This will be the worst idea for Belarusians to attack Ukraine. They will burn as bright as the Russians. https://t.co/7rapXlzdZl
— Sergej Sumlenny (@sumlenny) March 19, 2022
This will be the worst idea for Belarusians to attack Ukraine. They will burn as bright as the Russians. https://t.co/7rapXlzdZl
— Sergej Sumlenny (@sumlenny) March 19, 2022
Possible use of the Tornado-S 9K515 ballute arrested guided missile documented in the Kyiv region pic.twitter.com/756MzIWj7z
— OSINTtechnical (@Osinttechnical) March 19, 2022
LinkQuote:
The Russian military continues to commit small groups of reinforcements to localized fighting rather than concentrating them to launch new large-scale operations. Russia continues to commit units drawn from its naval infantry from all fleets, likely because those units are relatively more combat-ready than rank-and-file Russian regiments and brigades. The naval infantry belonging to the Black Sea Fleet is likely the largest single pool of ready reserve forces the Russian military has not yet committed. Much of that naval infantry has likely been embarked on amphibious landing ships off the Odesa coast since early in the war, presumably ready to land near Odesa as soon as Russian forces from Crimea secured a reliable ground line of communication (GLOC) from Crimea to Odesa. The likelihood that Russian forces from Crimea will establish such a GLOC in the near future is becoming remote, however, and the Russian military has apparently begun using elements of the Black Sea Fleet naval infantry to reinforce efforts to take Mariupol.
The culmination of the initial Russian campaign is creating conditions of stalemate throughout most of Ukraine. Russian forces are digging in around the periphery of Kyiv and elsewhere, attempting to consolidate political control over areas they currently occupy, resupplying and attempting to reinforce units in static positions, and generally beginning to set conditions to hold in approximately their current forward positions for an indefinite time. Maxar imagery of Russian forces digging trenches and revetments in Kyiv Oblast over the past several days supports this assessment.[1] Comments by Duma members about forcing Ukraine to surrender by exhaustion in May could reflect a revised Russian approach to ending this conflict on terms favorable to Moscow.
Stalemate will likely be very violent and bloody, especially if it protracts. Stalemate is not armistice or ceasefire. It is a condition in war in which each side conducts offensive operations that do not fundamentally alter the situation. Those operations can be very damaging and cause enormous casualties. The World War I battles of the Somme, Verdun, and Passchendaele were all fought in conditions of stalemate and did not break the stalemate. If the war in Ukraine settles into a stalemate condition Russian forces will continue to bomb and bombard Ukrainian cities, devastating them and killing civilians, even as Ukrainian forces impose losses on Russian attackers and conduct counter-attacks of their own. The Russians could hope to break Ukrainians' will to continue fighting under such circumstances by demonstrating Kyiv's inability to expel Russian forces or stop their attacks even if the Russians are demonstrably unable to take Ukraine's cities. Ukraine's defeat of the initial Russian campaign may therefore set conditions for a devastating protraction of the conflict and a dangerous new period testing the resolve of Ukraine and the West. Continued and expanded Western support to Ukraine will be vital to seeing Ukraine through that new period.
Key Takeaways:
- We now assess that the initial Russian campaign to seize Ukraine's capital and major cities and force regime change has failed;
- Russian forces continue efforts to restore momentum to this culminated campaign, but those efforts will likely also fail;
- Russian troops will continue trying to advance to within effective artillery range of the center of Kyiv, but prospects for their success are unclear;
- The war will likely descend into a phase of bloody stalemate that could last for weeks or months;
- Russia will expand efforts to bombard Ukrainian civilians in order to break Ukrainians' will to continue fighting (at which the Russians will likely fail);
- The most dangerous current Russian advance is from Kherson north toward Kryvyi Rih in an effort to isolate Zaporizhiya and Dnipro from the west. Russian forces are unlikely to be able to surround or take Kryvyi Rih in the coming days, and may not be able to do so at all without massing much larger forces for the effort than they now have available on that axis;
- The Russians appear to have abandoned plans to attack Odesa at least in the near term.
Rossticus said:
If those guys didn't know well enough to disable ALL geolocation… just… unacceptable. Utter lack of professionalism and focus. Loose lips sink ships.
Ulysses90 said:Rossticus said:
If those guys didn't know well enough to disable ALL geolocation… just… unacceptable. Utter lack of professionalism and focus. Loose lips sink ships.
It would not have mattered if the geolocation was turned off and it would not have mattered if they were carrying a 2G Nokia 3310. The key piece of data was the phone number itself pinging a tower in the area of Yavoriv. The Russians either have access to the cell tower logs or (more likely) the have devices like the Stingray or Wolfhound in the area to spoof being a cell tower.
From the article:aggiehawg said:Quote:
………..
Link
As repeated throughout all discussions concerning this war, Russian leadership and its soldiers are savage and brutal targeting civilians.Quote:
Immediate items to watch:
- Russian forces will likely capture Mariupol or force the city to capitulate within the coming weeks;
- Russia will expand its air, missile, and artillery bombardments of Ukrainian cities;
- Russian forces will likely continue efforts to reach Kryvyi Rih and isolate Zaporizhiya;
- Russian forces around Kyiv will continue efforts to push forward into effective artillery range of the center of the city;
- Russian troops will continue efforts to reduce Chernihiv and Sumy.
He also called it an "alarming signal" that Belarusian diplomats left #Ukraine
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) March 20, 2022
Denisenko believes that Lukashenko still does not want to be dragged into the war. "His army is small, about 40 000 soldiers. We are ready for their invasion but we certainly do not want it," he said.
