total losses 4343.74OA said:
"The team of researchers at the Oryx blog, which counts Russian military equipment losses in Ukraine based on photographs sent from the front lines, says that Russia is now visually confirmed to have lost at least 2539 military vehicles and pieces of equipment since it began its invasion of Ukraine on February 24."
LOSSES
I was under the impression that Oryx geolocates to confirm their information before formally adding them to their numbers? Am I misunderstanding?AgLA06 said:
Here's the issue.
Start thinking about what those numbers from Oryx would mean if legitimate
720 tanks destroyed, abandoned, or captured taking out the damaged that Russia could have repaired.
That's 60 BTGs of tanks alone (12 per). Not to mention men for crews.
If Russia had lost that, the war would be over.
So while i've been watching the Oryx numbers closely and rooting Ukraine on like everyone else. But sitting here right now trying to put that into perspective I'm seriously doubting how that could be real. Especially since Russia supposedly still has like 90 BTGs currently fighting.
So now I don't know what to think.
AgLA06 said:
Here's the issue.
Start thinking about what those numbers from Oryx would mean if legitimate
720 tanks destroyed, abandoned, or captured taking out the damaged that Russia could have repaired.
That's 60 BTGs of tanks alone (12 per). Not to mention men for crews.
If Russia had lost that, the war would be over.
So while i've been watching the Oryx numbers closely and rooting Ukraine on like everyone else. But sitting here right now trying to put that into perspective I'm seriously doubting how that could be real. Especially since Russia supposedly still has like 90 BTGs currently fighting.
So now I don't know what to think.
I think that has been the most shocking thing about this war. How brutish and generally hateful Russians truly are.Quote:
For a long time I thought there was hope for russia, the same hope I believe Trump had for improving that relationship and reducing the threat to USA. I was wrong and the horrors of the Gulag Archipelago is just as relevant today as it was 100 years ago. **** putin wannabe peter.
Really? Earlier Russian conduct in Afghanistan, Chechnya and Syria didn't make a similar impression?aggiehawg said:I think that has been the most shocking thing about this war. How brutish and generally hateful Russians truly are.Quote:
For a long time I thought there was hope for russia, the same hope I believe Trump had for improving that relationship and reducing the threat to USA. I was wrong and the horrors of the Gulag Archipelago is just as relevant today as it was 100 years ago. **** putin wannabe peter.
I wasn't seeing man in the street interviews in Russia during those like I am seeing now.74OA said:Really? Earlier Russian conduct in Afghanistan, Chechnya and Syria didn't make a similar impression?aggiehawg said:I think that has been the most shocking thing about this war. How brutish and generally hateful Russians truly are.Quote:
For a long time I thought there was hope for russia, the same hope I believe Trump had for improving that relationship and reducing the threat to USA. I was wrong and the horrors of the Gulag Archipelago is just as relevant today as it was 100 years ago. **** putin wannabe peter.
Not nearly as much came out in Western media for any of that. The stuff that did from Syria was truly gut wrenching. Worse than the stuff in Ukraine and that's bad enough.aggiehawg said:I wasn't seeing man in the street interviews in Russia during those like I am seeing now.74OA said:Really? Earlier Russian conduct in Afghanistan, Chechnya and Syria didn't make a similar impression?aggiehawg said:I think that has been the most shocking thing about this war. How brutish and generally hateful Russians truly are.Quote:
For a long time I thought there was hope for russia, the same hope I believe Trump had for improving that relationship and reducing the threat to USA. I was wrong and the horrors of the Gulag Archipelago is just as relevant today as it was 100 years ago. **** putin wannabe peter.
True, the coverage then wasn't at the voyeur-level detail we're seeing now, but anyone bothering to watch the evening news or read a newspaper during those three conflicts was shown more than enough horror to tell the story of Russian brutality--including plenty of in-person interviews with victims.aggiehawg said:I wasn't seeing man in the street interviews in Russia during those like I am seeing now.74OA said:Really? Earlier Russian conduct in Afghanistan, Chechnya and Syria didn't make a similar impression?aggiehawg said:I think that has been the most shocking thing about this war. How brutish and generally hateful Russians truly are.Quote:
For a long time I thought there was hope for russia, the same hope I believe Trump had for improving that relationship and reducing the threat to USA. I was wrong and the horrors of the Gulag Archipelago is just as relevant today as it was 100 years ago. **** putin wannabe peter.
