Ah ok.74OA said:
PAC-3 system. The US has been providing most of the missile reloads.
The reason I asked is because this is the pic in the article posted...

That's a PAC-2.
Ah ok.74OA said:
PAC-3 system. The US has been providing most of the missile reloads.
I know at the beginning of the war it was communication issues but in general the Russian philosophy is to have their leaders close to the action! You don't want Ivan to think they know what's best and do their own thing. Very dangerous for the motherland!Gilligan said:JFABNRGR said:AtticusMatlock said:
Rumors swirling that the Ukes may have taken out one of the best / most competent Russian generals with a HIMARS. Have not seen confirmation.
A rare time my tax dollars were effective.
Two strikes on large groups of open troops in last 2 days.
https://www.reddit.com/r/CombatFootage/s/xZysBGbYAP
https://www.reddit.com/r/CombatFootage/s/NuSdm3Hmqo
I hope he was in the middle of a motivational speech when the strike came. Would love to see the aftermath vids / photos.
Why was a general that close to the front?
Thank God they're so stupid.
PJYoung said:I know at the beginning of the war it was communication issues but in general the Russian philosophy is to have their leaders close to the action! You don't want Ivan to think they know what's best and do their own thing. Very dangerous for the motherland!Gilligan said:JFABNRGR said:AtticusMatlock said:
Rumors swirling that the Ukes may have taken out one of the best / most competent Russian generals with a HIMARS. Have not seen confirmation.
A rare time my tax dollars were effective.
Two strikes on large groups of open troops in last 2 days.
https://www.reddit.com/r/CombatFootage/s/xZysBGbYAP
https://www.reddit.com/r/CombatFootage/s/NuSdm3Hmqo
I hope he was in the middle of a motivational speech when the strike came. Would love to see the aftermath vids / photos.
Why was a general that close to the front?
Thank God they're so stupid.
Waffledynamics said:
New York threatened.
Saving them to use against their own people if they try to overthrow Putin?74OA said:
Russia is having difficulty fielding replacements for its tank losses, so why isn't it tapping its large stock of T-72s?
"Twenty-eight months into Russia's wider war on Ukraine, stocks of T-55s are down 31 percent, T-62s are down 37 percent and T-80Bs are down a startling 79 percent. But just nine percent of T-72s have left storage."
T-72s
Agthatbuilds said:
There's apparently nothing tactically that Ukraine could do that would remove Russia from the country. Russia is simply to big and to willing to sacrifice its people.
The one thing that could change the direction of this conflict would be true air superiority. Either side gets that and it would change the calculations.
TexasAggie_97 said:
Sadly no amount of defense systems will end this war. Russia is just going to bleed Ukraine dry. Putin will throw as many bodies as it takes to win and unless NATO commits to joining the war, Russia will ultimately win and all we will have to show for it is millions of dead Ukrainians and trillions more in debt. It is time to either step up and force Russia's hand to see if they have the balls to go against NATO or pull back and just let them have Ukraine because the current strategy already has a determined outcome, and it is not in Ukraine's favor.
Teslag said:Agthatbuilds said:
There's apparently nothing tactically that Ukraine could do that would remove Russia from the country. Russia is simply to big and to willing to sacrifice its people.
The one thing that could change the direction of this conflict would be true air superiority. Either side gets that and it would change the calculations.
There is also nothing tactically Russia can do to go on a successful offensive. Throwing bodies doesn't work in 2024.
The current lines are perpetually frozen.
Gordo14 said:
Russia is dying as a country. Their demographics are the worst in the world. Every 20-40 year old male that dies in Ukraine amplifies the issue further. This is also true for Ukraine, but Ukraine did not do the invading, Russia did. And as such Russia has experienced outsized casualty rates.
Exactly. That's the defeatist mindset Putin's disinformation programs are working to plant in the West's collective psyche. It's amazing how easily people buy into it.Teslag said:
It seems there is always this notion that Russia historically throws countless bodies at a front in war and eventually gets their way. And what do we base this? The Nazi invasion in WW2? There is a substantial difference between throwing your own bodies to defend your homeland against an invader during a time with still relatively little military advancement. There's literally no other option in that situation.