Ulysses90 said:Rossticus said:
If those guys didn't know well enough to disable ALL geolocation… just… unacceptable. Utter lack of professionalism and focus. Loose lips sink ships.
It would not have mattered if the geolocation was turned off and it would not have mattered if they were carrying a 2G Nokia 3310. The key piece of data was the phone number itself pinging a tower in the area of Yavoriv. The Russians either have access to the cell tower logs or (more likely) the have devices like the Stingray or Wolfhound in the area to spoof being a cell tower.
⚡️Russia claims Ukraine plans to attack Western diplomats in Lviv.
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) March 19, 2022
Russia’s Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov accused Ukrainian fighters from the Azov battalion of preparing to attack the U.S. and other Western diplomats in Lviv and putting the blame on Russia.
The “we can do things just as well as the US” opinion.
— OSINTtechnical (@Osinttechnical) March 20, 2022
Unfortunately for them it’s been a bit less successful.
Rossticus said:
This is just getting bonkers. What's next? Martians? Lizard people? They're not even trying to make crud believable…⚡️Russia claims Ukraine plans to attack Western diplomats in Lviv.
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) March 19, 2022
Russia’s Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov accused Ukrainian fighters from the Azov battalion of preparing to attack the U.S. and other Western diplomats in Lviv and putting the blame on Russia.
Video showing fire and smoke rising above the Ukraine’s eastern city of Kharkiv. pic.twitter.com/09ZovzN0mw
— The Intel Hub (@The_IntelHub) March 20, 2022
Rossticus said:The “we can do things just as well as the US” opinion.
— OSINTtechnical (@Osinttechnical) March 20, 2022
Unfortunately for them it’s been a bit less successful.
Yep. And that is why I'm all for bringing them to Texas if they end up losing their countryagent-maroon said:
Jealous of Ukraine's successes, maybe?
Alright Lady's & Gentlemen, boys and girls, it is time for another Truck logistics thread🧵 for this latest Russian Invasion of Ukraine.
— Trent Telenko (@TrentTelenko) March 20, 2022
In it we are going to discuss the concept of "Operational Attrition" as applied to the Russian Army truck fleet in combat.
1/
Robk said:Alright Lady's & Gentlemen, boys and girls, it is time for another Truck logistics thread🧵 for this latest Russian Invasion of Ukraine.
— Trent Telenko (@TrentTelenko) March 20, 2022
In it we are going to discuss the concept of "Operational Attrition" as applied to the Russian Army truck fleet in combat.
1/
Interesting read.
TexasAggie_02 said:Ulysses90 said:Rossticus said:
If those guys didn't know well enough to disable ALL geolocation… just… unacceptable. Utter lack of professionalism and focus. Loose lips sink ships.
It would not have mattered if the geolocation was turned off and it would not have mattered if they were carrying a 2G Nokia 3310. The key piece of data was the phone number itself pinging a tower in the area of Yavoriv. The Russians either have access to the cell tower logs or (more likely) the have devices like the Stingray or Wolfhound in the area to spoof being a cell tower.
Seems like if you're going to a foreign country to eff things up, that you would buy a burner phone along the way.
A sign we may be seeing an evolution into a stalled phase, Russian trenches. pic.twitter.com/uGxnMU7OyO
— OSINTtechnical (@Osinttechnical) March 20, 2022
It's a fantastic read for those who don't know about this level of logistics and a great reminder for those who do. One thing he absolutely nailed in my experience is how hard troops are on their vehicles in wartime conditions. We drove ours into the dirt and mistreated them in every way possible, in conditions that are already not ideal in the first place. We had a dedicated mechanic attached to our platoon and I have never met a harder worker person in my entire life. He simply had to just to keep us barely functional because we broke just about everything possible.n_touch said:Robk said:Alright Lady's & Gentlemen, boys and girls, it is time for another Truck logistics thread🧵 for this latest Russian Invasion of Ukraine.
— Trent Telenko (@TrentTelenko) March 20, 2022
In it we are going to discuss the concept of "Operational Attrition" as applied to the Russian Army truck fleet in combat.
1/
Interesting read.
I hated the amount of PMCS we did. That thread should be shown to all soldiers. That broke it down great
Between the end of April and Mid-May 2022, the Ukrainian Army will be able to counter-attack EVERYWHERE.
— Trent Telenko (@TrentTelenko) March 20, 2022
Because there will be NOWHERE more than 20 miles/30 km inside Ukraine where Russian troops won't be out of food and low on ammunition.
17/End
Russians again bombed shelter of civilians in Mariupol: the art school No 12, reports the city council. 400 people were hiding from the bombs in the school. They are under rubble now
— UkraineWorld (@ukraine_world) March 20, 2022
Russian missile attacks on Ukraine.#NaziRussia #WarCrimes #PutinHitler
— 𝔗𝔥𝔢 𝔇𝔢𝔞𝔡 𝔇𝔦𝔰𝔱𝔯𝔦𝔠𝔱 (@TheDeadDistrict) March 20, 2022
626/ pic.twitter.com/IQ0AiDpeN9
#Turkish Foreign Minister #Çavuşoğlu said that #Moscow and #Kyiv have converged on important issues, including critical ones. pic.twitter.com/M7IlarEmkL
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) March 20, 2022
Mariupol.
— Illia Ponomarenko 🇺🇦 (@IAPonomarenko) March 20, 2022
The 21st century warfare as it is. pic.twitter.com/YG4UleDiLg
Video: Russian army airborne troops unit was destroyed pic.twitter.com/roXgjLp7kZ https://t.co/UxnIEBSJab via @Armia_fm #Ukraine
— Liveuamap (@Liveuamap) March 20, 2022