"All that is necessary for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing." Edmund Burke
COSTS
zelensky was just too late to retreat now he comes with excuses bcause his troops can’t retreat now that wanger has surrounded the #bahkmut. they are not even russian soldiers in bakhmut but infantry contract soldiers
— rakgomo (@rakgomom) March 8, 2023
Russian forces claim progress in Bakhmut but no end in sight https://t.co/vOdxCsjX3N
— Canoe (@Canoe) March 8, 2023
Ukraine’s Bakhmut may fall in days, NATO chief warns, as Russia claims victory over eastern half of city - Fox News https://t.co/UfZlNIrHXx
— PK (@icepk) March 8, 2023
At what point does Ukraine give up on getting them out? Bad for morale but the soldiers in the Mariupol steel works were encircled and held out for months. They kept over a dozen BTGs engaged allowing Ukraine time to regroup after the initial invasion.MouthBQ98 said:
Falaise Gap redux. Very stupid move to allow encirclement to the point were artillery with spotters can cover the entire retreat path. Ukraine pretty much has to launch a spoiling attack against one of the encirclements, an extremely aggressive one, or their retreating forces will take big losses.
I have been wondering the same thing. Does anyone have a map of existing salt tunnels underneath Bakhmut. I know Soledar is the center of mining, but they have been mining for 150 years. Not saying that they can remove equipment, but are there tunnels to remove personnel at the end.lb3 said:At what point does Ukraine give up on getting them out? Bad for morale but the soldiers in the Mariupol steel works were encircled and held out for months. They kept over a dozen BTGs engaged allowing Ukraine time to regroup after the initial invasion.MouthBQ98 said:
Falaise Gap redux. Very stupid move to allow encirclement to the point were artillery with spotters can cover the entire retreat path. Ukraine pretty much has to launch a spoiling attack against one of the encirclements, an extremely aggressive one, or their retreating forces will take big losses.
Yes. It's arguably the single biggest tool they've used to stay ahead/in the fight (real time data/targeting being key).marcel ledbetter said:
Are the Ukrainians still able to use Starlink?
I'm not sure Chosin is something the Ukes can emulate.P.U.T.U. said:
Best bet is to do something like the Americans did in Korea at the Chosin Reservoir, have attack elements find a weak spot in the Russian encirclement. In Korea we had mountainous terrain to help while most of the area east of Bakhmut is wooded that has a limited canopy so easy for drones to spot.
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Blackouts in several regions in preparation to possible missile attack to avoid damage to power infrastructure
lb3 said:At what point does Ukraine give up on getting them out? Bad for morale but the soldiers in the Mariupol steel works were encircled and held out for months. They kept over a dozen BTGs engaged allowing Ukraine time to regroup after the initial invasion.MouthBQ98 said:
Falaise Gap redux. Very stupid move to allow encirclement to the point were artillery with spotters can cover the entire retreat path. Ukraine pretty much has to launch a spoiling attack against one of the encirclements, an extremely aggressive one, or their retreating forces will take big losses.
"Put us in jail, 5, 7, 10 years, we're ready!" "We'll leave on foot or by taxi! Fight yourself!"
— Dmitri (@wartranslated) March 8, 2023
Footage of a conversation between the mobilised of the 1004th regiment from Kaliningrad and their battalion commander. The mobilised talk about their conflicts with local "L/DPR"… https://t.co/xDmgUL5WQN pic.twitter.com/RVuCBpm3qZ
Waffledynamics said:
Massive missile attack in several more largely populated areas of Ukraine in the past few hours, and ongoing. Updates have been coming in on LiveUAMap.
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Any conflict with the Russians was always going to be heavy on numbers and the Ukrainians simply don't have the population in order to face down the Russians man for man. So they need to inflict massively out of whack casualty ratios on the folks that are fighting. And I'm not talking 2 3 to 1 like we've seen so far. Like 8 10 to 1 is really kind of the minimum if they are going to walk away from this. The Russians see this war as a battle for their existential survival, their right. They're not going to stop. And so the only way for Ukraine to emerge victorious is to kill so many Russian soldiers so quickly that the Russian front collapses and the military system within the Russian Federation requires years to recover. We are nowhere close to that. And the only way that the Ukrainians can pull that off is if they can outmaneuver the Russians. And that requires fields that are not mud.
This has allowed the Russians to play to their strengths and just throw body after body after body into a few battles, most notably the battle of Bakhmut, which until now the main effort has been led by the Wagner Group for internal political reasons. But honestly, the internal political reasons don't matter. As long as the Ukrainians can't maneuver and as long as the Russians have superior numbers, it's just an issue of throwing wave after wave of humans at them until the weather changes to a degree where the logistics shifts to a degree that the battles can move elsewhere.
That's unlikely to happen until May. Now, Wagner has been using almost exclusively convicts in their human wave tactics. And as to the number of people that have been lost, the estimates are in the process of being revised by everyone, because everyone is, you know, always changing these sort of things during a war. They're starting to use more radio intercepts to guess how many Russians have been killed. The problem is, if you go with just visual confirmation, you're going to wildly undercount because it doesn't count people who are injured who then were taken away from the front and then die because the Russians' triage system and medical system is beyond atrocious. And so probably for every person that is visually killed, there's another half to a person that then wandered away and died. Anyway, we now know that the minimum deaths in the war so far on the Russian side is 120,000, and the estimates for Russian deaths in the battle of Bakhmut specifically are somewhere between ten and 40,000, just for one little strategically insignificant town.
