourage a bit of fear in the locals of Kursk and maybe elsewhere (how widely within Russia is this effort being reported?) in order to reinforce the idea that this is an existential war for Russia and that they are responding to an external threat.
This ties in a bit with this good article I read ( https://www.foreignaffairs.com/ukraine/putins-forever-war : free to read) concerning with how Putin is attempting to make this appear as an existential as one of his strategies to keep the war going.
The article itself is looking at the war from Putin's perspective as an authoritarian leader and argues it is in his interests to keep the war going. The arguments made will be nothing new to anyone who has read all of the 2,224 pages (jeez - TWO THOUSAND, TWO HUNDRED AND TWENTY FOUR!!!!!!) of this thread but I found it helpful to see them laid out in one place and have them backed up by academic research.
Well worth the read IMHO.
Spoiler: The conclusion is send more and better weapons to Ukraine btw.
How Hot is Ukraine Gonna Get?
in Combat Mission Black Sea
Posted · Edited by Eddy
Makes sense now thanks.
Edit: I wonder how well a Harpoon or something like it would work against a ferry? What with all the clutter from the bridge and whatnot. Just musing ....