Would be nice if NATO used a couple destroyers to escort grain ships and issued a statement that if any NATO ships are harmed due to mines or otherwise, it's considered an act of war
Waffledynamics said:
If those are conditions, then Russia must value those things. That may mean the sanctions are having an effect indeed.
Odesa needs better air defense as a middle finger and a safeguard for grain supplies.
You favor escalation?SamHou said:
Would be nice if NATO used a couple destroyers to escort grain ships and issued a statement that if any NATO ships are harmed due to mines or otherwise, it's considered an act of war
LMCane said:That demonstrates a very high proficiency in combat arms. Good tactics, communication, and training.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
The ultimate problem however, is that there is no way that Ukraine can replicate the same thing for the OTHER 500 similar entrenchments along the front.
It's never a great idea to have a numerically inferior force involved in man to man trench fighting against a numerically superior force.
the Ukes have got to figure out a way to get mobile armored warfare working in their favor- or this war is going to remain stagnant ad infinitum.
At the very least, we need to get in front of this food shortage narrative to blame the Russians.RogerEnright said:You favor escalation?SamHou said:
Would be nice if NATO used a couple destroyers to escort grain ships and issued a statement that if any NATO ships are harmed due to mines or otherwise, it's considered an act of war
At this point, I don't believe they are holding back some massive strike force. Especially not given the volume of equipment losses being reported from multiple sources. Operation Quicksilver.ABATTBQ11 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
There are several battalions still being held in reserve. The strykers and a lot of Bradleys are assigned to those
RogerEnright said:You favor escalation?SamHou said:
Would be nice if NATO used a couple destroyers to escort grain ships and issued a statement that if any NATO ships are harmed due to mines or otherwise, it's considered an act of war
SamHou said:RogerEnright said:You favor escalation?SamHou said:
Would be nice if NATO used a couple destroyers to escort grain ships and issued a statement that if any NATO ships are harmed due to mines or otherwise, it's considered an act of war
I favor not allowing people to starve and not allowing Ukraine's economy to be choked.
Won't escalate. One lesson from this conflict is that Putin is all bark when it comes to threats and red lines with NATO.
I imagine it may work (certainly at this stage). Reminds me a bit of the West Berlin Air Lifts. You would want to have some intimidating American Naval ships to reinforce how immediate the response would be. I don't know if we or anyone in NATO could present that much power in the Black Sea.NoVAag91 said:SamHou said:
I favor not allowing people to starve and not allowing Ukraine's economy to be choked.
Won't escalate. One lesson from this conflict is that Putin is all bark when it comes to threats and red lines with NATO.
This. After all the West has done to support Ukraine, we've seen very little in the form of escalation beyond words and saber rattling. While all actions require careful examination of COAs and consequences, we should not approach escalation from a perspective of fear. In fact, escalation should be the key concern / fear of Moscow. Keep those ports open. It is a morally righteous position.
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Ukrainian Ministry of Defense will consider vessels heading to Russian Black Sea ports and ports at occupied territories of Ukraine as such that could carry military cargos, and vessel movement at Kerch Strait is prohibited
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The European Union will increase military aid to Ukraine in response to the shelling of Odesa, Borrell said. "There is only one solution for this - to increase military aid to Ukraine. If they are bombed, we must provide more air defense systems. If the Russians use drones, we must provide the means to destroy these drones. The massive attacks that took place over these 3 nights require a decisive response from us," Borrell said
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Russian state Duma adopted new amendments to laws on mobilisation, increasing existing fines and introducing new for avoiding mobilisation, not updating personal information at military enlistment office
Agree. But that works both ways. Russian grain shipsnot allowed out. No Russian war ships allowed into the Black Sea. The geography here is a huge factor in strategy. It is fairly easy to turn the Black Sea into a giant fishbowl, or rather fish in a barrel.2000AgPhD said:
Would Erdogan let them in? I think that is the big question.