Anyway, for the next couple of months, this is just where we are. It's probably too late in the season at this point to hope for a really hard freeze. So we're going to have to wait for things to dry out in May before the Ukrainians might be able to move. By the time we get to May, the Russians will really move a lot more troops into the front. They started the war with somewhere between 100 and 150,000. Today they probably have about 250,000. And with the second mobilization already deep underway, we're probably going to be around 6 to 700,000 by the time we get to May and June. Now, they will be badly led and they will be badly equipped and will be badly supplied and they will have poor morale and they'll be badly trained. And you know what you call troops like that, Russian.
There is nothing about the conflict to this point that is atypical in Russian history. They rarely win on quality. They almost always went on numbers. And we're almost to the point where we're going to see just how well these new infusions of NATO equipment help the Ukrainians on the front line and just how many massive waves and assaults the Russians can sustain at the same time. And this is going to put the battle in a bit of a pickle for the Ukrainians because they're going to be facing two or three major assaults from the Russians at different points of contact. And if they allow themselves to get bogged down, deflecting each and every one of those, they're going to lose. They need to free this up into a war of movement and allow their tanks and artillery and the rockets to do an offensive in a place where the Russians either can't resist or can't maneuver or to counter them.
This used to be a city in Ukraine.
— Xenta (@Xenta777) March 9, 2023
💔 pic.twitter.com/ZcV61bVqOb
Large Plumes of Smoke can be seen rising from what is claimed to be the KyivEnergo #5 Thermoelectric Power Plant in the Holosiivskyi District of Kyiv City after Russian Missiles hit the Plant earlier this morning. pic.twitter.com/oBcELQDKkO
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) March 9, 2023
The Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant in Central Ukraine is currently without Power due to the Russian Missile Strikes that have taken place across the Country this morning. pic.twitter.com/wuiPG1IeXK
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) March 9, 2023
Popko said that the city's air defense shot down the cruise missiles and drones but that a Russian nuclear-capable hypersonic aero-ballistic air-to-surface Kinzhal missile hit an infrastructure site. (2/2)
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) March 9, 2023
⚡️Governor: 4 killed in Russian attack on Lviv Oblast.
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) March 9, 2023
Four people were killed by a Russian missile strike that hit a residential area in the Zolochiv district in Lviv Oblast on March 9, Lviv Oblast Governor Maksym Kozytsky said.
The Ukrainian Minister of Energy has announced that Russian Missile Strikes on Energy Infrastructure were reported in the Kyiv, Mykolaiv, Kharkiv, Zaporizhia, Odesa, Dnipropetrovsk and Zhytomyr Regions with 3 Thermoelectrical Power Plants in the Country suffering Severe Damage.
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) March 9, 2023
In total 81 Missiles of different Variants were fired at Targets in Ukraine this morning.
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) March 9, 2023
We've toyed with the idea ourselves, in the past (note: the B-1B's are being retired and are just worn out).Quote:
The missile has also been test fired from a Navy ship-firing technology called Vertical Launch Systems currently on both cruisers and destroyers as a way to provide long range surface-to-surface and surface-to-air offensive firepower.
I watch a lot of uke videos which have subtitled and many of the fighters refer to exactly what you statelb3 said:At what point does Ukraine give up on getting them out? Bad for morale but the soldiers in the Mariupol steel works were encircled and held out for months. They kept over a dozen BTGs engaged allowing Ukraine time to regroup after the initial invasion.MouthBQ98 said:
Falaise Gap redux. Very stupid move to allow encirclement to the point were artillery with spotters can cover the entire retreat path. Ukraine pretty much has to launch a spoiling attack against one of the encirclements, an extremely aggressive one, or their retreating forces will take big losses.
Eliminatus said:Waffledynamics said:
Massive missile attack in several more largely populated areas of Ukraine in the past few hours, and ongoing. Updates have been coming in on LiveUAMap.
Looks like 80+ missiles and drones. Mostly missiles. Went after the usual targets in Kharkiv and Lyiv and other major cities. Power distribution and of course, apartment complexes. Several confirmed dead. All civilians so far, of course. A lot were shot down it appears but you will never stop all of them. Or even most of them.
The power plants make sense but the very deliberate targeting of apartments spread across the entire nation? Aside from the moral implications what is the point? This isn't carpet bombing. This is throwing away millions of rubles worth of advanced weaponry to kill a dozen here and a dozen there. It should be ABUNDANTLY clear that the Ukes are not going to break from that level of harassment or even come close. Maybe to waste AA munitions? Russians can't really go 1 for 1 on that either and come out on top. My westernized mind simply can't wrap around it.
It's just so pointless to me. Even smacks of desperation. I just can't think like the Russian leadership and I just have to take solace in the fact that that is probably an endorsement of my own sanity.
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Ukrainian missile and artillery units destroyed the Russian self-propelled howitzer "Msta-S" on the Kinburn spit - operational command "South"