Navy Day is celebrated today in #Russia.
— Alex Kokcharov (@AlexKokcharov) July 31, 2022
My sincere congratulations and wishing the entire Russian Navy join the Moskva cruiser. pic.twitter.com/vIaTBNPcEc
Navy Day is celebrated today in #Russia.
— Alex Kokcharov (@AlexKokcharov) July 31, 2022
My sincere congratulations and wishing the entire Russian Navy join the Moskva cruiser. pic.twitter.com/vIaTBNPcEc
⚡️Ukraine destroys Russian echelon in Kherson Obast with HIMARS.
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) July 31, 2022
According to Odesa Oblast Administration, Ukraine hit a 40-car train transporting Russian troops, equipment, and ammunition from Crimea on July 31, killing around 80 Russian soldiers and injuring around 200.
That sounds impressive. Would the thing have to be stopped for a while for them to do that?sclaff said:⚡️Ukraine destroys Russian echelon in Kherson Obast with HIMARS.
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) July 31, 2022
According to Odesa Oblast Administration, Ukraine hit a 40-car train transporting Russian troops, equipment, and ammunition from Crimea on July 31, killing around 80 Russian soldiers and injuring around 200.
⚡️Explosions heard in Russian-occupied Skadovsk, Kherson Oblast.
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) July 31, 2022
According to preliminary information, a Russian ammunition depot was destroyed in the southern port town in Kherson Oblast, local media “Most” reported. Eyewitnesses say thick dark smoke can be seen in the sky.
Hit the rails, give the train time to reach that spot and stop, then fire away.ABATTBQ11 said:
Technically, no. It would just be a difficult thing to time. HIMARS' rockets are generally going to hit a specific spot, not a moving target. Either the train just needs to happen to be there or they need to time it so that the train is passing through or at a stop.
Actually, why aren't there more attempts to derail trains? How much advance notice would HIMARS need to fire at a track in short enough time to derail a train before the track is repaired?74OA said:Hit the rails, give the train time to reach that spot and stop, then fire away.ABATTBQ11 said:
Technically, no. It would just be a difficult thing to time. HIMARS' rockets are generally going to hit a specific spot, not a moving target. Either the train just needs to happen to be there or they need to time it so that the train is passing through or at a stop.
This was the last major RR station about 25 miles SE from the Kherson RR bridge that was damaged about 2-3 days ago. The train was likely parked at the station because of the bridge damage.ABATTBQ11 said:
Technically, no. It would just be a difficult thing to time. HIMARS' rockets are generally going to hit a specific spot, not a moving target. Either the train just needs to happen to be there or they need to time it so that the train is passing through or at a stop.
This strike is impressive in several ways. The timing, precision and intel involved shows that the Ukes' capabilities are evolving quickly. Orcs main supply artery is the rail line. So anything to give them pause and cripple this method of transport is great.benchmark said:This was the last major RR station about 25 miles SE from the Kherson RR bridge that was damaged about 2-3 days ago. The train was likely parked at the station because of the bridge damage.ABATTBQ11 said:
Technically, no. It would just be a difficult thing to time. HIMARS' rockets are generally going to hit a specific spot, not a moving target. Either the train just needs to happen to be there or they need to time it so that the train is passing through or at a stop.
Seen a few takes recently arguing that Russian weapons don’t work well. Having spent time inside a number of Russian manufactured systems I thought I’d address why I think there is often a gap between Russian weapons on paper versus their performance in the field. 1/25
— Jack Watling (@Jack_Watling) July 31, 2022
Quote:
First observation is that, although we continue to see Russia failing -- failing on the battlefield, paying a high price for very little gain, and suffering domestic failures at home, I was really struck this week by how Russian rhetoric was trying to mask these losses, and what we saw was really very expansionist rhetoric coming out of Moscow.
Quote:
Q: Yeah, can you talk a little bit more about what we're seeing in the east, where the Russians are moving, where they're hunkering down? Any -- any more detail ...
(CROSSTALK)
... for Senior Military Official, of course.
SENIOR MILITARY OFFICIAL: I was going to give that one to [SDO], Tom.
Q: Yeah.
(LAUGHTER)
SENIOR MILITARY OFFICIAL: So we -- we're -- I don't want to say that it's a complete standstill because that would be inaccurate. There are gains on both sides but very -- back and forth, very small. You know, we've been talking -- and -- and so I'll go back -- I think it was probably three or four weeks ago -- in fact, it was probably the first time I did one of these pressers, we were talking about Severodonetsk and I had mentioned to you that, you know, they were -- the Ukrainians were withdrawing but they were withdrawing in a way that I thought we would probably study.
You know, they've gotten to a point now and have -- have created a level of defense that really has the Russians at a standstill, they've stopped. There are probably a lot of reasons for that. You know, we mentioned morale, we mentioned casualties. Those are certainly reasons that the Russians may have stopped. The other reason may be the Ukrainians have become very effective in finding and killing, you know, Russian command and control and destroying large levels of Russian materiel.
