SouthTex99 said:
#3 is the fastest way to invite NATO to the party. And NATO won't stop in Ukraine.
If Russia has trashed this so bad over 6.5 months in mostly good weather, wait until their old and inexperienced guys are supposed to be on guard duty in frigid conditions. Ukes will have a turkey shoot going on just for fun.Agthatbuilds said:
I'd imagine the ukes are trying to push their momentum to capture all they can before fall/winter weather mucks things up.
If they time it right, they can push Russia out and use winter as a helpful time to build up defenses for a major russian counter attack.
The wild card here is putin. What's he going to do?
1. Declare actual war, institute a draft and try to actually overwhelm the ukes, at least in the east/south east? Of course, this would mean pulling troops/recruits from Moscow and St. Petersburg which could escalate any internal resistance.
2. Throw everything he has into the donbass and Crimea regions, say the special operation is over and attempt to not lose any ill-goten gains by playing defense?
3. Introduce chemical or nuclear weapons to the battlefield? Would his military officers follow through? Would it lead to a coup?
4. Lose complete control and fall victim to coup?
I'm assuming the winter would effect operations on both sides. Could the Ukes even sufficiently move around their artillery, HIMARS, etc. to effectively hit Russian defensive forces?Tony Franklins Other Shoe said:If Russia has trashed this so bad over 6.5 months in mostly good weather, wait until their old and inexperienced guys are supposed to be on guard duty in frigid conditions. Ukes will have a turkey shoot going on just for fun.Agthatbuilds said:
I'd imagine the ukes are trying to push their momentum to capture all they can before fall/winter weather mucks things up.
If they time it right, they can push Russia out and use winter as a helpful time to build up defenses for a major russian counter attack.
The wild card here is putin. What's he going to do?
1. Declare actual war, institute a draft and try to actually overwhelm the ukes, at least in the east/south east? Of course, this would mean pulling troops/recruits from Moscow and St. Petersburg which could escalate any internal resistance.
2. Throw everything he has into the donbass and Crimea regions, say the special operation is over and attempt to not lose any ill-goten gains by playing defense?
3. Introduce chemical or nuclear weapons to the battlefield? Would his military officers follow through? Would it lead to a coup?
4. Lose complete control and fall victim to coup?
The already crappy Russian supplies have likely been thoroughly exhausted.
That probably also leads to him accidentally falling out of a window in short order.Agthatbuilds said:SouthTex99 said:
#3 is the fastest way to invite NATO to the party. And NATO won't stop in Ukraine.
Oh I agree it would be the dumbest option for putin to make, but, backed into a corner at risk of losing everything, I could see him making a rash decision.
I question whether the button pushers would actually follow the order and push the button
SwigAg11 said:I'm assuming the winter would effect operations on both sides. Could the Ukes even sufficiently move around their artillery, HIMARS, etc. to effectively hit Russian defensive forces?Tony Franklins Other Shoe said:If Russia has trashed this so bad over 6.5 months in mostly good weather, wait until their old and inexperienced guys are supposed to be on guard duty in frigid conditions. Ukes will have a turkey shoot going on just for fun.Agthatbuilds said:
I'd imagine the ukes are trying to push their momentum to capture all they can before fall/winter weather mucks things up.
If they time it right, they can push Russia out and use winter as a helpful time to build up defenses for a major russian counter attack.
The wild card here is putin. What's he going to do?
1. Declare actual war, institute a draft and try to actually overwhelm the ukes, at least in the east/south east? Of course, this would mean pulling troops/recruits from Moscow and St. Petersburg which could escalate any internal resistance.
2. Throw everything he has into the donbass and Crimea regions, say the special operation is over and attempt to not lose any ill-goten gains by playing defense?
3. Introduce chemical or nuclear weapons to the battlefield? Would his military officers follow through? Would it lead to a coup?
4. Lose complete control and fall victim to coup?
The already crappy Russian supplies have likely been thoroughly exhausted.
