War

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
disturbing news, but how long can they keep planes in the air, with little to no replacement parts and few trained pilots? Perhaps it's time for NATO and the US to get the fuck off the pot and give Ukraine what it needs to end this now.
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
disturbing news, but how long can they keep planes in the air, with little to no replacement parts and few trained pilots? Perhaps it's time for NATO and the US to get the fuck off the pot and give Ukraine what it needs to end this now.
in the interim, Ukraine has acquired more and better air defense hardware, and time to train into it. It will be interesting to see if Russia gains any control of the air, or if they get their air assets quickly attrited.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
in the interim, Ukraine has acquired more and better air defense hardware, and time to train into it. It will be interesting to see if Russia gains any control of the air, or if they get their air assets quickly attrited.
it would be something to remember, watching russia lose plane after plane to AA fire.
i wonder what it is like, watching your society, which was considered at least average, slide back into the feudal ages so a mad man can attain his dreams of avarice?
we did get a glimpse of that...almost more than a glimpse
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Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
And they are being told to kill people who are pretty much kin on top of that.
for the tech impaired....
By Marc Santora
Feb. 15, 2023
KYIV, Ukraine — As Moscow steps up its offensive in eastern Ukraine, weeks of failed attacks on a Ukrainian stronghold have left two Russian brigades in tatters, raised questions about Russia’s military tactics and renewed doubts about its ability to maintain sustained, large-scale ground assaults.
The battle for the city of Vuhledar, which has been viewed as an opening move in an expected Russian spring offensive, has been playing out since the last week of January, but the scale of Moscow’s losses there is only now beginning to come into focus.
Accounts from Ukrainian and Western officials, Ukrainian soldiers, captured Russian soldiers and Russian military bloggers, as well as video and satellite images, paint a picture of a faltering Russian campaign that continues to be plagued by battlefield dysfunction.
In recent weeks, Moscow has rushed tens of thousands more troops, many of them inexperienced new recruits, to the front lines as President Vladimir V. Putin’s forces seek to demonstrate progress before the anniversary of his invasion on Feb. 24. But raising further doubts about Russia’s offensive capabilities, Western officials estimate that a large part of Russia’s army is already fighting in Ukraine.
Britain’s defense secretary, Ben Wallace, told the BBC on Wednesday that “97 percent of the Russian army” is in Ukraine, though he did not elaborate or offer evidence for the claim. U.S. military officials estimate that about 80 percent of Russia’s ground forces are dedicated to the war effort.
The fighting over Vuhledar has come at a cost for Ukraine, too, both in terms of casualties and in the vast amounts of ammunition it has expended to repel Russia’s growing number of ground troops. Kyiv’s allies this week expressed concern about their ability to meet the demand, raising the possibly that Ukrainian commanders might at some point have to limit shelling to the most important targets.
Vuhledar, which sits at the intersection of the eastern front in the Donetsk region and the southern front in the Zaporizhzhia region, has long been in Moscow’s sights. It has been used by Ukraine as a base for harassing shipments on an important rail line supplying Russian forces.
But as has happened in previous Russian offenses, including one in November, “the enemy suffered critical losses,” Col. Oleksii Dmytrashkivskyi, a spokesman for Ukrainian military forces in the area, said in an interview.
He said the attacks on Vuhledar had been no surprise — the Russians even warned the Ukrainians of the coming assault through social media channels, in an apparent attempt to scare them. “It was announced and spread,” Colonel Dmytrashkivskyi said. “It was done to diminish the morale of the fighters.”
