Today's SITREP.
A drone apparently attacked the #Kursk airport a short while ago.#Russia #Курск pic.twitter.com/utdicSPsN7
— Pierre Davide Borrelli (@PierreDBorrelli) December 6, 2022
AlaskanAg99 said:
https://www.businessinsider.com/russias-inability-to-protect-its-airbases-from-attack-is-baffling-2022-12
"In a statement on Monday, the Russian Ministry of Defense asserted that attacks were carried out on its Engels and Dyagilevo air bases each home to nuclear-capable strategic bombers far from the front lines in Ukraine, killing three soldiers and damaging some aircraft. Those attacks, it claimed, were carried out with "Soviet-era" unmanned aerial vehicles.
...
Some observers believe the Russian defense ministry may have been referencing the Tu-141 reconnaissance drone that was first built in the 1970s. In March, one of these drones, armed with a bomb, crashed in Croatia. Neither Ukraine nor Russia claimed it was theirs, but the incident showed the craft is still being used today."
Looks like a V2 Nazi rocket.
I think a strike on RU nodes for every strike on UK nodes (night of missile attack) would not hazard the support from the West. Just a 1 for 1 and the world would call it restrained.AgBank said:
Good point on S300 rockets.
Ukraine can win this war with support from the West. If they hit too many "civilian" targets in Russia (grid node), it will be harder to raise money.
Quote:
. . .
A drone attack on Tuesday struck near an air base in Russia, a local official said, a day after Ukraine used drones to hit two military bases deep inside the country in one of its most brazen attacks in the nine-month war. If Ukraine's forces are confirmed to have been involved in the latest strike, it would add to signs that Kyiv is willing to bring the war closer to Moscow and to President Vladimir V. Putin.
Russian officials did not directly accuse Ukraine in Tuesday's attack, which hit an oil facility near an airfield in the Kursk region, 80 miles from the Ukrainian border. The regional governor said on Tuesday that a fire caused by the strike had been extinguished and that there were no injuries.
Ukraine's willingness to hit far inside Russia's border has altered the geography of the war, shown failures in Moscow's air defense systems and signaled Kyiv's determination that Russia pay a heavier price for its unrelenting assault on Ukraine's infrastructure. After Monday's drone strikes, Russia launched a volley of missiles at Ukraine that left half of the capital region of Kyiv without electricity and worsened rolling power outages across the country. Many Ukrainians have been without heat and water in frigid temperatures.
Monday's attacks struck two military installations hundreds of miles inside the Russian border the Engels airfield and the Dyagilevo military base according to Russia's Defense Ministry and a senior Ukrainian official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to convey sensitive information. The drones were launched from Ukrainian territory, and in at least one of the strikes Ukrainian special forces working near the base helped guide the drones to the target, the senior official said.
Ukraine has not explicitly claimed responsibility for those strikes, as is its practice regarding military actions inside Russia. Yurii Ihnat, a spokesman for the Ukrainian Air Force, said that the damage to the airfield at Engels appeared minimal. "But it is an alarming signal for them," he said on Ukrainian national television.
. . .
Mick Ryan, a retired Australian Army officer, wrote on the Substack blogging platform that the strikes indicated how Ukraine "is now taking the fight to Putin."
. . .
He said the strikes also carried symbolic import, with a strike so close to Moscow Dyagilevo lies about 100 miles from the Russian capital delivering "a psychological blow" to Russian people "who thought they were largely insulated from the effects of the war."
The British military said on Tuesday that if Russia believed that the strikes were deliberate, "it will probably consider them as some of the most strategically significant failures of force protection since its invasion of Ukraine." Russian war commentators have intensified criticism of their country's military command, with some calling for urgent measures to strengthen defense around strategic facilities.
. . .
