The Ukrainian flag flies again over the village of Davydiv Brid, Kherson region.
— Defense of Ukraine (@DefenceU) October 4, 2022
The Ukrainian marines are confidently advancing towards the Black Sea
🎥: 35th Marine Brigade. pic.twitter.com/HBi4P7aKrh
SwigAg11 said:
I have no idea how this Kherson offensive is going to end. Aren't there around 20,000 Russian troops on the west-side of the Dnipro river that Putin has stated are not allowed to retreat? That just seems like a terrible meat grinder for both sides.
SwigAg11 said:
I have no idea how this Kherson offensive is going to end. Aren't there around 20,000 Russian troops on the west-side of the Dnipro river that Putin has stated are not allowed to retreat? That just seems like a terrible meat grinder for both sides.
The answer to your question without additional detail is "yes."AlaskanAg99 said:
I just hope the US has parked ballistic interceptor batteries in Finland/Poland/Alaska as well as ship launched systems in the Mediterranean and Pacific oceans.
At least until Mylove. At that point you could head west and cut off some of the supply routes north to the pocket and bring their evac channels under pressure. Kinda hard to tell where the front is and it seems like the Russians are retreating to avoid encirclement according to liveuamap. I'd have to dig deep into Telegram to get a clearer picture and don't have time today.GarryowenAg said:I would continue to fix orc positions on the far western line and continue to push south/west along the Dnipro as they've been doing. A penetration through the middle requires double the troops to provide rear security and the Ukes would basically be opening a third front line for them to defend.LMCane said:Rossticus said:NEW: Ukrainian forces have made substantial gains around #Lyman and in northern #Kherson Oblast over the last 24 hours. The Russian units defeated on these fronts were previously considered to be among #Russia’s premier conventional fighting forces.https://t.co/qCfwrJolCF pic.twitter.com/GwXQBzxI0S
— ISW (@TheStudyofWar) October 4, 2022
so let's talk strategy and Corps level staff planning:
in Kherson Oblast, you have the Dnipro river as the southern boundary cutting off the Rus forces.
1. do you continue to move west/south west along the north bank of the Dnipro now that the Ukes have pushed through the initial defense line?
2. or do you send your forces to the west/north west linking up with other Uke forces penetrating south/south east and create a small cauldron of surrounded Russian forces in the eastern part of the occupied zone? that would cleave about 35% of the Russians into a complete encirclement
on the other hand, that would then give the other 65% a chance to create new defense lines (although still encircled around Kherson city)
Or Houston or New Orleans.LMCane said:fullback44 said:Are the Russians really stupid enough to basically poison the entire Black Sea or the Sea of Azov? They would piss off a lot more people than just the Ukraine, starting with Turkey, Turkey may cut them off completely from using the Bosphorus and Dardanelles Straits …. It would be load gun, ready, aim, SHOOT… foot falls offPrivate PoopyPants said:Theoretically, the tsunami could be over a kilometer high depending on yield and other factors like seafloor geography and distance from the detonation. That being said, the yield is likely far, far lower. The danger in these things is they travel very slowly and don't make much noise so they are difficult to track until they are close to the target and begin their final acceleration pattern before detonation. The cobalt causes increased radioactive fallout in the water. While an underwater detonation largely protects the surface and atmosphere from radiation, the seabed would be contaminated for decades and the radioactive salts would filter through along the coastline along an extended range.aggiehawg said:Theoretically, how massive of a tsunami? 20 feet? 30 feet? 100 feet? What is the yield on that. if you know.Private PoopyPants said:
The sub carries this supposed cobalt nuclear torpedo which is designed to detonate offshore. The shaped blast would theoretically cause a massive tsunami of radioactive water to engulf a coastal city. Fun times.
Not to also mention if this tsunami did work and went the wrong direction towards all of Turkeys shorelines… Ruskies would essentially screw themselves
what makes you think they would use the Belgorod against Odessa?
could be they use it against New York City or Miami, or Jacksonville, or Charleston.