GeorgiAg said:That probably also leads to him accidentally falling out of a window in short order.Agthatbuilds said:SouthTex99 said:
#3 is the fastest way to invite NATO to the party. And NATO won't stop in Ukraine.
Oh I agree it would be the dumbest option for putin to make, but, backed into a corner at risk of losing everything, I could see him making a rash decision.
I question whether the button pushers would actually follow the order and push the button
Depends on where. The frost line has to be deep enough that you don't crack through to mud. These tanks are 30-40 tons. AFV are lighter and more capable during winter but yeah you have to freeze that ground hard.Demosthenes81 said:
If I remember my WW2 correctly, winter is actually a time for offensive movement. Once the ground freezes tracked vehicles can move, maybe not with the speed of summer but it is not zero either. Spring thaw is actually a time of stagnant operations where the mud prevents off road movement. Now being on the defensive in the dead of winter is probably worse than being on offense.
Demosthenes81 said:
If I remember my WW2 correctly, winter is actually a time for offensive movement. Once the ground freezes tracked vehicles can move, maybe not with the speed of summer but it is not zero either. Spring thaw is actually a time of stagnant operations where the mud prevents off road movement. Now being on the defensive in the dead of winter is probably worse than being on offense.
We need to look at the last 6.5 months and I'm no military historian, just a casual novice. Who has been better organized and been able to adapt? Who has not learned from a single error? We well know about the Ukrainian Tractor Corps when needed. When conditions go to ****, I'm betting on one side that has hardened fighters, not a bunch of old or fat or green call ups since all their early men and equipment have been churned through the meat grinder.SwigAg11 said:I'm assuming the winter would effect operations on both sides. Could the Ukes even sufficiently move around their artillery, HIMARS, etc. to effectively hit Russian defensive forces?Tony Franklins Other Shoe said:If Russia has trashed this so bad over 6.5 months in mostly good weather, wait until their old and inexperienced guys are supposed to be on guard duty in frigid conditions. Ukes will have a turkey shoot going on just for fun.Agthatbuilds said:
I'd imagine the ukes are trying to push their momentum to capture all they can before fall/winter weather mucks things up.
If they time it right, they can push Russia out and use winter as a helpful time to build up defenses for a major russian counter attack.
The wild card here is putin. What's he going to do?
1. Declare actual war, institute a draft and try to actually overwhelm the ukes, at least in the east/south east? Of course, this would mean pulling troops/recruits from Moscow and St. Petersburg which could escalate any internal resistance.
2. Throw everything he has into the donbass and Crimea regions, say the special operation is over and attempt to not lose any ill-goten gains by playing defense?
3. Introduce chemical or nuclear weapons to the battlefield? Would his military officers follow through? Would it lead to a coup?
4. Lose complete control and fall victim to coup?
The already crappy Russian supplies have likely been thoroughly exhausted.
Bag said:
so, does anyone have a succinct current status of the overall war? its hard to understand who is winning at this point/
But Russia still holds significant Ukraine land. I think this current offensive has taken back, what, less than 10% of what they have lost so far (not including Crimea)? Anybody have a better estimate?Waffledynamics said:Bag said:
so, does anyone have a succinct current status of the overall war? its hard to understand who is winning at this point/
Russia's getting their asses handed to them at the moment. Ukraine just took back a lot of land in the Northeast and is threatening the South.
If Russia stops offensive operations and tries to harden their lines then that just continues to open them up for point attacks by allowing Ukraine to thin their forces along the line further. They can they allocate more forces in a concentrated area for offensive pushes like they are doing now.MouthBQ98 said:
Russia took a big loss.
BUT
For now, they still hold most of the territory they took. They have fewer resources now and the Ukrainians are getting stronger but this strategic surprise might not be so successful twice. Russia may simply spread out behind more defensible lines and play for time and try to pressure negotiations while they have a decent hand. I doubt they press for more except in The east, and that's what they might attempt to bargain for.
It's going to be a battle of how much misery the Russians will suffer versus the Ukrainians resolve.