The Doolittle raid did not have any real military impact, but the psychological impact on the Japanese was worth the effort. It was also good for the American's morale to be able to hit the Japanese home islands. These may be intended to have the same impact.Eliminatus said:
In a sane military and government, it would force the dispersion of forces to cover the now extremely obvious weaknesses of interior infrastructure. Thereby thinning the force concentration available at the front. It's one of the more critical and successful roles of SF and partisans, tying down larger forces.
Tactically, these strikes are probably mere pin*****s really but strategically these are huge IMO. It will force the Russians to react and getting the enemy to react to your moves is always a benefit. Assuming the Russians actually try to do something that is. Normally it would be a no brainer but ya know…..Russians.
Tank convoy #Starobilsk, Luhansk Oblast @Geoconfirmed 49.273288, 38.899659 pic.twitter.com/zkEHnuHHLa
— Neonhandrail (@neonhandrail) December 6, 2022
⚡️Ukro drones hit fuel depot in Kursk pic.twitter.com/vc0VyBPyL9
— War Monitor (@WarMonitors) December 6, 2022
JB!98 said:The Doolittle raid did not have any real military impact, but the psychological impact on the Japanese was worth the effort. It was also good for the American's morale to be able to hit the Japanese home islands. These may be intended to have the same impact.Eliminatus said:
In a sane military and government, it would force the dispersion of forces to cover the now extremely obvious weaknesses of interior infrastructure. Thereby thinning the force concentration available at the front. It's one of the more critical and successful roles of SF and partisans, tying down larger forces.
Tactically, these strikes are probably mere pin*****s really but strategically these are huge IMO. It will force the Russians to react and getting the enemy to react to your moves is always a benefit. Assuming the Russians actually try to do something that is. Normally it would be a no brainer but ya know…..Russians.
SouthTex99 said:
Quite a bit of CO2 emission there.
I gave you a star but I think this will not play out as you suggest.Eliminatus said:JB!98 said:The Doolittle raid did not have any real military impact, but the psychological impact on the Japanese was worth the effort. It was also good for the American's morale to be able to hit the Japanese home islands. These may be intended to have the same impact.Eliminatus said:
In a sane military and government, it would force the dispersion of forces to cover the now extremely obvious weaknesses of interior infrastructure. Thereby thinning the force concentration available at the front. It's one of the more critical and successful roles of SF and partisans, tying down larger forces.
Tactically, these strikes are probably mere pin*****s really but strategically these are huge IMO. It will force the Russians to react and getting the enemy to react to your moves is always a benefit. Assuming the Russians actually try to do something that is. Normally it would be a no brainer but ya know…..Russians.
Exactly first thing I thought of as well.
Apparently the vast numbers of dead brothers, husbands, and sons is not moving the needle fast enough for the Russian people. Bring the war to their doorstep. Make it REAL for them. So easy to live in your bubble when nothing is there to pierce it. At this point I think most of us here realize that Putin is not going to back down. So other means of making the Russians stopping must be paramount. And the best one is to get the people to turn on the government. It's a win/win/win for all of us here and Ukraine obviously.
One can hope at least.
LMCane said:I gave you a star but I think this will not play out as you suggest.Eliminatus said:JB!98 said:The Doolittle raid did not have any real military impact, but the psychological impact on the Japanese was worth the effort. It was also good for the American's morale to be able to hit the Japanese home islands. These may be intended to have the same impact.Eliminatus said:
In a sane military and government, it would force the dispersion of forces to cover the now extremely obvious weaknesses of interior infrastructure. Thereby thinning the force concentration available at the front. It's one of the more critical and successful roles of SF and partisans, tying down larger forces.
Tactically, these strikes are probably mere pin*****s really but strategically these are huge IMO. It will force the Russians to react and getting the enemy to react to your moves is always a benefit. Assuming the Russians actually try to do something that is. Normally it would be a no brainer but ya know…..Russians.
Exactly first thing I thought of as well.