Don't think that is the case with Wagner's latest move. The main grain imports for Africa come from Russia, France, and Ukraine. If Wagner actually is going to refocus on Africa I and Russia announces a blockade of Ukraine grain ships I think Russia is going to focus on their relationship with Africa to keep up their exportsMouthBQ98 said:
Putin's strategy is to increase hunger in third world nations? That's not going to win friends and allies. Trying to hold the world hostage via lack of food supply is going to be a tall order.
No. He needs to play both sides and Putin will put enormous pressure on him to not let NATO warships through to the Black Sea.2000AgPhD said:
Would Erdogan let them in? I think that is the big question.
Not sure we want the Navy to get into a shooting war with Russian warships trying to protect their grain ships outside of the Black Sea. That is the likely outcome of us trying to interdict Russian shipping after it leaves the Black Sea.aggiehawg said:Agree. But that works both ways. Russian grain shipsnot allowed out. No Russian war ships allowed into the Black Sea. The geography here is a huge factor in strategy. It is fairly easy to turn the Black Sea into a giant fishbowl, or rather fish in a barrel.2000AgPhD said:
Would Erdogan let them in? I think that is the big question.
The Montreux Convention prohibits passage of foreign warships during a war.txags92 said:No. He needs to play both sides and Putin will put enormous pressure on him to not let NATO warships through to the Black Sea.2000AgPhD said:
Would Erdogan let them in? I think that is the big question.
japantiger said:At this point, I don't believe they are holding back some massive strike force. Especially not given the volume of equipment losses being reported from multiple sources. Operation Quicksilver.ABATTBQ11 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
There are several battalions still being held in reserve. The strykers and a lot of Bradleys are assigned to those
I'm old enough to remember when a Wagner leader literally marched troops towards Moscow and shot down several Russian helicopters and an important intel plane and NOTHING happened to him.RogerEnright said:You favor escalation?SamHou said:
Would be nice if NATO used a couple destroyers to escort grain ships and issued a statement that if any NATO ships are harmed due to mines or otherwise, it's considered an act of war
I imagine we are giving them some of the flat bottom ones too, those things are goners with the first mine they hit. They had a lot of problems when the US used them. Good concept, bad executionDirt 05 said:
For the Ukrainian crew members sake, I hope we don't see strykers in combat
japantiger said:At this point, I don't believe they are holding back some massive strike force. Especially not given the volume of equipment losses being reported from multiple sources. Operation Quicksilver.ABATTBQ11 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
There are several battalions still being held in reserve. The strykers and a lot of Bradleys are assigned to those
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If the Ukrainians' plan is to mass most or all of their uncommitted combat power for a single major armored thrust somewhere in the south, expect the 117th to roll into combat alongside several other new brigades that we know exist, but which haven't yet appeared on the front line: the 21st, 32nd and 118th Mechanized andespeciallythe super-powerful 82nd Air Assault.
we have no assets in the Black Sea, only Russia and Turkey do.RogerEnright said:
Do we have sufficient assets in the Black Sea? This point is likely moot.
RogerEnright said:
Do we have sufficient assets in the Black Sea? This point is likely moot.
This is the way. Tell the Orcs to get their cameras ready…Sevastopol light show incoming.ABATTBQ11 said:RogerEnright said:
Do we have sufficient assets in the Black Sea? This point is likely moot.
We have no naval assets in the Black Sea, and foreign warships are currently barred from entering. The only option would be air based assets engaging in whatever ASW operations they could and engaging any Russian warships that fired on civilian vessels. I don't think that will happen.
The best option would be to arm Ukraine with long range missiles to hit Russia's vessels in port if a civilian vessel is attacked. Another potential partial solution would be to seek permission for mine sweepers to patrol traffic corridors into Ukrainian ports and demine them as necessary.
What does 🇺🇸 aid to Ukraine look like?
— CJ (@CasualArtyFan) July 20, 2023
It’s cluster munitions that are highly effective in the open against Russian infantry.
Starting with high explosives rounds, it’s quickly followed up at 0:25 by what appears to be 🇺🇸 DPICM. pic.twitter.com/jIfrxe91Kq