That's the military though. My assumption was that the babushkas at home were unaware of those activities at the time with such media restrictions there.74OA said:True, the coverage then wasn't at the voyeur-level detail we're seeing now, but anyone bothering to watch the evening news or read a newspaper during those three conflicts was shown more than enough horror to tell the story of Russian brutality--including plenty of in-person interviews with victims.aggiehawg said:I wasn't seeing man in the street interviews in Russia during those like I am seeing now.74OA said:Really? Earlier Russian conduct in Afghanistan, Chechnya and Syria didn't make a similar impression?aggiehawg said:I think that has been the most shocking thing about this war. How brutish and generally hateful Russians truly are.Quote:
For a long time I thought there was hope for russia, the same hope I believe Trump had for improving that relationship and reducing the threat to USA. I was wrong and the horrors of the Gulag Archipelago is just as relevant today as it was 100 years ago. **** putin wannabe peter.
Captain Positivity said:
Russia claiming to have targeted and destroyed depots containing thousands of pieces of western-donated equipment. No confirmation.
The tank used to be the queen of the chess board: a hold-your own dominant and critical piece. It's now somewhere between a knight and a pawn. Still not bad - but the additional dimensions to the game and its vulnerability to distant attack have relegated it to a supporting piece.74OA said:
Nice overview of the problem and potential solutions. FUTURE OF THE TANK
PA24 said:
One of the positives of this war, soon Israel will bomb Iran's nuclear facility and Iran's daddy Russia has their hands full.
The beginning of the end of Iran when that happens.
it seems information given out by the official Russian defense agency is unreliable and informations put out by Ukrainian are just unreliable...AgLA06 said:
Here's the issue.
Start thinking about what those numbers from Oryx would mean if legitimate
720 tanks destroyed, abandoned, or captured taking out the damaged that Russia could have repaired.
That's 60 BTGs of tanks alone (12 per). Not to mention men for crews.
If Russia had lost that, the war would be over.
So while i've been watching the Oryx numbers closely and rooting Ukraine on like everyone else. But sitting here right now trying to put that into perspective I'm seriously doubting how that could be real. Especially since Russia supposedly still has like 90 BTGs currently fighting.
So now I don't know what to think.
AlaskanAg99 said:
Not if they only manage to achieve a pyrrhic victory.
Their demographic profile suggests they don't have a mountain of flesh that they can afford to lose if they want to maintain the long term viability of their economy.one MEEN Ag said:AlaskanAg99 said:
Not if they only manage to achieve a pyrrhic victory.
Pyrrhic victories are still considered victories in Russia. When you have a mountain of flesh and a molehill of steel to throw at an enemy, you don't care too much about the deaths.
Pull your highest attrition units from places that aren't St. Petersburg or Moscow and just pick up your fallen comrades rifle during the push forward.
Kherson counteroffensive north west of centre:
— WarMonitor🇺🇦 (@WarMonitor3) June 14, 2022
Ukrainian forces are advancing towards Tomyna Balka and Chornobaivka.
Fighting continues around Kyselivka, Molodets'ke. And north east of Tomyna Balka. pic.twitter.com/fE2OlCsIMe
West Izium Front (June 14 8:30 AM)
— Ukraine Battle Map (@ukraine_map) June 14, 2022
Ukrainian Forces have liberated the village of Prydonetske in the Kharkiv Oblast advancing towards Izium🇺🇦
Ukrainian Forces are located in the large forest West of Izium and are least 10km from the center of Izium #UkraineWar #Ukraine #Kharkiv pic.twitter.com/NOd95fi4cA
Due to the 1/6 report, 2A legislation & economic issues, details of Donbas battles & the illegal Russian invasion of Ukraine are not at the forefront.
— Mark Hertling (@MarkHertling) June 13, 2022
UA isn't "losing" & the action isn't stalled. It remains a slugfest in the east.
Here's a new 🧵on equipping UA. 1/21
The country of Georgia, Donbas and the Crimea say "hold my beer"74OA said:Really? Earlier Russian conduct in Afghanistan, Chechnya and Syria didn't make a similar impression?aggiehawg said:I think that has been the most shocking thing about this war. How brutish and generally hateful Russians truly are.Quote:
For a long time I thought there was hope for russia, the same hope I believe Trump had for improving that relationship and reducing the threat to USA. I was wrong and the horrors of the Gulag Archipelago is just as relevant today as it was 100 years ago. **** putin wannabe peter.
I think Ukraine almost has to contest in order to keep the West backing the conflict. If it looks like Russia is going to complete taking the Donbas and Luhansk, and Ukraine is finally folding - then the support may dry up. That's a tough political calculation for Zelensky.Quote:
By fighting for a dead city, Ukraine aims to maximize Russian casualties, analysis say.
. . .