As they have done throughout the war, the Russian commanders made some basic mistakes, in this case failing to take into account the terrain — open fields littered with antitank mines — or the strength of the Ukrainian forces, Colonel Dmytrashkivskyi said. Two of Russia’s most elite brigades — the 155th and 40th Naval Infantry Brigades — were decimated in Vuhledar, he said.
In one week alone in the Vuhledar clash, the Ukrainian General Staff estimates, Russia lost at least 130 armored vehicles, including 36 tanks. That estimate has been supported by drone footage reviewed by independent military analysts and by accounts from Russian military bloggers, who are ardent supporters of the war but sharp critics of its conduct by top Russian commanders.
Mr. Wallace, the British defense secretary, cited reports on Wednesday that “a whole Russian brigade was effectively annihilated” in Vuhledar, where he said that Moscow “lost over 1,000 people in two days.” The British Defense Intelligence Agency reported last week that Russian units had “likely suffered particularly heavy casualties around Vuhledar.”
Mr. Wallace told LBC News, a British news outlet, on Wednesday that the losses in Vuhledar showed the result of “a president and a Russian general staff that defies reality or ignores reality and simply doesn’t care how many people they are killing of their own, let alone of the people they are trying to oppress.”
Many of the captured soldiers had been newly mobilized under a call-up Mr. Putin announced in September of some 300,000 recruits, while others had been recruited by the Wagner mercenary group, many of them from prisons, according to Ukrainian and Russian accounts.
In recent weeks, a rivalry between Wagner forces and the regular Russian Army has opened up, with the mercenary group claiming that its fighters are more capable.
Wagner fighters have led the bloody, monthslong Russian campaign to take the city of Bakhmut, 60 miles north of Vuhledar, while the forces in Vuhledar were made up primarily of regular Russian Army units, though some Wagner fighters were present, Ukrainian officials said.
After months of unrelenting Russian assaults in Bakhmut, Ukrainian forces are in an increasingly precarious position, though the Russian gains have come at a heavy cost for Moscow and left Bakhmut in ruins.
The Grey Zone, a Telegram channel that is affiliated with Wagner, has been scathing about the Russian military’s efforts in Vuhledar, and called for Russian commanders responsible for the losses to be held accountable in public trials. “Impunity always breeds permissiveness,” a recent post said.
After Russia’s November attack on Vuhledar, which was also reported to have ended with enormous losses, Moscow turned to newly mobilized recruits to replenish its ranks. But those troops had just a bare minimum of training, military analysts say, and probably not enough to mount a serious, organized offensive.
The Russians faced another problem in Vuhledar from Ukraine’s deployment of American-made HIMARS missiles that forced commanders to position large concentrations of forces more than 50 miles from the front. That made it hard to attack with either speed or surprise.
A Russian marine who fought in Vuhledar told the Russian media outlet 7x7, which is based in the Komi region of Russia, that those who survived the battle were considered deserters. The marine, whose identity the news outlet did not disclose, citing the need to protect his safety, said he was part of the third company of the 155th brigade. After the failed assault, he said, only eight soldiers from his company were left alive.
“It would have been better if I had been captured and never returned,” he said.
Despite the setbacks, Moscow has continued to insist that all is going according to plan. On Sunday, Mr. Putin said that the “marine infantry is working as it should. Right now. Fighting heroically.”
For the moment, Colonel Dmytrashkivskyi said, the large-scale Russian assaults have subsided, though the Russians are still attacking in small bands of 10 to 15 soldiers, probably probing Ukrainian defenses for weaknesses.
If the Russians continue with that tactic, he said, they will be outnumbered by Ukrainian platoons of 30 soldiers.
“They are going to their death, and that’s it,” he said.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Shuffling the deck again.
The Ministry of Defense announced the appointment of new commanders of military districts
New commanders of the Southern, Central and Western military districts have been appointed. This was reported in the Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation.

