Putin Recognizes Donbass Republics, Sends Russian Military to 'Denazify' Ukraine

Slowly stocking up on firewood, just in case there is no gas and/or electricity in the winter. So I can at least cook food over a campfire
Some people have wood stove/wood burner.
But it is only in countryside people have that and only some.
I know that schools will went on remote studing, if it would be cold. They wouldn't turn on the heating system in a region I know.

Another thing how it would be people in big cities. Where are a plenty of Khrushchevka and Stalinka types of buildings.
It would be really cold in such types of buildings if it would be no heat.

The government predicts that the heating season 2022-2023 will be the coldest in the history of independent Ukraine. It will start when the air temperature drops below 8 degrees Celsius
 
So, Poland with this just gave up of the western Ukraine. Its hardly unlikely that Russia will gave them anything after this. And logical thing would be denazification of the eastern part of Poland, along with "shock and awe" of some of the small Baltic countries. Which would fend off western Europeans and make nice safe belt for Russia from Baltic to the Black sea.
 
State Emergency Service of Ukraine ( SESU) has started a test version of sending alert messages.
The SESU (ДСНС) will be sending test alerts until October 10.

This is on of the articles

The SESU was testing a new emergency alert system. Ukrainians in social networks noted that the notifications scared them, but they are hard to ignore
This was reported by the SES in a telegram.

"Informed = safe! The SESU asks to understand the temporary inconvenience associated with receiving test messages on smartphones and mobile phones. Together with the Kyivstar, Vodafone and lifecell mobile operators , rescuers continue to deploy a system of operational public information using Cell Broadcast technology. This is a common practice in many EU countries - to promptly warn the public about the danger by sending information messages to subscribers," - the statement reads.

The SESU explained that they would eliminate the deficiencies of the system software based on the results of the testing, . This will allow to use it as soon as possible and notify Ukrainians about danger.

After the testing is completed, messages will be sent only in case of a real threat of an emergency or its occurrence and only where the danger exists.


Interesting thing here, that one can receive a message on the phone whithout sim-card or the phone have sim card inserted that expired (more-likely). I will make an update on that.
 
A small selection of events from last night to today:

Рыбарь
Footage of yesterday's explosion at Kharkiv TPP-5, which was hit by the Russian Armed Forces.

Mash
Mash
Footage of extinguishing the fire at Kharkov TPP-5 after the strike.

Рыбарь
Large fire at one of the power facilities in Kharkiv region after a missile strike.

Mash
Анатолий Шарий
Trolleybuses in Poltava catch fire right on the move due to power surges after the explosion at the thermal power plant.

Colonelcassad
Night rocket attacks on Zaporozhye.

Анатолий Шарий
Today's video, the Ukrainian Armed Forces are swimming somewhere. I have an assumption that it could be another landing party to take over the nuclear power plant in Energodar (I read a message from a local resident, from an acquaintance, she wrote today that she saw preparations by Ukrainian troops for a water crossing to the opposite shore on the bank of the Kakhovka Reservoir, where she lives).

Colonelcassad
Footage of one of today's missile strikes on Kharkiv.

☢️ Vladimir Rogov, a member of the civil-military administration of the Zaporizhzhya region (controlled by the Russian army) reports: the Ukrainian armed forces are preparing a large offensive in the area of the Zaporizhzhya NPP and crossings, artillery units are being relocated.
I saw such reports in Ukrainian telegram channels, too.

💣 The Ukrainian Armed Forces attacked a border checkpoint in Belgorod's Logachevka, killing one person and injuring four others. Almost all of them were refugees from Kharkiv Region.
According to Governor Gladkov, the deceased was an 80-year-old woman, a resident of Kharkiv Oblast. As well as three other victims - all of them were taken to Valuysk Central Regional Hospital. Another one is a local resident.
Houses, outbuildings, power lines and cars were also damaged as a result of the attack. Gas and electricity were temporarily cut off.
 
... It is possible that the Russian command realized that the Ukies were actually trying to create a kind of diversion to allow them to take out Donetsk itself.
They're well entrenched there, having had 8 years to dig in and reinforce their positions.
The Russians have barely moved the front in that area so far.
Russia pulled back troops to a more defensible position and moved the remainder to fortify the Donetsk front, realizing that they do not have enough manpower to hold both fronts at the moment.
The next move is to exhaust the Ukie onslaught at Izyum using their artillery and better defensive positions across the river, while not allowing the Ukies to develop in the direction of Donetsk. When that is done, they can take back what they lost and probably launch a counteroffensive to move the front further away from Donetsk with the help of the additional manpower that they will bring in in the meantime.

