Showing posts with label Ukrainian Army. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ukrainian Army. Show all posts

Monday, April 11, 2022

Wars and Rumors of War, 2022. The Russo Ukrainian War Edition, Part Four


From a handbill at a University of Wyoming protest, photo by MKTH.

March 27, 2022

Russo-Ukrainian War

In a typical year, the Wars and Rumors of Wars thread last the entire year.  Not this year, we're on to the fourth edition, and the war in Ukraine is the reason why.

Let's start with the situation on the ground, and the status of that is this.  Over the last week, the Russians lost ground.

March 27, 2022
By Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016Missile attacks source: BNO NewsTerritorial control source: ISW & Template:Russo-Ukrainian War detailed map, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=115506141

While it would probably serve to compare this to the map last put up in the prior edition of this tread, we'll simply note here that the Russians lost a lot of ground in the north.  But they also lost it in the south. From the appearances of things, the Ukrainians are mounting a relief effort on Mariupol, and they've made up a lot of lost ground.

As we noted yesterday:

March 26, 2022

Russia declared yesterday that its goal in the war had been to take all the Donbas region and that the larger offensive was just a diversion, a claim that's fairly obviously baloney.  More likely, this signals an effort to recast the war in that light, perhaps to the Russians themselves, in an effort to declare victory and potentially wind the operation down in light of the difficulties it has been facing.

The announcement is quite significant, however, as it signals the war has likdly entered a new phase with Russian forces going, at least temporarily, into a defensive posture.

Russian forces have ceased offensive actions near Kyvi and gone on the defensive.  Ukrainian forces have been on the offensive there in recent days.

The BBC reports that the Russians have lost a total of six generals in the war in Ukraine.  In contrast, the United States lost 12 generals during the long Vietnam War, and one in Afghanistan.

Quite frankly, this war has been amazingly revealing regarding Russia and its military capabilities.  The West has consistently overestimated the fighting capacity of Russia, dating back at least to World War One, and it very obviously did so again.  The Russian Army was widely assumed to essentially be the Red Army with a new name, and that in fact may be its trouble.

The troops are bottom of the barrel conscripts, armed for the most part with outdated equipment. Russian tanks, always thought to be beyond reproach since the truly excellent T-34 and other late World War Two Soviet tanks, are junk.  Their design thesis, which emphasized low profile and low weight, proves to have been spectacularly in error.  That the Russians are now ceasing the offensive gives strong evidence of this.  Ukrainian infantrymen repeatedly destroying Russian tanks with shoulder fired missiles as if they're opening cans with a can opener can't be ignored forever.

Ukraine's military, in contrast, has had a decade of Western assistance and is evolving into a Western army.  President Zelinskyy pointedly noted this last week when, addressing NATO, he noted that he didn't ever want to hear again that Ukraine's army isn't up to NATO standards.

Zelinskyy has begged for heavier Western weapons, and frankly in my view he should be given them.  Western nations maintain thousands of older weapons that, frankly, are better than those which are first line for the Russians.  In terms of armor, stored M60 and late M48 tanks are pretty clearly better than the Russian ones, as the late use of M60s in Iraq by the Marine Corps demonstrated.  Assistance now needs to emphasize offensive weapons, of which we have a fair number of older stored models.  As Volodymyr Zelenskyy has pointed out, even a small percentage of our newer ones would be significant assistance to Ukraine.

In the long run, that assistance would be assistance to Russia and the world as well.  Putin cannot survive defeat in Ukraine, and it's questionable whether he can survive what has, in effect, been a massive military failure.  In 1990, it looked for a time as if Russia would evolve into a real democracy, something that Russian democrats have struggled to create since the late 1800s.  Under Yeltsin, it was on its way, until Putin, dragged it back.  If Putin falls, Russia may fall into democracy, at long last.

March 28, 2022

Ukraine signaled yesterday that it would consider as a negotiation result for an end to the war, or a ceasefire, a Russian withdrawal to that territory Russia occupied prior to the war and an official neutral status for Ukraine, with that neutrality guaranteed by outside powers.

Russians are laying mines in the areas that they have dug in at, north of Kyiv.

