The Russian-Ukrainian War Thread

Feanor

Super Moderator
Staff member
It appears Ukraine did lose an F-16 during the recent Russian strike. Ukraine's official obituary for the F-16 Lt. Col. pilot apparently died while hunting Russian inbounds, and downed 3 missiles. This implies that he either got shot down by friendly fire or crashed into one of the inbounds. We've seen the latter happen with a MiG-29 that crashed into a Shahed it was trying to intercept. Now it's always possible that this newly minted F-16 pilot was flying something other than an F-16, but that would be a little strange. And using F-16s to intercept inbounds deep into friendly airspace, away from Russian SAMs or fighters would theoretically be a relatively safe thing to do, so it would make sense to start operating F-16s in this manner first. With both sides trying to restrict private parties from publishing footage of fighting and strikes, I think it remains to be seen what happened, but in my opinion it's more likely then not that Ukraine lost an F-16.


EDIT: All my inductive reasoning was for naught, we have western media sources confirming an F-16 lost in a crash, lines up perfectly with what we have above.

 

KipPotapych

Well-Known Member
It appears that the jet may have been shot down by the Patriot missile. This is suggested by the post on X by a Ukrainian lawmaker

IMG_6778.jpeg


The post translated to English:

According to my information, the F-16 of the Ukrainian pilot Oleksiy "Moonfish" Mes was shot down by the Patriot anti-aircraft missile system due to a lack of coordination between the units. In the reports, it was noted that he "failed to manage." The event happened during one of the most powerful Russian air attacks on August 26. War is war, such episodes are possible. But the culture of lies in the Air Force Command of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, as well as in other higher military headquarters, leads to the fact that the system of managing military decisions does not improve on the basis of truthful, consistently collected analytics, but deteriorates and even collapses, as is happening in the Pokrovsky direction. And none of the generals was punished. General Oleschuk remains in office.

Photo: Oleksiy "Moonfish" Mes (right) together with Andrii "Juice" Pilshikov, who died earlier (the investigation into his death also did not clarify anything and no one was punished).


Of course, we cannot take it as a confirmation and now a certainty.
 

Feanor

Super Moderator
Staff member
It appears that the jet may have been shot down by the Patriot missile. This is suggested by the post on X by a Ukrainian lawmaker

View attachment 51646


The post translated to English:

According to my information, the F-16 of the Ukrainian pilot Oleksiy "Moonfish" Mes was shot down by the Patriot anti-aircraft missile system due to a lack of coordination between the units. In the reports, it was noted that he "failed to manage." The event happened during one of the most powerful Russian air attacks on August 26. War is war, such episodes are possible. But the culture of lies in the Air Force Command of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, as well as in other higher military headquarters, leads to the fact that the system of managing military decisions does not improve on the basis of truthful, consistently collected analytics, but deteriorates and even collapses, as is happening in the Pokrovsky direction. And none of the generals was punished. General Oleschuk remains in office.

Photo: Oleksiy "Moonfish" Mes (right) together with Andrii "Juice" Pilshikov, who died earlier (the investigation into his death also did not clarify anything and no one was punished).


Of course, we cannot take it as a confirmation and now a certainty.
Russia has offered a 15 mln rouble bonus for downing the first F-16. Maybe the Ukrainian SAM operator can collect?
 

KipPotapych

Well-Known Member
Russia has offered a 15 mln rouble bonus for downing the first F-16. Maybe the Ukrainian SAM operator can collect?
I was thinking that if the case was that he hit a Russian missile or an UAV, would that count as an intercept and the operator gets rewarded?

I believe this guy was the third most famous Ukrainian pilot, after Juice who was second, and the Ghost of Kiev, who was first, but didn’t exist.

It’s probably pretty rough flying a mission thinking that you are more likely to be killed by your fellow AD operator than anything else.

It also appears, just like with everything else, the two sides keep taking turns doing the exact same thing.
 

Fredled

Active Member
Mariana Marybezuhla said:
But the culture of lies in the Air Force Command of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, as well as in other higher military headquarters
In this particular case, I don't see the Ukrainian Air Fporce lying
The General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine has confirmed the loss of an F-16 aircraft.
Buit they cannot give details. They can;t confirm that it was downed by a Patriot. Such information can be exploited by the Russians. They less you tell others, the better.

Sometimes they are obliged to lie, not only for propaganda, but because the Russians should not know the truth.

The bad news is the dead of the pilot. F16s can be replaced. Not the pilots. They have less pilots than F16s.

The "good" news is that it was shot down by friendly fire, not by Russians. Russians are waiting for the day when they can organize nation wide celebrations for their first downing of an F16.
The friendly fire, in this case, can be explained by the intensity of the battle, the number of flying objects, the lack of precedence (no other country in the world has ever had to face such modern missile attack of this scale and to chase so many missiles at once), lack of experience by the pilot and the Ukrainian Air Force.
What I don't understand is that there is no automatic indentification handshake between Patriot rockets and F16s to avoid this...

KipPotapych said:
Something like that. I really do not see the significance of the Kursk as described by many individuals.
The significances are multiple and evoluates as the events unfold. This was at first an oportunistic operation. Then Ukrainians see what they can do beyond the mediatic success.

The mediatic success is in itself important. Ukrainians noticed that there is less talka in the West and globaly to call for a truce of for negosiations with Putin.
However, Ukrainoskeptics are more talking about the risk of escalation due to the use of Western weapons.

The first material effect was that they took a certain number of prisoners. I won;t discuss the numbers, ranging from 100 to 1000 because we don't have verified information about that.

More interesting is the last prisoner exchange. It happened vey quickly. In a matter of days, aparently without moddlemen, while usualy it takes months and require the mediation by Qatar or Turkey.
Russians immediately agree to exchange 115 Ukrainian soldiers against 115 Russian conscripts. Moreover, any of these fighters (I think about 80 of them) were Azovstall heroes. 20 others were Border Guards. It's extremely important for the morale of the troops and for the Ukrainian symbolism to return Azovstall fighters and other elite veterans. They are the most difficult to exchange. And the Russian just gave them away for conscripts who have relatively little value.

IMO, this shows that Putin wants to avoid, at any cost, that the reality of war spreads among the base population. He wants the Russians tpo ignore that there is a war. The word war hasn't be pronounced yet since the start of the SVO. He is ready to pay a high price for that.

