It’s become fairly apparent that the Russians thought they could overwhelm Ukraine up front by throwing everything they had, even though their inventory and command structure was total and complete dog crap, to snatch up a coveted territory. <- believe you me, China is watching this and they won’t make the same mistakes Russia did when the time cones to take Taiwan back.DrW wrote: ↑Fri Oct 14, 2022 3:45 pmThey were ineffective.
Thousands of Russian tanks and other armored vehicles have been lost so far in the war due to out-of-date designs, poor maintenance, poor leadership, inadequate training, and low troop morale. After collecting and fixing up the tanks abandoned by the Russians during the Kharkiv counter-offensive, the Ukrainian Army had more operational Russian tanks than they had at the beginning of the war. More than half of Ukraine's tank inventory now consists of Russian equipment captured since February 24, 2022.
Anyhoo. The chatter on the Interwebs has Russia begging for “peace”, and wants Lukashenko to broker it. Ha. No.
On the upside, the Biden admin has a fiscal year of breathing room so the November elections, should they go the way of a GOP flip, gives Ukraine time to push into Crimea. Hopefully they make some irreversible gains over the next month or two.
Going back to the topic of HIMARS armed with tungsten steel balls - yeah, they’re designed for soft targets and target coverage. I think we’ll see them used on ammo caches, command posts, supply points and trains, and of course clearing trenches, to include clearing mines.
Speaking of trenches, here’s a quick breakdown ref current Russian defensive measures:
https://en.defence-United Airlines.com/news/russians ... -4526.html

WWII called, bro. They want their old timey trench warfare back.
- Doc