It is not. In an organized and pre-planned retreat you would not frantically abandon hundreds of your tanks, armored vehicles, SAUs, ammunition depots, and other personal items. The impending offensive was known at least 3 weeks in advance. But nothing was done. In three weeks it was possible to organize the evacuation of the population, which is the most important thing. Back in the summer, a Russian official who was visiting one of the now abandoned cities swore to the locals on video that "Russia is here forever. We're not leaving anymore." It turns out he deceived them. They relaxed and acted as if the front and hostilities were no longer there, as if the war was a thing of the past there. There were no defensive positions.
And there weren't even any troops in those cities, but only police special forces, which were simply supposed to maintain order on the ground. And so this special forces were taking the fight when the Ukrainian attack started. And within a few hours, all those cities were abandoned in an emergency when some military forces were moved in from other directions, allowing the police units to go to the rear. And then the entire front rolled back across the river, and now Ukrainian troops have reached the border with Russia itself, and are already hitting it, and the capital of the Russian border region, Belgorod.
Does all this look like a "planned and organized regrouping of troops"? Hundreds of pieces of equipment were thrown, 20-year-old guys were captured and killed, and now the Nazis are dancing on their bodies and killing local residents as accomplices of the occupiers. Why was it necessary to take those towns and make empty promises to people if they did not have enough strength and capacity to protect all those people from the beginning?

Moreover, it turns out that the goals of the Russian military operation have changed again; the Defense Ministry now does not mention demilitarization, denazification, and protection of the Russian-speaking population as initial goals at all. Now they say only one thing: "the liberation of Donbass. But then why didn't they do it from the beginning? Since the start of the military operation, more civilians have been killed every day in Donetsk and other neighboring cities by Ukrainian shelling than in the previous few years. This does not sound very protective.
Perhaps we should still force the Ukrainian government by all means to cease violence and resistance, rather than endlessly butchering Ukrainians endlessly sent to the front? Is this an operation against the population or against the government? Not a single Ukrainian politician and official has been hurt so far, not in any way at all. Unlike the people.
 
'Does Macron ask Putin to withdraw Russian troops from Zaporozhye Nuclear Power Plant?'

Putin and Macron discuss safety at Zaporozhye nuclear plant

12 Sep, 2022
The two leaders didn’t see eye to eye on who is to blame for the dangerous situation at the facility

Russian President Vladimir Putin and his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron spoke on the phone on Sunday, trading blame over the precarious situation at the Zaporozhye nuclear power plant in Ukraine.

During the “detailed and frank exchange of views,” Moscow drew attention to Ukraine’s repeated shelling of the plant’s facilities, including its radioactive waste storage, “which is fraught with catastrophic consequences,” the statement from the Kremlin read.

The Russian side also informed Macron of the steps Moscow is taking to protect the facility, while also urging the West to convince Kiev to immediately stop its attacks on the plant.

A separate readout of the call from the Elysee Palace largely pinned the blame for the situation in Zaporozhye on Russia, adding that the “occupation” by Russian troops is putting the facility at risk.

[Macron] asked that Russian forces withdraw their heavy and light weapons from the [Zaporozhye plant] and that the [International Atomic Energy Agency’s] recommendations be followed to ensure safety at the site,” the statement read. Earlier, Russian Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu claimed that Moscow does not station heavy weaponry at or near the facility.

At the same time, according to the Kremlin, both sides said they were ready to engage in a “non-politicized interaction” to address safety concerns at the facility with the participation of the UN’s International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), which inspected the plant earlier this month.

On Sunday, the last working power unit at the Zaporozhye facility, which has been under Russian control since March, was switched off. According to Vladimir Rogov, a member of the regional administration, the decision was made due to continued shelling of the plant by Ukraine. The constantly changing mode in which the reactors and turbines were forced to operate because of the attacks created the risk of an accident, he said.

On Friday, in the wake of the IAEA inspection of the plant, Rafael Grossi, the watchdog’s director, insisted that all attacks on the facility must cease, warning of a looming “nuclear accident.” To stop this from happening, he urged Moscow and Kiev to establish a kind of “sanctuary” at the plant by reaching a “simple protection agreement” that would see the two sides “agree in principle that the plant should not be attacked.”
12 Sep, 2022

12 Sep, 2022
 
As for all the different slights made by the Russians against Ukrainian Russians, they are very possibly lies and fabrications designed to provoke exactly the reaction that you have right now. Otherwise, they could have just been the best course of action when everything was considered.

There is no much difference between Ukrainian and Russian propaganda. Both here and there, for many years, hatred has been inculcated against their neighbors. Ukrainian journalists tell gruesome stories about bloody Russian "orks"; Russian journalists tell the same stories about bloody Ukrainian "animals". And all the hatred and contempt that is incited on TV, on social media, by opinion leaders and bloggers-deputies and pro-government mongrels who declare that because these pathetic and stupid Ukranians have a Nazi president, that means they ALL are like that, which means they themselves chose, organized and deserve everything that happens to them, all ~40 million people were just born Nazis, Nazis only because they are Ukrainians, not Russians like us, but we are Russians and God is with us (doesn't it remind you anything?). So the ukrainians deserved all this, and they are not pitied, and they all must burn in hell of war.

All of this is written by pro-Kremlin propagandists and military correspondents from the Ministry of Defense. But "the fascists are the ukies, not us". Except there is no difference at all. There is just no difference at all. And any other opinion, if it does not coincide with the opinion of the author of these opuses or commentators who applaud it, or sensibly criticize certain mistakes and events - immediately followed by accusations that he is a Ukr-bot/Kremlin-bot (underline as appropriate), scum, and then wishing death to you and all your loved ones in terrible agony. A real display of patriotism, love and friendship of nations. And no one will even think how it feels, sees and hears, when all the time you supported Russians and you were ashamed of your nation and that because of the actions of some fringe and degenerate people all people without exception are considered such.

