P.U.T.U said:
Shows what proper training vs conscript training is. The Uke would shoot and then move to another position and fire again. The Russians looked to fire from the same spots or close by even though they were not in a trench. I guess the Russians did not have any grenades either since at that range I would have chunked a few in the trench. Uke solder had an RPG but he didn't use grenades either.
Uke soldier also had a red dot while the Russians looked to have iron sights, helpful in close in situations like this to acquire targets faster.
So many of the videos showed Russian troops so close together making it easy for Ukraine to take out at least half of them with artillery or a drone. Also had a crunchy which is not unheard of with armoured vehicles. Difficult to see in IFVs and that guy was hugging the back of one. IFV changed directions and crunch
Damn. That was intense. And you are right. That is the first thing that jumped out at me. The Uke was shooting and scooting constantly. Popping his head up in a different place every time, traversing his assigned battlespace constantly and engaging threats quickly and moving on. This is textbook behavior and very well executed. Still, holy crap!
Russian was doing the exact opposite. This more than anything has shown how incredibly different our doctrine is from theirs. Assuming that Russian even got an adequate level of training. Never know these days. To be creeping up on an active enemy held trench like that from the front while fixated on a single point is mind numbing stupid.
"Violence of action" is a driving force of our USMC and one I adhere to with conviction. If you are going to get in the thick of things, then get in the f'ing thick of things with speed and purpose and with malice in your heart. Thunderdome logic but it works.
Also this Uke was fighting out of his mind! That RPG hit an IFV and he caused at least two more casualties while quick swapping weapons. Video game in real life almost. Hope he made it through.