Also, Stalin went to his countryside Dachas many times and always came back. I think Putin has to be pretty nervous though.
Bag said:
so, does anyone have a succinct current status of the overall war? its hard to understand who is winning at this point/
That's been a pretty persistent rumor but my feel in that is that it has the feel of a propoganda campaign.Waffledynamics said:
Russia is halting sending soldiers into Ukraine, and there are some in the Kherson region reportedly negotiating a surrender. The annexation referendums have been reportedly canceled.
MouthBQ98 said:
Russia took a big loss.
BUT
For now, they still hold most of the territory they took. They have fewer resources now and the Ukrainians are getting stronger but this strategic surprise might not be so successful twice. Russia may simply spread out behind more defensible lines and play for time and try to pressure negotiations while they have a decent hand. I doubt they press for more except in The east, and that's what they might attempt to bargain for.
It's going to be a battle of how much misery the Russians will suffer versus the Ukrainians resolve.
Also, Stalin went to his countryside Dachas many times and always came back. I think Putin has to be pretty nervous though.
Ukranian tractorist from Trostyanets describes how retreating Russian troops abandoned "a wealth of armor" incl. 3 T-80 "little tanks." He fixed 1 up & towed the 2 others. A few days later, the 93rd Brigade of the Ukranian Army came & took the 2. "I won't forgive them," he ends🤣 pic.twitter.com/qjLynKeq5S
— Elizabeth Tsurkov🌻 (@Elizrael) September 12, 2022
He's a farmer, not a military strategist. He wants his Russian trophies, is all. Finders-keepers and all that.BattleGrackle said:
Why TF would they allow him to keep the tank?
I understand his frustration, but if anyone needs it it's the uke military.
These could provide really good "decoys" with just a driver, they could make Russia believe an offensive was going one direction. If they could just park them and the Russians don't know if they are manned or not.
javajaws said:But Russia still holds significant Ukraine land. I think this current offensive has taken back, what, less than 10% of what they have lost so far (not including Crimea)? Anybody have a better estimate?Waffledynamics said:Bag said:
so, does anyone have a succinct current status of the overall war? its hard to understand who is winning at this point/
Russia's getting their asses handed to them at the moment. Ukraine just took back a lot of land in the Northeast and is threatening the South.
A new🗺️from @TheStudyofWar and @criticalthreats depicts total liberated Ukrainian territory as of September 11, 2022.#Ukraine has liberated over 60,000 square km of territory since the Russians began retreating from around Kyiv in early April. Quick🧵below. pic.twitter.com/bORyqNNHWY
— ISW (@TheStudyofWar) September 12, 2022
My bad, I should have been more precise...I meant 10% of what Russia had held a couple weeks ago...not from the beginning of the war or from Russia's maximal gains sometime between then and now.Fitch said:javajaws said:But Russia still holds significant Ukraine land. I think this current offensive has taken back, what, less than 10% of what they have lost so far (not including Crimea)? Anybody have a better estimate?Waffledynamics said:Bag said:
so, does anyone have a succinct current status of the overall war? its hard to understand who is winning at this point/
Russia's getting their asses handed to them at the moment. Ukraine just took back a lot of land in the Northeast and is threatening the South.A new🗺️from @TheStudyofWar and @criticalthreats depicts total liberated Ukrainian territory as of September 11, 2022.#Ukraine has liberated over 60,000 square km of territory since the Russians began retreating from around Kyiv in early April. Quick🧵below. pic.twitter.com/bORyqNNHWY
— ISW (@TheStudyofWar) September 12, 2022
Unconfirmed, but am now hearing that Ukraine has captured "more than one" Russian general.
— Michael Weiss 🌻🇺🇸🇮🇪 (@michaeldweiss) September 12, 2022
Never in a million years did I think 7 months later we'd see Belgorod become a frontline city... https://t.co/CcCIjeDwxD
— The Intel Crab (@IntelCrab) September 12, 2022