President Biden in a speech stated that Putin could not remain in power, a statement that was walked back by the administration nearly immediately thereafter.

On the weekend shows, Face The Nation had really good analysis of the state of the war, something television and the news in general frequently does not.

March 30, 2022

While the claim was greeted with nearly universal skepticism, the Russians claim that they are pulling back from the area around Kyiv in a show of good faith.

March 31, 2022

Declassified US intelligence reports indicate that Putin is being misled by his own advisors on the progress of the war in Ukraine.  Putin has reportedly become very isolated in general, and his advisors apparently fear telling him the truth.

Russia has kept up strikes on cities in spite of its promise to pull back.  US defense analysis feel that Russia is merely redeploying its forces to the east, but that may fail to give credit to the level of attrition that forces around Kyiv have sustained which may, in fact, make them incapable of being redeployed.

Ukraine hit targets inside of Russia with artillery yesterday for the first time in the war.

President Biden promised Ukraine 500,000,000 in additional aid.

March 31, 2022 cont:

Ukrainians have retaken Chernobyl.

Russian soldiers who were at Chernobyl are now sick with acute radiation poisoning.  Several days ago it was noted that they had dug into radioactive soil.

Russian Air Force planes armed with nuclear weapons violated Swedish airspace on March 2, interrupting a joint Swedish/Finnish exercise.

April 1, 2022

It seems relatively well established that Ukrainian helicopters raided an oil storage facility at Belgorod today. Belgorod is north of Kharkiv, in Russia.

The odd thing is the Russians are complaining about it.

What kind of weird mindset do you actually have to be possessed of in order to invade a neighboring country, and bombard its cities for days, and then be shocked, amazed, and upset, when they cross your border and wipe something out?

The more amazing thing, I suppose, is that the Ukrainians have recovered the initiative to this extent and that the Russians are doing so badly that their border, at least in this instance, is now porous.

April 2, 2022

Ukraine has now pushed the Russians out of the areas that they had taken near Kyiv.

April 2, 2022
By Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016Missile attacks source: BNO NewsTerritorial control source: ISW & Template:Russo-Ukrainian War detailed map, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=115506141

In the east, an offensive had recaptured an area in the northeast all the way to the Russian border.

In the south, the Russians have gained ground west of the Dneiper.

The Pentagon is warning of a major Russian offensive in the east being imminent.

Withdrawing Russian forces are mining some of the areas they are withdrawing from.

Ukrainian Generals Naumov Andriy Olehovych and Kryvoruchko Serhiy Oleksandrovych, both of whom had intelligence roles, have been cashiered from the Ukrainian Army under allegations of treason.

April 3, 2022

Former United Nations chief prosecutor for war crimes tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, Carla Del Ponte,  has called for an international arrest warrant to be issued for Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Maks Levin (Максим Євгенович Левін) Ukrainian press photographer, was killed by Russian soldiers while covering the Russian invasion of Ukraine where he had recently been documenting Russian war crimes.

April 5, 2022

North Korea v. South Korea.

North Korea's Kim Yo Jong, sister of North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Un, issued a statement in which she declared that North Korea is prepared to eliminate the South Korean military. This followed a South Korean statement the other day that labeled North Korea as the enemy and declared that South Korean is capable of taking out the North Korean military in a preemptive strike. 

The war in Ukraine has to be unsettling to North Korea in that its military is based on the Soviet model, as are their weapons, both of which are failing at an epic rate right now.

April 5, 2022, cont:

Russo Ukrainian War

The Czech Republic has been and is sending T-72 tanks to Ukraine.  It's considering repairing Ukrainian tanks inside the Czech Republic.  Other rolling equipment is being sent as well.

April 6, 2022

Russo Ukrainian War

President Zelenskyy basically called the United Nations out on the carpet yesterday, pointing out the irony that an organization in which Russia has a veto can't really stand for its principals.  He asked for the UN to reform itself, and to aid Ukraine.

This situation map has changed dramatically in the last view days.