Fast forward to 2024. When was the last time Russia successfully won a war in a near peer setting by simply manpower alone? Certainly not Afghanistan or anything recent. Trying simply man power your way on the modern battlefield with small arms against drones, modern guided weapons (often with cluster warheads), and real time intelligence to show exactly where those surges come from is pointless and folly. It would never work in a thousand years regardless of how many living Russians there are.
Possibly. If Russia wins, they can conscript 100% of the Ukrainians of certain ages to fight the next war. They are still in a tough spot, but their population would have grown. They will likely pay the Ukrainians less than they are contracting new recruits for in Russia.Gordo14 said:
Russia is dying as a country. Their demographics are the worst in the world. Every 20-40 year old male that dies in Ukraine amplifies the issue further. This is also true for Ukraine, but Ukraine did not do the invading, Russia did. And as such Russia has experienced outsized casualty rates.
Yeah, lets push for a meaningless piece of paper that Russia will ignore as soon as it is convenient for them so they can attack again after taking a pause to resupply their weapons and train up some new cannon fodder.P.U.T.U said:
Russia has already conscripted over 1 million blue collar Ukes from the SE industrial center at the beginning of the war. Most of their local conscripts that they threw in uniform were their undesirables (ethnic minorities, immigrants, Muslims) so while they have lost a generation of workers they gains more desirable eastern Ukes in an area they already considered theirs.
We can go back and forth but Ukraine does not have the manpower to conduct a widescale offensive to take back a large swatch of land. Yes they can hit some key targets and bleed out some men and supplies from Russia but Russia put itself in a wartime economy to somewhat handle this. Even at the beginning of the war there was NGOs with retired US special operations on the ground and they said they could not figure out what Ukraine's strategy was other than lob artillery. Neither was going a good job of having troops go under the artillery.
Vietnam and Afghanistan had insurgencies that understood how to use the terrain to fight a guerilla war, they fought when they had the advantage. If they did not they would retreat to right another day. Ukraine is not using the terrain in the same way and is trying to use Western weapons where they don't fully understand how to use them. I read the other day that a Patriot system lasted less than 30 days in country before it was taken out. Welp there goes another billion in taxpayers money.
Countries like Georgia, Poland, and other adjacent ones need to push for a treaty. For the most part the lines are not going to change too much further from what they are now. Plus the USA needs to focus on it's own inventory with all of the conflicts going on or getting hot around the world.
Quote:
Countries like Georgia, Poland, and other adjacent ones need to push for a treaty. For the most part the lines are not going to change too much further from what they are now.
Agthatbuilds said:74OA said:Exactly. That's the defeatist mindset Putin's disinformation programs are working to plant in the West's collective psyche. It's amazing how easily people buy into it.Teslag said:
It seems there is always this notion that Russia historically throws countless bodies at a front in war and eventually gets their way. And what do we base this? The Nazi invasion in WW2? There is a substantial difference between throwing your own bodies to defend your homeland against an invader during a time with still relatively little military advancement. There's literally no other option in that situation.
Fast forward to 2024. When was the last time Russia successfully won a war in a near peer setting by simply manpower alone? Certainly not Afghanistan or anything recent. Trying simply man power your way on the modern battlefield with small arms against drones, modern guided weapons (often with cluster warheads), and real time intelligence to show exactly where those surges come from is pointless and folly. It would never work in a thousand years regardless of how many living Russians there are.
Forgotten, for example, is Russia's defeat in WWI when its huge army of conscripted peasants eventually collapsed and went home to start a revolution and kill the czar.
True. That revolution was helped ushered on by Germany.
France and England were on the verge of revolution at the time as well due to the poor results in the field.
Obviously Russia cannot simply dump bodies in perpetuity as there is a limit. It just doesn't appear Russia is anywhere near that limit today.
As others have said, it likely doesn't much matter what either side does, this war is frozen in place.
