FriscoKid said:
baron_von_awesome said:
FriscoKid said:
You think it's impossible for there to be 40k-50k Russians that have been killed, wounded (and not fighting), surrendered, or went AWOL? I don't understand your pro-Russia ideas here. By all accounts they are taking heavy losses and you think the only thing that can be done is for Ukraine to surrender.
10K killed is not an unreasonable number. At 3x more wounded I don't think the 40-50k number is impossible.
Yes I think its too high, its higher than the US death rate in WWII per month.
Russia has lost 1259 pieces of equipment so far. That's not a small number.
https://www.oryxspioenkop.com/2022/02/attack-on-europe-documenting-equipment.html
The above site documents the losses with pictures. (unless you think they are just photo shopping this and it's all fake)
I think that one of the reasons why you're not seeing major gains in the last week is beyond supply and communication problems. I think part of it is that the Russians have incurred losses approaching 40k. I estimate about 20-25% of their forces have been KIA/WIA/MIA/Captured and essential ground equipment (tanks, IFV, AFV, APC) have been destroyed. That doesn't hurt their artillery as much, and while a good bit of their supply chain has been damaged and hurt, they're supplementing with civilian equipment. The Ukes are doing something similar and it wouldn't surprise me if the Ukrainians have lost 30k men to the same. Doesn't include civilian/partisan casualties. Based on the destruction we're seeing in Kharkiv, outside Kyiv and inside Mariupol... maybe 100k plus dead, wounded, missing, captured Ukrainian military and civvies.
So yes, the Russians probably reached the edge of their initial supply train which appears to be about 90 miles. They need to rebuild new forward dumps and depots and reorganize combat groups for losses and reposition units. They are not done, or beat or even behind on their heals. I would say they still have the initiative and it's uncertain if the Ukes will ever reclaim it. I'm shocked the Ukes haven't thrown more volunteers directly into the fight. From what I can tell they are trying to get them at least a few weeks training. That will pay off in spades if the Ukes can either gain enough time or the Russians give it to them. But I wouldn't expect great gains in Uke counter attacks near artillery or any great strategic sense. Not any time soon anyhow.
But the Russians by doctrine and political need should have been pushing harder. That they're not implies problems beyond supply chain and probably more due to combat losses. The fact that so many mid grade field officers and above (Major and up) have gotten clipped is probably due to having to fight forward with some of these dwindling units. Solid indications that between 30-40 BTG have either been destroyed or can no longer function due to losses. That's quite a bit. Quite a bit of striking power is also at the far end of these supply lines that may be maxed out. So we probably should expect some movement this week after the operational pause to build rudimentary depots up and bring more of their initial group up. The Russian army is also heavier on trigger pullers than we are so their logistical train losses hurt more but if they have gotten knocked around badly then what's happening in the field makes sense at those loss levels.