Russia cut off resupply by air and is done taking the casualties they are to try and root them out. It's basically becoming their version of the Stalingrad tractor plant.
I imagine some heavy MOAB type of bombing will take place shortly.
"All the guys from our anti-tank artillery division are charged for victory! Because this is not just a war between two countries! This is a war for our liberty, for the opportunity to live in a free democratic European country!"
— Michael MacKay (@mhmck) April 19, 2022
Mobile press group of the Joint Forces Operation pic.twitter.com/TIEVlwCtoc
AgLA06 said:
I think they are hosed and essentially the Uke Alamo. Ukes couldn't get to them if they tried.
Russia cut off resupply by air and is done taking the casualties they are to try and root them out. It's basically becoming their version of the Stalingrad tractor plant.
I imagine some heavy MOAB type of bombing will take place shortly.
The MOAB bombing supposedly happened a little bit agoAgLA06 said:
I think they are hosed and essentially the Uke Alamo. Ukes couldn't get to them if they tried.
Russia cut off resupply by air and is done taking the casualties they are to try and root them out. It's basically becoming their version of the Stalingrad tractor plant.
I imagine some heavy MOAB type of bombing will take place shortly.
This is disgusting. https://t.co/ymD3l0xzlG
— LtCol Rip Rawlings (@RipRawlings) April 19, 2022
1) Mariupol is completely cut off by land and sea. There is no hope of relief by Uke ground forces for the foreseeable future unless the Russian army completely collapses.AGS-R-TUFF said:Hoping for a way to buy these Mariupol fighters more time. The map doesn't look conducive to Uke ground troops getting in thru from East (Khereson) side expeditiously and not sure if they can afford to redirect some support from Donbas down to Mariupol.MeatDr said:⚡️Special groups began to storm the Azovstal steel plant in #Mariupol.
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) April 19, 2022
This was announced by Eduard Basurin, a representative of the so-called "Interior Ministry of the '#Donetsk People's Republic'". pic.twitter.com/Vukva1ObJR
My novice opinion is thinking if air strikes (drones, switchblades etc.) could create enough disruption to delay or fracture enemy advances, allowing for more effective guerilla counter strikes from Azof battalion.
Thoughts…
The Romanian Ministry of National Defense has announced that they will Send Lethal Military Equipment to Ukraine from the Nation’s Military Reserves, it has not been stated what these will entail but it could include T-72s which Romania has 28 of in Various Conditions. pic.twitter.com/yOra9ey5Vf
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) April 19, 2022
The defense official said the howitzers would be delivered "very soon" but didn't give an exact timeline.
— Jack Detsch (@JackDetsch) April 19, 2022
Quote:
Russia confirmed that the ship sank but said only that it had been damaged by "heavy storms" and a fire that caused ammunition on board to detonate. On April 14, the Russian defense ministry said all crew members were evacuated. The authorities have not confirmed any dead or wounded.
So sad for those families.Quote:
But several families are now contradicting this claim in Russian media reports and on social media. Social media groups uniting mothers of Russian soldiers deployed in Ukraine are filling up with photos and pleas from parents looking for their missing sons.
On Monday, at least four families shared pictures of sailors who the families say served on the sunken ship and have been not been heard from since the incident.
"Please join our search for the Moskva sailors!" reads one message on a Vkontakte message board.
"Family members, please talk to your sons, perhaps someone saw the guys at the time of the evacuation, or you were near on the cruiser itself or you are currently with them in a hospital?"
Via @Liveuamap
— Illia Ponomarenko 🇺🇦 (@IAPonomarenko) April 19, 2022
Quote:
Moscow is not considering using nuclear weapons in the Ukraine war, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has said.
In an interview with India Today, Lavrov said his country's forces would use "conventional weapons only," according to state news agency Interfax.
Although he is not directly responsible for military decision-making, his comments are among the most direct so far on the prospect of Russia escalating the conflict into a nuclear one.
Quote:
Soon after announcing his invasion, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered Russia's nuclear forces be placed on high alert.
LinkQuote:
Lavrov suggested that nuclear weapons were not part of the Kremlin's strategy as he referred to how the war is entering a new phase, which chimes with Ukraine's assessment that Moscow had started a new offensive in the Donbas region overnight Monday.
On Tuesday, Russian forces were attacking Ukrainian positions along the entire 300-mile front line in the eastern Donbas region, as Ukrainian president Volodymr Zelensky announced that a new Russian offensive in the east had begun.
When Russia has said anything this war, I would say 90% of the opposite is what has actually happened.aggiehawg said:
Well now I feel better. Or do I not trust this?Quote:
Moscow is not considering using nuclear weapons in the Ukraine war, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has said.
In an interview with India Today, Lavrov said his country's forces would use "conventional weapons only," according to state news agency Interfax.