Apparently the vast numbers of dead brothers, husbands, and sons is not moving the needle fast enough for the Russian people. Bring the war to their doorstep. Make it REAL for them. So easy to live in your bubble when nothing is there to pierce it. At this point I think most of us here realize that Putin is not going to back down. So other means of making the Russians stopping must be paramount. And the best one is to get the people to turn on the government. It's a win/win/win for all of us here and Ukraine obviously.
One can hope at least.
Nazi bombing of London during the Blitz only hardened the British to keep fighting.
Allied bombing of Germany only strengthened the Nazi war effort from the part of the general population
Russian bombing of Ukraine is not bringing them to their knees.
why would pin***** explosions in Russia do anything to Putin? If anything, it gets even more of the ignoramuses to really believe that they are fighting NATO and fighting for the very existence of the Rodina.
People today are soft. Deprive Moscow, or even parts of the city, of power/heat and the people will start to protest. The Russian people feel isolated from the "war" and will start to actually take notice when they have no heat or electricity. So far, body bags haven't done much, since killed aren't from Moscow/St. Petersburg, but a few cold nights in some dachas will change some mindsEliminatus said:LMCane said:I gave you a star but I think this will not play out as you suggest.Eliminatus said:JB!98 said:The Doolittle raid did not have any real military impact, but the psychological impact on the Japanese was worth the effort. It was also good for the American's morale to be able to hit the Japanese home islands. These may be intended to have the same impact.Eliminatus said:
In a sane military and government, it would force the dispersion of forces to cover the now extremely obvious weaknesses of interior infrastructure. Thereby thinning the force concentration available at the front. It's one of the more critical and successful roles of SF and partisans, tying down larger forces.
Tactically, these strikes are probably mere pin*****s really but strategically these are huge IMO. It will force the Russians to react and getting the enemy to react to your moves is always a benefit. Assuming the Russians actually try to do something that is. Normally it would be a no brainer but ya know…..Russians.
Exactly first thing I thought of as well.
Apparently the vast numbers of dead brothers, husbands, and sons is not moving the needle fast enough for the Russian people. Bring the war to their doorstep. Make it REAL for them. So easy to live in your bubble when nothing is there to pierce it. At this point I think most of us here realize that Putin is not going to back down. So other means of making the Russians stopping must be paramount. And the best one is to get the people to turn on the government. It's a win/win/win for all of us here and Ukraine obviously.
One can hope at least.
Nazi bombing of London during the Blitz only hardened the British to keep fighting.
Allied bombing of Germany only strengthened the Nazi war effort from the part of the general population
Russian bombing of Ukraine is not bringing them to their knees.
why would pin***** explosions in Russia do anything to Putin? If anything, it gets even more of the ignoramuses to really believe that they are fighting NATO and fighting for the very existence of the Rodina.
Aye. I agree actually. That's why I said one can hope. I don't actually believe it myself tbh.
Do stand firm on the Putin not stopping though. So how else does this war end? Militarily? Best option probably and the Ukes have punched back harder than the vast majority of us expected. Russia may very will collapse on the battlefield. Already lots of signs and cracks seen on the micro scale. Will it be enough to make a difference on the political front or will new waves of peasants just be rushed up? Political intervention is my next best bet I think. And internal strife makes the most sense to me on paper. But we shall just have to see I guess.
I will also say that the upcoming deep freezes is REALLY going to test Russia. More than the Ukes. Equipment is key of course but just as equal is discipline and resolve to operate in sub zero temps. And we have all seen a shocking lack of that from the Russians. On paper, the weather may be the force multiplier the Ukes have been looking for since HIMARS.
If the Ukrainian military can start and sustain a large winter offensive, the Russian forces will definitely collapse. The RU in Ukraine are not prepared or supplied for a winter war.Eliminatus said:LMCane said:I gave you a star but I think this will not play out as you suggest.Eliminatus said:JB!98 said:The Doolittle raid did not have any real military impact, but the psychological impact on the Japanese was worth the effort. It was also good for the American's morale to be able to hit the Japanese home islands. These may be intended to have the same impact.Eliminatus said:
In a sane military and government, it would force the dispersion of forces to cover the now extremely obvious weaknesses of interior infrastructure. Thereby thinning the force concentration available at the front. It's one of the more critical and successful roles of SF and partisans, tying down larger forces.