Deploying extra forces to counter the Ukrainian invasion is also a dilema for Putin. On one hand, he has to dispatch forces which were not supposed to fight in Ukraine and who were told that they won't fight in Ukraine and now they do. This is a dilema because it will bring more regular Russians into the reality of war.
To minimize this, he still moves some contingents from low priority axis of the front. But the Russian are facing man power shortage. A silent mobilisation is still under way. The mobilisation never stopped, in reality, but at a level that is not critical for the public opinion. Mobilized soldiers are not returning home, and won't be until the end of the SVO (official). Wagner is mostly gone and the 5000 or so remaining in Belarussia can't be trusted, IMO. The prisons are not recruiting shopping malls anymore. Russians attempt to hire mercenaries from more and more improbable nations. After Nepalese, we see reports of Indonesians. All of this indicates that either the war will have to be shared with more basic Russians or that more forces will have to be removed from the DonBas. Just a question of time.

In the meantime, Ukrainians, who always said that this was a short term defence operation, are digging in.

If they could expand their area of control further east, they could hit Russian logistics, railways, roads. they started to do it, of course, but they are not in an areas where they could make a big impact. For that they should move to the Belgorod region, which is better defended or to Kursk, which is too risk and, now, also better defended. yet there is still potential in this respect.

About the so called non significant of Pokrovsk, Bahkmut etc. Of course there is field significance, as oit means that Ukrainians are retreating.
But, it's clear that at this point of the war, Ukrainians don;t have a couple of strategical logistic center. And Pokrovsk, in particular, shouldn't be a logistic center anymore for quiet a while. It would be suicidal to keep a logistic hub in Pokrovsk right now. They certainly have moved it somewhere else.

The big problem for Ukrainians, as Russians advance in this region is that it makes retaking Mariupol, Melitopol or Berdiansk, or at least cutting the land corridor, less and less likely.
 

Feanor

Super Moderator
Staff member
In this particular case, I don't see the Ukrainian Air Fporce lying
The General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine has confirmed the loss of an F-16 aircraft.
Buit they cannot give details. They can;t confirm that it was downed by a Patriot. Such information can be exploited by the Russians. They less you tell others, the better.

Sometimes they are obliged to lie, not only for propaganda, but because the Russians should not know the truth.

The bad news is the dead of the pilot. F16s can be replaced. Not the pilots. They have less pilots than F16s.

The "good" news is that it was shot down by friendly fire, not by Russians. Russians are waiting for the day when they can organize nation wide celebrations for their first downing of an F16.
The friendly fire, in this case, can be explained by the intensity of the battle, the number of flying objects, the lack of precedence (no other country in the world has ever had to face such modern missile attack of this scale and to chase so many missiles at once), lack of experience by the pilot and the Ukrainian Air Force.
What I don't understand is that there is no automatic indentification handshake between Patriot rockets and F16s to avoid this...
We don't really know what exactly happened. It could have happened like this. The Patriot engages a enemy inbound, but the warhead catches an F-16 that happened to be flying by, and it's brought down. The Patriot intercepts a Russian missile or drone, but the F-16 crashes into the intercepted munition, which may have gone in an unexpected direction after the intercept. It's not necessarily the case that the Patriot actually engaged the F-16, thinking it was a target.

That having been said, it's also very plausible that neither the F-16 nor the Patriots came with western IFFs, and it may be on Ukraine to refit them with Ukrainian IFFs that can work. Whether this got done, and whether it worked, is an open question. We just don't have enough information.

And for our purposes, as observers trying to understand what's happening, it's less significant to consider why Ukraine lies, and more significant to consider whether Ukraine lies. If we know Ukraine lies, we can't trust the statements made, even if there is a "good reason" for the lies.

The significances are multiple and evoluates as the events unfold. This was at first an oportunistic operation. Then Ukrainians see what they can do beyond the mediatic success.

The mediatic success is in itself important. Ukrainians noticed that there is less talka in the West and globaly to call for a truce of for negosiations with Putin.
However, Ukrainoskeptics are more talking about the risk of escalation due to the use of Western weapons.

The first material effect was that they took a certain number of prisoners. I won;t discuss the numbers, ranging from 100 to 1000 because we don't have verified information about that.

More interesting is the last prisoner exchange. It happened vey quickly. In a matter of days, aparently without moddlemen, while usualy it takes months and require the mediation by Qatar or Turkey.
Russians immediately agree to exchange 115 Ukrainian soldiers against 115 Russian conscripts. Moreover, any of these fighters (I think about 80 of them) were Azovstall heroes. 20 others were Border Guards. It's extremely important for the morale of the troops and for the Ukrainian symbolism to return Azovstall fighters and other elite veterans. They are the most difficult to exchange. And the Russian just gave them away for conscripts who have relatively little value.

IMO, this shows that Putin wants to avoid, at any cost, that the reality of war spreads among the base population. He wants the Russians tpo ignore that there is a war. The word war hasn't be pronounced yet since the start of the SVO. He is ready to pay a high price for that.

Deploying extra forces to counter the Ukrainian invasion is also a dilema for Putin. On one hand, he has to dispatch forces which were not supposed to fight in Ukraine and who were told that they won't fight in Ukraine and now they do. This is a dilema because it will bring more regular Russians into the reality of war.
To minimize this, he still moves some contingents from low priority axis of the front. But the Russian are facing man power shortage. A silent mobilisation is still under way. The mobilisation never stopped, in reality, but at a level that is not critical for the public opinion. Mobilized soldiers are not returning home, and won't be until the end of the SVO (official). Wagner is mostly gone and the 5000 or so remaining in Belarussia can't be trusted, IMO. The prisons are not recruiting shopping malls anymore. Russians attempt to hire mercenaries from more and more improbable nations. After Nepalese, we see reports of Indonesians. All of this indicates that either the war will have to be shared with more basic Russians or that more forces will have to be removed from the DonBas. Just a question of time.
Do you have any evidence that Russia is facing a manpower shortage? Every report I've seen shows Russian troops committed to the fight in Ukraine increasing. This suggests recruitment rates above the casualty rates, allowing not only replenishment of losses but formation of new units. There's another crop of freshly formed divisions and brigades in the last updtae from altyn73. I think Russia will continue to hire mercenaries, and will do regular military recruitment from any countries they can. I think they will continue recruiting from prisons, and they will continue to hand out large recruitment bonuses. There's no reason for any of this to stop. But I don't think any of this in and of itself indicates a shortage of manpower. Rather like you said, Putin doesn't want this war to come home. The worst way for this war to come home would be for ordinary Russians to feel the squeeze from Russia's own government. By contrast, the best way would be for Ukraine to attack Russia proper. The Ukrainian attack in Kursk saw a flurry of aid related posts in Russian social media, including more people collecting money for drones, and kit for the military. I would not be surprised if they got an enlistment spike off the back of that too.