So I think what -- what we're seeing on the east is a result of that. And then if you know, if you just look at the axes from Izyum, those defenses have been stalwart now for coming up on three weeks. So the Russians again have been able to make very little progress.
You wonder, in the Russian leadership perspective, if they look at the small level of ground -- and again, as I said then, if you're a Ukrainian and you give up a foot, that's a big deal to you, but if you look at the small amount of ground, miles, that they advanced from Severodonetsk to the west, the Russians, and the gigantic costs they pay for that, you wonder if the Russians now are thinking to themselves "hey, is it worth another few miles?"
So we'll see where this goes.
Waffledynamics said:Actually, why aren't there more attempts to derail trains? How much advance notice would HIMARS need to fire at a track in short enough time to derail a train before the track is repaired?74OA said:Hit the rails, give the train time to reach that spot and stop, then fire away.ABATTBQ11 said:
Technically, no. It would just be a difficult thing to time. HIMARS' rockets are generally going to hit a specific spot, not a moving target. Either the train just needs to happen to be there or they need to time it so that the train is passing through or at a stop.
Waffledynamics said:
23:07 - Apparently the massive Russian artillery attacks on Mykolaiv a day ago was a bunch of impotent rage, and it didn't hit anything of military importance.
Being a former Tanker I questioned the Russia's ability to repair broken down vehicles. I made the assumption Russia's plan would be fraught with the inability to meet the demand because they have shown to be logistically incompetent. I read an article that supports my assumption. True or not.Waffledynamics said:What other signs of Russia suffering attrition do you see? It seems like they are still able to have marginal success. One would think scrub teams would get wiped out with no challenge.Red1 said:
The Russians are promising outlandish sums of money to new recruits who will get very little training. This tells me:
- The Russian Army is experiencing serious attrition to its soldiers.
- Inexperienced soldiers are easier to kill if they are forced to frontline units.
The advent of the P-51 in Europe was the bane to the Luftwaffe in WWII. In due time practically all the experienced German pilots were shot down. Their replacements had little experienced and were killed rather easily. This is an example of attritions and the ramifications of it.
The US military is painting the picture for the Ukes by using a wide spectrum of intelligence gathering.AGS-R-TUFF said:This strike is impressive in several ways. The timing, precision and intel involved shows that the Ukes' capabilities are evolving quickly. Orcs main supply artery is the rail line. So anything to give them pause and cripple this method of transport is great.benchmark said:This was the last major RR station about 25 miles SE from the Kherson RR bridge that was damaged about 2-3 days ago. The train was likely parked at the station because of the bridge damage.ABATTBQ11 said:
Technically, no. It would just be a difficult thing to time. HIMARS' rockets are generally going to hit a specific spot, not a moving target. Either the train just needs to happen to be there or they need to time it so that the train is passing through or at a stop.
Also, a little payback for the Azov POW massacre.
Red1 said:
General (R) Keane confirmed what I suspected. The US military is using its intelligence to keep the Ukrainian military apprised of the Russians with tremendous detail. Like I said in a previous post, I would not be surprised if we are assisting the Ukrainian military plan for operations. The Ukrainians are doing the fighting, but we are in their corner by giving them overhead cover figuratively. If we want Ukraine to win then we should arm them better. Give them the weapons to achieve a decisive victory.
Yes, I don't think the US admin wants a quick victory which'll piss the Russians off. I think the US wants a long, bloody, slow vicotry that'll demoralize the Russians and won't escalate things. I'm not saying it's right, but that's just where we are.Private PoopyPants said:
I think the goal is the long drawn out struggle.
#Russian media showed how their methods to cross the #Dnipro river in #Kherson now work. pic.twitter.com/I7e8eZlXQt
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) August 1, 2022
Quote:
Minister of Defense of Ukraine: Third brother in the Long Hand family - MLRS MARS II from Germany - has arrived in Ukraine
3rd and 2 said:Yes, I don't think the US admin wants a quick victory which'll piss the Russians off. I think the US wants a long, bloody, slow vicotry that'll demoralize the Russians and won't escalate things. I'm not saying it's right, but that's just where we are.Private PoopyPants said:
I think the goal is the long drawn out struggle.
Not only that, but there's a Putin X-Factor to this. How does he handle a decisive loss? Would he quietly saunter off into the corner and waste away his years out of the public eye, or would he go (literally) scorched earth in a "if I can't have it, no one can" response.ABATTBQ11 said:3rd and 2 said:Yes, I don't think the US admin wants a quick victory which'll piss the Russians off. I think the US wants a long, bloody, slow vicotry that'll demoralize the Russians and won't escalate things. I'm not saying it's right, but that's just where we are.Private PoopyPants said:
I think the goal is the long drawn out struggle.
I see both sides of this. A quick victory would certainly leave them demoralized, but it may also leave a sense of resentment and the question of, "Should we have done more?" A longer conflict gives the impression that fought hard but just couldn't do it. The former invites another try, while the latter says it's not worth it.