I see every day all these thousands of comments on news and events, where they gloat with everything that happens to others (including the crisis in Europe, for example). There are hundreds and thousands of emoji with laughing emoticons and likes under every news telegram as they post videos of soldiers being killed, houses being blown up, bodies being torn apart and burned alive, and all the rest.
They find it funny and hilarious that you are sitting in a war zone, listening to air danger alarms all day long and shells exploding all around you. Because you're on the other side of the border, which means you're a Nazi by default, and you deserve it all. Even if you are Russian.
And you tell me that it can't be. I have read hundreds of curses and the most vile insults against me and all my relatives from Russian patriots with Z / V on their avatars and nicknames. They pride themselves on insulting "stupid Ukrainian Nazi pigs" and wishing everyone a painful death and suffering. There are hundreds of them under every post on social media. And when I ask them the same question: so how are you different from Ukrainian Nazis?" - they insult and hate even more.
Everywhere there are adequate people, and everywhere there are cretins and cynical, soulless bastards who have lost their humanity, and yet consider themselves the most spiritual, correct and exceptional people. And it is painful and bitter to see this every day. Russia needs to be denazified, too, for all these characters. They sit thousands of miles away from a real war and it amuses and entertains them.

If you'll know Russian, I would highly recommend you watch some videos from the Russian YouTube blogger BadComedian - in some of his videos he very clearly compiles and compares all this Ukrainian and Russian propaganda, which have no differences, and you would understand everything of all this sad shit after watching it all.
 
Russia appears to be VERY angry with Germany for supplying arms to Ukraine. Crossed the red line they say. So why does Germany get their angst? Haven’t many other countries done the same thing? All under the threat of the Russian don’t you dare statements. So why Germany? Even after reading the article, it doesn’t seem very clear. From the article, here's the best statement that supports the specific words to Germany.

"He added that Berlin should have known better, “considering the moral and historic responsibility that Germany has before our people for the Nazi crimes.”"

“They have crossed the Rubicon,”
Nechaev stated, using an idiom for passing the point of no return."

“The very fact that the Ukrainian regime is being supplied with German-made lethal weapons, which are used not only against Russian military service members, but also the civilian population of Donbass, crosses the red line,” Ambassador Sergey Nechaev said in an interview with Izvestia newspaper."


Article below:

Germany has ‘crossed red line’ – Russia​

 

Special Military Operation, Season 2​

Things are starting to heat up.​


Big Serge
1 hr ago

September 9 - 11 will go down in history as a period of great significance in the Russo-Ukrainian war. Both belligerent parties crossed very important thresholds, which taken together suggest that the war is entering a new phase. On the 9th and 10th, Ukraine achieved its first concrete success of the war by retaking all the Russian-held territory in Kharkov Oblast west of the Oskil river, including the western bank of Kupyansk and the transit node of Izyum.

Meanwhile, Vladimir Putin convened an emergency meeting of his national security council, which precipitated Russia’s own escalation on the 11th, when Ukrainian infrastructure was at long last subject to attack, plunging much of the country into darkness.

It seems clear that the war is entering a new phase, and it seems highly likely that both parties will attempt to take decisive action in the near feature. For now, let’s try to parse through the developments of the past week and get a handle on where the war is heading.

The Kharkov Counteroffensive

At the risk of sounding very pedantic, Ukraine’s counteroffensive in eastern Kharkov Oblast is an excellent demonstration of the difficulties in evaluating military operations. Everyone agrees on the basic geography of what has happened: Ukraine cleared everything west of the Oskil river of Russian forces. Nobody agrees on what this means, however. I have seen all of the following interpretations posited - note, people reached all of these conclusions from the same set of data:

  • Russia has drawn Ukraine into a trap and will soon counterattack
  • Russia voluntarily withdrew from Kharkov to prioritize other fronts
  • Russia drew the Ukrainians out to hit them with artillery
  • Russia suffered a massive intelligence failure and did not see or respond to Ukraine’s offensive
  • Russia suffered a defeat in battle and was forced to retreat
Let’s do a methodical autopsy and see what we come away with.

The first thing we want to note is that the disparity of forces on this front was absolutely laughable. Ukraine assembled a strike group of at least five full brigades, and aimed at a line of contact which had no Russian regular troops at all. The Russian frontline defenses in the region were manned by allied donbas militia and national guardsmen. It seems there was a lone Battalion Tactical Group (BTG) in Izyum, but little else.

It is undeniable, even for Ukrainians celebrating the advance, that Kharkov oblast had been almost completely hollowed out of Russian troops, leaving little more than a screening force. Two important things flow from this. First, that the Ukrainian shock group was in most places advancing against virtually nonexistent resistance. Secondly, more ominously for Ukraine, the low quality units left behind for screening purposes were able to put up good resistance against the Ukrainians - the Rosgvardiya men in Balakliya held out tenaciously for several days before evacuating through a corridor.