April 6, 2022
By Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016Missile attacks source: BNO NewsTerritorial control source: ISW & Template:Russo-Ukrainian War detailed map, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=115506141

The war is now concetrated in the east and southeast, with the Russian offensive in the north not only halted, but all Russian gains eliminated due to Ukrainian counteroffensives and successful defensive operations, resulting in Russian withdrawals.  Defense analysts repeated warn that Russian forces are redeploying, which may be correct.  Ukrainain forces are also redeploying, however, and have much shorter interior lines.  My guess is that Russian forces will be completely pushed out of the northeast in the next few days.

An open question is the extent to which Russian forces are actually being withdrawn as they've been destroyed to teh level of being combat ineffective, something that has received little attention.  The units in the north were engaged in heavy combat since the start of the war and may be so seriously depoeted in men and equipment that they cannot be reconstituted and returned to combat quickly, if at all.

Russian forces in the southeast have regained ground that they'd earlier taken but were pushed out of last week.

The Russians have been hitting Odessa with missles which has led to speculation on whether they intend to attempt to land there, although I doubt that they will.

As Russian forces have withdrawn, evidence of rape and murder, including the murder of women and children, has been coming forth.  This has been a hallmark of the Russian forces since the late Second World War and is something that has been mentioned here already, but which has now appeared in several other venues, including written ones, and on Face The Nation.  It's difficult to explain how this seems to have become such a feature of Russian forces, but its now been noted that not only was this a feature of their behavior in the late Second World War, but also in their more recent actions in Chechya.  It's now been perpetrated against Ukrainians, which takes it to a new height, in a way, in that during the Second World War it was somewhat excused as actions taken in revenge for German atrocities on Soviet soil, and in Chechnya it was basically ignored as that conflict was basically ignored.  Now, however, Russian soldiers are murdering members of a culture whose invasion was presented as one to "liberate" a people that Putin claims are really Russians.

All this gets back, of course, to yesterday's speech by Zelenskyy and an earlier statement by President Biden.  The question of how Putin can remain in control of one of Russia, which has now invaded a neighbor and whose troops have engaged in rape and murder, is a good one.  And how the UN can maintain legitimacy with Russia in the Security Council is as well.

April 11, 2022

Russo Ukrainian War

April 11, 2022
By Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016Missile attacks source: BNO NewsTerritorial control source: ISW & Template:Russo-Ukrainian War detailed map, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=115506141

Northern and Northeastern Ukraine have now been liberated from Russian control and the war, right now, is about the east and southeast.

Alexander Dvornikov, age 60, has been placed in commanad of the Russian effort.  He has prior combat command experience from Syria.  It is widely speculated that the Russians shall commences a renewed offensive in the east to consolidate their gains there.

The Russians hit a train station a couple of days ago in a missle strike, killing up to fifty civilians.  One of the missles was marked "for the children".

Congo

The rebel group M23 from areas that it recently took in the eastern part of the country so that negotiations could take place.  The group lead a rebellion in 2014.

April 11, 2022, cont.

Russo Ukrainian War

Russia, by requiring payment in rubles, is now regarded as having defaulted on its foreign debts.


Last Prior Thread:

Wars and Rumors of War, 2022. The Russo Ukrainian War Edition, Part Three


Related threads:















Saturday, March 19, 2022

Poster Saturday. Russo Ukrainian War Poster Art


Wars, traditionally, have made for graphic posters.  However, since 1945, poster art in the west has dramatically declined in quality and importance.

In the East it did not, probably reflecting the lack of visual information systems, television in particular, and it remained strong into the 1970s.  

The Russo Ukrainian War seems to be a reflection of this heritage.  Democratic Ukraine has been producing some really stunning graphic poster art, of which this example is the most graphic I've seen, although last week's was as well.  It's also produced a lot of ad hoc poster art, as in of the handbill type, which we'll also be running.

For those less familiar with the visual elements depicted here, the khaki colored boot is a Ukrainian one.  The vampire teeth skull wears a Russian camouflaged tankers helmet, bedecked with the Russian tricolor flag, and the ribbon for the Cross of St. George, the Russian Federation's highest military honor.

