But they're taking losses at about 40x the rate of the Afghan war. Putin wouldn't survive a 10 year war, nor will we fund one for that matter. But the point is that this war, as it's currently executed, is unsustainable for Russia.AgBank said:
During the Russian Afghan War, it took almost 10 years for fatigue to set in. The Russians have been at this stage of the conflict for 1 year.
EastSideAg2002 said:
Anybody seen the amount of people mobilized out of Moscow or St. Petersburg? From everything I have read on here is that they pretty much have not been touched. That's when I think it will get dicey for him.
You are most welcome and my thanks to everyone else, too.fire09 said:
Pg 1000. Wow. Just wanted to say thank you to those posters sifting through and filtering the endless content to provide us with updates, insight, and relevant discussion.
74OA a special thank you to your efforts.
Waffledynamics said:
Despite recent Russian gains, Denys is pretty optimistic here. He seems to think something big will come out of Zelensky's meetings in Europe happening at the moment.
Agreed, but it will be interesting to see what effect they would have. This video from several months ago describes Russia's poor utilization of their air force. I would be interested to see how Ukraine would better use Western jets.RebelE Infantry said:Waffledynamics said:
Despite recent Russian gains, Denys is pretty optimistic here. He seems to think something big will come out of Zelensky's meetings in Europe happening at the moment.
Reading the tea leaves, it seems almost a foregone conclusion that they'll get fighter jets from the UK.
Vuhledar, a Russian mechanized formation tries to assault a Ukrainian position through a minefield, before retreating.
— OSINTtechnical (@Osinttechnical) February 9, 2023
During the retreat, a BMP-3 hits a mine, the entire formation comes under Ukrainian artillery fire, and one of the T-80BVs is abandoned. pic.twitter.com/Imn2C198EC
2/ ISW has not previously seen Russian personnel subordinated to a DNR formation and this claim, if true, would suggest that Russian forces may be reinforcing degraded DNR formations with mobilized personnel from Russia itself because DNR formations are unable to replenish losses
— ISW (@TheStudyofWar) February 9, 2023
#Ukraine: At least 31 vehicles lost - the aftermath of the Russian attack on Vuhledar, #Donetsk Oblast.
— 🇺🇦 Ukraine Weapons Tracker (@UAWeapons) February 9, 2023
13 Russian tanks (mostly T-72B3), 12 BMP-1/BMP-2 infantry fighting vehicles, 2 MT-LB, an IMR combat engineering vehicle and others were destroyed or damaged and abandoned.
⏬ pic.twitter.com/FdZmLtn4ay
I disagree in part. The Russians can't sustain the materiel costs forever. They don't have the manufacturing capacity to turn out the tanks, ifv, afv, that they need to put back into the field. This isn't the 1700s and Russians can't win an infantry centric war vs a mechanized force.Corporal Punishment said:
That is terrifying.
that video is pretty amazing.JFABNRGR said:
Does Ivan change the oil???
Looks like a blown engine to me on the last part of vid on MBT...maybe overreving from spinning in the mud? any tankers on here!More video from #Vuhledar #Donetsk region pic.twitter.com/6HzJhzEktG
— Cloooud (@GloOouD) February 8, 2023
DCPD158 said:Agthatbuilds said:
True. It's quite a conundrum for putin.
He probably can't afford for this war to be too protracted for 3 reasons- his health, Russian financing, and threat of coup.
But, Russia doesn't have a weaponry advantage almost anywhere and loses ground every time the west decides to send something new.
So, he's left, imo, with sending bodies in an attempt to overwhelm and breakout at the risk of an internal coup. I dont think this would happen so long as Russia were successful in a breakout.
Or, he could simply send so many troops to the areas which he holds and make it very uninviting for Ukraine to attempt to gain back those areas and, in doing so, create leverage for political pressure for terms to end the war with whatever minor gains have been made.
Sooner or later, those bodies are going to say "no" in even larger numbers. No amount of Wagner Commisars will overcome a collective will to survive
They were also taking small arms fire. Hence they are all on the one side of IFV. In beginning the tank fires towards bottom right corner of frame but appears to be unaware of exact target locations.LMCane said:that video is pretty amazing.JFABNRGR said:
Does Ivan change the oil???
Looks like a blown engine to me on the last part of vid on MBT...maybe overreving from spinning in the mud? any tankers on here!More video from #Vuhledar #Donetsk region pic.twitter.com/6HzJhzEktG
— Cloooud (@GloOouD) February 8, 2023
good post.
you see about 20 Russkies beating it for the rear...
but then the one time they pan out on the screen you see the rear is..
about 5 miles away.
Maybe. I'd bet money the force you saw backed by an armor isn't conscripts. They send conscripts in human waves "covered" by inaccurate artillery to soak up bullets and expose the defensive positions.jobu93 said:
so the Russians still can't mass armor in range of arty or missiles and they still don't do will with combined arms assault.
They've got artillery and man in numbers. Neither of which are particularly accurate but their numbers are the multiplier.
This is going to be a very long conflict.
I agree on all points. This conflict may have another year or so, although I don't see Poland and other Eastern European countries reducing their supply of aid.lb3 said:But they're taking losses at about 40x the rate of the Afghan war. Putin wouldn't survive a 10 year war, nor will we fund one for that matter. But the point is that this war, as it's currently executed, is unsustainable for Russia.AgBank said:
During the Russian Afghan War, it took almost 10 years for fatigue to set in. The Russians have been at this stage of the conflict for 1 year.
If their offensive fails, Putin will likely be forced to turn to a full mobilization and that is when the pressure will really mount.
UK is tapping the brakes. POST-WAR?lb3 said:
The prospect of Ukraine getting western jets is a game changer. Sure older airframes are still susceptible to modern Russian air defenses but they open up so many opportunities for the Ukes.
Our military doctrine is heavily dependent on air power, not artillery as is the Soviet doctrine. But more specifically we employ tactical airframes in pursuit of offensive goals whereas the Soviets used their tactical airframes in defensive roles to counter our strategic bombers.
The point being that, while our stockpiles of artillery and other ground based munitions is under strain, we have lots air based munitions that haven't entered the battle yet.