Russian occupiers, who seized Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, mined off the coast of Kakhovka Reservoir bordering the nuclear power plant.–Energoatom, 16:30 EEThttps://t.co/6qDRKu7w9C pic.twitter.com/F4s1YWGVrV
— Euromaidan Press (@EuromaidanPress) March 10, 2022
This looks like to me that Yuri and the rest of the drivers got 3/4 of the way to their mission target, dumped their cargoes in the ditch , loitered, then did a 180 back. Returned to storage facility, reported all good arrived safely.ATX_AG_08 said:I heard #Russia faces difficulties supplying its own troops. It seems they are, however, pretty good at supplying Ukrainian forces with all the ammo they need 👌 pic.twitter.com/Fv2bhbkBuh
— Michael A. Horowitz (@michaelh992) March 10, 2022
I probably should have said disrupted instead of cutting off. Cause enough havoc to make vehicles run out of gas, and troops to go hungry. Enough disruption to potentially kill morale, and make a long term siege difficult. I'm curious if we'd be ballsy enough to pull a Berlin Airlift, and drop food into Kyev to keep the local population fed. Iffy on how Russia would react.RebelE Infantry said:mickeyrig06sq3 said:And if Ukraine is cutting off the same supply lines to the encircling forces, they're going to experience the same thing. Up to this point, they've been pretty good at doing that. Russia's zone of control between the border and Kyev isn't the best.benchmark said:Most likely scenario IMO ... Russia will surround and cut off both Kiev and Odessa from resupply. Fast forward 3-4 weeks and both cities are humanitarian disasters and everything east of the Dnieper and along the coast are consolidated and effectively under Russian control. Russian supply lines are then mostly re-established.David Wallace said:
The Russian forces might be able to surround Kiev, but I don't see how they maintain it.
As we have seen, the Ukrainians have had successful counter-attacks to retake positions lost.
I think its more probable that the Russian forces get their supply chain cut off and they slowly get eliminated.
Yes, there will still be an ongoing active resistance but nothing that threatens their grip. This is when Russia's negotiating leverage will be at it's peak.
I think Ukraine is harassing supply lines instead of cutting them off proper. To actually cut off supply lines you need maneuver elements to take and hold roads and bridges or have total air superiority. They have neither.
Still causes a lot of headaches for the Russians though.
Ukraine has to maintain their position of a purely defensive victim. The moral high ground. It's why they're releasing all of the POW interviews and have that hotline. Hard to paint the enemy as a bunch of morally corrupt Nazis if they maintain that public image.aggiehawg said:
Assuming that is true, seems it would be a lot easier to get special forces saboteurs into Russia and Belarus to wreak havoc behind their lines.
A) No we are not that ballsy and you are talking feeding 750,000 minimum. B) Russians would shoot at those aircraft.mickeyrig06sq3 said:I probably should have said disrupted instead of cutting off. Cause enough havoc to make vehicles run out of gas, and troops to go hungry. Enough disruption to potentially kill morale, and make a long term siege difficult. I'm curious if we'd be ballsy enough to pull a Berlin Airlift, and drop food into Kyev to keep the local population fed. Iffy on how Russia would react.RebelE Infantry said:mickeyrig06sq3 said:And if Ukraine is cutting off the same supply lines to the encircling forces, they're going to experience the same thing. Up to this point, they've been pretty good at doing that. Russia's zone of control between the border and Kyev isn't the best.benchmark said:Most likely scenario IMO ... Russia will surround and cut off both Kiev and Odessa from resupply. Fast forward 3-4 weeks and both cities are humanitarian disasters and everything east of the Dnieper and along the coast are consolidated and effectively under Russian control. Russian supply lines are then mostly re-established.David Wallace said:
The Russian forces might be able to surround Kiev, but I don't see how they maintain it.
As we have seen, the Ukrainians have had successful counter-attacks to retake positions lost.
I think its more probable that the Russian forces get their supply chain cut off and they slowly get eliminated.
Yes, there will still be an ongoing active resistance but nothing that threatens their grip. This is when Russia's negotiating leverage will be at it's peak.
I think Ukraine is harassing supply lines instead of cutting them off proper. To actually cut off supply lines you need maneuver elements to take and hold roads and bridges or have total air superiority. They have neither.
Still causes a lot of headaches for the Russians though.
aezmvp said:
Worth a separate post. I think it would be time to start withdrawing and countering from that kessel/cauldron in the extreme Southeast and NW of Kyiv. Leave lots of partisans but those areas are going to be cut off and surrounded in the next 48 hours.
