Quote:
One span of the road part of the Crimean bridge is destroyed and cannot be restored - Russian minister
https://liveuamap.com/en/2023/17-july-one-span-of-the-road-part-of-the-crimean-bridge-is
Quote:
One span of the road part of the Crimean bridge is destroyed and cannot be restored - Russian minister
txags92 said:I am going to say there is zero chance the orcs have a group that large anywhere near Ukrainian lines without it getting hammered by HIMARs and other longer range munitions.FriscoKid said:"Now a very powerful Russian group is concentrated in the Lyman - Kupyansk direction. More than 100,000 personnel, more than 900 tanks and 370 self-propelled guns" — Cherevaty
— MAKS 23 👀🇺🇦 (@Maks_NAFO_FELLA) July 17, 2023
100k troops?
Battle of the bulge?
Teslag said:
Kinda hope they do. Would be fun to see what the new cluster munitions could do to a group of orcs that thick.
MouthBQ98 said:
Yes, call me skeptical, but there is NO WAY they put this together without western intelligence spotting it and handing that information off to Ukraine and without its presence being noted to the public following the war in significant detail as it assembled.
calling BS; the logistics alone to get something that big armed, fed and moving would be 20x beyond the scope of anything we have seen the Russians capable of. If they are, in fact, doing this the starvation and lack of ammo for the troops is going to cause a mass mutiny.FriscoKid said:"Now a very powerful Russian group is concentrated in the Lyman - Kupyansk direction. More than 100,000 personnel, more than 900 tanks and 370 self-propelled guns" — Cherevaty
— MAKS 23 👀🇺🇦 (@Maks_NAFO_FELLA) July 17, 2023
100k troops?
Battle of the bulge?
2wealfth Man said:calling BS; the logistics alone to get something that big armed, fed and moving would be 20x beyond the scope of anything we have seen the Russians capable of. If they are, in fact, doing this the starvation and lack of ammo for the troops is going to cause a mass mutiny.FriscoKid said:"Now a very powerful Russian group is concentrated in the Lyman - Kupyansk direction. More than 100,000 personnel, more than 900 tanks and 370 self-propelled guns" — Cherevaty
— MAKS 23 👀🇺🇦 (@Maks_NAFO_FELLA) July 17, 2023
100k troops?
Battle of the bulge?
Funny thought. And re: the difficult to detect, I don't doubt it. All the combat debris as well would make chemical sensors give you a lot of false positives too. I just think that the small remote ground item is more plausible than some Mammoth Tank mine clearing vehicle.SmallBusiness said:I always thought we needed some low cost remotely controlled "disposable" Skid Steers.aezmvp said:
I could definitely see the later. Building something so heavy that it could withstand ATGMs while doing mine clearing doesn't seem like it would work in Ukraine where there are really only 6 months of the year where you can use the tanks in a off road fashion.
Let some 18 year olds see how far they can get.
The problem is that something big enough to carry the sensor, the batteries to run it, the GPS antenna, and all the processing gear is going to require a cart big enough to set off any mine it runs over before it gets a chance to detect it. To reasonably think you can detect a mine up to 1-2' deep, you are going to need a sensor that is probably at least 30" x 30". I like your idea, but the sensors have to be big to be able to classify the signature they read against a library of know signatures.ABATTBQ11 said:
I wouldn't suspend it under a drone. I'd put it on a glorified RC car and try to keep it as low and quiet as possible with the idea of remotely mapping the minefield before breaching.
Here's an interesting review of the effects of artillery on various vehicles, including armor.SmallBusiness said:Can a heavy tank (say Abrams, Leopard 2) survive a top hit from a 152MM?ABATTBQ11 said:74OA said:
Sappers can't clear paths through the minefields until the pre-sighted Russian artillery guarding them is sufficiently attrited. This is why the initial counterbattery battle Ukraine is steadily winning is so important.
"In the open fields of Zaporizhzhia in particular, where finding cover is difficult, commanders are exposing fewer soldiers in order to limit the number of casualties from heavy artillery."
SLOW GOING
The lesson learned here, to me, is that you need a mine clearing vehicle so heavily armored it can withstand ATGM's and artillery to clear a mine field while under fire, or something that can do it stealthily at night, like a small, remotely operated electric vehicle with a metal detector. Have it drive out and quietly mark mines or plant charges and blow them all after it retreats.
