BFT also allows artillery to see and target what is input to the system and plots the location of minefields, battlefield obstacles, bridges that are damaged, etc., too.Smeghead4761 said:The M2A2 ODS (Operation Desert Storm) doesn't have a Mk-19. The only grenade launcher the vehicle is equipped with are the smoke grenade launchers. Armament is a 25mm chain gun, M240C coax, and twin box TOW launcher, plus dismount troop weapons.Waffledynamics said:Western, Ukrainian, and Russian sources continue to indicate that #Russia is preparing for an imminent offensive, supporting ISW’s assessment that an offensive in the coming months is the most likely course of action.https://t.co/BOss1GjKHc pic.twitter.com/LyzFcyzvtu
— ISW (@TheStudyofWar) January 31, 2023
The M2A2 ODS is state of the late 90s tech, and consists of upgrades recommended after Desert Storm. My unit in Germany was one of the last units in the Army to field them, in Feb 2000. Upgrades to the ODS over the base M2A2 include:
- laser rangefinder (previously, gunner indexed the range manually in 200m increments)
- replacing the individual dismount seats with bench seats like in the M113.
- revised stowage for reserve 25mm ammo
- addition of a hot water box/MRE heater. Idea borrowed from the Brits, who have water heaters for making tea on all their armored vehicles.
I'm not sure if the thermals were upgraded from the base M2A2 or if that didn't happen to the M2A3.
So it appears at least some of that interview isn't entirely correct.RebelE Infantry said:Australian mercenary: “Wagner is near peer.”
— Lord Bebo (@MyLordBebo) January 31, 2023
-> He describes the overmatch in combat capability between Wagner and Ukrainian forces around Bakhmut. pic.twitter.com/TLiBiqrEZ7
Interesting insight into the capabilities and tactics of Wagner. Before this war I never viewed PMCs as fully integrated combined arms units, but rather possibly better than average small unit light infantry.
Smeghead4761 said:
- addition of a hot water box/MRE heater. Idea borrowed from the Brits, who have water heaters for making tea on all their armored vehicles.
AgLA06 said:So it appears at least some of that interview isn't entirely correct.RebelE Infantry said:Australian mercenary: “Wagner is near peer.”
— Lord Bebo (@MyLordBebo) January 31, 2023
-> He describes the overmatch in combat capability between Wagner and Ukrainian forces around Bakhmut. pic.twitter.com/TLiBiqrEZ7
Interesting insight into the capabilities and tactics of Wagner. Before this war I never viewed PMCs as fully integrated combined arms units, but rather possibly better than average small unit light infantry.
The below is in reference to the Bradleys we're sending over.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidaxe/2023/01/31/ukraines-new-m-2-fighting-vehicles-know-a-high-tech-trick-each-can-see-what-the-others-see/?sh=7ad2a9d316a6
This so-called "Blue Force Tracker" won't be the first battlefield networking system in Ukrainian military service. The Ukrainians have cobbled together their own network they call "Kropyva," which runs on computer tablets and displays a digital map of Ukraine, onto which users can plot the locations of any Russian forces they spot.
Kropyva famously helps Ukrainian air-defense crews warn each other about approaching Russian warplanes. It's unclear whether the Ukrainian network works at the much more granular tactical level, accurately plotting individual ground vehicles.
I have a buddy who always says it's the little luxuries in war that mean the most when stuck in the meat grinder.ABATTBQ11 said:Smeghead4761 said:
- addition of a hot water box/MRE heater. Idea borrowed from the Brits, who have water heaters for making tea on all their armored vehicles.
This is amazing
IMO, Ukraine believes the decisive battle will be fought to regain the south, not the east. The occupied south includes much of its valuable coastline and ports, roughly 20% of its most productive agricultural land and regaining it will safeguard vital Odessa and Kherson cities, plus also secure Ukraine's absolutely essential internal defensive depth.AgLA06 said:
Back to strategy.