I think what people are insinuating is that the US government wants a long war to bleed the orcs dry and make them a non-entity as a geopolitical foe in the long term. The fact that it gives us an excuse to print money to feed the military industrial complex and thin out the older obsolete weapons platforms in our arsenals to be replaced with newer ones is just a bonus in the eyes of people who believe that. I don't have much faith in our government, but I can't say I am cynical enough to believe that we would sacrifice the good people of Ukraine towards such an end, though I guess we have done it before elsewhere in the world.ABATTBQ11 said:3rd and 2 said:Yes, I don't think the US admin wants a quick victory which'll piss the Russians off. I think the US wants a long, bloody, slow vicotry that'll demoralize the Russians and won't escalate things. I'm not saying it's right, but that's just where we are.Private PoopyPants said:
I think the goal is the long drawn out struggle.
I see both sides of this. A quick victory would certainly leave them demoralized, but it may also leave a sense of resentment and the question of, "Should we have done more?" A longer conflict gives the impression that fought hard but just couldn't do it. The former invites another try, while the latter says it's not worth it.
However, there's a fine line between giving Ukraine what they need and putting ourselves at risk. If you see someone who lost their home in a fire, you don't give them your life savings to rebuild and get them right back on their feet. You give them what you can without putting your own finances in jeopardy. That's where we are.
one MEEN Ag said:
Why can't it be all of that? Why not bleed russia, get old equipment off the shelf, and watch the latest generation of warfare unfold to help inform what weapons to buy next? All while having widespread support.
True.Nagler said:one MEEN Ag said:
Why can't it be all of that? Why not bleed russia, get old equipment off the shelf, and watch the latest generation of warfare unfold to help inform what weapons to buy next? All while having widespread support.
Agree with this. I'm all about helping but do remember Ukraine isn't part of NATO. We don't have to be there in any form or fashion so if we're going to help I don't have a problem making it to our advantage.
txags92 said:I think what people are insinuating is that the US government wants a long war to bleed the orcs dry and make them a non-entity as a geopolitical foe in the long term. The fact that it gives us an excuse to print money to feed the military industrial complex and thin out the older obsolete weapons platforms in our arsenals to be replaced with newer ones is just a bonus in the eyes of people who believe that. I don't have much faith in our government, but I can't say I am cynical enough to believe that we would sacrifice the good people of Ukraine towards such an end, though I guess we have done it before elsewhere in the world.ABATTBQ11 said:3rd and 2 said:Yes, I don't think the US admin wants a quick victory which'll piss the Russians off. I think the US wants a long, bloody, slow vicotry that'll demoralize the Russians and won't escalate things. I'm not saying it's right, but that's just where we are.Private PoopyPants said:
I think the goal is the long drawn out struggle.
I see both sides of this. A quick victory would certainly leave them demoralized, but it may also leave a sense of resentment and the question of, "Should we have done more?" A longer conflict gives the impression that fought hard but just couldn't do it. The former invites another try, while the latter says it's not worth it.
However, there's a fine line between giving Ukraine what they need and putting ourselves at risk. If you see someone who lost their home in a fire, you don't give them your life savings to rebuild and get them right back on their feet. You give them what you can without putting your own finances in jeopardy. That's where we are.
Winner.AgLA06 said:True.Nagler said:one MEEN Ag said:
Why can't it be all of that? Why not bleed russia, get old equipment off the shelf, and watch the latest generation of warfare unfold to help inform what weapons to buy next? All while having widespread support.
Agree with this. I'm all about helping but do remember Ukraine isn't part of NATO. We don't have to be there in any form or fashion so if we're going to help I don't have a problem making it to our advantage.
But the last thing we want is an aggressive Russia and China at the same time. This gave us an opportunity to slap one down while the other now has to second guess Taiwan.
This has little to do with NATO and everything to do with world order. All the other stuff is a bonus. The Ukes winning or this war dragging out another year cuts Russia off at the knees. Enough that with the current military armament taking place amongst european countries, they can handle Russia on their own in the future if China decides to step out. Because we'll have to focus there with Japan, India, and Australia.
Because they were a free people who we helped convince to give up their nukes in return for security assurances. Because it is immoral to take actions designed to prolong a war that is resulting in the murder and rape of civilians and destruction of entire cities instead of shortening it any way we can short of putting our own troops on the ground. I am not arguing for direct troops on the ground...but against the idea that prolonging the war is the right thing to do simply because it benefits us.one MEEN Ag said:
Why can't it be all of that? Why not bleed russia, get old equipment off the shelf, and watch the latest generation of warfare unfold to help inform what weapons to buy next? All while having widespread support.
AgLA06 said:
Except you aren't acknowledging that the majority of eastern Ukraine where all that grain and steel was made was under Russia control days into the war. Azov was the exception and they at least forced Russia to pretty much destroy the plant to take it.
The only way that would have been undone would have been for us to put boots on the ground. And I don't see that happening unless Russia does something really stupid (even for Russia).