Kyiv and Konotop area detail pic.twitter.com/eFXFB4rjTy
— OSINTtechnical (@Osinttechnical) April 4, 2022
Kyiv and Konotop area detail pic.twitter.com/eFXFB4rjTy
— OSINTtechnical (@Osinttechnical) April 4, 2022
Rossticus said:
I wasn't aware of this either.this is literally the product page on the manufacturer's website https://t.co/249smxewPC
— Gerry Doyle (@mgerrydoyle) April 4, 2022
I've got no applicable experience but I'm fairly well read and agree that now is the time for a counter attack.Eliminatus said:Rossticus said:2/ at this point Ukraine is clearly shifting from defensive operations to offensive, now that the majority of the North is clear we can expect more pushes to the east. Russia is highly susceptible to counter attacks in multiple areas in the east due to the lack of a FLOT.
— The Intel Hub (@The_IntelHub) April 3, 2022
From what I gather, and how Russia has been summarily terrible at strategy, this is probably correct. The Ukes could probably use stormtrooper tactics and roll up a lot of Russians. I just don't see the Russians have the presence of professional war fighting to have an established and planned FLOT (Forward Line of Own Troops, or established front line for those may not know) ready to receive the Ukes.
Do the Ukes throw the dice and charge in? I can't make the call of course but I would do it, based off the little I do know. Russia is not doing well. If the Ukes can punch a breakthrough and exploit it it can snowball out of control for Russia. That has to be worth a try, no?
Russia has requested a UN Security Council meeting on Monday in connection with what they call "the outrageous provocation of Ukrainian radicals in Bucha"
— Russians With Attitude (@RWApodcast) April 3, 2022
⚡️Donetsk Oblast governor urges residents to leave amid threats of military escalation.
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) April 3, 2022
Pavlo Kyrylenko said that the authorities “strongly recommend” residents to leave Donetsk Oblast, explaining that all the necessary transport and instructions will be provided.
I'm telling you, any Uke that decides after all this is said in done that they want to leave, should be more than welcome to come to Texas. Give them first dibs on anything before the Californians get hereRossticus said:
I seriously think that we may need to consider offering Ukrainian servicemen honorary Texan status. This is too good! A "naval attack" to intercept a convoy. Lol.#Ukraine: Ukrainian forces launched a naval attack to intercept a Russian convoy. Capturing a BTR-MDM Rakushka APC (Used by VDV troops), and two MT-LB (first one looks like a SNAR-10M1) pic.twitter.com/KDqqk0KIYr
— Arslon Xudosi 🇺🇦 (@Arslon_Xudosi) April 3, 2022Btw, missed this one: a BTR-D damaged, and a group picture! pic.twitter.com/X1OFJjyFVs
— Arslon Xudosi 🇺🇦 (@Arslon_Xudosi) April 3, 2022
Rossticus said:
For entertainment purposes only.Russia has requested a UN Security Council meeting on Monday in connection with what they call "the outrageous provocation of Ukrainian radicals in Bucha"
— Russians With Attitude (@RWApodcast) April 3, 2022
UA SOF/FOG thermals go brrr pic.twitter.com/9miSftIlL0
— Cᴀʟɪʙʀᴇ Oʙsᴄᴜʀᴀ (@CalibreObscura) April 4, 2022
Losing this port is a hindrance to the Russian effort around Mariupol and the east. pic.twitter.com/vhYMZ0Md14
— OSINTtechnical (@Osinttechnical) April 3, 2022
javajaws said:
IMO if you can't get Russia removed from the UN security council then every NATO country needs to remove themselves from the UN immediately. The UN is a joke and serves no purpose as is.
Would the troops in the Donbas not have more experience? If the conflict has been ongoing for 8 years there, I would expect them to be a bit more prepared than the rando scrubs sent in through Belarus.Eliminatus said:Rossticus said:2/ at this point Ukraine is clearly shifting from defensive operations to offensive, now that the majority of the North is clear we can expect more pushes to the east. Russia is highly susceptible to counter attacks in multiple areas in the east due to the lack of a FLOT.