As the eastern city of Sievierodonetsk appears close to falling to Russia, military analysts say that Ukraine's outgunned and outnumbered forces are trying to draw out the fight to inflict more casualties against Moscow.
Russia has been using its advantage in longer-range artillery to bombard eastern cities from a distance, leveling them and killing or driving out civilians, raising the question of whether it is worth the cost in Ukrainian soldiers' lives to defend them. President Volodymyr Zelensky has described Sievierodonetsk as a "dead" city.
In Sievierodonetsk, the analysts say, the Ukrainians' hope is that by drawing Russian forces into street-by-street battles, they can defuse Moscow's heavy weapons advantage, at least for a time, since close-quarter fighting raises the risk for Russia that artillery strikes would bombard their own soldiers.
"If the Ukrainians succeed in trying to drag them into house-to-house combat, there is a higher chance of inducing casualties on the Russians that they cannot afford," said Gustav Gressel, a Ukraine expert from the European Council on Foreign Relations.
Still, the Ukrainians are taking a chance by drawing the Russians into street fighting, risking getting trapped in the city - especially as the last bridge that would allow a fast escape has been destroyed. Mr. Zelensky has also acknowledged the cost of close combat "in terms of the number of people killed, the number of losses."
But with Western weapons slow in coming, the Ukrainians appear to be calculating that it is worth the risk for now.
Although street fighting kills large numbers of Ukrainian soldiers - officials have estimated that Ukraine is losing up to 200 soldiers daily in battle - it also inflicts casualties on the Russians in greater numbers than uneven artillery and tank battles in the open fields.
Before the Russian invasion, the Ukrainian military had studied approaches to fighting an enemy with superior armored vehicle and artillery capabilities, including by drawing lessons from urban combat in cities such as Aleppo in the Syrian war.
. . .
These tactics were not needed within Kyiv, because Russian forces were repelled before entering the city. But Ukraine put them to use in urban combat in Mariupol, where Ukrainian fighters facing much larger Russian forces were able to engage the enemy troops for weeks.
Mykhailo Samus, the deputy head of the Center for Army, Conversion and Disarmament Studies, argued that the Ukrainian military's dogged resistance had also bought its forces time, holding Russia off from advancing farther into eastern Ukraine as they hope that more shipments of Western weapons arrive. The goal, he said, is to "exhaust, or reduce, the enemy's offensive capabilities."
It is not clear, however, how long such a strategy can work in Donbas, where the largely flat plains favor Russian artillery, and as longer-range weapons from the United States and other Ukrainian allies are slow to arrive. While Ukrainian casualties mount, Mr. Zelensky has acknowledged that Russia has more troops it can use as "cannon fodder."
. . .
Subsequent correction:GarryowenAg said:
Very detailed and accurate assessment of the artillery the Ukes are requesting.Due to the 1/6 report, 2A legislation & economic issues, details of Donbas battles & the illegal Russian invasion of Ukraine are not at the forefront.
— Mark Hertling (@MarkHertling) June 13, 2022
UA isn't "losing" & the action isn't stalled. It remains a slugfest in the east.
Here's a new 🧵on equipping UA. 1/21
Correction, not 240 but 720. I had a math brain cramp. Please correct that math.
— Mark Hertling (@MarkHertling) June 13, 2022
The #United_States will transfer intelligence to #Ukraine for strikes with the help of the MLRS supplied to it, said Deputy Secretary of Defense Colin Cole.🇺🇸🤝🇺🇦#UkraineRussiaWar pic.twitter.com/nkKyp1tgnK
— 🇺🇦Ukraine News Live🇺🇦 (@UkraineNewsLive) June 14, 2022
Definitely requesting significant additional artillery systems. Of course, the more effective path with less arty units is to nut up and provide the long range MLRS rockets. Ukes could hit Russian artillery from greater distance, hit Crimean airfields and wreck Sevastopol.74OA said:Subsequent correction:GarryowenAg said:
Very detailed and accurate assessment of the artillery the Ukes are requesting.Due to the 1/6 report, 2A legislation & economic issues, details of Donbas battles & the illegal Russian invasion of Ukraine are not at the forefront.
— Mark Hertling (@MarkHertling) June 13, 2022
UA isn't "losing" & the action isn't stalled. It remains a slugfest in the east.
Here's a new 🧵on equipping UA. 1/21Correction, not 240 but 720. I had a math brain cramp. Please correct that math.
— Mark Hertling (@MarkHertling) June 13, 2022
Additionally, a lot of Army artillery is resident elsewhere than in the divisions. Most rocket artillery is held at corps level, for example. Wiki isn't authoritative of course, but it can't be that far off: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_equipment_of_the_United_States_Army#Artillery