In order for your theory of what's happening to be correct the situation would have to look like this. Russia is short on troops and is committed to a limited number of successful attacks in one or two primary areas, and is stretched very thin everywhere else. Ukraine on the other hand has forces to spare and benefits from stretching Russia thinner. However the situation on the ground seems to be the exact opposite. Ukraine is stretched thin, and Russia has troops to spare. Leading to a situation where a Ukrainian cross-border attack that required a significant response didn't seem to impact Russia's own offensive operations at all. In fact Russia seems to have started a new offensive at Ugledar in the past ~2 days aiming to encircle the town, while still pushing into Toretsk, biting off more pieces on the Oskol front, and developing a multi-directional assault on the Pokrovsk axis.
 

Feanor

Super Moderator
Staff member
In the meantime, Ukrainians, who always said that this was a short term defence operation, are digging in.

If they could expand their area of control further east, they could hit Russian logistics, railways, roads. they started to do it, of course, but they are not in an areas where they could make a big impact. For that they should move to the Belgorod region, which is better defended or to Kursk, which is too risk and, now, also better defended. yet there is still potential in this respect.

About the so called non significant of Pokrovsk, Bahkmut etc. Of course there is field significance, as oit means that Ukrainians are retreating.
But, it's clear that at this point of the war, Ukrainians don;t have a couple of strategical logistic center. And Pokrovsk, in particular, shouldn't be a logistic center anymore for quiet a while. It would be suicidal to keep a logistic hub in Pokrovsk right now. They certainly have moved it somewhere else.

The big problem for Ukrainians, as Russians advance in this region is that it makes retaking Mariupol, Melitopol or Berdiansk, or at least cutting the land corridor, less and less likely.
The significance is the fairly rapid pace of Russian advances in this area and the fact that they bypassed Ukrainian defenses and are now doing so on an even larger scale. Currently the southward push towards Selidovo and Ukrainsk sets the stage for cutting off all Ukrainian defenses west of Donestk. I.e. Ukraine may have to withdraw, without a fight, from all those defenses, or face encirclement. Even without taking Gornyak, or even Ukrainsk (though I think they will at least try to) there are 3 villages, Galitsinovka, Zhelannoe Pervoe, and Zhelannoe Drugoe, the loss of which threatens the main road back to Kurakhovo. They're on the left shore of the Volchya river (not the same Volchya as the one in Volchansk) and so using the western river to cover their flank Russian forces can push southward. So there is significance here.

Maximum problem, Russia could take the entire northern shore of the Kurakhovo reservoire, and push southward west of it, forcing a Ukrainian withdrawal from the south-Donestk area, pushing the entire front westward, out of pre-built defensive positions, and into open ground, to avoid encirclement. And all of this can be done without taking Pokrovsk. Taking Pokrovsk itself, and assuming Russia isn't spent at that point (and your assertions to the contrary there's no evidence they are) they could attack in multiple directions outwards from there, not dissimilar to how after grabbing Ocheretino they then captured multiple areas around it. It doesn't just make it more difficult to recapture Berdyansk and Melitopol' (which frankly look like utopian aspirations at this point) but it could mean Russian troops in Dnepropetrovsk region.
 

Fredled

Active Member
Bits of news on the diplomatic front:

The Ukrainian Foreign Affairs Ministry asks the Mongolian authorities to execute the international arrest warrant for Putin.
Historicaly, no head of state in office has ever been arrested despite ICC warrants even when visiting ICC signatory countries.
But the public declaration is a good way to recall the world who Putin is.

The Ukrainian Foreign Affairs Ministry said:
The Ukrainian Side hopes that the Government of Mongolia is aware of the fact that Vladimir Putin is a war criminal. The International Criminal Court, the jurisdiction of which is recognized by Mongolia, has issued a warrant for his arrest on suspicion of the illegal forced transfer of Ukrainian children to the Russian Federation. The abduction of Ukrainian children is just one of numerous crimes for which Putin and the rest of the Russian military and political leadership must be brought to justice
Poland is not going to shot down Russian missiles or drones over Ukraine. They won't train Ukrainian recruits inside Ukraine neither.
However they support the idea to lift restrictions on long-range weapons to strike inside Russia.

It's a bad news that Poland won't assist in intercepting missiles and drone in the west of Ukraine. I'm not sure if the reason is the fear of escalation or the lack of means to do it.

Not training Ukrainian recruits inside Ukraine makes sens. There were talks that trainiang them inside Ukraine would be easier because the soldiers would not have to travel abroad. This is a valid argument for the US or France, with the risk to be targeted by Russian balistic missiles. But Poland is not realy "abroad" regarding Ukraine. They can train in east Poland and they will be not far.
Wait... wasn't East Poland part of Ukraine, in the past? Or West Ukraine part of Poland? Or both at the same time? Whatever...

EU defense ministers will increase the number of Ukrainian military personnel who would undergo training by 15000, bringing the total for the whole year 2024 to 75,000.
This is good news for Ukraine.

Zelensky sacks his Air Force Commander.
First F16 mission, and already one loss by friendly fire...
_____________________________

Feanor said:
Do you have any evidence that Russia is facing a manpower shortage?
Yes I do. Unfortunately I can't share my source here.
Of course Russia still has some troops for its own internal and external security outside Ukraine. But they can't allocate too many of them in the Kursk region. They can't decently depopulate completely the other border areas of the Russian land mass. They also have to keep minimum reliable and capable contingents for their military bases protection and for the internal security of the country.

We already have two instances where the military had to engage into internal security: The Vagner Rebellion and the Kursk Incursion.

But to answer your question, one of the evidences is that they hire mercenaries from exotic countries. I wonder how effective these recruits who don't speak a signle word of Russian and with both Russians and the recruits poorly mastering English, if at all, can be effective on the battle field. I'm no expert in military sign language...