Maybe somewhat off target and simplistic, but I remember in Saving Private Ryan, they mentioned "those little wooden bastages that the minesweepers couldn't detect". Are there similar mines made of non-detectable materials today?txags92 said:The problem is that something big enough to carry the sensor, the batteries to run it, the GPS antenna, and all the processing gear is going to require a cart big enough to set off any mine it runs over before it gets a chance to detect it. To reasonably think you can detect a mine up to 1-2' deep, you are going to need a sensor that is probably at least 30" x 30". I like your idea, but the sensors have to be big to be able to classify the signature they read against a library of know signatures.ABATTBQ11 said:
I wouldn't suspend it under a drone. I'd put it on a glorified RC car and try to keep it as low and quiet as possible with the idea of remotely mapping the minefield before breaching.
B-1 83 said:Maybe somewhat off target and simplistic, but I remember in Saving Private Ryan, they mentioned "those little wooden bastages that the minesweepers couldn't detect". Are there similar mines made of non-detectable materials today?txags92 said:The problem is that something big enough to carry the sensor, the batteries to run it, the GPS antenna, and all the processing gear is going to require a cart big enough to set off any mine it runs over before it gets a chance to detect it. To reasonably think you can detect a mine up to 1-2' deep, you are going to need a sensor that is probably at least 30" x 30". I like your idea, but the sensors have to be big to be able to classify the signature they read against a library of know signatures.ABATTBQ11 said:
I wouldn't suspend it under a drone. I'd put it on a glorified RC car and try to keep it as low and quiet as possible with the idea of remotely mapping the minefield before breaching.
Yeah, Eliminatus covered it in his reply, but I just wanted to add that theoretically there are other tools like microgravity that can detect the differential in density between the native soil and a non-metallic mine, assuming the native soil is otherwise mostly uniform and undisturbed. However, in an area that has been pockmarked with artillery impacts and shrapnel, they would be pretty much impossible to detect. Also, the tools necessary to do a microgravity survey are not as easily portable or quick to scan as the Apex or an EM-61 system.B-1 83 said:Maybe somewhat off target and simplistic, but I remember in Saving Private Ryan, they mentioned "those little wooden bastages that the minesweepers couldn't detect". Are there similar mines made of non-detectable materials today?txags92 said:The problem is that something big enough to carry the sensor, the batteries to run it, the GPS antenna, and all the processing gear is going to require a cart big enough to set off any mine it runs over before it gets a chance to detect it. To reasonably think you can detect a mine up to 1-2' deep, you are going to need a sensor that is probably at least 30" x 30". I like your idea, but the sensors have to be big to be able to classify the signature they read against a library of know signatures.ABATTBQ11 said:
I wouldn't suspend it under a drone. I'd put it on a glorified RC car and try to keep it as low and quiet as possible with the idea of remotely mapping the minefield before breaching.
KERCH BRIDGE ATTACK: UKR's strike likely utilized a 2nd Generation variant of UKR's Unmanned Surface Vessel (USV). Damage to the road-spans suggest that the attacking USVs carried approx. 1000 lbs (453 Kg) of explosive configured as a linear shaped charge. The USVs were detonated… pic.twitter.com/2uEzWGAShL
— Chuck Pfarrer | Indications & Warnings | (@ChuckPfarrer) July 17, 2023
the fact is that russia attacking is the best news that ukr could ever get, they are dug in and have more arty than the ru do... by moving forward they are in the open and thats the stuff that cluster bombs LOVE!!!!
— david D. (@secretsqrl123) July 17, 2023
only 60k+ for 300k kia... this could put them over the top.
Ukraine attacked the Crimean Bridge, which connects occupied Crimea with Russia, with kamikaze unmanned surface vehicles (USVs).
— Clash Report (@clashreport) July 17, 2023
The damaged span of the Crimean bridge in the direction of Kerch sank by 50 cm.
Another span - towards Taman – was destroyed. pic.twitter.com/7WPTPHuBE1
Clearer pictures of the destroyed span of the Kerch Bridge. It is the side leading from Russia to the temporarily occupied peninsula.
— (((Tendar))) (@Tendar) July 17, 2023
That bridge section will not be operational for the rest of the year and we will see what will come next. It is obvious that Russians cannot… pic.twitter.com/LyNKZHE2jG
The President of Russia, Vladimir Putin stated today during a Televised Meeting that the Ministry of Defense is preparing a number of Response Options for the “Terrorist Attack by the Kyiv Regime” against the Kerch Striat Bridge and that he has also requested the Military to… pic.twitter.com/wfo3UZ8sDe
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) July 17, 2023
Thus, repairs this time around will likely be more efficient. Russian authorities also likely have capacity in place to install pre-fab spans, and the relative distance to shore and water clearance is a less-technically complex operation overall.
