sohamn wrote:Karan - I don't think its fair to accuse John of western propaganda, I don't think he is doing any propaganda.
Given your posts on the matter, please don't go around giving any clean chits on the matter please. Some of you have made your preferences for which side you support clear. Just dont expect the rest of us to go for your preferences without examining the sources you quote.
For instance, its very clear that you believe hook, line and sinker in the western narrative - dont expect thought that because you do so, the rest of us align to the very same belief system.
Did you see the video of the analysis posted by Lt. Gen Syed Ata Hasnain? It would be clear to you that Russian's had a major failure in their logistical operations which resulted in huge losses and hence the retreat to a region where logistical hurdles won't be a nightmare. No matter where our emotions lie, lets be pragmatic and logical.
Please do consider your own advise of being pragmatic and logical regarding the topic as you were busy advising people that there are no Nazis in Ukraine wherein the actual evidence speaks otherwise.
Next, with all due respect to Lt Gen Hasnain, his is *one* view and even his view is countered by other military veterans who spent a lifetime studying the Russian military to fight against it. Time will tell who is correct. But the certitude with which you quote one opinion as correct merely because it aligns to your preconceptions is not something I would do.
Russia committed their best divisions for Kiev, then a huge logistical operation which didn't take off as planned. All these losses for many weeks just for a diversion attack to Donbass?
Of course they would commit their best - the problem is you guys dont even read what is offered to you on a platter.
For instance check this (posted earlier in the thread)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raid_on_Tatsinskaya
The Raid on Tatsinskaya was a Soviet armoured raid deep into the German rear conducted by 24th Tank Corps under the command of Major General Vasily Mikhaylovich Badanov in late December 1942. It took place during Operation Little Saturn, on the heels of the successful encirclement of the Wehrmacht's 6th Army in the Battle of Stalingrad. The raid was designed to force the Germans to divert forces attempting to relieve the 6th Army. The Soviet force captured its objective, the Luftwaffe's airlift hub at the Tatsinskaya Airfield. The Soviet forces destroyed over 72 aircraft on the ground, but was left cut off and without supplies. Despite the loss of most of the tank corps during the ensuing breakout, the raid was a great operational victory.
The Soviets lost an *entire corps* to gain an operational advantage. Now consider that mindset and what they've actually lost during the current fighting and revisit your assumptions on how different nations with different operational strategies, war reserves fight.
India fights with a very different mindset - most of our equipment is imported, have you seen anything like the above in any Indian conflict with Pakistan? Then think on how pointless it is for us to apply our mindset to how the Russians would do things. Does the US do COIN as India does? Same answer.
Ritter makes the same point - a different analyst - that the initial fight would be fierce, to make sure the Ukrainians pour all they have into Kiev, and then it tapers off. Which is what has occurred.
Take this Ukraine friendly account from the NYT
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/06/worl ... olaiv.html
The Russian force that poured out of Crimea was five times the size of his Ukrainian unit and quickly overwhelmed it. His brigade had no air support and few functional antiaircraft systems, because most had been sent to Kyiv to defend the capital. Much of the brigade’s tanks and armored fighting vehicles were destroyed in the initial attack by Russian aviation.
This, in an account of how great and plucky the Ukrainians are.
More, on how ineffective Russian airpower is and how useless their tactics are.
The brigade’s commander, Col. Oleksandr Vinogradov, had lost touch with military leadership and was forced to make decisions on the fly, said Colonel Stetsenko, who was with the commander throughout. Encircled and suffering heavy losses from strikes by Russian fighter jets, Colonel Vinogradov ordered his remaining tank and artillery units to punch a hole through a unit of Russian airborne assault troops that had positioned itself at the Ukrainian brigade’s rear.
“The fighter jets of the enemy attacked our tanks, several tanks were hit and burned, and the rest remained and did not flee,” Colonel Stetsenko said. “They knew that behind them were other people, and they gave up their lives to break through the bridge to dig in on the other bank.”
The tactic worked, but the costs were steep. By falling back to Mykolaiv, Colonel Stetsenko’s brigade had to sacrifice Kherson, which on March 2 became the first major city to fall to the Russian forces. They had no choice, Colonel Stetsenko said. If they had tried to defend Kherson, Russian forces could have flanked them and cut them off, opening a road to the west, and to Odessa.
Given the western media has imposed a complete omerta on any and every Ukrainian account of loss, beyond incompetent Russians, the above excerpts are telling.The Russian airborne infantry and airpower literally decimated an entire armoured brigade.
And what do we have in the BBC - oh look, how badly the elite Russian infantry are doing. They have high casualties. In contrast, a true analysis would look at what they achieved. It is this that is completely missing from the western end, apart from the occasional Ritter, as nobody wants to break ranks over the evil Russians stuff.
It will be a difficult war for Russia henceforth as they have lost the element of surprise and momentum. Furthermore, the retreat from Kiev will only accelerate weapons supply from the west and Ukrainian's will resort to a guerrilla style war - and so far what we have seen that Russian armor has no answer to this strategy. I think Putin will look for an exit strategy now after taking Mariupol and Donbass oil fields, after which their would be temporary peace. But long term - holding some of these places would be difficult unless the local population likes the Russian administration.
All this is your opinion, and you are welcome to it, but it only shows how little you know about actual tactics and strategy despite making such categorical assumptions.
"Russian armor has no answer to a guerilla style war" - really?! Have you been accompanying Russian troops in the Ukraine while they conduct anti-armor ops and doing road opening, or anti-ATGM missions and taking calculated risks? Instead, all you have are propaganda videos from the Ukrainian side of their *successful* strikes. None of how many ATGM operators they have lost, their casualties, their failures and what the Russians are doing. On that basis you have decided Russians have no answer and the Ukrainians are winning.
Please spare me the sort of analysis that you've engaged in.
Heck, even if the Russians did lose the Kiev battle, all this does is worsen the strategic situation for the Ukrainians as the relieved units from Kiev rush into the next fight over the Donbass and the Ukrainians still have to contend with Russian airpower preventing them from re-positioning heavy forces.