Tactically, these strikes are probably mere pin*****s really but strategically these are huge IMO. It will force the Russians to react and getting the enemy to react to your moves is always a benefit. Assuming the Russians actually try to do something that is. Normally it would be a no brainer but ya know…..Russians.
Exactly first thing I thought of as well.
Apparently the vast numbers of dead brothers, husbands, and sons is not moving the needle fast enough for the Russian people. Bring the war to their doorstep. Make it REAL for them. So easy to live in your bubble when nothing is there to pierce it. At this point I think most of us here realize that Putin is not going to back down. So other means of making the Russians stopping must be paramount. And the best one is to get the people to turn on the government. It's a win/win/win for all of us here and Ukraine obviously.
One can hope at least.
Nazi bombing of London during the Blitz only hardened the British to keep fighting.
Allied bombing of Germany only strengthened the Nazi war effort from the part of the general population
Russian bombing of Ukraine is not bringing them to their knees.
why would pin***** explosions in Russia do anything to Putin? If anything, it gets even more of the ignoramuses to really believe that they are fighting NATO and fighting for the very existence of the Rodina.
Aye. I agree actually. That's why I said one can hope. I don't actually believe it myself tbh.
Do stand firm on the Putin not stopping though. So how else does this war end? Militarily? Best option probably and the Ukes have punched back harder than the vast majority of us expected. Russia may very will collapse on the battlefield. Already lots of signs and cracks seen on the micro scale. Will it be enough to make a difference on the political front or will new waves of peasants just be rushed up? Political intervention is my next best bet I think. And internal strife makes the most sense to me on paper. But we shall just have to see I guess.
I will also say that the upcoming deep freezes is REALLY going to test Russia. More than the Ukes. Equipment is key of course but just as equal is discipline and resolve to operate in sub zero temps. And we have all seen a shocking lack of that from the Russians. On paper, the weather may be the force multiplier the Ukes have been looking for since HIMARS.
If the Ukrainians can mount a winter offensive on the left bank of the Dnipro, moving towards the coast of the Sea of Azov, I could see the Russian forces there folding tents and going "as far South as South goes" to steal a line from Game of Thrones, or lots of conscripts surrendering. Hard to see ill equipped Russian units standing and fighting if their supply lines are threatened.DCPD158 said:If the Ukrainian military can start and sustain a large winter offensive, the Russian forces will definitely collapse. The RU in Ukraine are not prepared or supplied for a winter war.Eliminatus said:LMCane said:I gave you a star but I think this will not play out as you suggest.Eliminatus said:JB!98 said:The Doolittle raid did not have any real military impact, but the psychological impact on the Japanese was worth the effort. It was also good for the American's morale to be able to hit the Japanese home islands. These may be intended to have the same impact.Eliminatus said:
In a sane military and government, it would force the dispersion of forces to cover the now extremely obvious weaknesses of interior infrastructure. Thereby thinning the force concentration available at the front. It's one of the more critical and successful roles of SF and partisans, tying down larger forces.
Tactically, these strikes are probably mere pin*****s really but strategically these are huge IMO. It will force the Russians to react and getting the enemy to react to your moves is always a benefit. Assuming the Russians actually try to do something that is. Normally it would be a no brainer but ya know…..Russians.
Exactly first thing I thought of as well.
Apparently the vast numbers of dead brothers, husbands, and sons is not moving the needle fast enough for the Russian people. Bring the war to their doorstep. Make it REAL for them. So easy to live in your bubble when nothing is there to pierce it. At this point I think most of us here realize that Putin is not going to back down. So other means of making the Russians stopping must be paramount. And the best one is to get the people to turn on the government. It's a win/win/win for all of us here and Ukraine obviously.