In my previous analysis, conducted while the Ukrainian counteroffensive was just beginning to develop, I noted two important things about the shape of the battlefield.

  1. I argued that Ukraine would be unable to push across the Oskil and properly exploit their offensive.
  2. I noted that Ukraine was making rapid advances against thinly manned, hollowed out portions of the front, and that Russia had committed very little to the battle.
Both of these statements were correct. I freely admit, however, that I drew the incorrect conclusion from them. I believe the Ukrainian advance would culminate at the Oskil river, leaving them vulnerable to a Russian counterattack by the arriving reserves. It seems fairly clear now that this is incorrect, and the Russian reserves that were en-route were tasked with stabilizing the defense at the Oskil, not launching a counterattack.

This was not an operational trap by Russia, but neither was it a victory in battle for Ukraine - for the simple reason that there was not much of a battle at all. Russia had already hollowed out these positions, and withdrew the remaining screening forces very quickly. Ukraine covered a lot of ground, but were unable to destroy any Russian units, because there really weren’t any there.

It would be silly to try to talk the Ukrainian side out of their excitement right now. Credit where credit is due, they did manage to put together a good sized shock group, aim it at a weak portion of the front, and regain a good bit of ground. Considering the abject lack of successes for Ukraine in this war, they are rightfully trying to eke every last bit of morale and propaganda out of this.

I do not, however, believe that the territorial losses in Kharkov in any way change the ultimate calculus of the war. Russia hollowed out this front and surrendered ground, but they were able to maul the Ukrainian forces as they advanced with relentless artillery and airstrikes. Ukrainian channels widely report overflowing hospitals. The Russian Ministry of Defense claimed 4,000 killed and 8,000 wounded for Ukraine during their advance - I believe this is high, but even if we reduce the numbers by 50% (leaving us with 6,000 total casualties, reasonable given how much ordnance Russia discharged) it is very clear that the loss ratios in this operation were stacked badly against Ukraine, as they always are.

Momentum

As I predicted in my last piece, Ukraine has so far been unable to exploit their offensive by reaching the operational depth. They have been totally unable to project forces across the Oskil River. With the advance eastward firmly culminated, they are seeking to maintain their momentum, or at least the appearance of it.

Ukraine’s successful advance in Kharkov Oblast has been augmented with a blitz of fakery and propaganda designed to simulate a total shift in strategic momentum. These include fakes related to Russian domestic politics, such as fabricated calls for Putin’s impeachment, and battlefield misinformation, like claims that the Ukrainian Army has breached the borders of the LNR or stormed Donetsk City. They have also circulated out of context videos (the most popular one shows a Russian vehicle depot in Crimea) purporting to show that the Russians abandoned hundreds of vehicles in Izyum.

The fakery is not important. Ukraine will, however, also attempt to maintain battlefield momentum by piggybacking on the Kharkov operation with additional counteroffensives. They continue to attempt to cross the Donets River in force to storm Lyman, unsuccessfully. They also continue their attacks in the Kherson direction, making little progress and taking high casualties.

The most important development, however, is the claim that a second Ukrainian shock group has been assembled in Zaparozhia. This is an area where the geography actually would allow Ukraine to achieve operational exploitation. A successful drive towards Melitopol or Mariupol would compromise the land bridge to Crimea and threaten to crumble Russia’s entire position in the south.

Unlike Kharkov, however, this is not a hollowed out portion of the front. The newly formed Russian 3rd Corps is concentrated in the south, and Russian convoys have been spotted recently moving through the Mariupol region. Ukraine may very well attempt yet another offensive operation in this direction, but given the strength of the Russian grouping here the results will be more like Kherson than Kharkov.

Sovereignty

During the opening months of the war, I argued on Twitter that massed offensives are difficult, and that Ukraine had not yet shown the organizational ability to organize an operational higher than the brigade level. All the attacking action that we saw from Ukraine early on took the form of single brigade - or more often, single battalion - commanders taking initiative.

Well, lo and behold, Ukraine managed to field at least two (Kherson, Kharkov) and perhaps three (Zaporizhia) multi-brigade shock groups, and launch coordinated operations. This was made possible because Ukraine is a pseudo-state, which is supplied, financed, and increasingly managed by NATO. Western agencies cannot resist bragging - Britain identified itself as the party responsible for planning and organizing the Kherson operation, while the USA claims credit for the more successful Kharkov attack.

It is difficult to overstate the extent to which Ukraine is sustained solely by the west. Ukrainian soldiers are trained by NATO officers, armed with NATO weapons, accompanied in the field by NATO soldiers foreign volunteers, and the Ukrainian pseudo-state is kept running by cash injections from the west. Videos from the Kharkov front abound with English speaking soldiers and foreign weapons.

The point isn’t just to point out, yet again, that Ukraine is a failed state - a corpse that is given the illusion of life by outside actors moving its limbs. The point is that Russia understands this and correctly understands itself to be in a civilizational collision with the west. To that end, we must understand that Russian escalation is underway, and think about what that means.