Sunday, March 13, 2022

Wars and Rumors of War, 2022. The Russo Ukrainian War Edition, Part Two.

March 6, 2022

The Russo Ukrainian War


The world is now one week into the invasion, slightly less.

Active map of invasion.
By MaitreyaVaruna - Derived from File:2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.svg, originally by Viewsridge, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=115563226

Yesterday was the day of the MANPAD with Russian airpower having a very bad day.

A marked part of the war so far is the complete Russian failure to obtain air superiority, something most observers thought they'd achieve on day one.  While the Ukrainians have been pleading for NATO to establish a no-fly zone, something that would immediately expand this war into a general war with the west, and which accordingly will not happen, they are in fact doing much better in the air, and against the air, than remotely anticipated.

The ceasefire at Mariupol did not occur, with the Russians immediately violating it.  This city supposedly fell to the Russians a couple of days ago, but it obviously has not.

Situation as of March 6.
By Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016Missile attacks source: BNO NewsTerritorial control source: ISW & Template:Russo-Ukrainian War detailed map, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=115506141

Ukraine's president met by teleconference Friday with U.S. Senators and spoke forcefully yesterday.  His plea, as noted, was for a no fly zone.  While that would presumably aid his country somewhat, without direct air intervention against ground targets its questionable how much of an impact that would actually have, given that Ukraine's air force remains in the air, and the Russian air force has been surprsiingly lacking.  The big day for MANPADs yesterday suggests those are just reaching combat troops.

Putin is expanding his threats against third party nations, stating yesterday that the economic sanctions are an act of war, an absurd proposition.

The US State Department has asked Americans to leave Russia immediately.

Stolichnaya vodka, whose owner relocated years ago due to his opposition to Putin, is rebranding as Stoli. The product is billed as Russian vodka, or at least has been, but it's now a Latvian company.

March 7, 2021

Putin claimed in a speech yesterday that everything is going as per plan, which is an odd claim in light of the obvious problems the Russian invasion is having, and that it shall continue until Ukraine stops fighting, i.e., surrenders.

New Zealand is adding sanctions against Russia, the first of its kind for the nation which has lacked any legal framework to do so outside of complying with UN sanctions, which of course were vetoed by Russia.  This will mean that New Zealand, among other things, will not be a safe haven for Russian oligarch's yachts.

AMMO Inc., a cartridge manufacturer in the US, is sending 1,000,000 rounds of ammunition to Ukraine for free, adding to what Remington and Federal were doing.

Far from Ukraine, but interesting nonetheless, there was a protest in Jackson Hole over the Russian invasion yesterday.

The leader of the Bolshoi resigned rather than pick a side in the war.

Tik Tok has suspended live-streaming from Russia.

Vladimir Zhoga, a Russian warlord in a separatist militia, was killed in combat and will be posthumously decorated by the Russian government, showing its connection with these movements.

March 8, 2022

Situation as of March 8.
By Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016Missile attacks source: BNO NewsTerritorial control source: ISW & Template:Russo-Ukrainian War detailed map, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=115506141

Russian forces have actually lost or ceded control of territory they recently occupied in the northeast, while also gaining ground in a new offensive in the east.  All in all, they control no more territory than they did two days ago.

Their advance in the south appears to be stalled or halted.

Active map of invasion.
By MaitreyaVaruna - Derived from File:2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.svg, originally by Viewsridge, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=115563226

Another Russian Major General, Vitaly Gerasimov, was killed in combat, this time near Kharkiv. This is the second Russian officer holding that rank to die in the war. For those not familiar with ranks, this is the equivalent to three stars in the U.S. Army, a very senior rank.

The fact that general officers are dying in combat is telling regarding the overall situation.  In spite of some individuals who will act as apologist for the Russian forces, with the Russian invasion force now 100% committed, the Russian Army is proving to be lousy.  The sheer number of tanks that have been photographed by Ukrainian forces that they've knocked out of action is stunning.   The US didn't lose any tanks in action during the wars against Iraq.