Mylove is is shaping up to be next. It's 10 miles SW downriver from Dudchany and about 15 miles east of the Davydid Brid 'pincer.' Things get real interesting after Mylove ... Berislav and Nova Kakhova (15-20 miles downriver from Mylove) are very heavily defended and the Orks are dug in. Their Alamo and they won't give it up easily.Tony Franklins Other Shoe said:
Just a quick glance at the map, that only seems to be about 15 miles to Mylove? Russia keeps backing up and there is no way there is time to dig in for a good defense. It seems unlikely they already had anything established in this new defense area so I guess this is why the Uke army is attacking, running out of ammo, going back to resupply and then attacking again? Also would make some sense for whatever command is still left in the russian army to say fall back to XXX and defend and these guys know nothing other than to do it no matter what a death trap it is going to be.
How quickly does the bridging equipment operate? It seems like Russia would notice quickly because it might be slow and loud, but at the same time they always seem to be caught off guard. Their intelligence and people on orders to be on watch must be absolutely terrible.AgLA06 said:
I keep looking across the river and wondering what, if anything Russia has over there.
If they could use the German bridging equipment at night to get a mechanized battalion across and then head south along the river it would cause immediate chaos and panic. The Russians on the western bank still hold out hope they'll be able to withdraw across the river if necessary. If there was suddenly Uke forces across the river flanking them, Kherson folds almost immediately.
Keep pushing along the Dnipro River. You are eating territory while probably not inflicting that many casualties due to the Russians retreating so fast and far. Ukes are probably fighting units that are "holding" so others can scoot out the back.LMCane said:
so let's talk strategy and Corps level staff planning:
in Kherson Oblast, you have the Dnipro river as the southern boundary cutting off the Rus forces.
1. do you continue to move west/south west along the north bank of the Dnipro now that the Ukes have pushed through the initial defense line?
2. or do you send your forces to the west/north west linking up with other Uke forces penetrating south/south east and create a small cauldron of surrounded Russian forces in the eastern part of the occupied zone? that would cleave about 35% of the Russians into a complete encirclement
on the other hand, that would then give the other 65% a chance to create new defense lines (although still encircled around Kherson city)
I let the footage speak for itself. Bohuslavka, Kharkiv region.
— NOĂ‹L 🇺🇦 (@NOELreports) October 4, 2022
❤️ pic.twitter.com/gpYxTKANA8
Nagler said:ABATTBQ11 said:LMCane said:fullback44 said:Are the Russians really stupid enough to basically poison the entire Black Sea or the Sea of Azov? They would piss off a lot more people than just the Ukraine, starting with Turkey, Turkey may cut them off completely from using the Bosphorus and Dardanelles Straits …. It would be load gun, ready, aim, SHOOT… foot falls offPrivate PoopyPants said:Theoretically, the tsunami could be over a kilometer high depending on yield and other factors like seafloor geography and distance from the detonation. That being said, the yield is likely far, far lower. The danger in these things is they travel very slowly and don't make much noise so they are difficult to track until they are close to the target and begin their final acceleration pattern before detonation. The cobalt causes increased radioactive fallout in the water. While an underwater detonation largely protects the surface and atmosphere from radiation, the seabed would be contaminated for decades and the radioactive salts would filter through along the coastline along an extended range.aggiehawg said:Theoretically, how massive of a tsunami? 20 feet? 30 feet? 100 feet? What is the yield on that. if you know.Private PoopyPants said:
The sub carries this supposed cobalt nuclear torpedo which is designed to detonate offshore. The shaped blast would theoretically cause a massive tsunami of radioactive water to engulf a coastal city. Fun times.
Not to also mention if this tsunami did work and went the wrong direction towards all of Turkeys shorelines… Ruskies would essentially screw themselves
what makes you think they would use the Belgorod against Odessa?
could be they use it against New York City or Miami, or Jacksonville, or Charleston.
