It probably works, but Ivan on the ground doesn't really care.lb3 said:
Maybe the Russians haven't really entered the air war because their IFF tech doesn't work.
See plane, will fire missile
It probably works, but Ivan on the ground doesn't really care.lb3 said:
Maybe the Russians haven't really entered the air war because their IFF tech doesn't work.
I think the idea is bleed the Russian out in terms of men and equipment; on that basis Bahkmut has been quite successful. Based on what I read in the past, there is really no strategic value to holding it at all costs.deddog said:
So to be clear, the Ukes are still holding on to Bahkmut?
I know Russian losses have been tremendous, but is it a bad sign that the Ukrainians have been unable to relieve the pressure on the beleaguered town?
Or do they deem it not worth the losses, since it doesn't have any strategic value
TXAggie2011 said:
Most people who have attached strategic importance to Bakhmut have done so in the sense that it is "where Ukraine chose to fight." Built into that view is a belief that if Ukraine has to fall back from Bakhmut, where they chose to fight hard and long, Russia will be able to roll into larger cities such as Kramatorsk.
In that sense, I've thought of it somewhat like Gettysburg…a town and location which itself lacked clear importance but was where the fight broke out.
I think that view largely lacks an appreciation for what Ukraine has done to bleed Russian resources and set up defenses west of Bakhmut. Or at least my understanding of what Ukraine has done.
'Your.'jobu93 said:
So a planned fighting withdrawal that worked so well it turned I to a strategic
Delaying action.
Someone said it a number of pages ago…. When you're enemy is making mistakes don't stop them.
Quote:
Von Clausewitz breaks down war into three important aspects, "the military power, the country, and the will of the enemy"
Videos reportedly from the last 48 hours which show Ukrainian Forces struggling to Withdraw from Bakhmut due to the state of the Dirt Roads to the West that they forced to use because Russian/Wagner Forces are currently in Control of all Paved Roads in and out of the City. pic.twitter.com/sfGkKHDX44
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) March 5, 2023
Seems that the 2nd Video has been Geolocated with this most likely being the same location as the other Video. https://t.co/lLEN6gDhMp
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) March 5, 2023
Key section from this good piece. The ratio of losses worsened for Ukraine once it lost control of Bakhmut’s flanks. The conditions are less favorable for defending Bakhmut than Vuhledar/elsewhere and Kyiv needs as many forces as possible for its strategically critical offensive. https://t.co/8Qi2PqjfHM pic.twitter.com/ShhWAr6WOE
— Rob Lee (@RALee85) March 5, 2023
Ukrainian army convoy was destroyed by Russian artillery strikes as it tried to flee Bakhmut pic.twitter.com/WHyWaAdaHe
— LogKa (@LogKa11) March 5, 2023
Bakhmut is almost encircled.
— Sarah 🇺🇸 (@LoveOurTrump) March 6, 2023
The O0506 road through Khromove and the T0504 is unusable due to blown up bridges. The only way for ukrainian troops to retreat now through muddy fields” and under fire because command didn’t grant their request to retreat earlier. pic.twitter.com/Fz7hAYsxKB
Civilians still remain in Bakhmut. They cannot or don't want to leave.
— Anton Gerashchenko (@Gerashchenko_en) March 6, 2023
Despite it being very dangerous, volunteers continue helping them.
📹: Volunteer Home/Instagram pic.twitter.com/8P0YxZIV7k
Ukraine's Hidden Power Struggle? Zelensky at Odds with Top Military Man - Report
— 🇷🇺Jacob🇷🇺Charite🇷🇺 (@jaccocharite) March 6, 2023
The Ukrainian president has reportedly been facing a battle of his own behind the scenes with his most important general. It's claimed the fall out is over Artemovsk (Bakhmut) - and
1/ pic.twitter.com/Ufziq7GPPc
I think we'll see one, just not at Bakhmut.Waffledynamics said:
I'll be extremely surprised if we see a Ukrainian counterattack. I think Denys's title is more clickbait.
This. The Ukrainians did this before, with the Russians pushing harder and harder and concentrating more and more troops to push the Ukrainians out of a relatively meaningless town (was it Izyum?) and just when it looked like the Ukrainians would have to do a fighting retreat, the attacked the flanks with a major counter attack and encircled the entire group of orc troops, forcing them to abandon everything and retreat instead.AgLA06 said:I think we'll see one, just not at Bakhmut.Waffledynamics said:
I'll be extremely surprised if we see a Ukrainian counterattack. I think Denys's title is more clickbait.