The (B) is the ballsy part. You're definitely not going to send in a bunch of C-17's unescorted. It's not a full no fly zone, but you'd have to enforce protection. With Russia controlling their internal narrative, if they were to attempt a shoot down, we hit their air defense sites, and then it potentially becomes a "US has entered the conflict, gloves are off" moment.aezmvp said:A) No we are not that ballsy and you are talking feeding 750,000 minimum. B) Russians would shoot at those aircraft.mickeyrig06sq3 said:I probably should have said disrupted instead of cutting off. Cause enough havoc to make vehicles run out of gas, and troops to go hungry. Enough disruption to potentially kill morale, and make a long term siege difficult. I'm curious if we'd be ballsy enough to pull a Berlin Airlift, and drop food into Kyev to keep the local population fed. Iffy on how Russia would react.RebelE Infantry said:mickeyrig06sq3 said:And if Ukraine is cutting off the same supply lines to the encircling forces, they're going to experience the same thing. Up to this point, they've been pretty good at doing that. Russia's zone of control between the border and Kyev isn't the best.benchmark said:Most likely scenario IMO ... Russia will surround and cut off both Kiev and Odessa from resupply. Fast forward 3-4 weeks and both cities are humanitarian disasters and everything east of the Dnieper and along the coast are consolidated and effectively under Russian control. Russian supply lines are then mostly re-established.David Wallace said:
The Russian forces might be able to surround Kiev, but I don't see how they maintain it.
As we have seen, the Ukrainians have had successful counter-attacks to retake positions lost.
I think its more probable that the Russian forces get their supply chain cut off and they slowly get eliminated.
Yes, there will still be an ongoing active resistance but nothing that threatens their grip. This is when Russia's negotiating leverage will be at it's peak.
I think Ukraine is harassing supply lines instead of cutting them off proper. To actually cut off supply lines you need maneuver elements to take and hold roads and bridges or have total air superiority. They have neither.
Still causes a lot of headaches for the Russians though.
"#Ukraine will accept #Russia's surrender with understanding" - Ukrainian Defense Minister Alexey Reznikov pic.twitter.com/fn1z501oP9
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) March 10, 2022
This is a very big impact as the Iskander is high up on the high value target list and will mitigate Russia’s capability to conduct strikes throughout Ukraine. If things like this continue Russia will have to start shifting to air assets for targets out of range of MLRS. https://t.co/CKR5j8011h
— The Intel Hub (@The_IntelHub) March 10, 2022
92AG10 said:maverick2076 said:Rossticus said:If the Russians actually use chemical weapons against the Ukrainian civilian population it would produce catastrophic lethality. Chemical munitions not effective against equipped US troops. Terrible impact on civilians. Predict we would enter the war.
— Barry R McCaffrey (@mccaffreyr3) March 10, 2022
He is significantly underestimating the negative impact of chemical weapons on equipped troops.
He is a retired US Army 4 star that commanded an infantry division in Desert Storm.
Of course, it depends on the chemical…..but even basic military equipment is better than an unprotected civilian.
Hold. That. Line. #Ukraine #Putin #WarCrimes https://t.co/ds7S3yq2pg
— Slava Ukraine 🇺🇦 (@lives_ukraine) March 10, 2022
From what I've seen with Russian OPSEC I don't think those lines will be very tight for at least a day or two. Just IMO.RebelE Infantry said:aezmvp said:
Worth a separate post. I think it would be time to start withdrawing and countering from that kessel/cauldron in the extreme Southeast and NW of Kyiv. Leave lots of partisans but those areas are going to be cut off and surrounded in the next 48 hours.
Very good point. That they haven't yet may suggest degradation in the Ukrainian C&C capabilities. By the end of the day it may be too late.
We are not going to get away with sending "Humanitarian aid." in with air drops or supply runs to contested air fields with air cover unmolested. If you put combat aircraft into that airspace it will be tantamount to declaring war. You would be far better off saying you're putting a no-fly zone west of the Dnieper. That's more feasible and my guess on the actual feasibility is zero. Russians will either shoot at our aircraft from ground or engage in dogfights and it will get nasty quick.mickeyrig06sq3 said:The (B) is the ballsy part. You're definitely not going to send in a bunch of C-17's unescorted. It's not a full no fly zone, but you'd have to enforce protection. With Russia controlling their internal narrative, if they were to attempt a shoot down, we hit their air defense sites, and then it potentially becomes a "US has entered the conflict, gloves are off" moment.aezmvp said:A) No we are not that ballsy and you are talking feeding 750,000 minimum. B) Russians would shoot at those aircraft.mickeyrig06sq3 said:I probably should have said disrupted instead of cutting off. Cause enough havoc to make vehicles run out of gas, and troops to go hungry. Enough disruption to potentially kill morale, and make a long term siege difficult. I'm curious if we'd be ballsy enough to pull a Berlin Airlift, and drop food into Kyev to keep the local population fed. Iffy on how Russia would react.RebelE Infantry said:mickeyrig06sq3 said:And if Ukraine is cutting off the same supply lines to the encircling forces, they're going to experience the same thing. Up to this point, they've been pretty good at doing that. Russia's zone of control between the border and Kyev isn't the best.benchmark said:Most likely scenario IMO ... Russia will surround and cut off both Kiev and Odessa from resupply. Fast forward 3-4 weeks and both cities are humanitarian disasters and everything east of the Dnieper and along the coast are consolidated and effectively under Russian control. Russian supply lines are then mostly re-established.David Wallace said:
The Russian forces might be able to surround Kiev, but I don't see how they maintain it.