Because we would retaliate. It would either be an ultimatum to arrest Putin and all of his advisors and give them over to US custody or face a nuclear attack, we take Kaliningrad and send forces into Ukraine/Russia, or a straight nuclear response against a Russian city. There would be catastrophic repercussions.
The amount of **** you up we'd send at Russia if they nuked one of our cities would be mind boggling. And I'm not talking about nukes. Their military would cease to exist.
If you're going to nuke the US go ahead and nuke it all because one city is just going to piss us off.
bonfarr said:
Does this end in a stalemate with Ukraine kicking the Russians ass all the way back to Crimea and Russia digging in and fortifying?
I don't see how the Ukes could launch a large invasion of Crimea unless they have some incredible amphibious capability we haven't seen yet.
Neither side is going to be willing to give up Crimea. The land is too valuable and Russia would have to remove its fleet from Sevastopol as that shared arrangement is untenable now.
Strange how the people so happy to see the Ukrainian troops supposedly voted 98% to be part of Russia?FriscoKid said:I let the footage speak for itself. Bohuslavka, Kharkiv region.
— NOĂ‹L 🇺🇦 (@NOELreports) October 4, 2022
❤️ pic.twitter.com/gpYxTKANA8
It's worth the fight.
Russian media Rybar's latest map shows how dire the situation is in northern Kherson for Russia. These maps are 4 hours apart. pic.twitter.com/d8ZrxOdLZS
— Kyle Glen (@KyleJGlen) October 4, 2022
The Ukrainians pushing south from Mikolaiv may plan to drive to the Inhulets River and then set a defensive line all along the river down to Kherson. The Ukrainians pushing from the east would then pin the retreating Russians inside the area defined by the junction of the Inhulets and the Dnieper with no way to resupply or escape across either river.GarryowenAg said:I would continue to fix orc positions on the far western line and continue to push south/west along the Dnipro as they've been doing. A penetration through the middle requires double the troops to provide rear security and the Ukes would basically be opening a third front line for them to defend.LMCane said:Rossticus said:NEW: Ukrainian forces have made substantial gains around #Lyman and in northern #Kherson Oblast over the last 24 hours. The Russian units defeated on these fronts were previously considered to be among #Russia’s premier conventional fighting forces.https://t.co/qCfwrJolCF pic.twitter.com/GwXQBzxI0S
— ISW (@TheStudyofWar) October 4, 2022
so let's talk strategy and Corps level staff planning:
in Kherson Oblast, you have the Dnipro river as the southern boundary cutting off the Rus forces.
1. do you continue to move west/south west along the north bank of the Dnipro now that the Ukes have pushed through the initial defense line?
2. or do you send your forces to the west/north west linking up with other Uke forces penetrating south/south east and create a small cauldron of surrounded Russian forces in the eastern part of the occupied zone? that would cleave about 35% of the Russians into a complete encirclement
on the other hand, that would then give the other 65% a chance to create new defense lines (although still encircled around Kherson city)
KHERSON/ FLASH TRAFFIC/1030 UTC 4 OCT/ At 1000 UTC, developing reports indicate that RU forces have fallen back to shorten their lines S of Novohrednjeve. Partisan reports indicate that RU units are establishing a new defensive line in the vicinity of Mylove. pic.twitter.com/tG4K3tgw6F
— Chuck Pfarrer | Indications & Warnings | (@ChuckPfarrer) October 4, 2022
Modern Bridging equipment in ideal conditions with well trained personnel can span a 100m river in about a half hour.The Fife said:How quickly does the bridging equipment operate? It seems like Russia would notice quickly because it might be slow and loud, but at the same time they always seem to be caught off guard. Their intelligence and people on orders to be on watch must be absolutely terrible.AgLA06 said:
I keep looking across the river and wondering what, if anything Russia has over there.