One can hope at least.
Nazi bombing of London during the Blitz only hardened the British to keep fighting.
Allied bombing of Germany only strengthened the Nazi war effort from the part of the general population
Russian bombing of Ukraine is not bringing them to their knees.
why would pin***** explosions in Russia do anything to Putin? If anything, it gets even more of the ignoramuses to really believe that they are fighting NATO and fighting for the very existence of the Rodina.
Aye. I agree actually. That's why I said one can hope. I don't actually believe it myself tbh.
Do stand firm on the Putin not stopping though. So how else does this war end? Militarily? Best option probably and the Ukes have punched back harder than the vast majority of us expected. Russia may very will collapse on the battlefield. Already lots of signs and cracks seen on the micro scale. Will it be enough to make a difference on the political front or will new waves of peasants just be rushed up? Political intervention is my next best bet I think. And internal strife makes the most sense to me on paper. But we shall just have to see I guess.
I will also say that the upcoming deep freezes is REALLY going to test Russia. More than the Ukes. Equipment is key of course but just as equal is discipline and resolve to operate in sub zero temps. And we have all seen a shocking lack of that from the Russians. On paper, the weather may be the force multiplier the Ukes have been looking for since HIMARS.
I would hold in the south and move enough troops to the east to crush the Wagner Group. Without the "high profile" group of bandits, thieves and prima-donnas, that sector collapses. Do that and drive south to Mariupol. Crush a symbol of Russian might and take back a Ukrainian symbol of pride.twk said:If the Ukrainians can mount a winter offensive on the left bank of the Dnipro, moving towards the coast of the Sea of Azov, I could see the Russian forces there folding tents and going "as far South as South goes" to steal a line from Game of Thrones, or lots of conscripts surrendering. Hard to see ill equipped Russian units standing and fighting if their supply lines are threatened.DCPD158 said:If the Ukrainian military can start and sustain a large winter offensive, the Russian forces will definitely collapse. The RU in Ukraine are not prepared or supplied for a winter war.Eliminatus said:LMCane said:I gave you a star but I think this will not play out as you suggest.Eliminatus said:JB!98 said:The Doolittle raid did not have any real military impact, but the psychological impact on the Japanese was worth the effort. It was also good for the American's morale to be able to hit the Japanese home islands. These may be intended to have the same impact.Eliminatus said:
In a sane military and government, it would force the dispersion of forces to cover the now extremely obvious weaknesses of interior infrastructure. Thereby thinning the force concentration available at the front. It's one of the more critical and successful roles of SF and partisans, tying down larger forces.
Tactically, these strikes are probably mere pin*****s really but strategically these are huge IMO. It will force the Russians to react and getting the enemy to react to your moves is always a benefit. Assuming the Russians actually try to do something that is. Normally it would be a no brainer but ya know…..Russians.
Exactly first thing I thought of as well.
Apparently the vast numbers of dead brothers, husbands, and sons is not moving the needle fast enough for the Russian people. Bring the war to their doorstep. Make it REAL for them. So easy to live in your bubble when nothing is there to pierce it. At this point I think most of us here realize that Putin is not going to back down. So other means of making the Russians stopping must be paramount. And the best one is to get the people to turn on the government. It's a win/win/win for all of us here and Ukraine obviously.
One can hope at least.
Nazi bombing of London during the Blitz only hardened the British to keep fighting.
Allied bombing of Germany only strengthened the Nazi war effort from the part of the general population
Russian bombing of Ukraine is not bringing them to their knees.
why would pin***** explosions in Russia do anything to Putin? If anything, it gets even more of the ignoramuses to really believe that they are fighting NATO and fighting for the very existence of the Rodina.
Aye. I agree actually. That's why I said one can hope. I don't actually believe it myself tbh.