Escalation and Mobilization

By this point, the idea that Russia needs to mobilize has become a tired old meme, courtesy of the deranged Igor Strelkov. It is certainly true that Russia must escalate, but leaping directly to mobilization (putting the economy on war footing and calling up conscripts) would be a grave mistake. Russia has other, better ways to escalate. The recent Ukrainian advance in Kharkov is an obvious signal to raise the force deployment, and Ukrainian potshots at targets across the Russian border only add to the pressure to take the gloves off.

First, I would like to comment on why I am against mobilization. One of the most important dimensions of this war is the economic front. Europe is being driven to the brink by the energy crisis. The Wall Street Journal keyed in on what I believe to be the most apt descriptor of the crisis, warning of a “new era of deindustrialization in Europe.”

A full mobilization would be very costly for Russia’s economy, risking the edge that it currently holds in the economic confrontation with Europe. This, I believe, is the main reason that the Russian government was quick to quash rumors of mobilization today. There are other steps on the escalation ladder before going to total war footing.

There are already rumors that Russia is planning to change the formal designation of the war, from “Special Military Operation”. While that could mean a formal declaration of war, I think that is unlikely. Rather, Russia will likely give the Ukraine operation the same designation as its operations in Syria, loosening the rules of engagement and beginning to target Ukrainian assets in earnest.

We saw a foretaste of this last night, when Russia wiped out over half of Ukraine’s power generation with a few missiles. There are many more targets that they can go after - more nodes in the electrical grid, water pumping and filtration facilities, and higher level command posts. There is at least some probability that Russia begins targeting the command facilities with NATO personnel in them. Plausible deniability works both ways; because NATO is not officially in Ukraine - only “volunteers” - targeting their personnel is not an overtly aggressive act.

Russia also has many ways to boost its force deployment in Ukraine that fall short of full mobilization. They have a pool of demobilized contract soldiers that they can call up, as well as a pool of reservists that they can raise with a partial mobilization.

The Russian line is hardening. Just in the past 24 hours, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said there were “no prospect for negotiations” with Ukraine, and Putin said “Unfriendly forces are targeting us, and we must take initiative in order to succeed in confronting them.” Medvedev went even further just now: “"A certain Zelenskyy said that he will not hold a dialogue with those who issue ultimatums. The current 'ultimatums' are a warm-up for kids, a preview of demands to be made in the future. He knows them: the total surrender of the Kiev regime on Russia's terms”

If you believe the Russian government is utterly incompetent and duplicitous, feel free to view statements like this as bluster. But given the warning shot at Ukrainian power generation yesterday, my sense is that Russia is preparing to escalate to a higher level of intensity, which Ukraine cannot match with its indigenous resources. Recent The only other player on the escalation ladder is the United States.

Dark times area ahead for Ukraine - and perhaps for Americans on the other front of this war.

The Other Southern Front

Syria and Ukraine are two fronts in the same war. This is very important to understand. In Syria, the United States has attempted to wreck Russia’s most important Middle Eastern ally and create a Trashcanistan of chaos to suck in Russian resources; in Ukraine, NATO has armed a kamikaze state to hurl at Russia’s western border. In the Russian mind, these wars are inextricably linked.

After the Kharkov counteroffensive, I strongly suspect that Russia will look for a way to strike back at the United States, without crossing red lines that could lead to a more direct confrontation. Syria is the place where this would happen. The United States maintains several illegal bases on Syrian soil, which Russia could strike using its Syrian allies much the same way that the United States is using Ukraine. Russia is in the finishing stage training a new Syrian airborne division. With Russian air cover, an attack on one of the American bases in Syria would be possible - the USA would be forced to choose between shooting down Russian planes and flirting with nuclear war, or humbly accepting the loss of an illegal base that it has worked hard to hide from its own citizens. Given the utter lack of enthusiasm among the American public for yet another war in the Middle East, it seems that the USA would simply have to swallow the loss.

Big Serge Expectations:

  1. Russian escalation of attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure and command centers.
  2. Russian force deployment raised without full mobilization.
  3. Intensification of Russian efforts to recover DNR territory.
  4. Possible escalation in Syria, likely in the form of Syrian army attacks on US bases.
 

Special Military Operation, Season 2​

Things are starting to heat up.​


Big Serge
1 hr ago

September 9 - 11 will go down in history as a period of great significance in the Russo-Ukrainian war. Both belligerent parties crossed very important thresholds, which taken together suggest that the war is entering a new phase. On the 9th and 10th, Ukraine achieved its first concrete success of the war by retaking all the Russian-held territory in Kharkov Oblast west of the Oskil river, including the western bank of Kupyansk and the transit node of Izyum.

Meanwhile, Vladimir Putin convened an emergency meeting of his national security council, which precipitated Russia’s own escalation on the 11th, when Ukrainian infrastructure was at long last subject to attack, plunging much of the country into darkness.

It seems clear that the war is entering a new phase, and it seems highly likely that both parties will attempt to take decisive action in the near feature. For now, let’s try to parse through the developments of the past week and get a handle on where the war is heading.