That being said, it's hard to define shortage. In one sens, it's true that if Putin can afford to deploy several hundred of thousand soldiers to invade another country, he has no shortage of soldiers. Now if you consider his goal in this war, even the minimal goal of taking the Donestk and other so called new provinces within a reasonable time frame, then he doesn;t have enough men. And he doesn't have enough shells, tanks and other tings.

Ukrainians have, by contrast, only one task for their military. There is a theory that Ukraine still has significant reserves yet to be engaged. That they prefer to gve up more land in the Pokrovsk direction or wherever Russian assaults are too massive, instead of wasting their precious reserves in an inevitable defeat. IMO, they have learn from Bahkmut and Avdiivka that better retreating solwly than waiting that the Russians shell the town until complete destruction forcing them to withdraw anyway.
In the battle for Pokrovsk, we don't see these massive aerial and artillery bombing anymore. Ukrainians withdraw without giving the Russian this pleasure.

Then, but it's still a theory, the Ukrainians would use their reserves to lanch an attack somewhere unexpected.
I say it's a theory because we don't know to which extent the Ukrainians have or don't have reserves to use in further operations... If they don't have anything left, of course, it will be very difficult for them in the near future. Time will tell.
 

Feanor

Super Moderator
Staff member
Even without taking Gornyak, or even Ukrainsk (though I think they will at least try to) there are 3 villages, Galitsinovka, Zhelannoe Pervoe, and Zhelannoe Drugoe, the loss of which threatens the main road back to Kurakhovo. They're on the left shore of the Volchya river (not the same Volchya as the one in Volchansk) and so using the western river to cover their flank Russian forces can push southward. So there is significance here.
For context Galitsinovka just fell.

Yes I do. Unfortunately I can't share my source here.
That doesn't make for a persuasive argument and in principle this forum requires sources for claims of fact. Other then your unnamed source that just happens to know this, is there any other evidence in support of something as significant and impactful as a substantial manpower shortage for the Russian military either as a whole or the portion deployed to Ukraine?

Of course Russia still has some troops for its own internal and external security outside Ukraine. But they can't allocate too many of them in the Kursk region. They can't decently depopulate completely the other border areas of the Russian land mass. They also have to keep minimum reliable and capable contingents for their military bases protection and for the internal security of the country.

We already have two instances where the military had to engage into internal security: The Vagner Rebellion and the Kursk Incursion.

But to answer your question, one of the evidences is that they hire mercenaries from exotic countries. I wonder how effective these recruits who don't speak a signle word of Russian and with both Russians and the recruits poorly mastering English, if at all, can be effective on the battle field. I'm no expert in military sign language...

That being said, it's hard to define shortage. In one sens, it's true that if Putin can afford to deploy several hundred of thousand soldiers to invade another country, he has no shortage of soldiers. Now if you consider his goal in this war, even the minimal goal of taking the Donestk and other so called new provinces within a reasonable time frame, then he doesn;t have enough men. And he doesn't have enough shells, tanks and other tings.

Ukrainians have, by contrast, only one task for their military. There is a theory that Ukraine still has significant reserves yet to be engaged. That they prefer to gve up more land in the Pokrovsk direction or wherever Russian assaults are too massive, instead of wasting their precious reserves in an inevitable defeat. IMO, they have learn from Bahkmut and Avdiivka that better retreating solwly than waiting that the Russians shell the town until complete destruction forcing them to withdraw anyway.
In the battle for Pokrovsk, we don't see these massive aerial and artillery bombing anymore. Ukrainians withdraw without giving the Russian this pleasure.

Then, but it's still a theory, the Ukrainians would use their reserves to lanch an attack somewhere unexpected.
I say it's a theory because we don't know to which extent the Ukrainians have or don't have reserves to use in further operations... If they don't have anything left, of course, it will be very difficult for them in the near future. Time will tell.
Big picture, Russia has increased their troop presence in Ukraine with only one wave of mobilization that has still not been repeated. Let's be clear here, mobilization means involuntary call-up of the holders of reservist military documents in Russia. Nothing else is a mobilization. Since then Russia has drastically increased their forces in Ukraine (sources differ but we can fairly confidently talk about numbers north of 600k at this point up from a starting strength of optimistically around 200k). This is despite substantial losses, and they were substantial. Russia continues to pay generously for domestic enlistment, continues to utilize mercenaries where expedient, continues to recruit abroad, and continues to recruit from prisons though it's not clear if the numbers from there are still substantial, perhaps not. Russia also continues to attack on multiple directions, and in principle maintains the initiative on almost every axis, Kursk and Kharkov being the only real exceptions. Successful Ukrainian counter-attacks are rare (you can look at the dynamic on the suriyakmaps telegram) and the rate at which Ukraine is losing ground has accelerated. What about this suggests manpower shortage?

Now let's be clear, many have called for a mobilization to relieve the first wave and send them home. Many others have called for a second wave in response to the Kursk incursion and to switch to actual war footing, but we've seen no indication the Russian government intends to pursue this. And you'll note neither call implies a shortage of personnel now.

Lastly, if you want to talk about internal forces, let's not forget Russia's MVD has been active in this conflict from day 1, and has likely never stopped. I recently posted a Russian National Guard bde active in Kharkov region. A recently destroyed Russian helo in Donestk region was MVD, and was doing CASEVAC. In other words, internal security forces in Russia aren't cleanly separate from the regular military the way they would be in a western country. The mere activation of such forces does not indicate an extraordinary situation. They participated in Russian operations in Syria, Chechnya, and Soviet operations in Afghanistan. So while they certainly were utilized, this is to be expected, and is the norm.
 

GermanHerman

Active Member
Diehl in Germany had another accident.

Back in may an office in Berlin burned out and there were reports of russian involvement although those were denied in the end.

This time an explosion inside a factory producing explosives for artillery and other munitions left two workers seriously injured and the factory damaged although it is reported the munition production is not affected.


Once again officialy this is supposedly a mere accident and no russian involvement is claimed but I have my doubts since this would be the second incident involving Diehl in 4 months and only last month news brome about an alleged russian plot to assassinate the CEO of Rheinmetall.


It seems russia might be intensifying its sabotage campaign in the west.
 

Fredled

Active Member
Feanor said:
That doesn't make for a persuasive argument
I'm not trying to be persuasive. If I wanted, I would go in great length to describe things without giving any source or by trying to find the same information from the internet. But I don't and I just answered to your question if I had evidences, adding that I can't develop them in a public space as I would like.