— | osint_east | (@osint_east) July 17, 2023
2|2
people are saying ... what about ukraine....
— david D. (@secretsqrl123) July 17, 2023
ukraine has been getting more aircraft.
in fact ukraine has a growing airforce with more western and soviet helicopters being delivered than many know about. entire airforces of helicopters have been donated...
on the fixed wing…
Russian Sources are reporting that a 3M54-1 “Kalibr” Cruise Missile has Targeted the Large Commercial Port in the Ukrainian City of Odesa tonight, with a Pillar of Black Smoke seen coming from the Location after the Explosion; the Port of Odesa was the Primary Port during the… pic.twitter.com/Nc1oOMemhT
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) July 18, 2023
ABATTBQ11 said:74OA said:
Sappers can't clear paths through the minefields until the pre-sighted Russian artillery guarding them is sufficiently attrited. This is why the initial counterbattery battle Ukraine is steadily winning is so important.
"In the open fields of Zaporizhzhia in particular, where finding cover is difficult, commanders are exposing fewer soldiers in order to limit the number of casualties from heavy artillery."
SLOW GOING
The lesson learned here, to me, is that you need a mine clearing vehicle so heavily armored it can withstand ATGM's and artillery to clear a mine field while under fire, or something that can do it stealthily at night, like a small, remotely operated electric vehicle with a metal detector. Have it drive out and quietly mark mines or plant charges and blow them all after it retreats.
The October attack took a lot longer to repair than predicted. hopefully the same holds true here.Rossticus said:Thus, repairs this time around will likely be more efficient. Russian authorities also likely have capacity in place to install pre-fab spans, and the relative distance to shore and water clearance is a less-technically complex operation overall.
— | osint_east | (@osint_east) July 17, 2023
2|2
Always baffling watching them do this. Usually, consistent dismissals are a sign that the enemy is on its last legs. That aside, as siloed as the Russian army is, the constant knowledge vacuum and lack of any form of turnover has to be hampering them significantly.LMCane said:
"The Russian MoD has begun to remove commanders from some of the Russian military's most combat effective units and formations and appears to be accelerating this effort.
The recent dismissal of 58th Combined Arms Army Commander (CAA) Colonel General Ivan Popov and the reported dismissal of 106th Guards Airborne (VDV) Division Commander Major General Vladimir Seliverstov prompted further discussions of other alleged recent dismissals and arrests.
Russian sources amplified an alleged audio message from personnel of the 7th Guards Mountain VDV Division on July 15 in which the personnel claimed that the Russian military command dismissed 7th VDV Division Commander Major General Alexander Kornev in early July.
Russian sources also claimed that Russian authorities arrested 90th Tank Division (Eastern Military District) Commander Major General Ramil Ibatullin as well as two unspecified deputies on an unspecified date.
A prominent Kremlin-affiliated milblogger suggested that the Russian military command is also planning to dismiss the 31st VDV Brigade Commander, who is reportedly Colonel Sergei Karasev.
Russian sources speculated that the Russian MoD may be preparing to arrest VDV Commander Colonel General Mikhail Teplinsky.
ISW has not observed confirmation of Seliverstov's and Kornev's dismissals nor of Ibatullin's arrest, although these claims follow a pattern similar to that of previous claims of command changes that have proven true.
These formations and units are conducting defensive and offensive operations in key sectors of the front in Ukraine.
The 58th CAA has conducted a relatively successful defense against Ukrainian counteroffensives in western Zaporizhia Oblast, and the 106th Division is committed to defending against Ukrainian assaults on Bakhmut's northern and southern flanks.
ISW has observed elements of the 7th VDV Division deployed to east (left) bank of Kherson Oblast near the Antonivsky Bridge as well as to unspecified areas of western Zaporizhia Oblast.
Russian milbloggers have claimed that the 31st VDV Brigade is also defending in the Bakhmut direction and that elements of the 90th Tank Division are involved in ongoing limited assaults west of Kreminna, Luhansk Oblast."