We noted this, of course, in a recent post, part of which read:

Whatever a person thinks of the Red Army of the Second World War, in many ways ever since then the Red Army/Russian Army just hasn't been all that good.  Its NCO corps has always been lacking, and was during World War Two.  Its training is brutal, which ostensibly created tough troops, but it might have made for a lot of disincentivized troops.  And, a few good pieces of equipment, such as the AK47/AKM, and the Mig15 (their air force of course, not their army), but most of their equipment was behind the times or not all that.  Indeed, their armor and aircraft was consistently overrated throughout the entire Cold War, with the West finding excuses for why the stuff we acquired in the Third World couldn't possibly be the first-rate Russian stuff.  It was, it was just bad.

Anonymous hacked Russian TV and streaming services with live footage of the war in Ukraine.

Photos of the war show a lot of western made anti tank missiles now in Ukrainian hands.  A photo also showed Belgian FNC assault rifles having reached there, the Belgian government having shipped 3,000 of the 5.56 NATO rifles to Ukraine.  Ukraine retained the use of Soviet pattern weapons running up to the war which has been a supply problem to some degree as their weapons are, obviously, do not use NATO standard ammunition.

March 8, cont:

The United States is going to announce today that it's banning the import of Russian oil.

March 8, cont:

Yikes.

Open Letter Calling for Limited No-Fly Zone 

We, the undersigned, urge the Biden administration, together with NATO allies, to impose a limited No-Fly Zone over Ukraine starting with protection for humanitarian corridors that were agreed upon in talks between Russian and Ukrainian officials on Thursday. NATO leaders should convey to Russian officials that they do not seek direct confrontation with Russian forces, but they must also make clear that they will not countenance Russian attacks on civilian areas. 

Vladimir Putin’s decision to invade Ukraine has caused massive devastation and loss of life for Ukrainians. His premeditated, unprovoked and unjustified war of aggression has created the greatest crisis on the European continent since the end of World War II. Despite the truly heroic efforts by Ukrainian soldiers and average citizens to resist the marauding Russian forces, Putin’s military is poised for further attacks on major cities, including the capital Kyiv. Targeting residential buildings, hospitals and government complexes, as well as nuclear power plants, Russian forces will be responsible for an even higher death toll. 

The international community has responded swiftly through an unprecedented array of sanctions and a significant increase in lethal military assistance to help Ukraine defend itself. But more must be done to prevent more widescale casualties and a potential bloodbath. 

President Biden and NATO Secretary General Stoltenberg have stated that neither the United States nor NATO will engage Russian forces on the ground in Ukraine. What we seek is the deployment of American and NATO aircraft not in search of confrontation with Russia but to avert and deter Russian bombardment that would result in massive loss of Ukrainian lives. This is in addition to the request from Ukrainian leaders for A-10 and MIG-29 aircraft to help Ukrainians defend themselves, which we also strongly support. 

Already more than a million Ukrainians have fled their country to escape the brutality Putin has unleashed. Estimates suggest that that number could reach 5 million, more than 10 percent of the population. Several thousand Ukrainians have already died from Putin’s latest aggression, on top of the more than 14,000 killed following Putin’s first invasion of Ukraine starting in 2014. Ukraine is facing a severe humanitarian disaster, and the effects are being felt across the European continent and beyond.

The refrain “never again” emerged in the wake of the Holocaust, and Ukrainians are wondering whether that pledge applies to them. It is time for the United States and NATO to step up their help for Ukrainians before more innocent civilians fall victim to Putin’s murderous madness. Ukrainians are courageously defending their country and their freedom, but they need more help from the international community. A U.S.- NATO enforced No-Fly Zone to protect humanitarian corridors and additional military means for Ukrainian self-defense are desperately needed, and needed now.

(Note: Affiliations are for identification purposes only; individuals are signing in their personal capacity.) 