Now, what the public sources I can show may not provide evidence, but provide strong signs.
When Russians repatriate 100 professional soldiers from Burkina Faso to fight in the Kursk Region, it's an indication that they are short of experienced soldiers.
(It reminds me how the Ukrainians were right to help Touareg rebels to kill Vagners in Mali.)
Hiring mercenaries from exotic countries is also a sign.

These humiliating moves just bring an extra hundreds or a few hundreds soldiers. Doing this for such small numbers shows how desperate they are to hire professional soldiers. The pay rise over the two years and half is also an indication. Now they start to offer land. The mere fact that they are recruiting in huge numbers shows that they need the new recruits, hence have a shortage of personnel. Else, they wouldn't hire that many.

As I said, the shortage doesn't mean that there is less soldiers in the Russian army, nor that the Russians are not advancing in Ukraine, nor that Ukrainians don;t have worse soldier shortage. It means that Putin doesn't have enough soldiers to achieve his grandiose dream of pan-Russian civilisation. If he decided to withdraw to the pre SVO borders, he would have a surplus immediately.
___________________

GermanHerman said:
Diehl in Germany had another accident.
It's assumed in the media sphere, that it's plot by the Russians. It's even surprising that Russians don;t multiply such attacks more often.

German are not the kind of people to let accidents happening by failing to observe safety rules.

____________________

Finally Ukraine is sending reinforcements to Pokrovsk. Was about time!
Syrsky transferred the Kara-Dag brigade to Pokrovsk — Forbes
 

KipPotapych

Well-Known Member
I believe Feanor is exactly right. I will respond to some parts of the posts and add a bit of my thoughts on the subject.

This is apparently part 1 of 2 3, lol, due to the wordiness.

In this particular case, I don't see the Ukrainian Air Fporce lying
I believe that part of the comment was made in regard to the general systemic issue. Not the particular case.

Buit they cannot give details. They can;t confirm that it was downed by a Patriot. Such information can be exploited by the Russians. They less you tell others, the better.
I am fairly certain this is having an opposite effect in this case.

Sometimes they are obliged to lie, not only for propaganda, but because the Russians should not know the truth.
The issue with this is that it gets to the point (and I personally believe that point was a very long time ago) when no one (few special cases aside) believes you anymore, especially when your reports contradict what is very obvious. Examples are plentiful: a million-man army, offensive is going well and according to the plan, there is no stalemate, intercepted Kh-22 twice (I think it was), but we don’t have AD capable of such intercepts, and so on. The most recent one would be the statement by Zelensky that the Russian advances in Pokrovsk direction have slowed down since Kursk invasion. Fool me once… The best strategy, of course, was from the very beginning not to believe a word they say. I really do not understand why some people laugh at the Russian MoD statements, but listen without blinking to the Ukrainian MoD or Zelensky. This is very strange to me.

The thing is that lying should make sense, it should have logic, and not many (ideally none at all) holes in the story, that are apparent and easily exposed. In some cases there should be ambiguity, to create confusion, perhaps, or have an exit for yourself when the tide turns (good politicians are good at this). When instead they make idiotic claims on the regular bases, it isn’t at all the same. And, of course, when you are lying about meaningless stuff, while there are plenty of interested parties from your own side to (maybe half) expose the truth, it is not going to work well for you.

As for the Russians not knowing the truth… In spite of the popular belief, they are not complete idiots and do not severely lack basic capabilities.

The bad news is the dead of the pilot. F16s can be replaced. Not the pilots. They have less pilots than F16s.
This is the worst part about this situation. Not just an F-16 pilot that took an enormous amount of time to train (provided the scope, urgency, and the timeframe of the conflict), where very limited resources and training spots available, but also a commander, a mentor, a media persona (like I said in another post, he was the third most famous pilot in Ukraine). It is a huge loss.

The "good" news is that it was shot down by friendly fire, not by Russians. Russians are waiting for the day when they can organize nation wide celebrations for their first downing of an F16.
We still cannot state with 100% certainty what really took place. For all we know, he could have been in the plane ready for take off when a Russian missile hit it on the ground.

NYT reported yestersay, citing American military officials, that it isn’t likely that it was a friendly fire incident:

But on Saturday, two senior U.S. military officials said that friendly fire was probably not the cause of the F-16 downing, and that American and Ukrainian investigators were looking at a variety of possibilities. Those could include things like mechanical failure or pilot error.

So we really don’t know what really happened, but can probably safely assume the jet was in the air.

The friendly fire, in this case, can be explained by the intensity of the battle, the number of flying objects, the lack of precedence (no other country in the world has ever had to face such modern missile attack of this scale and to chase so many missiles at once), lack of experience by the pilot and the Ukrainian Air Force.
While I agree with former statement to a degree, Ukraine is a huge landmass and these large aerial attacks by Russia are generally, as was the case the last time, very well spread out across the entire country. So while the number of flying objects is substantial, these raids also generally last several hours. In other words, the intensity is not as what you describe, especially if you take Shaheds out of the equation. This is not to reduce the severity of the situation and achievements of the Ukrainian air forces, by any means, especially with the limited resources in their possession. It really only takes one or two projectiles to create enough confusion and fire at your own aircraft or fail to intercept an incoming projectile.

What I don't understand is that there is no automatic indentification handshake between Patriot rockets and F16s to avoid this...
I don’t understand this either. The same goes for the Russians.

The significances are multiple and evoluates as the events unfold. This was at first an oportunistic operation. Then Ukrainians see what they can do beyond the mediatic success.
This is a bingo, in my opinion. The success is determined by the outcome, which we are yet to see.

While the events are still unfolding, we can clearly see at least three intermediate results. One is of course the media reports and internal and external “peremoga”. This was a great success, but far from perfect. Most articles I read on the subject questioned (at least to some degree) the strategy behind such a move. That was in the beginning. More recently, most not just question it, but suggest that it was not a smart move given the situation in Ukraine. I would still call it a success, but clearly a temporary one and one that could backfire. Social media is sure full of irrelevant posts by the riled up fans, but that has no relevance whatsoever. For instance,

IMG_6787.jpeg

Second, an attempt to convince the western sponsors to allow for their long-range missiles to be used deep inside the Russian territory. This was clearly a failure for now and it doesn’t look like it is going to change in the foreseeable future (I personally doubt it ever will, but you never know). Third is the attempt to draw the Russian troops away from the fronts where the situation is critical. As we all know, this has not only failed but also had the opposite effect.