As we have seen, the Ukrainians have had successful counter-attacks to retake positions lost.
I think its more probable that the Russian forces get their supply chain cut off and they slowly get eliminated.
Yes, there will still be an ongoing active resistance but nothing that threatens their grip. This is when Russia's negotiating leverage will be at it's peak.
I think Ukraine is harassing supply lines instead of cutting them off proper. To actually cut off supply lines you need maneuver elements to take and hold roads and bridges or have total air superiority. They have neither.
Still causes a lot of headaches for the Russians though.
aezmvp said:From what I've seen with Russian OPSEC I don't think those lines will be very tight for at least a day or two. Just IMO.RebelE Infantry said:aezmvp said:
Worth a separate post. I think it would be time to start withdrawing and countering from that kessel/cauldron in the extreme Southeast and NW of Kyiv. Leave lots of partisans but those areas are going to be cut off and surrounded in the next 48 hours.
Very good point. That they haven't yet may suggest degradation in the Ukrainian C&C capabilities. By the end of the day it may be too late.
I don't think that far yet. I wouldn't give up Kharkiv and the central part. I think you try and extract as many troops and weapons as you can and disperse volunteer partisans into the population while stashing weapons/ammo/comms for those partisans. Those lines and regular formations aren't failing yet else where. But that extreme SE group north of Mariupol and the group around Chernihiv. Depends on actual ground conditions up there as it is very sketchy what the Russians actually control up there. If I was territorial defense I would absolutely be trying to cut off that probe by Pryluky and bottle up that attack. If you could squeeze their schwerpunkte there you could free a good supply chain back to that pocket that isn't as vulnerable to the other side of Kyiv.RebelE Infantry said:aezmvp said:From what I've seen with Russian OPSEC I don't think those lines will be very tight for at least a day or two. Just IMO.RebelE Infantry said:aezmvp said:
Worth a separate post. I think it would be time to start withdrawing and countering from that kessel/cauldron in the extreme Southeast and NW of Kyiv. Leave lots of partisans but those areas are going to be cut off and surrounded in the next 48 hours.
Very good point. That they haven't yet may suggest degradation in the Ukrainian C&C capabilities. By the end of the day it may be too late.
You very well may be right. But the time to start the withdrawal is now and there's no sign of it. I figure they'd at least have to get to the West Bank of the Dnieper. That's a long way to go under fire.
Honestly with the Uke supply chain up and running still not much difference putting it in Poland atm. Later maybe.Ag In Ok said:
Had we started from the beginning it would have been like the Berlin airlift. This is something different and we don't have the leadership to pull it off diplomatically. I trust we can do it militarily, though we best not brag about it like Kabul. And not Mariupol - i think the Russians are grinding their axe there.
I also think that when they do close, it'll be like a sieve. Smaller units will probably be able to get through.aezmvp said:From what I've seen with Russian OPSEC I don't think those lines will be very tight for at least a day or two. Just IMO.RebelE Infantry said:aezmvp said:
Worth a separate post. I think it would be time to start withdrawing and countering from that kessel/cauldron in the extreme Southeast and NW of Kyiv. Leave lots of partisans but those areas are going to be cut off and surrounded in the next 48 hours.
Very good point. That they haven't yet may suggest degradation in the Ukrainian C&C capabilities. By the end of the day it may be too late.
Only the crispy remains of the upper torso on fire in that photo. jeez!Red Pear Realty said:
Google says $11m. Also, don't put "su-25" into the Twitter search unless you want to see a nasty image of that dead pilot.
Quote:Only the crispy remains of the upper torso on fire in that photo. jeez!Quote:
Google says $11m. Also, don't put "su-25" into the Twitter search unless you want to see a nasty image of that dead pilot.
More shots from the Ukrainian counterattack.#Ukraine #Ukraine pic.twitter.com/nHN3VsHNec
— BlueSauron👁️ (@Blue_Sauron) March 10, 2022
Video : Ukrainian troops during a firefight in todays counterattack in Kyiv Oblast.#Ukraine #Russia pic.twitter.com/QieeOf2ldE
— BlueSauron👁️ (@Blue_Sauron) March 10, 2022
“Get some, you bitch”
— Illia Ponomarenko 🇺🇦 (@IAPonomarenko) March 10, 2022
🇺🇦Kyiv region pic.twitter.com/fHKUSWsPh0
They want the Ukrainians to try to retake it so if anything goes boom and releases radiation, the Russians can scream and yell that the Ukrainians caused it.Teddy Perkins said:
Russia digging in at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant.Russian occupiers, who seized Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant, mined off the coast of Kakhovka Reservoir bordering the nuclear power plant.–Energoatom, 16:30 EEThttps://t.co/6qDRKu7w9C pic.twitter.com/F4s1YWGVrV
— Euromaidan Press (@EuromaidanPress) March 10, 2022
📽️Russian forces reportedly hit a gas pipeline near #Svitlodarsk #Ukraine #UkraineRussiaWar pic.twitter.com/xGrRSzK9IP
— MilitaryLand.net (@Militarylandnet) March 10, 2022