The Kharkov Counteroffensive​

At the risk of sounding very pedantic, Ukraine’s counteroffensive in eastern Kharkov Oblast is an excellent demonstration of the difficulties in evaluating military operations. Everyone agrees on the basic geography of what has happened: Ukraine cleared everything west of the Oskil river of Russian forces. Nobody agrees on what this means, however. I have seen all of the following interpretations posited - note, people reached all of these conclusions from the same set of data:

  • Russia has drawn Ukraine into a trap and will soon counterattack
  • Russia voluntarily withdrew from Kharkov to prioritize other fronts
  • Russia drew the Ukrainians out to hit them with artillery
  • Russia suffered a massive intelligence failure and did not see or respond to Ukraine’s offensive
  • Russia suffered a defeat in battle and was forced to retreat
Let’s do a methodical autopsy and see what we come away with.

The first thing we want to note is that the disparity of forces on this front was absolutely laughable. Ukraine assembled a strike group of at least five full brigades, and aimed at a line of contact which had no Russian regular troops at all. The Russian frontline defenses in the region were manned by allied donbas militia and national guardsmen. It seems there was a lone Battalion Tactical Group (BTG) in Izyum, but little else.

It is undeniable, even for Ukrainians celebrating the advance, that Kharkov oblast had been almost completely hollowed out of Russian troops, leaving little more than a screening force. Two important things flow from this. First, that the Ukrainian shock group was in most places advancing against virtually nonexistent resistance. Secondly, more ominously for Ukraine, the low quality units left behind for screening purposes were able to put up good resistance against the Ukrainians - the Rosgvardiya men in Balakliya held out tenaciously for several days before evacuating through a corridor.

In my previous analysis, conducted while the Ukrainian counteroffensive was just beginning to develop, I noted two important things about the shape of the battlefield.

  1. I argued that Ukraine would be unable to push across the Oskil and properly exploit their offensive.
  2. I noted that Ukraine was making rapid advances against thinly manned, hollowed out portions of the front, and that Russia had committed very little to the battle.
Both of these statements were correct. I freely admit, however, that I drew the incorrect conclusion from them. I believe the Ukrainian advance would culminate at the Oskil river, leaving them vulnerable to a Russian counterattack by the arriving reserves. It seems fairly clear now that this is incorrect, and the Russian reserves that were en-route were tasked with stabilizing the defense at the Oskil, not launching a counterattack.

This was not an operational trap by Russia, but neither was it a victory in battle for Ukraine - for the simple reason that there was not much of a battle at all. Russia had already hollowed out these positions, and withdrew the remaining screening forces very quickly. Ukraine covered a lot of ground, but were unable to destroy any Russian units, because there really weren’t any there.

It would be silly to try to talk the Ukrainian side out of their excitement right now. Credit where credit is due, they did manage to put together a good sized shock group, aim it at a weak portion of the front, and regain a good bit of ground. Considering the abject lack of successes for Ukraine in this war, they are rightfully trying to eke every last bit of morale and propaganda out of this.

I do not, however, believe that the territorial losses in Kharkov in any way change the ultimate calculus of the war. Russia hollowed out this front and surrendered ground, but they were able to maul the Ukrainian forces as they advanced with relentless artillery and airstrikes. Ukrainian channels widely report overflowing hospitals. The Russian Ministry of Defense claimed 4,000 killed and 8,000 wounded for Ukraine during their advance - I believe this is high, but even if we reduce the numbers by 50% (leaving us with 6,000 total casualties, reasonable given how much ordnance Russia discharged) it is very clear that the loss ratios in this operation were stacked badly against Ukraine, as they always are.

Momentum​

As I predicted in my last piece, Ukraine has so far been unable to exploit their offensive by reaching the operational depth. They have been totally unable to project forces across the Oskil River. With the advance eastward firmly culminated, they are seeking to maintain their momentum, or at least the appearance of it.

Ukraine’s successful advance in Kharkov Oblast has been augmented with a blitz of fakery and propaganda designed to simulate a total shift in strategic momentum. These include fakes related to Russian domestic politics, such as fabricated calls for Putin’s impeachment, and battlefield misinformation, like claims that the Ukrainian Army has breached the borders of the LNR or stormed Donetsk City. They have also circulated out of context videos (the most popular one shows a Russian vehicle depot in Crimea) purporting to show that the Russians abandoned hundreds of vehicles in Izyum.

The fakery is not important. Ukraine will, however, also attempt to maintain battlefield momentum by piggybacking on the Kharkov operation with additional counteroffensives. They continue to attempt to cross the Donets River in force to storm Lyman, unsuccessfully. They also continue their attacks in the Kherson direction, making little progress and taking high casualties.

The most important development, however, is the claim that a second Ukrainian shock group has been assembled in Zaparozhia. This is an area where the geography actually would allow Ukraine to achieve operational exploitation. A successful drive towards Melitopol or Mariupol would compromise the land bridge to Crimea and threaten to crumble Russia’s entire position in the south.