Lieutenant General Andrey Mordvichev became commander in the Central Military District, Lieutenant General Yevgeny Nikiforov in the Western District, and Colonel General Sergey Kuzovlev in the Southern. Information is provided on the website Ministry of Defense of the Russian Federation .

Rustam Muradov remained head of the Eastern Military District. Previously, the head of the Central Military District was General Alexander Lapin, the Western Military District was commanded by Kuzovlev.

Not going according to plan?

Kremlin: Putin's meeting with the leadership of the United Russia faction will be later
The meeting of Russian President Vladimir Putin with the head of the United Russia faction in the State Duma, Vladimir Vasiliev, will take place later, after the president's message to the Federal Assembly. This was announced by the press secretary of the President of the Russian Federation Dmitry Peskov, answering a question from URA.RU.

“The meeting with Vasiliev will take place later, until the President's message it will not be. The dialogue between the country's leadership and United Russia is of a special nature. This is the ruling party, the majority party. Its entire agenda is well known to the president," Peskov said.

This week, President Putin met with the leaders of four parliamentary parties. Gennady Zyuganov (KPRF), Leonid Slutsky (LDPR), Sergei Mironov (A Just Russia - For Truth) and Alexei Nechaev (New People) told the head of state about their work and plans.

Battalion "Akhmat" will give a gift to PMC "Wagner"
PMC "Wagner" will receive more than 100 ammunition from the battalion "Akhmat" after a request from the fighters. This was told by the founder of PMC "Wagner".

“We watched a video with guys asking for ammunition. We agreed that Akhmat would hand over 100 units,” Prigogine said. Apti Alaudinov, a representative of Akhmat, noted that this would not solve the issue, but it would be a “gift for fireworks” at the site where PMCs work. Video posted Prigozhin's press office .

Hungarian MOL conducted a trial run of Arab oil instead of Russian
Hungarian oil and gas company MOL has successfully conducted a trial run of Arab Light Arab oil at its subsidiary's plant in Slovakia, according to MOL's annual report .

Earlier, the Hungarian Energy Ministry stated that after February 5, that is, the date when sanctions on Russian oil products come into force, MOL will be able to export products from its subsidiary refinery in Bratislava only from oil of non-Russian origin. The company reported that the share of non-Russian raw materials at the Slovak plant is 30%.

Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto previously noted that an increase in oil supplies from Saudi Arabia would help Budapest diversify energy imports. In addition, as part of diversification, Hungary is considering the possibility of importing oil from Ecuador in case the overland transit of Russian raw materials through Ukraine becomes impossible.

According to Szijjarto, negotiations are also underway at the level of specialists and enterprises on the possible start of imports of oil and natural gas from Oman. The Foreign Minister emphasized that agreements with other countries on the supply of oil and gas to Hungary do not mean the rejection of contracts with Russia, but are aimed at diversification.

Hungary has been a thorn in Nato's side during this conflict, hopefully getting off of Russian oil will help.
 

hprincton

Member
I am not sure how much data exists surrounding this globally. In the United States we may have one hundred cities. Chicago reports five hundred murders per year giving an estimate of fifty thousand reported murders in the United States per year. This compares unfavorably with the physician training capacity of twenty-two or forty-four thousand students per year admitted into schools and then training programs at hospitals. These take over ten years often times to complete before beginning in a healthcare workforce. Or any of us is more likely to be murdered than admitted into a physician training program, each year every year although I would think of that or treat it as a constant instead of compounding interest e.g., 1/50,000^y. This isn't linked to a group or movement or cause, only my personal struggle. If I say immigration that could be problematic, same with language, same with home availability. Meanwhile it looks like guidance counselors and administrators and politicians must have known some things about this if not been actively planning it for one reason or another. Or out of neglect. They certainly are not doing their jobs advising us to leave our country and train in Australia, Cuba, or the Caribbean Islands. This does not say much about being paranoid lighting up a joint thinking your mother will evict you. Or when neighbors steal your belongings otherwise known as breaking and entering. After the rest of this education and career stuff has already happened. The shrink and I would be a pot calling a kettle black with the uniformed armed officers looking like a fucking death squad or some random shit. That is not any kind of handoff. They do not personally or professionally know each other. Neither or those professions trains dealing with safety or danger, respectively speaking. Or nutrition for either one. They do not have qualifications that are reciprocated in any instance or agreement I am aware of.
 
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BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
I am not sure how much data exists surrounding this globally. In the United States we may have one hundred cities. Chicago reports five hundred murders per year giving an estimate of fifty thousand reported murders in the United States per year. This compares unfavorably with the physician training capacity of twenty-two or forty-four thousand students per year admitted into training programs. These take over ten years often times to complete before beginning in a healthcare workforce. Or, any of us is more likely to be murdered than admitted into a physician training program, each year every year although I would think of that or treat it as a constant instead of compounding interest e.g. 1/50,000^y.
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