Although he is not directly responsible for military decision-making, his comments are among the most direct so far on the prospect of Russia escalating the conflict into a nuclear one.Quote:
Soon after announcing his invasion, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered Russia's nuclear forces be placed on high alert.LinkQuote:
Lavrov suggested that nuclear weapons were not part of the Kremlin's strategy as he referred to how the war is entering a new phase, which chimes with Ukraine's assessment that Moscow had started a new offensive in the Donbas region overnight Monday.
On Tuesday, Russian forces were attacking Ukrainian positions along the entire 300-mile front line in the eastern Donbas region, as Ukrainian president Volodymr Zelensky announced that a new Russian offensive in the east had begun.
I think today is the first time I have heard of really large bombs going off there. Until now, I was under the impression they had not been bombing or shelling it indiscriminately like they have the areas around it. No specific information to make me think that, just the impression I had developed over time. Could be totally wrong.Build It said:
The Russians have been bombing the crap out of the steel plant. I don't think they are trying to save it in any way. Where did you get that information?
Thanks for the explanation.aezmvp said:AGS-R-TUFF said:MeatDr said:⚡️Special groups began to storm the Azovstal steel plant in #Mariupol.
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) April 19, 2022
This was announced by Eduard Basurin, a representative of the so-called "Interior Ministry of the '#Donetsk People's Republic'". pic.twitter.com/Vukva1ObJR
Hope all this makes sense!
deddog said:Thanks for the explanation.aezmvp said:AGS-R-TUFF said:MeatDr said:⚡️Special groups began to storm the Azovstal steel plant in #Mariupol.
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) April 19, 2022
This was announced by Eduard Basurin, a representative of the so-called "Interior Ministry of the '#Donetsk People's Republic'". pic.twitter.com/Vukva1ObJR
Hope all this makes sense!
Is there a reason the Russians can't bypass the plant and take the rest of the city.
It is the same with every surrounded force. They can still sally out and do a lot of damage. Trapped forces on continuous land still need to be dealt with, unlike some of the Pacific Islands during WW2. Until that pocket is eliminated, they will still fight and jeopardize/undermine any Russian undertakings in that area.deddog said:Thanks for the explanation.aezmvp said:AGS-R-TUFF said:MeatDr said:⚡️Special groups began to storm the Azovstal steel plant in #Mariupol.
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) April 19, 2022
This was announced by Eduard Basurin, a representative of the so-called "Interior Ministry of the '#Donetsk People's Republic'". pic.twitter.com/Vukva1ObJR
Hope all this makes sense!
Is there a reason the Russians can't bypass the plant and take the rest of the city.
7 US flights with weapons for Ukraine presumably arriving in Rzeszow over the next 24 hours. https://t.co/ez15vd2nP7
— OSINTtechnical (@Osinttechnical) April 19, 2022
The Security Service of Ukraine on Tuesday released a purported communications intercept of a Russian ground unit commander, who said Russian aircraft were planning to "level everything to the ground" around Azovstal, the steel factory in Mariupol https://t.co/vMH8IXMVGk
— Natasha Bertrand (@NatashaBertrand) April 19, 2022
Interesting that it doesn't say "on", but "around". Which suggests they are interested in trying not to completely destroy the steel mill.MeatDr said:The Security Service of Ukraine on Tuesday released a purported communications intercept of a Russian ground unit commander, who said Russian aircraft were planning to "level everything to the ground" around Azovstal, the steel factory in Mariupol https://t.co/vMH8IXMVGk
— Natasha Bertrand (@NatashaBertrand) April 19, 2022
U.S. defense official: Not inevitable that Mariupol will fall to Russia, and the U.S. is working to ensure it remains not inevitable.
— Paul D. Shinkman (@PDShinkman) April 19, 2022
I would love to see some stealth airpower used to help them. Wonder that the Russian air defense radar coverage looks like on the seaward side of that plant?Robk said:U.S. defense official: Not inevitable that Mariupol will fall to Russia, and the U.S. is working to ensure it remains not inevitable.
— Paul D. Shinkman (@PDShinkman) April 19, 2022
Robk said:U.S. defense official: Not inevitable that Mariupol will fall to Russia, and the U.S. is working to ensure it remains not inevitable.
— Paul D. Shinkman (@PDShinkman) April 19, 2022
I have been scratching my head at that as well.Waffledynamics said:Robk said:U.S. defense official: Not inevitable that Mariupol will fall to Russia, and the U.S. is working to ensure it remains not inevitable.
— Paul D. Shinkman (@PDShinkman) April 19, 2022
Yeah? And just how is that going to work? The city is locked down. They're surrounded entirely. What can we even do?
Will be interesting on what happens or doesn't happen to Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.aggiehawg said:
Well now I feel better. Or do I not trust this?Quote:
Moscow is not considering using nuclear weapons in the Ukraine war, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has said.