If they could use the German bridging equipment at night to get a mechanized battalion across and then head south along the river it would cause immediate chaos and panic. The Russians on the western bank still hold out hope they'll be able to withdraw across the river if necessary. If there was suddenly Uke forces across the river flanking them, Kherson folds almost immediately.
ABATTBQ11 said:Nagler said:ABATTBQ11 said:LMCane said:fullback44 said:Are the Russians really stupid enough to basically poison the entire Black Sea or the Sea of Azov? They would piss off a lot more people than just the Ukraine, starting with Turkey, Turkey may cut them off completely from using the Bosphorus and Dardanelles Straits …. It would be load gun, ready, aim, SHOOT… foot falls offPrivate PoopyPants said:Theoretically, the tsunami could be over a kilometer high depending on yield and other factors like seafloor geography and distance from the detonation. That being said, the yield is likely far, far lower. The danger in these things is they travel very slowly and don't make much noise so they are difficult to track until they are close to the target and begin their final acceleration pattern before detonation. The cobalt causes increased radioactive fallout in the water. While an underwater detonation largely protects the surface and atmosphere from radiation, the seabed would be contaminated for decades and the radioactive salts would filter through along the coastline along an extended range.aggiehawg said:Theoretically, how massive of a tsunami? 20 feet? 30 feet? 100 feet? What is the yield on that. if you know.Private PoopyPants said:
The sub carries this supposed cobalt nuclear torpedo which is designed to detonate offshore. The shaped blast would theoretically cause a massive tsunami of radioactive water to engulf a coastal city. Fun times.
Not to also mention if this tsunami did work and went the wrong direction towards all of Turkeys shorelines… Ruskies would essentially screw themselves
what makes you think they would use the Belgorod against Odessa?
could be they use it against New York City or Miami, or Jacksonville, or Charleston.
Because we would retaliate. It would either be an ultimatum to arrest Putin and all of his advisors and give them over to US custody or face a nuclear attack, we take Kaliningrad and send forces into Ukraine/Russia, or a straight nuclear response against a Russian city. There would be catastrophic repercussions.
The amount of **** you up we'd send at Russia if they nuked one of our cities would be mind boggling. And I'm not talking about nukes. Their military would cease to exist.
If you're going to nuke the US go ahead and nuke it all because one city is just going to piss us off.
No. We'd have a somewhat measured response. We won't launch an all out strike and invite a complete nuclear war.
Alternatively, Russia would likely be cutoff from world markets completely. That kind of attack against a country you're not directly at war with has to have grave consequences, and every other country in the world has a stake in avoiding nuclear exchange. China, Iran, India, et al would likely go from neutral or quietly supportive to real sanctions pretty damn fast. No one wants to see that box opened, and I think those countries know they'd be having to choose between us and Russia when it came to brass tacks. Failure to condemn and follow through would be tacit approval and taken as an insult requiring a response beyond mere words.
If it turns into the world against Russia, I think you'll see Russian regime change, with extreme prejudice. Even Putin's closest allies and advisors have to know they can't survive as a global pariah.
8/ #Ukrainian forces resumed counteroffensives in northern #Kherson Oblast and have secured positions in Zolota Balka and Khreshchenivka.https://t.co/bediT0xICa pic.twitter.com/PjnKCpD1jL
— ISW (@TheStudyofWar) October 3, 2022
Russian brigades have no rotations across Kherson region.
— WarMonitor🇺🇦 (@WarMonitor3) October 4, 2022
Their troops have been fighting for 7 months.
Morale is 0
Yep I like the way you think. Go bold go deep for maximum chaos with extreme Violence of Action.AgLA06 said:
Agree. It would be a risk. But the reward to truly isolate that 20k troops on the west bank to either be destroyed or captured would be huge.
Seems the Ukes could bring up some air defense systems to ensure drones can't spot the bridging at night and have troops across before Russia knows what's going on. The german air defense systems were made for this. I don't think it's an accident they sent those and the bridging systems.