Putin is Fighting the War He Chooses…The Russian Federation is not losing this war. Please do not be fooled into thinking that.

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By Ernest Sipes

As I returned from Ukraine a few days ago after my first post-COVID reporting trip and after a couple days of letting my aging bones resume their proper position after the trauma of 10 hours in an economy-class airline seat, I do believe I have gained some insight into the logistics of this conflict after all.
 
Which I have to say I initially doubted.
 
During those three weeks in Ukraine, I was present for missile attacks in two cities, sat wide-eyed through dozens of artillery barrages, spent hours discussing the war with a wounded Ukrainian soldier on a 17 hour train ride from Lviv to Dnipro in a small train cabin, visited with serving members of the Ukrainian army, photographed many wrecked buildings in the eastern part of the country and ate borscht so many times that I believe I can now identify the recipe differences between Dnipro and Lviv.
 

Photos by the author

Before I begin, let me establish a couple of things as a reference point for my views.
 
First, of course Putin was wrong to invade Ukraine, that is a given.
 
The loss of life is horrific.
 
I fully support the Ukrainian people in their efforts to expel what are called there the “Russian Occupiers.” (Tellingly, Russian soldiers are now being referred to as “Orcs” by younger Ukrainians.)
 
But the relationship between Russia and Ukraine is a long one, and it is much more complex than we as outsiders can ever imagine. I had a three-hour conversation with a Polish computer technician named Vasily who sat next to me on the plane out of Warsaw about this exact issue. And while he admitted he was surprised the invasion occurred, he was not as dismissive of Russian methods and goals as you might think. More than once, the concept of being Russian as not just a nationality, but instead an ethno/spiritual state of being, was expressed by him to me.
 
So, with that being said, I would rather comment on just a few specifics and throw in a little speculation that I will state to some extent as fact, simply because to do otherwise would become tedious for the reader.
 
It appears to me Moscow (and I am choosing to use Moscow to refer to the Russian Federation as to me it’s a bit simplistic to refer to one man as the leader of a nation with a representational body as is the Duma) has a fixed series of goals in the war. Now we could argue all day over whether the Duma truly represents the people of the nation, but that would be pointless given the reason for writing this piece.
 
I perceive Moscow’s goals in this military engagement as:
 

  1. A route to the Black Sea.
  2. The unification of areas perceived as belonging to Russia and whose citizens (a majority at least) desire to join Russia.
  3. A notice to the world that the lands that once formed the Soviet Bloc are still under the guidance of Moscow at some level.
  4. To discourage Ukraine and surrounding nations from joining NATO/EU.
  5. To illustrate that all of Eastern Europe is still under the influence of Moscow.

If we approach the situation with these points in mind, events and decisions made by Moscow will begin making a bit more sense.
 
Despite what the media is presenting, the army of the Russian Federation is not made up of rampaging Orcs who rape, murder and pillage. And they have not, as we are told, being bested in every contest with the Ukrainian army. Additionally, Moscow’s army is not exhausted and out of fuel, equipment and supplies. There have not been mass desertions from Russia’s army. What you are reading is the typical propaganda that always seems to show up in a war in this region. I saw the exact same thing and devices used in the 2008 South Ossetia War when I worked for the newspaper Georgia Today and that particular Russian Invasion was occurring.
 
Perhaps it is best to begin by being honest and recognize that Moscow is exercising (to some extent anyway) restraint in this action so far. I am not defending this endeavor, but this is the simple fact of the military situation as I perceive it.
 
If you accept that a decision has been made to only accomplish a relatively small set of specific goals as outlined above, it is easy to see that this is why there has been no out-and-out destruction of the infrastructure of Ukraine when it is well within the ability of Moscow to do so.
 
With a map of the country in hand and after riding the train and taking the bus on several of the east-west-north routes, you would most likely see it doesn’t take a military genius to realize that the topography of Ukraine makes it very vulnerable to aerial bombardment. And the country is by all appearances not prepared for attacks at these vital points.
 
As one example, on the bridge crossing the Dnieper River in Dnipro, there were no aerial defence systems present, instead only two small groups of soldiers on either end armed with PKMs in sandbag enclosures.
 
Additionally, in terms of intra-country transportation, Ukraine suffers from antiquated facilities and rolling stock, particularly in the area of railroads. Some of the rolling stock is still of Soviet vintage. And not as curious antiques for tourists to ride in, but for the actual transportation of goods.
 