In an interview with India Today, Lavrov said his country's forces would use "conventional weapons only," according to state news agency Interfax.
Although he is not directly responsible for military decision-making, his comments are among the most direct so far on the prospect of Russia escalating the conflict into a nuclear one.Quote:
Soon after announcing his invasion, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered Russia's nuclear forces be placed on high alert.LinkQuote:
Lavrov suggested that nuclear weapons were not part of the Kremlin's strategy as he referred to how the war is entering a new phase, which chimes with Ukraine's assessment that Moscow had started a new offensive in the Donbas region overnight Monday.
On Tuesday, Russian forces were attacking Ukrainian positions along the entire 300-mile front line in the eastern Donbas region, as Ukrainian president Volodymr Zelensky announced that a new Russian offensive in the east had begun.
Build It said:
The Russians have been bombing the crap out of the steel plant. I don't think they are trying to save it in any way. Where did you get that information?
NYT article on the steel mill:txags92 said:Interesting that it doesn't say "on", but "around". Which suggests they are interested in trying not to completely destroy the steel mill.MeatDr said:The Security Service of Ukraine on Tuesday released a purported communications intercept of a Russian ground unit commander, who said Russian aircraft were planning to "level everything to the ground" around Azovstal, the steel factory in Mariupol https://t.co/vMH8IXMVGk
— Natasha Bertrand (@NatashaBertrand) April 19, 2022
Quote:
. . .
A sprawling Soviet-era steel factory that is sheltering thousands of soldiers and civilians is the last Ukrainian redoubt in the ravaged city of Mariupol, where the battle by Russian forces to take full control of the city appears to be entering its final stages.
Russian commanders said Tuesday they were beginning their assault on the Azovstal steel plant, where the remaining Ukrainian soldiers defending the besieged port city had been joined by 1,000 or more civilians, Ukrainian officials said. The Russians launched a new round of artillery barrages and issued the latest in a series of ultimatums to the fighters in the factory to surrender.
But the Azovstal plant makes for a formidable fortress, an immense industrial complex of thick concrete and walls, steel doors and underground warrens. Yan Gagin, who identified himself as Russian adviser in the Donetsk People's Republic, a self-declared government backed by the Kremlin, in eastern Ukraine, said in a broadcast report that the steel factory was designed to withstand a nuclear war.
"It is basically a city under a city," he said, conceding that the Russian's campaign to seize the plant had been significantly hampered by the sophisticated communication systems connecting the basement levels of the plant.
. . .
The plant stretches across four square miles, a complex of buildings, smokestacks, blast furnaces and stacks of coiled and plate steel, and it has its own port facilities on the Sea of Azov.
One of the largest metal mills in Europe, it produced about 10 million tons of steel a year before the Russian invasion, most of it sent by ship to European customers, according to its owner, Metinvest, a steel and mining conglomerate owned by Ukraine's richest man, the billionaire Rinat Akhmetov.
The network of underground spaces, which is now pivotal to the survival of the holed-up soldiers and civilians, was originally built to transport equipment between buildings and to access the undersides of ground-level machinery for maintenance, according to Metinvest, the company that operated the mill. There was no planned military use for the underground areas before the war, the company said.
The Russian military ordered Ukrainian forces inside to allow trapped civilians to evacuate through humanitarian corridors.
But the Ukrainians said they did not trust the Russians to honor their promise of safe passage and would likely refuse; they said they were preparing for battle. That sets the stage for a potentially bloody, protracted confrontation whose casualties may include many civilians.
. . .
The Russians are trying to establish uncontested control of a swath of territory linking the separatist-held regions of Donbas, in southeastern Ukraine, to the Crimean Peninsula, which Russia seized in 2014. The holdouts in Mariupol are the last substantial obstacle left in the region.
Russian forces have had the city, a major port, under siege since last month, bombarding much of it to rubble and slowly tightening their grip.
The fight over the Azovstal steel plant recalls one of the great struggles of the Second World War, the battle for the Stalingrad Tractor Factory as Nazi Germany's forces attempted to capture the city. Thousands of German and Soviet soldiers died there, as did many civilians, before the Soviets ultimately prevailed.
. . .
Ukraine's intelligence service wrote in a statement on Monday that the Russians were preparing to use three-ton bombs on the plant in an effort to raze it completely. Moscow is "not deterred by the fact that civilians have taken refuge in the plant," the service said in a statement, adding that they were anticipating "3-ton surprises" from the sky.
"You'd be surprised at how well people can survive big bombs in a facility like that," said Mr. Kagan, adding that the Russians have not exhibited extraordinary precision in their targeting.
Pentagon spokesman continues that the US has helped w/ the "shipment of some additional spare parts that has helped with their aircraft needs, but we have not transported whole aircraft" for Ukraine
— Paul McLeary (@paulmcleary) April 19, 2022