Apparently, Putin took a page out of the other Vlad's book (which no doubt was partially plagiarized from Marx & Adam Smith). Doused in NYC stripclub Stolichnaya while flicking a critical clown's Zippo ...The Capitalists will sell us the rope with which we will hang them — Vladimir Ilich Lenin
Here comes very apparent the problem that Russia has now: that "front line" drawn to the map is what? 1300 kilometers or so? In the map (on page 84) there are drawn 16 Russian divisions or equivalent, which would be something similar to that 190 000 - 200 000 figure of Russian forces. But that is "way thin" when you think of it. There are huge gaps in between.If the Russians have been basically just keeping the Ukraine forces in the East to setup this moment ... seems to me there's no a race in time against the pincers closing for all those brigades to the East of the pincers to retreat West. — boethius
Russian army logistics forces are not designed for a large-scale ground offensive far from their railroads. Inside maneuver units, Russian sustainment units are a size lower than their Western counterparts. Only brigades have an equivalent logistics capability, but it’s not an exact comparison. - No other European nation uses railroads to the extent that the Russian army does. Part of the reason is that Russia is so vast — over 6,000 miles from one end to the other.
The Russian army does not have enough trucks to meet its logistic requirement more than 90 miles beyond supply dumps. To reach a 180-mile range, the Russian army would have to double truck allocation to 400 trucks for each of the material-technical support brigades.
The Russian army makes heavy use of tube and rocket artillery fire, and rocket ammunition is very bulky. Although each army is different, there are usually 56 to 90 multiple launch rocket system launchers in an army. Replenishing each launcher takes up the entire bed of the truck. If the combined arms army fired a single volley, it would require 56 to 90 trucks just to replenish rocket ammunition. That is about a half of a dry cargo truck force in the material-technical support brigade just to replace one volley of rockets. There is also between six to nine tube artillery battalions, nine air defense artillery battalions, 12 mechanized and recon battalions, three to five tank battalions, mortars, anti-tank missiles, and small arms ammunition — not to mention, food, engineering, medical supplies, and so on. Those requirements are harder to estimate, but the potential resupply requirements are substantial. The Russian army force needs a lot of trucks just for ammunition and dry cargo replenishment.
Although I don't read most posts on this thread, I see that our useful idiot support group, having exhausted the neo-Nazi theme for now, has jumped onto the latest Russian propaganda talking point: Ukrainian bioweapons. — SophistiCat
:100:The bioweapons thing is comical. The public profoundly misunderstands CBRN, what weapons actually exist, why and under what circumstances they would be useful in military operations, and existing mechanism for deploying said weapons. The whole plot idea makes no sense. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Why would Nuland mention a secret bioweapons program in an open hearing? Why would she know about a secret bioweapons program? Sounds like the type of thing to keep under wraps, no? Why would the US government publicly announce a secret bioweapons program in public documents for years? — Count Timothy von Icarus
Here comes very apparent the problem that Russia has now: that "front line" drawn to the map is what? 1300 kilometers or so? I — ssu
The US deployed nearly 700 000 troops into the war and the Alliance had a strength of over 900 000 of which ground forces were over 600 000 troops, hence three times the size of Putin "Special Military Operation". — ssu
In fact, the Russian way of fighting, using massive firepower of the artillery, depends a lot on the supply: — ssu
And this is why some Ukrainian cities that the Russian forces are attempting to secure will have lulls in the fighting. Russia simply has to stock the ammo and equipment for some days, perhaps talk about cease-fires and humanitarian corridors, before they make the next attack. — ssu
All the above just how absolute disaster this plan was and how it's not all so evident that one or the other side will prevail. — ssu
Putin was heading into Dr. Strangelove territory with this theory: he believed that Americans were collecting Russians' precious bodily fluids in order to develop bioweapons for ethnic cleansing. No one knows where he picked up this nonsense, but it cropped up regularly over the years, and apparently this is what the propaganda decided to go with this tim — SophistiCat
Also, just lol the idea of using a weapons platform that can be effectively countered by a paper mask and washing your hands at this exact moment in time. — Count Timothy von Icarus
How does Putin's belief about the mooted biological weapons have any bearing whatsoever on their existence? — Isaac
It is my deep conviction that there will be a European Union which will be in a few years, I don't know when, in a few years, probably extended to Ukraine, to Moldova, to Georgia, perhaps to other countries ...
From what I can see, the South salient simply keeps advancing every day, and the North salient has now passed Kiev. — boethius
No one knows where he picked up this nonsense — SophistiCat
Will Putin escalate to de-escalate? — ssu
Some crazy stuff... I don't know if related, but a similar ugly rumor has been going around in Africa for decades about AIDS, that is was invented by the Americans to kill black people. — Olivier5
From Kherson to Zhytomyr (town West of Kiev) is 8 and half hour drive according to g-maps.
Londongrad + Manhattangrad = Absurdistan! :fire:
"When after all
It was you and me ..." — 180 Proof
I was talking about the line between the Ukrainian and the Russian lines. You do have the "front" stretched quite long now in Ukraine.Which line? The current one all around the East of Ukraine?
However, to cut Ukraine in half North-South is still 700 Kilometres. — boethius
Let's see how it develops then. And let's be honest here: the Western intelligence has been very good.From what I can tell, the South-West front has simply been moving at it's logistical pace, while the North-West front has been slowly getting through the Urban areas around Kiev, which is the hard part.
Of course, it's always possible the Ukraine finds some way to stop these pincers joining in the middle. They do have a lot of ATGM's and intelligence from the US. — boethius
The initiative is still with the Russians. But if the continue inflicting similar damage to Russia as they have done now, that's really good for themI simply don't see a counter tactic available to Ukraine, but, of course maybe they have one. — boethius
That's not a counterargument. Everybody would desire overwhelming force to minimize owns losses and maximize the losses of the enemy. Short war means less casualties.True, but NATO wants to wage war with super minimal losses, which is only possible with overwhelming force. — boethius
Well, they aren't invading anybody, hence when they have logistical problems, they can have peace all around them.However, all these questions about the Russians also apply to the Ukrainians — boethius
OK.Maybe they've been bogged down and just incompetent and disorganized as the Western Media keeps saying, or maybe they've been tying up Ukrainian forces with chaotic skirmishing all over the East of Ukraine, while establishing the forward operating bases and logistical plan to close the North and South pincers — boethius
Yet the classic imperialism that Putin is so dearly advocating will only end if the country experiences and absolute catastrophy. This hopefully might happen. — ssu
I also completely agree that as soon as the war ends (or even sooner), as Isaac put it, the idea Ukraine has essentially been "beautified" and can face no criticism of anything and any kind whatsoever — boethius
This is why Putin won't retreat because he knows that after such a retreat he would lose Ukraine to Nato, and after that, it would be impossible to invade again. Instead of making up some geopolitical nonsense speculation, look at what actually exists as information, like the leaked propaganda document aimed for after the invasion was supposed to be over. — Christoffer
Governments come and go. — boethius
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