Below is a map of Ukraine. I would like you to examine this map before and after you read my points.
 

 
Map credit: Lencer CC BY-SA 3.0 license
 
It is worthwhile to note the presence and geographic position of the Dnieper River, which essentially splits Ukraine into a western and eastern section. From the standpoint of defense of a nation from a land based invasion, it would be difficult to overstate the significance of this fact. Simply put, if the actual goal of Moscow were to simply invade and occupy Ukraine, then the following would be their logical course of action to pursue:
 

  1. Strike and destroy bridges over the Dnieper River at Kiev, Cherkasy, Dnipro and Zaporizhzhia using TU22 and TU60 heavy bombers or the equivalent.
  2. Destroy the railroad yards at Lviv, Kiev, Dnipro, Poltava and Uman using a combination of TU 22s and fighter bombers such as the Sukhoi 34 and the Tupolev 160 .
  3. Basically rinse and repeat the above for the highways systems M06 and MO3 at Kiev, the M12 at Kirovgard, the MO4 at Dnipro and the M20 at Kharkiv.
  4. Send in any suitable aircraft to simply shoot up the rail and road systems after the above was completed.
  5. Target with 9K720s truck mounted surface-to-surface missiles and destroy electrical stations in keys towns such as Lviv, Kiev, Dnipro, Kharkiv and Zaporizhzhia. This would have several effects, one being it would demoralize the citizens in the cities that were hit.

Moscow could accomplish all of the above in approximately one week’s time. It has air superiority despite what you read. And it is important to remember as well that Moscow has the aircraft — a combat-ready 964 heavy bombers and fighters as reported by Janes Intelligence Review — to withstand what losses would occur if this route to invasion is chosen.
 
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If such a series of steps were taken by Moscow, the following would happen:
 

  1. With the bridges and other transport infrastructure destroyed, no fuel, military equipment, food or goods would move west to east.
  2. Internal military communications would be severely disrupted.
  3. Refugees would be swarming the bridge sites on the eastern side of the river, which would impede movement even more and produce an almost unimaginable humanitarian crisis.
  4. Virtually no military equipment or reinforcements could be moved into the eastern areas in Donbas, Odessa etc. to reinforce the already stressed Ukrainian defenders.
  5. With the eastern part of the country cut-off, after a few weeks what Ukrainian forces left in that region would be forced to surrender.

What I find almost staggering is I could go there, travel around a bit, interview a few people, look at how poorly bridges, road junctions and railway stations are actually defended and then figure out that Moscow has decided to prosecute this war with perhaps only 10% of its armed forces’ capability. Instead of examining the simple facts of this conflict, analysts and media personalities choose to ignore the obvious and instead become ecstatic over a series of videos of Russian BTR 80s, BMP2s, T72s (and at least one of the new T90s) being blown up in minor engagements with Ukrainian forces.
 
Moscow does have an end game.
 
It is in fact accomplishing what appear to be the goals it began with on February 24th.
 
Russia is fighting exactly the war it wants to fight on an apparently adjustable timetable.

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Henry Kissinger: Ukraine must give Russia territory

Veteran US statesman Henry Kissinger has urged the West to stop trying to inflict a crushing defeat on Russian forces in Ukraine, warning that it would have disastrous consequences for the long term stability of Europe.

The former US secretary of state and architect of the Cold War rapprochement between the US and China told a gathering in Davos that it would be fatal for the West to get swept up in the mood of the moment and forget the proper place of Russia in the European balance of power.

zelensky is a dirtbag corruptocrat. He will continue to let his people dies while he pushes the world to give him more money.

No one knows where the vast sums of billions of dollars have gone.

Last edited 1 year ago by TrumpWon

06/01/22 – Russian Officials Who Demanded Putin End War Expelled From Communist Party

Two Russian lawmakers who called on President Vladimir Putin to end the war against Ukraine have been expelled from the Communist Party.

Leonid Vasyukevich and Gennady Shulga were branded traitors after their comments last Friday during a meeting of the legislative assembly of the Primorsky region in far eastern Russia.

Vasyukevich appealed to Putin to stop the war and withdraw his troops from the country. He said he was also speaking on behalf of three Communist Party colleagues: Shulga, Natalya Kochugova and Aleksandr Sustov.