What you wrote in the part of your post I quoted suggests that there was no solid plan to begin with. And I actually see it that exactly way. I even quoted some of what Zelensky previously said that suggests the same. It is also consistent with many previous actions by the Ukrainian highest command, where the media effect is, if not the main purpose of the operation, extremely important. This one appears to be a huge gamble based on poor planning (beyond immediate stage). When you put all the pieces together, it appears that the plan was based on the media reports over the past long while that were based on the statements of Ukrainians themselves, British MoD, analysts who often appear to lack understanding of the situation in Russia, Russian people, their military structure and available resources within the country. Many examples of such, but poor morale, lack of manpower, inability (whether actual or politically motivated) to use conscripts for the war efforts, lack of Rosgvardia and MVD personnel due to the great majority of them being occupied in the Ukrainian territories Russia had captured or beating people on the streets all over the country in order to suppress the protests and whatever other similar rubbish. All of this indicates a compete lack of understanding or/and ability to build long-term strategy and planning.
 

KipPotapych

Well-Known Member
Part 2 of 3.

This is also greatly accompanied (and partially explained by) the simple fact: Ukraine simply does not have resources - be it manpower, equipment, monetary, whatever - to compete in this type of warfare with a country like Russia. It is just the reality of the situation. “Remarkable adaptability” and the like is not a real feature in this environment. The longer this lasts, the more it becomes apparent that both sides are equally “adaptable” and innovative, copying each other in success and failure. Imagine Ukraine sending many of their best (and now probably mediocre) troops to capture and hold some arbitrary 1,000 sq km inside Russia, while the front is literally collapsing or about to elsewhere (namely Ukraine) without an end in sight and, at the same time, thinking that they are gaining an upper hand in the process. It’s insanity if you simply think about it, yet here we are. Also consider that that they had lost most of their best prepared fortifications in Donetsk and Russians are rolling through the poorly prepared once currently. Now they are going to attempt to prepare defense line(s) and hold the hostile territory, while collecting donations for excavators. And Russian military rightfully isn’t biting the bait either. Why would they? While fighting continues in Kursk, the offensive appear to have been stalled, at least for now, so why bother wasting resources in some large counteroffensive? They know this has put them closer to the reach of their strategic goal and it is going well for now.

Analysts say it is not at all clear what the end game is — or if Syrsky’s gamble will pay off.

Nico Lange, a former German defense official who is now a fellow at the Center for European Policy Analysis, noted that the incursion into Russia gave Ukraine “tangible gains,” including prisoners of war and a much-needed morale boost. But Russian President Vladimir Putin is downplaying the incursion and keeping the focus on Ukraine’s east.

“He’s basically telling the Ukrainians: ‘You can stay, you can leave — do what you want. For now I will be busy with other things,’” he said. If Ukraine’s goal was to exchange land for land, Lange added, “it’s clearly not working and Putin is calling it.”

“There is an asymmetry: The territory that is lost now in Donbas — Russia will keep it. But Ukraine cannot keep Kursk, and Putin knows it,” he said.



“The effect we aim to achieve should not so much be reflected on the battlefield as it should in the impact on the international community, the moral and psychological state of the Ukrainian people, and the demoralization of Russian society.”

When I read something like the paragraph above, I really do not understand what the hell they are talking about. For what purpose do they need this impact on the Ukrainian people if they cannot make any impact on the battlefield? Demoralization of Russian society? Do they not understand how things work? Haven’t we been through this numerous times already? Wagner had a run towards Moscow while Prigozhin was spitting foam from his mouth bring up real problems, but the absolute majority of the society dismissed him as a traitor and whatever else and came together supporting the authorities and those in power, namely Putin.

The “Russian partisan” incursions into Belgorod region did nothing but more of the same. I am going to use a hyperbole here myself and say no one supports those guys and this is going to be true if you remove the rounding error. They are hated even more as a result.

The reality is that all these actions bring the society together more than doing the opposite. I do not understand why this isn’t clear as day to everyone. Every such action takes more people out of the “this war is unjustified” camp and puts them into the camp of supporters. Isn’t it obvious? Sure, in some very distant perspective, this may have a significant effect on Putin’s ratings and his viability as a leader, but this war will be over way before any of this possibly materializes. We can actually add this as the fourth result of this incursion and as the third failure.

Fredled, you say you have your connections and sources in Russia that you cannot reveal. I am rather amazed that these sources are not telling you exactly this. Along with the previous info those sources had provided you with that you mentioned here, I would seriously consider questioning those very sources.

Let’s talk about the shortage of manpower in Russia. I am not even going to argue against it because there really is a shortage of manpower. This is very apparent from the unemployment rate, inflation, among other factors. Do we see it on the frontline, including the current state of the Kursk offensive, however? The answer is clearly no, or not at the moment. Now let’s put the existing shortage into perspective and consider what is happening in Kursk and Ukraine. The Ukrainian defences are (near) collapsing in one direction rather quickly, a few others have very questionable status and may follow suit. Russians are advancing at the fastest pace since 2022. At the same time, they added, reportedly, 30,000 troops to Kursk, hardly any of which came from Ukraine. Of course, according to the reports, these are mostly unexperienced and poorly prepared troops (they will be after this, of course). The immediate result of such moves is that the Ukrainian offensive has stalled, which was expected. This isn’t the only reason it has stalled, of course. Complexity of logistics and lack of manpower and reserves, as well as equipment, in Ukraine play quite a role here as well.

Let’s now consider the argument that was made about exposing the shortage Russia is allegedly experiencing and make them stretch those scarce resources. I think I am now getting into what Feanor had already talked about, so I will just say this: if your resources are significantly more limited, you cannot win by willingly stretching your resources even more. The active frontline has now been expanded and requires additional resources from both sides. The difference being one side is now willing to commit substantial resources that weren’t previously available for various (mostly political) reasons.