Unlike Kharkov, however, this is not a hollowed out portion of the front. The newly formed Russian 3rd Corps is concentrated in the south, and Russian convoys have been spotted recently moving through the Mariupol region. Ukraine may very well attempt yet another offensive operation in this direction, but given the strength of the Russian grouping here the results will be more like Kherson than Kharkov.

Sovereignty​

During the opening months of the war, I argued on Twitter that massed offensives are difficult, and that Ukraine had not yet shown the organizational ability to organize an operational higher than the brigade level. All the attacking action that we saw from Ukraine early on took the form of single brigade - or more often, single battalion - commanders taking initiative.

Well, lo and behold, Ukraine managed to field at least two (Kherson, Kharkov) and perhaps three (Zaporizhia) multi-brigade shock groups, and launch coordinated operations. This was made possible because Ukraine is a pseudo-state, which is supplied, financed, and increasingly managed by NATO. Western agencies cannot resist bragging - Britain identified itself as the party responsible for planning and organizing the Kherson operation, while the USA claims credit for the more successful Kharkov attack.

It is difficult to overstate the extent to which Ukraine is sustained solely by the west. Ukrainian soldiers are trained by NATO officers, armed with NATO weapons, accompanied in the field by NATO soldiers foreign volunteers, and the Ukrainian pseudo-state is kept running by cash injections from the west. Videos from the Kharkov front abound with English speaking soldiers and foreign weapons.

The point isn’t just to point out, yet again, that Ukraine is a failed state - a corpse that is given the illusion of life by outside actors moving its limbs. The point is that Russia understands this and correctly understands itself to be in a civilizational collision with the west. To that end, we must understand that Russian escalation is underway, and think about what that means.

Escalation and Mobilization​

By this point, the idea that Russia needs to mobilize has become a tired old meme, courtesy of the deranged Igor Strelkov. It is certainly true that Russia must escalate, but leaping directly to mobilization (putting the economy on war footing and calling up conscripts) would be a grave mistake. Russia has other, better ways to escalate. The recent Ukrainian advance in Kharkov is an obvious signal to raise the force deployment, and Ukrainian potshots at targets across the Russian border only add to the pressure to take the gloves off.

First, I would like to comment on why I am against mobilization. One of the most important dimensions of this war is the economic front. Europe is being driven to the brink by the energy crisis. The Wall Street Journal keyed in on what I believe to be the most apt descriptor of the crisis, warning of a “new era of deindustrialization in Europe.”

A full mobilization would be very costly for Russia’s economy, risking the edge that it currently holds in the economic confrontation with Europe. This, I believe, is the main reason that the Russian government was quick to quash rumors of mobilization today. There are other steps on the escalation ladder before going to total war footing.

There are already rumors that Russia is planning to change the formal designation of the war, from “Special Military Operation”. While that could mean a formal declaration of war, I think that is unlikely. Rather, Russia will likely give the Ukraine operation the same designation as its operations in Syria, loosening the rules of engagement and beginning to target Ukrainian assets in earnest.

We saw a foretaste of this last night, when Russia wiped out over half of Ukraine’s power generation with a few missiles. There are many more targets that they can go after - more nodes in the electrical grid, water pumping and filtration facilities, and higher level command posts. There is at least some probability that Russia begins targeting the command facilities with NATO personnel in them. Plausible deniability works both ways; because NATO is not officially in Ukraine - only “volunteers” - targeting their personnel is not an overtly aggressive act.

Russia also has many ways to boost its force deployment in Ukraine that fall short of full mobilization. They have a pool of demobilized contract soldiers that they can call up, as well as a pool of reservists that they can raise with a partial mobilization.

The Russian line is hardening. Just in the past 24 hours, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said there were “no prospect for negotiations” with Ukraine, and Putin said “Unfriendly forces are targeting us, and we must take initiative in order to succeed in confronting them.” Medvedev went even further just now: “"A certain Zelenskyy said that he will not hold a dialogue with those who issue ultimatums. The current 'ultimatums' are a warm-up for kids, a preview of demands to be made in the future. He knows them: the total surrender of the Kiev regime on Russia's terms”

If you believe the Russian government is utterly incompetent and duplicitous, feel free to view statements like this as bluster. But given the warning shot at Ukrainian power generation yesterday, my sense is that Russia is preparing to escalate to a higher level of intensity, which Ukraine cannot match with its indigenous resources. Recent The only other player on the escalation ladder is the United States.

Dark times area ahead for Ukraine - and perhaps for Americans on the other front of this war.

The Other Southern Front​

Syria and Ukraine are two fronts in the same war. This is very important to understand. In Syria, the United States has attempted to wreck Russia’s most important Middle Eastern ally and create a Trashcanistan of chaos to suck in Russian resources; in Ukraine, NATO has armed a kamikaze state to hurl at Russia’s western border. In the Russian mind, these wars are inextricably linked.

After the Kharkov counteroffensive, I strongly suspect that Russia will look for a way to strike back at the United States, without crossing red lines that could lead to a more direct confrontation. Syria is the place where this would happen. The United States maintains several illegal bases on Syrian soil, which Russia could strike using its Syrian allies much the same way that the United States is using Ukraine. Russia is in the finishing stage training a new Syrian airborne division. With Russian air cover, an attack on one of the American bases in Syria would be possible - the USA would be forced to choose between shooting down Russian planes and flirting with nuclear war, or humbly accepting the loss of an illegal base that it has worked hard to hide from its own citizens. Given the utter lack of enthusiasm among the American public for yet another war in the Middle East, it seems that the USA would simply have to swallow the loss.