“We understand that if our country does not stop the military operation, there will be even more orphans in our country,” Vasyukevich told the meeting, in a rare display of dissent against the so-called “special military operation” that began in February.

“During the military operation, young people who could bring great benefit to our country die and become disabled,” he added. “We demand the immediate withdrawal of the troops of the Russian Federation.”

The incident caused a commotion, with the region’s governor, Oleg Kozhemyako, branding Vasyukevich a “traitor.”

Vasyukevich and Shulga were escorted from the meeting and denied the right to vote at the session, according to independent Russian language news outlet MediaZona.

The head of the Primorsky assembly’s Communist Party faction, Anatoly Dolgachev, has now told state-run newspaper Kommersant that Vasyukevich and Shulga have been expelled for “discrediting the party.”

Dolgachev said colleagues voted unanimously to kick the pair out of the party. “They have no place in our ranks … they are now non-handshake, political corpses for us,” he said.

He added that Russia’s Communist Party officially “supports the actions of the armed forces to de-Nazify Ukraine,” echoing the Kremlin’s rhetoric that the “special military operation” seeks to rescue residents of the self-proclaimed Donetsk and Luhansk republics from a “genocide.”

Vasyukevich and Shulga “betrayed their voters,” said Dolgachev.

No one cares moron

“Didn’t the CEOs Just Tell You They Understood it Would Have a Very Big Impact?” – Reporter Calls Out Joe Biden’s Lies Related to Baby Formula Crisis

Last edited 1 year ago by TrumpWon

The Communist Party in Russia has membership less than 500,000.

These TWO little guys were expelled from a small party in Russia, and not by Putin.

The lies you tell…CNN-style, and by omission.

You are an absolute pig.

Last edited 1 year ago by Nathan Blue

greg does not know his ass from a hole in the ground

He’s also getting more desperate to spin things for his globalist masters.

I guess Davos is a bit closer to Russian tanks than Indiana.

You missed the point: The Russian Communist Party is 100% behind Vladimir Putin and his war.

06/01/22 – Hundreds of Russian soldiers have deserted or refused to fight in Ukraine, compounding major losses in the war, report says

Hundreds of Russian soldiers have refused to fight or fled their posts since the war in Ukraine began, according to report published Wednesday by The Wall Street Journal.

“So many people don’t want to fight,” Russian lawyer Mikhail Benyash told the outlet. Benyash is representing a dozen service members of Russia’s National Guard, which typically stamps out protests in Russia, who were dismissed after refusing to take part in the invasion of Ukraine.

The Guardian reported last week that at least 115 Russian national guardsmen said they were fired for refusing to fight. The lawsuit they brought challenging their dismissals was rejected by a Russian court when the judge found their firings justified for “refusing to perform an official assignment.”

Benyash told The Journal soldiers who refuse to fight have been dismissed but not criminally charged because Russia has not formally declared war against Ukraine. Russian President Vladimir Putin has instead described the invasion as a “special military operation.”

Benyash also said he received requests for legal help from more than 1,000 service members and employees of the Russian agency that oversees domestic policing. He said many had either refused to fight in Ukraine or quell protests in occupied towns.

Agora, a Russian human rights group, also told The Journal upwards of 700 Russian service members contacted the group for legal assistance in relation to refusing orders.

The desertions and refusals to fight have compounded the heavy losses Russian troops have experienced in Ukraine and a shortage of boots on the ground. The UK’s defense ministry said last month Russia had likely lost one-third of its its invading ground combat forces in Ukraine since February.

Reports have also emerged of low morale among Russian troops, including going to desperate lengths to get sent home from the war. One Russian soldier said his commander shot himself in the leg just so he could leave, according to intercepted audio published by Ukraine officials.

Russia has lost more troops and equipment after 100 days in Ukraine than during 10 years in Afghanistan.

05/28/22 – To Replenish Its Army In Ukraine, Russia Plans To Strip Its Training Units. It Can Only Do This Once.

Before Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered his forces to widen their war on Ukraine starting the night of Feb. 23, the Russian army had 168 battalion tactical groups.

A BTG is the Russian army’s basic unit for ground warfare. Each BTG includes around 800 soldiers plus 50 or so armored vehicles. For the Ukraine campaign, the army concentrated at least 125 of its 168 BTGs—three-quarters of the overall combat force.

Three months later, the Ukrainians have destroyed 4,100 Russian vehicles, killed up to 15,000 Russian troops and wounded perhaps several times that number. Russia’s losses amount to the dissolution of around three-dozen BTGs.