This brings us to the next point and possibly the most significant miscalculation by the Ukrainian command: Russia/Putin will not commit the conscripts and other internal forces for the political reasons and some such. This is pure garbage and lack of understanding of the situation. It can actually be looked at from several angles. I will only briefly discuss one that I think is sufficient to make the point. This has actually untied Russian MoD’s (Putin’s) hands and allowed them to use the resources previously unavailable to (actively) fight Ukraine within their own borders. In other words, this has increased the availability of men to be sent to the frontline. Political implications? Sure, no doubt. But they are defending Russia now. And this is literally the case. Tens of thousands of troops have been added to the Russian pool by the Ukrainian actions, while Ukraine itself has to wiggle with numbers that haven’t changed on their side. The bigger problem arises when Ukraine has to rotate the troops and substitute for losses, which I am sure are significant and probably rising. This is a big deal because they are now either using the reserves (that may very well be unavailable) or moving the troops from some other “cold” (and other) spots of the front. Russia has to do nothing but defend, which not only requires less personnel and equipment, but also allows for in-battle training of the conscripted personnel, etc.

Back to the political consequences for the Putin regime. There are some, but aren’t many, really, in short to medium run. Likely at the very least not until the war is over. Some seem to be forgetting that Putin rose during the war in Chechnya, where thousands of conscripts had perished and the war had lasted a very long time. Some very nasty stuff. Back then, they were not only fighting the radical terrorists, but also to keep the country intact. Now they are fighting nazi terrorists organized and directed by the west, the entire NATO (and don’t forget the USA in particular), and the existential threat to the country. A little perspective goes a long way. Moreover, there is no political party in Russia today that has any opposition to the war in Ukraine. There are no Politkovskayas, but plenty of Skobsevas and Solovyovs. In other words, Ukraine would be long gone before this alleged demoralizing and outrage ever takes place.

In regard to “humiliating moves”. From the article cited:

"When the enemy arrives on our Russian territory, all Russian soldiers forget about internal problems and unite against a common enemy," Bears Brigade commander Viktor Yermolaev told France's Le Monde newspaper (in French).

There is something about prestige of fighting in and defending Russia and I hear the money is better. Furthermore, they are talking about 100 paramilitary officers leaving for Russia (Crimea, according to the article). These would likely be battle hardened commanding officers for the conscripts and recruits in training, and again, Rosgvardia and others. This shows planning, nothing more. Not sure where humiliation comes into place. Especially considering what has happened over the past two and a half years and still.
 

KipPotapych

Well-Known Member
Part 3 of 3.

In the meantime, the commander of the 11th motorized infantry battalion that chose not to be killed while being surrounded in Karlivka and retreated is being fired.


The rumours about the 72nd being transferred out of Vuhledar (to either Kursk or Pokrovsk) and replaced by… trying to think but can’t recall the brigade, but is the one that kept screwing up rotations that allegedly led to the loss of positions in the Ocheretino and further west. The rumours unsurprisingly coincided with a serious Russian offensive on Vuhledar that is currently unraveling and many expect the result to be very different from the previous attempts, all repelled by the 72nd for two years. We will see what happens.

Nothing good will come from Vuhledar falling. Surely it will have no strategic meaning and the usual statements, but Russia might be looking to bite off a huge chunk of land stretching from Mihaylivka or there about and down to Vuhledar, if not further west. That would be a really very bad development for Ukraine, in my opinion. Do they even need to attack Pokrovsk at all for this to happen? Do they have enough resources to push for both? Can they simply make Pokrovsk unusable as a hub without taking it and push south? Does Ukraine have resources to prevent any of this from happening? Can mount a serious offensive as they did in 2023, but less advertised and better thought out? These are some pretty big questions. Some meaningless points about humiliating withdrawal of 100 (common, seriously?) Russian troops from Africa have very little place in this greater discussion, in my opinion. The situation on land, as they say, draws a very grim picture here. Imagine Russia being able to realize the scenario I described above. This will not only rid Ukraine of their best remaining and longest standing fortified position, but also threaten the entire southern front, as well as west of Donetsk and the possibility of Russia occupying territories in the new regions. In addition, if this scenario unravels as described, there will be a greater need for the Ukrainian resources to defend unprepared or poorly prepared positions, while Russia will need less resources to attack for the same reasons. This is basically a domino effect that has been happening past Avdiivka, but on a much larger scale. I can also clearly see Russian voluntary recruitment increasing dramatically as a result of this.

Last comment on the sabotage in the west. There is a great saying: shit happens. With the (supposedly) rapidly increasing rates of production on tight deadlines and tight resources (be it plants, machinery, personnel working overtime, etc), the likelihood of accidents is prone to rise, there is no way around it. It doesn’t matter if it is in Germany or the United States or elsewhere. In the meantime, Russia will gladly sit it out and take it as given - ie, their grotesque capabilities to interfere and organize these type of events. As long the societies (both, Russian and Western) are ready to consume it as a given as well.

Last thing for this (probably) unnecessarily long post. I wrote a good chunk of it while sitting on the bench in the park during the Alberta Heritage Day event. Next to me, a couple of other benches were occupied by a whole bunch of young men (and a few ladies), probably late 20s early 30s, speaking Ukrainian. You can clearly see they are fairly newly arrived to the country. Having fun, eating ice cream, etc. Not a word about the depressing stuff or Ukraine in general. Just a good day in their lives. The event was wrapped by the drone light show. Not a bother in the world for those guys, Interesting how it works, really. I am probably overloaded by this stuff, but essentially every time I hear or see a drone or a small airplane circling around, I immediately think about this damn war and what people must feel like when they see or hear these in Ukraine and Russia. I really have no idea how these guys can have this much fun while watching a drone light show, haha. Don’t get me wrong, good for them to move on and have and enjoy a better life, but man…

Edit: Forgot to add that the following is a good listen at BBC Sounds. The begging is quite boring (a person I have never heard of before talks about the Russian neighbours and their caution of Russia, etc), but hang on and it becomes a good discussion about the war, a bit of geopolitics, situation in Russia, etc. The other guests are Jack Watling, Mark Galeotti, and Michael Clarke.

 
Last edited:

KipPotapych

Well-Known Member
That would be post number four in a row, for which I apologize. Catching up on today’s Twitter here. Funny because I am not the only one who apparently proposed the theory today:


The original thread on X if you prefer.

Another excellent read by Emil Kastehelmi, always valuable contributions form this guy:


The original thread on X if you prefer.