The commander of Ukrainian ground forces, Colonel-General Oleksandr Syrskyi, visited Bakhmut on March 5 – the third time since February 25.
— Michael MacKay (@mhmck) March 6, 2023
Ukrainian military commanders have first-hand knowledge of the battlefront, whereas warlords of the Russian fascist invaders keep far away. pic.twitter.com/lEuAQ3unwL
“When you go out to the position, it’s not even a 50/50 chance that you’ll come out of there (alive). It’s more like 30/70.”
— Neil Hauer (@NeilPHauer) March 6, 2023
Good reporting here on the recent dynamic in the battle of Bakhmut. Ukrainian forces are now taking very heavy losses themselves. https://t.co/QuRkbgpbcS
This is worrying as Ukraine needs to show results to its Western backers to maintain support, and coming offensives (in Zaporizhzhye or elsewhere) already won't be easy. Bleeding troops into a lost and strategically meaningless defence of Bakhmut only makes that harder.
— Neil Hauer (@NeilPHauer) March 6, 2023
Or he came to the same conclusion you did in the first paragraph.Not a Bot said:
Ukrainian soldiers have posted videos of their withdrawal attempts and getting stuck in the mud. They've lost dozens of vehicles due to mud. Russians now control the paved roads around the city. It appears a withdrawal was ordered too late and many Ukrainian soldiers are stuck.
Zelensky recently fired the general in charge of that area of Ukraine if I'm remembering correctly. Kind of makes you wonder if he's starting to meddle too much in the military day-to-day tactics. Hopefully not.
I promise not to interfere in the Verlander marriage.Rossticus said:“When you go out to the position, it’s not even a 50/50 chance that you’ll come out of there (alive). It’s more like 30/70.”
— Neil Hauer (@NeilPHauer) March 6, 2023
Good reporting here on the recent dynamic in the battle of Bakhmut. Ukrainian forces are now taking very heavy losses themselves. https://t.co/QuRkbgpbcSThis is worrying as Ukraine needs to show results to its Western backers to maintain support, and coming offensives (in Zaporizhzhye or elsewhere) already won't be easy. Bleeding troops into a lost and strategically meaningless defence of Bakhmut only makes that harder.
— Neil Hauer (@NeilPHauer) March 6, 2023
Realistically, I would venture a guess it is closer to 200-500 hardcore troops in quasi-organized groups remaining. Again, this is just a guess. Apparently it's an open question whether they or the Russians run out of ammo first.Quote:
What happens if Ukrainian forces retreat from Bakhmut?
If Bakhmut were to fall into Russian hands, it would represent a rare, if symbolic, victory in the Russian war effortthe first to occur since Moscow's capture of the eastern Ukrainian town of Soledar earlier this year. For Ukraine, it would offer a similarly symbolic lossits first major territorial concession since the summer, as well as a hit to overall morale.
But experts such as Hird say that this is where Bakhmut's significance ends. The city would not afford Moscow any major strategic advantage, though Prigozhin has warned about the costs of losing the city. If anything, Hird says, the manpower and resources incurred in the process of its capture may likely prevent Russia from launching another prolonged offensive operation in the coming months.
"There's been a little bit of panic in Western media about what it means if Bakhmut falls, and I think it means the same thing that it meant back in summer of 2022 when Severodonetsk and Lysychansk fell," says Hird, referencing the territories Ukraine withdrew from over the summer. "This isn't going to be a turning point in the war in any sort of concrete sense. In fact, it will probably allow Ukrainians the opportunity to regain the initiative once this offensive has culminated and pursue their own array of counteroffensive options."
Various outlets now reporting Zelensky has decided to continue defensive operations in #Bakhmut. This tracks with statements from Dep. Defense Minister Malyar last week. My assessment on what would be required to successfully carry that out stands.
— Patrick Fox (@RealCynicalFox) March 6, 2023
Map courtesy of @TheStudyofWar pic.twitter.com/8mZrkk94fX
As we've discovered over the last 70+ years (especially the last dozen or so), the ChiComs say many things, but at the end of the day they will behave like ChiComs and every other communist country always have.Rossticus said:
With a grain of saltSource: https://t.co/wRY0Q0pgeB
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) March 5, 2023
Rossticus said:
With a grain of saltQuote:
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz stated today that China has declared to the German Government that they will not provide Lethal Aid to Russia for their War against Ukraine.