I wonder how much of this is continued fallout from the Wagner mutiny and the corruption found in the wake of it?mickeyrig06sq3 said:Always baffling watching them do this. Usually, consistent dismissals are a sign that the enemy is on its last legs. That aside, as siloed as the Russian army is, the constant knowledge vacuum and lack of any form of turnover has to be hampering them significantly.LMCane said:
"The Russian MoD has begun to remove commanders from some of the Russian military's most combat effective units and formations and appears to be accelerating this effort.
The recent dismissal of 58th Combined Arms Army Commander (CAA) Colonel General Ivan Popov and the reported dismissal of 106th Guards Airborne (VDV) Division Commander Major General Vladimir Seliverstov prompted further discussions of other alleged recent dismissals and arrests.
Russian sources amplified an alleged audio message from personnel of the 7th Guards Mountain VDV Division on July 15 in which the personnel claimed that the Russian military command dismissed 7th VDV Division Commander Major General Alexander Kornev in early July.
Russian sources also claimed that Russian authorities arrested 90th Tank Division (Eastern Military District) Commander Major General Ramil Ibatullin as well as two unspecified deputies on an unspecified date.
A prominent Kremlin-affiliated milblogger suggested that the Russian military command is also planning to dismiss the 31st VDV Brigade Commander, who is reportedly Colonel Sergei Karasev.
Russian sources speculated that the Russian MoD may be preparing to arrest VDV Commander Colonel General Mikhail Teplinsky.
ISW has not observed confirmation of Seliverstov's and Kornev's dismissals nor of Ibatullin's arrest, although these claims follow a pattern similar to that of previous claims of command changes that have proven true.
These formations and units are conducting defensive and offensive operations in key sectors of the front in Ukraine.
The 58th CAA has conducted a relatively successful defense against Ukrainian counteroffensives in western Zaporizhia Oblast, and the 106th Division is committed to defending against Ukrainian assaults on Bakhmut's northern and southern flanks.
ISW has observed elements of the 7th VDV Division deployed to east (left) bank of Kherson Oblast near the Antonivsky Bridge as well as to unspecified areas of western Zaporizhia Oblast.
Russian milbloggers have claimed that the 31st VDV Brigade is also defending in the Bakhmut direction and that elements of the 90th Tank Division are involved in ongoing limited assaults west of Kreminna, Luhansk Oblast."
mickeyrig06sq3 said:Always baffling watching them do this. Usually, consistent dismissals are a sign that the enemy is on its last legs. That aside, as siloed as the Russian army is, the constant knowledge vacuum and lack of any form of turnover has to be hampering them significantly.LMCane said:
"The Russian MoD has begun to remove commanders from some of the Russian military's most combat effective units and formations and appears to be accelerating this effort.
The recent dismissal of 58th Combined Arms Army Commander (CAA) Colonel General Ivan Popov and the reported dismissal of 106th Guards Airborne (VDV) Division Commander Major General Vladimir Seliverstov prompted further discussions of other alleged recent dismissals and arrests.
Russian sources amplified an alleged audio message from personnel of the 7th Guards Mountain VDV Division on July 15 in which the personnel claimed that the Russian military command dismissed 7th VDV Division Commander Major General Alexander Kornev in early July.
Russian sources also claimed that Russian authorities arrested 90th Tank Division (Eastern Military District) Commander Major General Ramil Ibatullin as well as two unspecified deputies on an unspecified date.
A prominent Kremlin-affiliated milblogger suggested that the Russian military command is also planning to dismiss the 31st VDV Brigade Commander, who is reportedly Colonel Sergei Karasev.
Russian sources speculated that the Russian MoD may be preparing to arrest VDV Commander Colonel General Mikhail Teplinsky.
ISW has not observed confirmation of Seliverstov's and Kornev's dismissals nor of Ibatullin's arrest, although these claims follow a pattern similar to that of previous claims of command changes that have proven true.
These formations and units are conducting defensive and offensive operations in key sectors of the front in Ukraine.
The 58th CAA has conducted a relatively successful defense against Ukrainian counteroffensives in western Zaporizhia Oblast, and the 106th Division is committed to defending against Ukrainian assaults on Bakhmut's northern and southern flanks.
ISW has observed elements of the 7th VDV Division deployed to east (left) bank of Kherson Oblast near the Antonivsky Bridge as well as to unspecified areas of western Zaporizhia Oblast.
Russian milbloggers have claimed that the 31st VDV Brigade is also defending in the Bakhmut direction and that elements of the 90th Tank Division are involved in ongoing limited assaults west of Kreminna, Luhansk Oblast."