A couple more one-post threads:

IMG_6852.jpeg

Another one:

IMG_6853.jpeg

I didn’t read the article myself yet (won’t till tomorrow), but here is the link:


Edit: Syrsky’s revelations from my previous post:

This part is like a thunder in the blue sky, to be honest. As opposed to the daily briefings, only 4.5% of the ballistic missiles, such as Iskander, Tochka-U, and North Korean KN-23 were intercepted out of 1,388 launched.
Claims of the Ukrainian air force from today’s intercepts:

Radio engineering troops of the Air Force detected and tracked 58 air targets - 35 missiles of various types and 23 attack UAVs:
- 16 "Iskander-M"/KN-23 ballistic missiles from the Bryansk, Voronezh and Kursk regions - Russian Federation[…]

As a result of the combat work of units of anti-aircraft missile troops, means of radio-electronic warfare of the Air Force, as well as calculations of mobile fire groups of the Defense Forces of Ukraine, the following was shot down:
- 9 "Iskander-M"/KN-23 ballistic missiles[…]


Sounds plausible. Don’t forget:

Together - to victory!
 
Last edited:

Fredled

Active Member
You will always find naysayers or bits of informations to say that Ukrainian successes are in fact failures, that their effect is the opposite of what was expected, that the front line is collapsing...

No, the front line is not collapsing. Except in the Pokrovsk direction, Russian progress have been terribly slow and in a few spots, while most of the 1000 km front line remains unchanged. They didn't even enter Chasiv Yar, two months after reaching the outskirt of the town. They barely crossed the canal for the n-th time.

They are closing in on Toresk and Vuhledar (which was supposed to be taken 2 years ago), and of course Pokrovsk where they made their only significant advance. Anywhere else, Russian advances have been stopped.

No, Putin is not indifferent in front of the Kursk Incursion. It's yet-one-more humiliation for him and for his invincible army.
First of all it shows that Russia doesn't have enough military forces left to adequately protect their own borders. Everything is sent to the DonBas. After one month, Ukrainians are still there. And even worse, they are building fortification, indicating that they are not going to withdraw anytime soon by their own will.

2 or 3000 Russian soldiers are on the verge of being trapped between the Seym river and Ukrainian lines. Even if Ukrainians may not be able to do it, it's in istself already remarkable that they posed such a threat.

These developments show that Putin's strategy to not remove any troops from the front line to defend Kursk is not working. And some are moving from the south of Ukraine to Kursk because he has no other choice. He will be forced to remove even more of them if Ukrainians are not repelled and manage to build their defence line.

Despote several massive missile attacks since 2022, Ukraine is still standing. These attacks means for the Ukrainians that there is no red line, no talk with a murderer, no escalation possible because it's already at the top of the scale (nukes expected), that they have to fight Russia by any means without any restrain, that the pro-war pro-Putin public opinion in Russia is secondary (if not totally irelvant) to them, and they don't care what the Russian public will think of the Kursk Incursion or of their strikes deep inside Russia. They don't care.

Now Putin has decided to import ballistic missiles from Iran. It seems it's done deal. This is another humiiliation for him and for his militaro industrial complex. Let's see if Iranian missiles are more accurate...

In the meantime, Ukraine is still striking deep inside Russia with increased efficiency. Only in Russia can a leader take so many humiliations and still have popular support. Only in Russia...


More details here
https://youtu.be/ra2ucq9k9L8

KipPotapych said:
Fredled, you say you have your connections and sources in Russia that you cannot reveal. I am rather amazed that these sources are not telling you exactly this. About my sources in Russia.
Yes. it's amazing, isn't it?
People there want this war to stop. Unfortunately, I can't tell more about it.
 

hauritz

Well-Known Member
Thermite armed drones are now a thing. Nothing new about incendiary devices but the ability of drones to precisely lay down a wall of fire might take things to the next level.
 

KipPotapych

Well-Known Member
^ I saw that earlier today. Some really menacing stuff.

Yes. it's amazing, isn't it?
People there want this war to stop. Unfortunately, I can't tell more about it.
I will only reply to the quoted part for now.

I don’t believe, personally, there are many (any?) people on this forum that don’t want the same. This is probably true for the majority of people elsewhere. Some may not particularly care (there are many people around the world, including those that don’t even know what Ukraine is), but most would probably rather see peace than hostilities, destruction, and death, regardless.


This is a good article written for Foreign Affairs by Michael Kofman and Rob Lee. They talk about Kursk offensive, risks, potential benefits, war in general, etc. I think it is free to all readers.


A look at the (cluster) ATACMS that was either intercepted or malfunctioned and landed on the Russian positions somewhere in Ukraine:


The guy in the video says (with a lot of swearing) that “this is the rocket with these balls, there are so many of them, it just fell and didn’t explode” or something along those lines.

An interesting thread by War Mapper showing the Russian and Ukrainian (Kursk) advances on a few nice charts. The charts could surely be much better, but I think it works for his point (or what I think it is), which I do not necessarily care for right now, but talked about a few weeks (?) ago. But I still think these are nice visualizations.


The charts clearly show the increased pace of Russian advancement on multiple fronts since the Kursk incursion.
 

Capt. Ironpants

Active Member
Thermite armed drones are now a thing. Nothing new about incendiary devices but the ability of drones to precisely lay down a wall of fire might take things to the next level.
When I saw that video earlier today, I thought it was terrifying. I looked it up, and it seems it's not quite as horrific as it looks, if this article is correct:

Rather than staying in one place, the moving drone spreads the product of the thermite reaction along its flight path as it burns. This is not likely to cause casualties. The droplets of molten iron fall like a sprinkle of white-hot rain, but anyone in a bunker or covered trench will be safe and even in the open troops in helmets and body armor are well protected, so long as they do not make the mistake of looking up.

What the thermite rain will do though is set alight any flammable material it falls on. After a dry summer, crops and vegetation burns easily and the thermite spray leaves hundreds of thousands of tiny fires in its wake. As the video shows, some of these spread and join up to create larger conflagrations. The combined effect of smoke and flame may present more of a problem to occupying troops and force them to abandon the position.

...Though spectacular, the new weapon is unlikely to be decisive. Thermite fire will not destroy Russian positions, unless applied more intensively, but it will certainly strip away protective cover. Perhaps more importantly, the effect of Dragonfire drones on morale may be considerable, and this ultimately be Russia’s weak spot.


Link:
‘Dragonfire’: Flamethrowing Drone Burns Up Russian Positions

You guys are a much better judge of this than I. Do you think this is correct?
 
Top