Big Serge Expectations:​

  1. Russian escalation of attacks on Ukrainian infrastructure and command centers.
  2. Russian force deployment raised without full mobilization.
  3. Intensification of Russian efforts to recover DNR territory.
  4. Possible escalation in Syria, likely in the form of Syrian army attacks on US bases.
Excellent analysis. This is the correct context in which to see the events of the last week in Ukraine. The Kharkov offensive was an American escalation. The destruction of a swathe of Ukraine's power grid in the space of two hours' worth of cruise missiles was Russia's counter-escalation. And Syria is part of the same 'essential battlefield'.

Anyone calling for Putin to 'fire all the generals', or for Putin to 'acknowledge his mistakes/errors and mobilize the entire Russian army, NOW! - and that means most of the 'top pro-Russia war commentators'(!) - is being a silly 'armchair general' who's deluding himself into believing he knows better than Putin and his team 'what ought to be done'.
 
Moreover, it turns out that the goals of the Russian military operation have changed again; the Defense Ministry now does not mention demilitarization, denazification, and protection of the Russian-speaking population as initial goals at all. Now they say only one thing: "the liberation of Donbass.

What do you mean?

Yesterday:

All goals of the special operation will be achieved - Medvedev

Russia controls 120-140,000 km2 of Ukraine. Of these, they have now given up 2,000 (1.5%)

If Russian MOD and other Telegram pages are to believed. Ukraine lost 4000 troops and 8000 wounded during their little counter offensive.

How victorious.

A week ago I said:

Russia will keep grinding away at Ukrainian troops until their numbers drop at such a level that they can't play a relevant role anymore. RU forces aren't that interested in taking huge swatch of areas because that means taking more risks. They are primarily focused on destroying military targets. When accomplished, the whole map belongs to Russia.


200K + demilitarized, at Christmas around 500K and so on.

Still 300K or so to go after that.

Russia is unlikely to start a new offensive until most of the Ukrainian troops are gone. Until then, it will probably play defensively without taking many risks. This benefits them greatly.

Anyone calling for Putin to 'fire all the generals', or for Putin to 'acknowledge his mistakes/errors and mobilize the entire Russian army, NOW! - and that means most of the 'top pro-Russia war commentators'(!) - is being a silly 'armchair general' who's deluding himself into believing he knows better than Putin and his team 'what ought to be done'.

During the Syrian campaign, when IS (Islamic State) recaptured Palmyra during a counter-offensive, these same people told their audience that all was lost. These are not serious people.

Also,

By targeting Ukrainian key infrastructures, the Russians send a message to Ukraine/USA/NATO that it can level the country anytime it wants.

Like Putin said: We haven't started anything serious yet.
 
Last edited:
Russia appears to be VERY angry with Germany for supplying arms to Ukraine. Crossed the red line they say. So why does Germany get their angst? Haven’t many other countries done the same thing? All under the threat of the Russian don’t you dare statements. So why Germany? Even after reading the article, it doesn’t seem very clear. From the article, here's the best statement that supports the specific words to Germany.

"He added that Berlin should have known better, “considering the moral and historic responsibility that Germany has before our people for the Nazi crimes.”"

“They have crossed the Rubicon,”
Nechaev stated, using an idiom for passing the point of no return."

“The very fact that the Ukrainian regime is being supplied with German-made lethal weapons, which are used not only against Russian military service members, but also the civilian population of Donbass, crosses the red line,” Ambassador Sergey Nechaev said in an interview with Izvestia newspaper."


Article below:

Germany has ‘crossed red line’ – Russia​


"Meanwhile, Germany has sent Ukraine 15 Gepard anti-aircraft tanks, 10 self-propelled howitzers 2000, 3 multiple rocket launchers and 3 armored recovery vehicles. " ntv reports today.

However, Germany does not want to fulfill Ukraine's wish for battle tanks, while "the self-propelled howitzer 2000, for example, is a much more modern system than, for example, the 'Leopard 2' in the A4 variant."

Ukraine is 'demanding' the delivery of 100 'Marder' armored personnel carriers which would have to be extracted from German armed forces stock which the defense ministry has rejected.

Chancellor Olaf Scholz who is under enormous pressure to provide heavy weaponry to the conflict seems to be trying every trick in the book to delay or forestall the deliveries. Apart from the mass media he is being particularly pestered by his Green party coalition partner (an outfit that evolved out of the German peace movement) and the bigmouthed Ukrainian ambassador.

Concerning the Greens who are religiously trying to 'save the climate' I'm wondering how they can support the exhaust gas pollution, the release of toxic chemicals and the impairment of nature that come along with a major war...

The Russian 'don't you dare' statements must be considered as a warning to Scholz not to commit any decisive war material.
 
Back
Top Bottom