Do stand firm on the Putin not stopping though. So how else does this war end? Militarily? Best option probably and the Ukes have punched back harder than the vast majority of us expected. Russia may very will collapse on the battlefield. Already lots of signs and cracks seen on the micro scale. Will it be enough to make a difference on the political front or will new waves of peasants just be rushed up? Political intervention is my next best bet I think. And internal strife makes the most sense to me on paper. But we shall just have to see I guess.
I will also say that the upcoming deep freezes is REALLY going to test Russia. More than the Ukes. Equipment is key of course but just as equal is discipline and resolve to operate in sub zero temps. And we have all seen a shocking lack of that from the Russians. On paper, the weather may be the force multiplier the Ukes have been looking for since HIMARS.
The Russians have short, defensible supply lines in the East. On the other hand, they have a very long and very vulnerable supply line in the south. If you cut their road access from the East by driving to the coast, their entire position to the west of such a penetration would become just about untenable, including Crimea. Expelling the Russians from Crimea, or pushing them back to a small pocket around Sevastopol, would signal a cataclysmic defeat to a Russian population that, so far, is only marginally concerned by the lack of success in this operation.DCPD158 said:I would hold in the south and move enough troops to the east to crush the Wagner Group. Without the "high profile" group of bandits, thieves and prima-donnas, that sector collapses. Do that and drive south to Mariupol. Crush a symbol of Russian might and take back a Ukrainian symbol of pride.twk said:If the Ukrainians can mount a winter offensive on the left bank of the Dnipro, moving towards the coast of the Sea of Azov, I could see the Russian forces there folding tents and going "as far South as South goes" to steal a line from Game of Thrones, or lots of conscripts surrendering. Hard to see ill equipped Russian units standing and fighting if their supply lines are threatened.DCPD158 said:If the Ukrainian military can start and sustain a large winter offensive, the Russian forces will definitely collapse. The RU in Ukraine are not prepared or supplied for a winter war.Eliminatus said:LMCane said:I gave you a star but I think this will not play out as you suggest.Eliminatus said:JB!98 said:The Doolittle raid did not have any real military impact, but the psychological impact on the Japanese was worth the effort. It was also good for the American's morale to be able to hit the Japanese home islands. These may be intended to have the same impact.Eliminatus said:
In a sane military and government, it would force the dispersion of forces to cover the now extremely obvious weaknesses of interior infrastructure. Thereby thinning the force concentration available at the front. It's one of the more critical and successful roles of SF and partisans, tying down larger forces.
Tactically, these strikes are probably mere pin*****s really but strategically these are huge IMO. It will force the Russians to react and getting the enemy to react to your moves is always a benefit. Assuming the Russians actually try to do something that is. Normally it would be a no brainer but ya know…..Russians.
Exactly first thing I thought of as well.
Apparently the vast numbers of dead brothers, husbands, and sons is not moving the needle fast enough for the Russian people. Bring the war to their doorstep. Make it REAL for them. So easy to live in your bubble when nothing is there to pierce it. At this point I think most of us here realize that Putin is not going to back down. So other means of making the Russians stopping must be paramount. And the best one is to get the people to turn on the government. It's a win/win/win for all of us here and Ukraine obviously.
One can hope at least.
Nazi bombing of London during the Blitz only hardened the British to keep fighting.
Allied bombing of Germany only strengthened the Nazi war effort from the part of the general population
Russian bombing of Ukraine is not bringing them to their knees.
why would pin***** explosions in Russia do anything to Putin? If anything, it gets even more of the ignoramuses to really believe that they are fighting NATO and fighting for the very existence of the Rodina.
Aye. I agree actually. That's why I said one can hope. I don't actually believe it myself tbh.
Do stand firm on the Putin not stopping though. So how else does this war end? Militarily? Best option probably and the Ukes have punched back harder than the vast majority of us expected. Russia may very will collapse on the battlefield. Already lots of signs and cracks seen on the micro scale. Will it be enough to make a difference on the political front or will new waves of peasants just be rushed up? Political intervention is my next best bet I think. And internal strife makes the most sense to me on paper. But we shall just have to see I guess.