I think all of us are a little perplexed by the way Ukraine is handling the Bakhmut offensive by Russia. We all know it is spearheaded by Wagner, yet it appears Russian Marines, VDV, and even special forces are actively engaged behind the wall of human meat they are throwing at the town.
Essentially let the convicts and conscripts soak up the bullets and artillery and then hit with small capable attack groups at times of weakness. It's a much better strategy than Russia has done in the last year (may be Wagner's plan and not MOD) and it appears to be working. Although at really small increments that none of us would think were worth the cost.
I think the real question we're all wondering, is why isn't Ukraine calling up the reserves and hitting this on the flanks and dealing a major blow to what appears is a small pocket of the best troops and equipment Russia has in Ukraine?
Are they willing to wait it out and counter attack when it finally fizzles at huge costs? Are they somehow out of reinforcement even though everything points to that not being the case? Or is this just not important enough to be drawn into a larger, decisive battle?
I'm starting to wonder if the last point is the case. Intelligence is saying Russia is showing an upcoming offensive. We know the Ukes are also planning some kind of spring offensive. Maybe it's just as simple as has been stated. Bakhmut isn't strategically important to Ukraine and not worth throwing more equipment and troops at. Maybe bleeding Russia and tying up all their best units is a win for them while they game plan elsewhere. It would suck to be a Uke their expected to hold the line and make this a Monte Casino type donkey punch. But something else has to be brewing. There's been too much equipment donated and too many troops trained and equipped for them to be out of reinforcement for a battle this small in scale.
Currently the ground conditions likely do not permit a Ukrainian Offensive with armor and while they wait there with significantly greater losses on the russian side so might as well wait and in a month will be getting new assets.74OA said:IMO, Ukraine believes the decisive battle will be fought to regain the south, not the east. The occupied south includes much of its valuable coastline and ports, roughly 20% of its most productive agricultural land and regaining it will safeguard vital Odessa and Kherson cities, plus also secure Ukraine's absolutely essential internal defensive depth.AgLA06 said:
Back to strategy.
I think all of us are a little perplexed by the way Ukraine is handling the Bakhmut offensive by Russia. We all know it is spearheaded by Wagner, yet it appears Russian Marines, VDV, and even special forces are actively engaged behind the wall of human meat they are throwing at the town.
Essentially let the convicts and conscripts soak up the bullets and artillery and then hit with small capable attack groups at times of weakness. It's a much better strategy than Russia has done in the last year (may be Wagner's plan and not MOD) and it appears to be working. Although at really small increments that none of us would think were worth the cost.
I think the real question we're all wondering, is why isn't Ukraine calling up the reserves and hitting this on the flanks and dealing a major blow to what appears is a small pocket of the best troops and equipment Russia has in Ukraine?
Are they willing to wait it out and counter attack when it finally fizzles at huge costs? Are they somehow out of reinforcement even though everything points to that not being the case? Or is this just not important enough to be drawn into a larger, decisive battle?
I'm starting to wonder if the last point is the case. Intelligence is saying Russia is showing an upcoming offensive. We know the Ukes are also planning some kind of spring offensive. Maybe it's just as simple as has been stated. Bakhmut isn't strategically important to Ukraine and not worth throwing more equipment and troops at. Maybe bleeding Russia and tying up all their best units is a win for them while they game plan elsewhere. It would suck to be a Uke their expected to hold the line and make this a Monte Casino type donkey punch. But something else has to be brewing. There's been too much equipment donated and too many troops trained and equipped for them to be out of reinforcement for a battle this small in scale.
Ukraine knows it can live without the Donbas--it spent the years since 2014 proving that--but its survival as a viable independent state will be much, much more difficult without its southlands.
So, I suspect Ukraine is committed to an economical defense in the east while it husbands its resources for a southern spring offensive. In the meantime, Kiev is more than happy to let Wagner's meatgrinder eastern offense bleed Russian combat power for strategically inconsequential gains.