So it’s worth asking: as Russia attempts to sustain a fresh offensive across a small pocket of Ukrainian troops in the city of Severodonetsk, in eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region, how many BTGs are left? And how many more battalions can the Kremlin mobilize?

When the Russian army retreated from northern Ukraine in March and April, it reconstituted some BTGs and also deployed fresh battalions from Russia’s fringes. The Pentagon on May 16 estimated Russia had 106 BTGs in Ukraine. Ten days later the battalion count was up to 110—this despite the Russians losing one or two BTGs trying to cross the Siverskyi Donets River, north of Severodonetsk, in early May.

With 110 BTGs in Ukraine, the Russian army might have just 20 or 30 battalions in reserve. Realistically, some of them cannot deploy without exposing the cities or borders they guard. For example, the remaining BTGs in Kaliningrad, Russia’s geographically-separate exclave on the Baltic Sea.

As casualties continue to mount, not adding forces to Ukraine isn’t an option for Russia unless it’s willing to, well, lose. The solution, of course, is to stand up new BTGs. But with what troops and equipment?

According to recent mobilization order, which some analysts claim to have seen, the Kremin plans to raid its training base. It’s a risky move.

Every brigade and regiment in the Russian army forms at least two BTGs for combat, both with professional contract soldiers. A so-called “third battalion” oversees a brigade or regiment’s conscripts—who, by law, aren’t supposed to deploy to a combat zone—and handles training and constabulary tasks.

The mobilization order requires the higher units to strip their third battalions of all legally deployable manpower in order to form an extra BTG. The open-source analysts at Conflict Intelligence Team believe the army can squeeze another 30 or 40 BTGs from the existing third battalions.

These units will not be well-armed. The army has lost a third or more of its active tanks. New construction realistically can’t replace them. Russia’s main tank factory idled back in March as new sanctions deprived it of microchips and optics, which Russia usually imports.

The Kremlin on paper has 10,000 tanks in storage, including thousands of reasonably modern T-80s and T-72s. But many of those tanks lack chips and optics, too—and others have rusted away after years of exposure to rain and snow.

Some of the oldest stored tanks have fared the best. Sixty-year-old T-62s don’t have a lot of sophisticated equipment and could be easier to regenerate. This helps to explain why social-media users have begun spotting trainloads of the ancient tanks trundling into Melitopol in Russian-occupied southern Ukraine.

As the wider war in Ukraine enters its fourth month, the Kremlin is beginning the painful process of forming potentially dozens of BTGs to replace an equal number of battalions the Ukrainians have destroyed. The deadline reportedly is in June.

But those BTGs will ride in obsolete vehicles. And they will leave behind them the empty shells of brigades and regiments that no longer will have much, or any, training base.

Trainers are an army’s regenerative tissue—the means by which it sustains itself after wartime damage. When you deploy the trainers, you lose the ability to regenerate. What that means is: Russia can replenish its army in Ukraine, restoring it roughly to the numerical strength—if not the technological sophistication—it possessed on day one of the wider war.

But it can only replenish the army once. If Ukraine destroys those extra Russian BTGs, there might not be any more battalions to take their place.

Attrition is not Putin’s friend. He’s destroying Russia’s military while NATO forces sit on the sidelines and watch. Twitter posts aren’t going to save him from the consequences of his own stupid ambitions.

Last edited 1 year ago by Greg

No one cares
The entire debacle is a waste of time and money
We have far more important issues here
Screw Ukraine

If “no one cares”, why don’t you cut the “Putin’s winning” crap?

Putin’s war is why I paid $5.39/gal for gas yesterday.

Last edited 1 year ago by Greg

Putin is winning
Even all of Europe is done with this petty civil war

It’s NOT a civil war. It’s the invasion of a sovereign nation by a TYRANT who wants to control all of western Europe.

Harvey Weinstein Advisor, Mao Lover Anita Dunn In Line To Become White House Chief Of Staff

Just what the doctor ordered for the democrat party

06/02/22 – 200,000 kids among Ukrainians forcefully taken to Russia, says Zelenskyy

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Wednesday that 200,000 children are among the Ukrainians who have been forcefully taken to Russia and dispersed across the vast country…

Hitler did the same thing in Eastern Europe.

Last edited 1 year ago by Greg