I will also say that the upcoming deep freezes is REALLY going to test Russia. More than the Ukes. Equipment is key of course but just as equal is discipline and resolve to operate in sub zero temps. And we have all seen a shocking lack of that from the Russians. On paper, the weather may be the force multiplier the Ukes have been looking for since HIMARS.
Actually, looks like a Nazi V1, not V2. V2 was a true ballistic missile powered by a rocket engine. The above picture is like the V1, which was a jet powered cruise missile, with short wings.AlaskanAg99 said:
https://www.businessinsider.com/russias-inability-to-protect-its-airbases-from-attack-is-baffling-2022-12
"In a statement on Monday, the Russian Ministry of Defense asserted that attacks were carried out on its Engels and Dyagilevo air bases each home to nuclear-capable strategic bombers far from the front lines in Ukraine, killing three soldiers and damaging some aircraft. Those attacks, it claimed, were carried out with "Soviet-era" unmanned aerial vehicles.
...
Some observers believe the Russian defense ministry may have been referencing the Tu-141 reconnaissance drone that was first built in the 1970s. In March, one of these drones, armed with a bomb, crashed in Croatia. Neither Ukraine nor Russia claimed it was theirs, but the incident showed the craft is still being used today."
Looks like a V2 Nazi rocket.
It is some of the most impressive airmanship you can watch to see the British Spitfire pilots flying up to a V1 and flipping it with their wing to cause it to spiral out of control. Why waste bullets when you can tip them!lotoarmy said:Actually, looks like a Nazi V1, not V2. V2 was a true ballistic missile powered by a rocket engine. The above picture is like the V1, which was a jet powered cruise missile, with short wings.AlaskanAg99 said:
https://www.businessinsider.com/russias-inability-to-protect-its-airbases-from-attack-is-baffling-2022-12
"In a statement on Monday, the Russian Ministry of Defense asserted that attacks were carried out on its Engels and Dyagilevo air bases each home to nuclear-capable strategic bombers far from the front lines in Ukraine, killing three soldiers and damaging some aircraft. Those attacks, it claimed, were carried out with "Soviet-era" unmanned aerial vehicles.
...
Some observers believe the Russian defense ministry may have been referencing the Tu-141 reconnaissance drone that was first built in the 1970s. In March, one of these drones, armed with a bomb, crashed in Croatia. Neither Ukraine nor Russia claimed it was theirs, but the incident showed the craft is still being used today."
Looks like a V2 Nazi rocket.
Any links to videos of the above? Would love to see them if you doQuote:
It is some of the most impressive airmanship you can watch to see the British Spitfire pilots flying up to a V1 and flipping it with their wing to cause it to spiral out of control. Why waste bullets when you can tip them!
I just saw this but I am headed to bed. I know that I have seen them on WWII documentaries so I figure they are on youtube. I will look into that tomorrow.agent-maroon said:Any links to videos of the above? Would love to see them if you doQuote:
It is some of the most impressive airmanship you can watch to see the British Spitfire pilots flying up to a V1 and flipping it with their wing to cause it to spiral out of control. Why waste bullets when you can tip them!
To me, the big question is, can the Ukrainians mount a substantial winter offensive? I'm somewhat skeptical about that, as I imagine the Russians are. My guess is that the Russian's immediate concern is not having their men freeze to death, more than a winter offensive. But, if a credible winter offensive happens, any Russian that can read a map who finds himself west of such a penetration is going to start thinking about survival.lb sand said:
If the Ukrainians can mount a winter offensive on the left bank of the Dnipro, moving towards the coast of the Sea of Azov, I could see the Russian forces there folding tents and going "as far South as South goes" to steal a line from Game of Thrones, or lots of conscripts surrendering. Hard to see ill equipped Russian units standing and fighting if their supply lines are threatened.
I appreciate your conviction and hope you are correct.