Quote:
3 people killed, 20 wounded as result of Russian missile strike with Iskander-K missile against residential apartments block in Kramatorsk
Southern #Ukraine:
— ISW (@TheStudyofWar) February 2, 2023
Russian forces are continuing to carry out disruption missions on islands in the Dnipro River delta in #Kherson Oblast in an effort to prevent Ukrainian forces from gaining ground on the islands. https://t.co/QHtKCCBqr4 pic.twitter.com/cWOrzs6eTB
Russian convoy defeated by road traffic pic.twitter.com/WGvTi7MCcY
— Ukrainska Pravda in English (@pravda_eng) February 1, 2023
AgLA06 said:
Back to strategy.
I think all of us are a little perplexed by the way Ukraine is handling the Bakhmut offensive by Russia. We all know it is spearheaded by Wagner, yet it appears Russian Marines, VDV, and even special forces are actively engaged behind the wall of human meat they are throwing at the town.
Essentially let the convicts and conscripts soak up the bullets and artillery and then hit with small capable attack groups at times of weakness. It's a much better strategy than Russia has done in the last year (maybe Wagner's plan and not MOD) and it appears to be working. Although at really small increments that none of us would think were worth the cost.
I think the real question we're all wondering, is why isn't Ukraine calling up the reserves and hitting this on the flanks and dealing a major blow to what appears is a small pocket of the best troops and equipment Russia has in Ukraine?
Are they willing to wait it out and counter attack when it finally fizzles at huge costs? Are they somehow out of reinforcement even though everything points to that not being the case? Or is this just not important enough to be drawn into a larger, decisive battle?
I'm starting to wonder if the last point is the case. Intelligence is saying Russia is showing an upcoming offensive. We know the Ukes are also planning some kind of spring offensive. Maybe it's just as simple as has been stated. Bakhmut isn't strategically important to Ukraine and not worth throwing more equipment and troops at. Maybe bleeding Russia and tying up all their best units is a win for them while they game plan elsewhere. It would suck to be a Uke there expected to hold the line and make this a Monte Casino type donkey punch. But something else has to be brewing. There's been too much equipment donated and too many troops trained and equipped for them to be out of reinforcement for a battle this small in scale.
Waffledynamics said:Southern #Ukraine:
— ISW (@TheStudyofWar) February 2, 2023
Russian forces are continuing to carry out disruption missions on islands in the Dnipro River delta in #Kherson Oblast in an effort to prevent Ukrainian forces from gaining ground on the islands. https://t.co/QHtKCCBqr4 pic.twitter.com/cWOrzs6eTB
How would you hide the delivery of multiple boats/ferries large enough to transport a tank? Wouldn't think that a craft that size could be easily traileredQuote:
NATO should be providing assault boats/ferries secretly to the Ukes
and then in the spring in one dark night move over 50 new tanks at the narrowest point across from the Kherson Dnipro river crossings.
Ferries can be assembled in parts that are small enough to but in the back of a truck.agent-maroon said:How would you hide the delivery of multiple boats/ferries large enough to transport a tank? Wouldn't think that a craft that size could be easily traileredQuote:
NATO should be providing assault boats/ferries secretly to the Ukes
and then in the spring in one dark night move over 50 new tanks at the narrowest point across from the Kherson Dnipro river crossings.
agent-maroon said:How would you hide the delivery of multiple boats/ferries large enough to transport a tank? Wouldn't think that a craft that size could be easily traileredQuote:
NATO should be providing assault boats/ferries secretly to the Ukes
and then in the spring in one dark night move over 50 new tanks at the narrowest point across from the Kherson Dnipro river crossings.
........and getting occasionally nailed in the process. BOATSWaffledynamics said:Southern #Ukraine:
— ISW (@TheStudyofWar) February 2, 2023
Russian forces are continuing to carry out disruption missions on islands in the Dnipro River delta in #Kherson Oblast in an effort to prevent Ukrainian forces from gaining ground on the islands. https://t.co/QHtKCCBqr4 pic.twitter.com/cWOrzs6eTB