— The Intel Hub (@The_IntelHub) April 3, 2022
From what I gather, and how Russia has been summarily terrible at strategy, this is probably correct. The Ukes could probably use stormtrooper tactics and roll up a lot of Russians. I just don't see the Russians have the presence of professional war fighting to have an established and planned FLOT (Forward Line of Own Troops, or established front line for those may not know) ready to receive the Ukes.
Do the Ukes throw the dice and charge in? I can't make the call of course but I would do it, based off the little I do know. Russia is not doing well. If the Ukes can punch a breakthrough and exploit it it can snowball out of control for Russia. That has to be worth a try, no?
“Today’s address will begin without greetings,” Zelenskyy begins in Ukrainian. “I don't want to use extra words. Presidents don’t normally record addresses like this. But today I must, after what was revealed in Bucha and in our other cities the occupiers were pushed out of." 2/
— Zoya Sheftalovich (@zoyashef) April 4, 2022
Powerful, passionate address from Zelensky tonight. Switching from Ukrainian to Russian he addresses mothers of soldiers who committed horrific war crimes in Bucha, Irpin, Hostomel, asking how they raised “butchers,” and he tells Moscow to see how it’s orders are being fulfilled. pic.twitter.com/7UyYxqiY4V
— Christopher Miller (@ChristopherJM) April 3, 2022
From the looks of troop deaths and hardware losses, the elite Russian troops were sent to Kharkiv, Kyiv, and Kherson-> Odessa. The separatist armies have fought in Donbas, but it hasn't appeared that a lot of the elite Russian equipment or soldiers were in Donbas. It wasn't until they were stuck Northwest of Kiev that it appeared that some of the elite SOF and Chechen forces were transitioned to Mariupol.Waffledynamics said:Would the troops in the Donbas not have more experience? If the conflict has been ongoing for 8 years there, I would expect them to be a bit more prepared than the rando scrubs sent in through Belarus.Eliminatus said:Rossticus said:2/ at this point Ukraine is clearly shifting from defensive operations to offensive, now that the majority of the North is clear we can expect more pushes to the east. Russia is highly susceptible to counter attacks in multiple areas in the east due to the lack of a FLOT.
— The Intel Hub (@The_IntelHub) April 3, 2022
From what I gather, and how Russia has been summarily terrible at strategy, this is probably correct. The Ukes could probably use stormtrooper tactics and roll up a lot of Russians. I just don't see the Russians have the presence of professional war fighting to have an established and planned FLOT (Forward Line of Own Troops, or established front line for those may not know) ready to receive the Ukes.
Do the Ukes throw the dice and charge in? I can't make the call of course but I would do it, based off the little I do know. Russia is not doing well. If the Ukes can punch a breakthrough and exploit it it can snowball out of control for Russia. That has to be worth a try, no?
Waffledynamics said:
I just want to take this time to thank you, Rossticus, for the excellent work you are doing for this thread with the information you're sharing. Thanks to everyone, in fact. People have said multiple times that this thread is invaluable. Well done on making it so informative.
.Rossticus said:
Heavy losses to take Crimea and not a given you'd be successful given the solid logistical support that Russia can maintain as well as ease of Russian naval and air support. You don't want to focus on Crimea until you've wrapped up the rest of the country and secured it from the east.
Seal off Crimea and make it as much of a non-factor as possible while you drive Russia out of as much of the rest of the country as you can (before they can refit, redeploy, and really dig in). Time is a critical element.
My opinion at least. There are guys who know a ton more than me on this and may see things that I'm not.
My unit, as part of civil defense, had faced the enemy in the city of X (I won’t disclose the particulars for obvious reasons).
— Dmytro Gurin, Ukrainian MP (@DmytroGurinMP) April 3, 2022
We were able to fight off the first attack, the second one put more pressure on us, they had a lot of heavy equipment. 2/
Judging by what we see on Russian TV, first commentaries from "talking heads" and what seems to be working the most with "average Russians" - the official narrative will be:
— Anton Barbashin (@ABarbashin) April 4, 2022
Ukrainians did it/faked it in order to provoke/on the order of West so more #sanctions can be introduced
Or
— Anton Barbashin (@ABarbashin) April 4, 2022
"Please let's not talk about this. I don't even want to look at that"
Or
"Yes, I've seen it. I can't not see it anymore"
---
For people 35-45 trust in TV is down but (!) they've started receiving more propaganda content via WhatsApp from people they know
Seeing images being posted of a dead woman with a swastika burned/scratched into her body.
