GAC06 said:
More Bradleys is obvious, but the Strykers are interesting. We've seen two (or three?) extra allocations of Strykers after the large initial batch but I haven't seen any evidence of losses or combat use at all so far
GAC06 said:
More Bradleys is obvious, but the Strykers are interesting. We've seen two (or three?) extra allocations of Strykers after the large initial batch but I haven't seen any evidence of losses or combat use at all so far
They've shifted quite a bit of men and material up that way but nothing has gone in yet that I'm aware of.Ag In Ok said:
Any word on the Russian 100k assault?
Quote:
The situation at the end of the day on July 18, 2023
Fierce fighting continues on the flanks of Bakhmut . Russian gunners, together with units of the Airborne Forces, repulse enemy attacks in the Berkhovka area.
However, in the area of Kleshcheevka , the consolidated assault groups of the 3rd and 5th battalions of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, as a result of the hardest fighting and at the cost of heavy losses, managed to cling to the adjacent heights.
The attacks of Ukrainian formations in small groups continue without stopping. The rotation of the personnel of the Armed Forces of Ukraine is regularly carried out, which allows us to continue the tactics of "meat assault" without the support of armored vehicles.
The control of the Armed Forces of Ukraine over tactical heights greatly complicates the task of defending Kleshcheevka. In addition, the return of lost positions by Russian units is hampered by the same problem as on the Zaporozhye front - the lack of rotation and reinforcements. Delay in resolving the issue of supporting the defending units of the RF Armed Forces in this area threatens with sad consequences.
Russian telegram channel 'Archangal' claims that Russian forces have "approached the line of sight to Kupyansk"https://t.co/cTZOe8KlSP pic.twitter.com/PWKhKPDrly
— Faytuks News Δ (@Faytuks) July 18, 2023
Russians continue their meltdown over the footage of a Su-25 that crashed into the sea yesterday. Apparently, the pilot died after drowning - he was in the water for 8 minutes, and no one on the beach bothered trying to help him, instead preferring to swim and drink beer. pic.twitter.com/lD8TRJTbmf
— Dmitri (@wartranslated) July 18, 2023
Ukrainian troops now typically fire between 2,000 and 3,000 artillery shells per day at Russian forces, a US defense official told CNN.
— Faytuks News Δ (@Faytuks) July 18, 2023
https://t.co/2GhZiXdSwy
✙ KREMENSKY FOREST ✙
— Getty (@region776) July 18, 2023
The Armed Forces of Ukraine pushed back the RF Armed Forces in the Kremensky forest northeast of the village of Grigorovka. pic.twitter.com/LK4ixt2Sjl
#Ukraine's counteroffensive has been grinding but a "robust #Ukrainian reserve force" lies in wait, for the right time to strike, per @thejointstaff Chairman Gen Mark Milley
— Jeff Seldin (@jseldin) July 18, 2023
JFABNRGR said:GAC06 said:
More Bradleys is obvious, but the Strykers are interesting. We've seen two (or three?) extra allocations of Strykers after the large initial batch but I haven't seen any evidence of losses or combat use at all so far
I saw that as well. About a week ago the Brads were 16% of supplied lost but not a single Stryker or Abrams lost. This was the same time someone posted that the counter assault was a total failure and that all but 4 battalions had been committed.
Waffledynamics said:
WtfRussians continue their meltdown over the footage of a Su-25 that crashed into the sea yesterday. Apparently, the pilot died after drowning - he was in the water for 8 minutes, and no one on the beach bothered trying to help him, instead preferring to swim and drink beer. pic.twitter.com/lD8TRJTbmf
— Dmitri (@wartranslated) July 18, 2023
Right as we shift forward cluster munitions. Makes me wonder if that had a role of sorts in that decision, as I am sure we have been watching this gathering too. Even if Russia can gather 100K troops in one area, I can't believe all of them will be quality well trained units. So more human wave type attacks are probably expected. And nothing gets arty guys more lubed up than getting fire missions of "troops in the open". Arm them with DPICMs and it is literally perfect conditions for those.aezmvp said:They've shifted quite a bit of men and material up that way but nothing has gone in yet that I'm aware of.Ag In Ok said:
Any word on the Russian 100k assault?