As long as the "mere cargo" keeps coming from the hinterlands, and not from Moscow and/or St Petersburg, it will keep working at least until groceries and items that come from the hinterlands stop showing up on shelves in the big city stores.ABATTBQ11 said:Agthatbuilds said:74OA said:Exactly. That's the defeatist mindset Putin's disinformation programs are working to plant in the West's collective psyche. It's amazing how easily people buy into it.Teslag said:
It seems there is always this notion that Russia historically throws countless bodies at a front in war and eventually gets their way. And what do we base this? The Nazi invasion in WW2? There is a substantial difference between throwing your own bodies to defend your homeland against an invader during a time with still relatively little military advancement. There's literally no other option in that situation.
Fast forward to 2024. When was the last time Russia successfully won a war in a near peer setting by simply manpower alone? Certainly not Afghanistan or anything recent. Trying simply man power your way on the modern battlefield with small arms against drones, modern guided weapons (often with cluster warheads), and real time intelligence to show exactly where those surges come from is pointless and folly. It would never work in a thousand years regardless of how many living Russians there are.
Forgotten, for example, is Russia's defeat in WWI when its huge army of conscripted peasants eventually collapsed and went home to start a revolution and kill the czar.
True. That revolution was helped ushered on by Germany.
France and England were on the verge of revolution at the time as well due to the poor results in the field.
Obviously Russia cannot simply dump bodies in perpetuity as there is a limit. It just doesn't appear Russia is anywhere near that limit today.
As others have said, it likely doesn't much matter what either side does, this war is frozen in place.
The limit has grown since Afghanistan. I posted a video quite awhile back from a YouTube channel called Paper Skies by the son of a former Soviet aviator who delves into Soviet aviation stories that goes into how and why. He has a really good insight into Russian and Soviet culture because he grew up in it, and it's absolutely fascinating most of the time.
Anyway, the video explains the origin of, "cargo 200/300" and how the Soviets, and mainly the Russians, capitalized on, "The Black Tulip," which was the moniker given to the An-12 since it was used to repatriate so many bodies from Afghanistan. There was a song written about it by a very popular Soviet/Russian singer that brought a lot of attention to it, but the Russians, in only a way they could do, managed to turn it around through movies and TV to desensitize their populace to dead soldiers by dehumanizing them through the use of the, "cargo 200/300" label in movies and TV. Through so much exposure and repetition of the term in action movies and the like, they got average people to think of dead soldiers as mere cargo and simply a fact of life. That social engineering effort of the 80's and 90's is a large part of why Russian culture looks upon the deaths in Afghanistan and Ukraine so differently.
For reference;74OA said:
Ukraine is littered with unexploded Russian ordnance, so Ukraine is training women as EOD specialists. The consequences of Putin's crimes will long outlive him.
"No one can say with any certainty how much unexploded ordnance there is Ukraine, but we do know every day that the war rages on there are thousands of devices dropped. It's estimated that for every day's worth of ordnance dropped, it will take 30 days to clear it that means if the war ended tomorrow it would take at least 50 years to clear Ukraine. I probably won't be alive to see Ukraine free of unexploded ordnance and its likely my future children won't either. There will be devices to dispose of for generations."
UXO
From the UXO article: "Friends of Ukraine-EOD has partnered with MAT Kosovo, a world-renowned explosive ordnance disposal training team to deliver this training to Ukrainian nationals. Since the conflict began, devastatingly more than 1,000 Ukrainian mine clearance operators have been killed, and increasing capacity in this area is an absolute priority. With almost 60% of Russian ordnance that is dropped in Ukraine not exploding, (the average is usually 15% - the high rate is due to the age of the devices and how they have been stored) this means Ukraine is one of the most heavily contaminated countries in the world."Eliminatus said:
I can't even fathom the colossal effort it will take to cleanse all of that country, and that used to be my very job. That part of the country will never be the same again IMO, as with all of Russias wars.
Actually super curious as to the actual dud rates of the Russian munitions right now over there. Haven't been able to find a reliable source on that as of yet and I've looked more than once already.