— Nick Waters (@N_Waters89) April 3, 2022
As far as I can tell this was first posted on 27th March 2022 from a location in Mariupol, by Patrick Lancaster, who I would characterise as an extremely unreliable source.
The #Ukraine intelligence reports about confirmed death of the first Russian Army soldier from Acute Radiation Syndrome (ARS) and 73 more soldiers in a severe condition suffering from this illness. They were camping in the Red Forest near Chernobyl nuclear power plant.
— Victor Kovalenko (@MrKovalenko) April 4, 2022
CowPieAndFries said:javajaws said:
IMO if you can't get Russia removed from the UN security council then every NATO country needs to remove themselves from the UN immediately. The UN is a joke and serves no purpose as is.
It may seem that wat but they are very good at food distribution for famished nations and health care. Diplomacy? Not so much.
"Denazification is a set of measures aimed at the nazified mass of the population, which technically cannot be subjected to direct punishment as war criminals"
— Francis Scarr (@francska1) April 4, 2022
"...The just punishment for this part of the population is possible only as the bearing of the inevitable hardships of a just war against the Nazi system"
— Francis Scarr (@francska1) April 4, 2022
"Denazification is inevitably also deukrainisation – a rejection of the large-scale artificial inflation of the ethnic element of self-identification of the population of the territories of the historical Malorossiya and Novorossiya begun by the Soviet authorities"
— Francis Scarr (@francska1) April 4, 2022
"The Banderite elite must be liquidated, its reeducation is impossible. The social 'swamp' which actively and passively supports it must undergo the hardships of war and digest the experience as a historical lesson and atonement" END
— Francis Scarr (@francska1) April 4, 2022
Poland, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia in the next 2-3 days will start process of complete isolation from Russia and Belarus, thus closing their land routes for the delivery of goods to these countries
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) April 4, 2022
This was stated by Deputy Minister of Infrastructure of Ukraine Mustafa Nayem. pic.twitter.com/yIQCBcA3rM
MeatDr said:Poland, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia in the next 2-3 days will start process of complete isolation from Russia and Belarus, thus closing their land routes for the delivery of goods to these countries
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) April 4, 2022
This was stated by Deputy Minister of Infrastructure of Ukraine Mustafa Nayem. pic.twitter.com/yIQCBcA3rM
Local traffic to Kaliningrad through Lithuania will probably have to be excepted because there are some major treaties and agreements with the EU there. In my opinion, it would be seen as a major provocation, could end up with Russia invading and trying to take over that corridor, and then you have Russia invading a NATO state.
Consequences of heavy clashes on the #Zhytomyr highway near #Kyiv. pic.twitter.com/kwvGOqLTOb
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) April 4, 2022
MeatDr said:Poland, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia in the next 2-3 days will start process of complete isolation from Russia and Belarus, thus closing their land routes for the delivery of goods to these countries
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) April 4, 2022
This was stated by Deputy Minister of Infrastructure of Ukraine Mustafa Nayem. pic.twitter.com/yIQCBcA3rM
Local traffic to Kaliningrad through Lithuania will probably have to be excepted because there are some major treaties and agreements with the EU there. In my opinion, it would be seen as a major provocation, could end up with Russia invading and trying to take over that corridor, and then you have Russia invading a NATO state.
Good luck with that. Quickest route via Belarus requires going through Lithuania and/or Poland. If the last month has proven anything, its that Russia would not succeed in that and would most likely lose in a conventional war with Poland. If they went in just Lithuania, there is zero chance that Poland doesn't get involved. FAFOMeatDr said:Poland, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia in the next 2-3 days will start process of complete isolation from Russia and Belarus, thus closing their land routes for the delivery of goods to these countries
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) April 4, 2022
This was stated by Deputy Minister of Infrastructure of Ukraine Mustafa Nayem. pic.twitter.com/yIQCBcA3rM
Local traffic to Kaliningrad through Lithuania will probably have to be excepted because there are some major treaties and agreements with the EU there. In my opinion, it would be seen as a major provocation, could end up with Russia invading and trying to take over that corridor, and then you have Russia invading a NATO state.