Eliminatus said:Right as we shift forward cluster munitions. Makes me wonder if that had a role of sorts in that decision, as I am sure we have been watching this gathering too. Even if Russia can gather 100K troops in one area, I can't believe all of them will be quality well trained units. So more human wave type attacks are probably expected. And nothing gets arty guys more lubed up than getting fire missions of "troops in the open". Arm them with DPICMs and it is literally perfect conditions for those.aezmvp said:They've shifted quite a bit of men and material up that way but nothing has gone in yet that I'm aware of.Ag In Ok said:
Any word on the Russian 100k assault?
NEW FOOTAGE: An unverified video being circulated on Telegram appears to show the moment a Russian cruise missile impacted a residential area close to Odesa’s city center. pic.twitter.com/fwatsjr6Ke
— Forster Monitoring (@forster_intel) July 19, 2023
looks like odesa is getting hit by the russians.
— david D. (@secretsqrl123) July 18, 2023
to be clear odesa has no real military value right now, the armies are in the field, the marine HQ has no ships, and the barracks are pretty empty.
so what they are hitting is grain port areas, and civilian areas.
it sucks..…
Is this sarcasm? Cruise missiles launched against civilian targets is terrorism. High tech weaponry being used is far beyond what an ISIS-type insurgency could ever have available, but terrorism nonetheless. If you could make the case that Desert Storm was conducted as a terroristic campaign then lay it out here, but otherwise that's a terrible take.Quote:
Not pointless from a strategic point. They need to provide wins to their population to sustain the war.
Surely you must know that. Operation Desert Storm was presented in much the same way.
Don't we expect the Abrams to be stationed closer to Kyiv and closer to Western maintenance?ABATTBQ11 said:
They are still training on the Abrams. I don't think they even have them assigned to battalions yet.
Quote:
Ukrainian Defence Forces have success at Velyka Novosilka - Staromayorske and Novosilka - Staromayorske directions, - General Staff of Armed Forces of Ukraine says in the morning report
Russia opened a criminal case against Colonel of GRU Vladimir Kvachkov, a close Girkin's ally and a member of the "Angry Patriots Club", accusing him of discrediting the Russian Armed Forces. pic.twitter.com/rkdMCBAT5x
— Dmitri (@wartranslated) July 19, 2023
“We fought with honor,” Prigozhin tells his fighters in Belarus. “But today the situation on the front is shameful, and we don’t want to be part of it.” Wagner’s future, for now, is in Africa and in training the Belarusian army. https://t.co/MEOU1BU0Qk
— Yaroslav Trofimov (@yarotrof) July 19, 2023
The Russians are responding to the bridge in Crimea being attacked.Rossticus said:looks like odesa is getting hit by the russians.
— david D. (@secretsqrl123) July 18, 2023
to be clear odesa has no real military value right now, the armies are in the field, the marine HQ has no ships, and the barracks are pretty empty.
so what they are hitting is grain port areas, and civilian areas.
it sucks..…
Trench warfare is horrific.JFABNRGR said:
For anyone interested in INF ops this 12 minute vid of very difficult raid on orc trench is outstanding. Well executed OP Order. Has it all: preplanning, rehearsal, leadership, violence of action, real time intel, coms, coordination's, resupply, SSSSS, AAR....even fear/ hesitation overcome by leadership.
https://www.reddit.com/r/CombatFootage/comments/153r3o3/english_subtitles_soldiers_from_the_3rd/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3
TheEternalPessimist said:How do you KNOW for certain they are civilian targets?agent-maroon said:Is this sarcasm? Cruise missiles launched against civilian targets is terrorism. High tech weaponry being used is far beyond what an ISIS-type insurgency could ever have available, but terrorism nonetheless. If you could make the case that Desert Storm was conducted as a terroristic campaign then lay it out here, but otherwise that's a terrible take.Quote:
Not pointless from a strategic point. They need to provide wins to their population to sustain the war.
Surely you must know that. Operation Desert Storm was presented in much the same way.
I posted this last year -- but I had friends who were living south of the city center in Kiev just 2 blocks north of the main soccer stadium. The Ukrainians stationed anti-air missiles in the courtyard immediately adjacent to the building full of flats and apartments. They also were using the lobby of the building as a control center. My friend, who served in the old Soviet Armed forces in Afghanistan, confronted the officers and soldiers about the danger to civilians to no avail.
Regardless of the civilians that were living there.... the actions of the Ukrainian military made their building a legitimate target.