1. Anders Aslund, Senior Fellow, Stockholm Free World Forum 

2. Stephen Blank, Senior Fellow/Foreign Policy Research Institute 

3. Gen. (Ret.) Philip Breedlove, Former Supreme Allied Commander Europe 

4. Paula Dobriansky, Former Under Secretary of State for Global Affairs 

5. Eric S. Edelman, Former Under Secretary of Defense 

6. Evelyn Farkas, Former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Russia, Ukraine, Eurasia 

7. Daniel Fried, Former Assistant Secretary of State and U.S. Ambassador to Poland 

8. Andrew J. Futey, President, Ukrainian Congress Committee of America 

9. Melinda Haring, Deputy Director, Atlantic Council Eurasia Center 

10. John Herbst, Former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine 

11. LtG (Ret.) Ben Hodges, Former Commanding General, United States Army Europe 

12. Glen Howard, President, Jamestown Foundation 

13. Donald Jensen, Johns Hopkins University 

14. Ian Kelly, Former U.S. Ambassador to Georgia and OSCE 

15. John Kornblum, Former Assistant Secretary of State and U.S. Ambassador to Germany 

16. Shelby Magid, Associate Director, Atlantic Council Eurasia Center 

17. Robert McConnell, Co-Founder, U.S.-Ukraine Foundation 

18. Claire Sechler Merkel, Senior Director, McCain Institute for International Leadership 

19. David A. Merkel, Former Deputy Assistant Secretary of State and Director, National Security Council 

20.Barry Pavel, Senior Vice President and Director, Atlantic Council Scowcroft Center for Strategy and Security 

21. Herman Pirchner, President, American Foreign Policy Council 

22.Michael Sawkiw, Jr., Director, Ukrainian National Information Service 

23.Leah Scheunemann, Deputy Director, Atlantic Council Transatlantic Security Initiative

24.Benjamin L. Schmitt, Former European Energy Security Advisor, U.S. Department of State 

25.William Taylor, Former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine 

26.Alexander Vershbow, Former U.S. Ambassador to Russia and NATO

27. Kurt Volker, Former U.S. Ambassador to NATO and Special Representative for Ukraine Negotiations

Do these people not realize that this would amount to directly entering the war and would necessarily lead, and immediately lead, to a third world war, this time against a nuclear power lead by an arguably unstable dictator?

March 9, 2022

After Anthony Blinken promised that Poland would be able to transfer Mig 29s to Ukraine, while speaking as a guest on Meet the Press on Sunday, the Pentagon now terms the Polish offer as "untenable".

Vice President Harris is now going to Poland.

Situation as of March 9.
By Viewsridge - Own work, derivate of Russo-Ukraine Conflict (2014-present).svg by Rr016Missile attacks source: BNO NewsTerritorial control source: ISW & Template:Russo-Ukrainian War detailed map, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=115506141

The Russians continue to make advances, but not at a blistering rate.

The Russians deployed an armored train in the Battle of Mariupol yesterday.  I didn't even know that armored trains were still a thing, but apparently they are.  I was aware they were used as late as World War Two by both the Germans and the Soviets, but apparently the Russians retain two that were based in Crimea, and at least one is now in use in the Russo Ukrainian War.

March 10, 2022

The Russians hit a maternity hospital in Mariupol yesterday in an airstrike.

Lines in the war remained more or less unchanged from yesterday.

Coca-Cola and Pepsi Cola have suspended sales to Russia.  McDonald's has shut its operations in Russia down.  Mining giant Rio Tinto cut ties with Russian businesses.  Sony and Nintendo suspended game sales to Russia.

Russia is very close to defaulting on its financial obligations, the first time the country will have suffered that fate since 1917.

March 11, 2022

Russo Ukrainian War

Russia has asked for meeting of the UN Security Council claiming that there were US biological weapons labs on Ukrainian territory, an obviously made up claim for a variety of reasons, security of such labs alone being one.  This is a species of "false flag" operation.

Of interest, there are there still those on the far right, such as Candace Owens, acting as apologists for Russia in this war.  Owens leaped on this story with conspiratorial tweets supporting the Russian thesis, not the only support to Russia she's tweeted since the war began.  US Congressman Madison Cawthorn called Ukrainian President Zelenskyy a "thug", which immediately received sharp rebuke from other Republican Congressman.  These are examples of the extreme Trump loyalty right, however, which has grown increasingly silent as the war in Ukraine has raged on, or which has featured bizarre claims about Trump's resoluteness on such matters when in fact Trump has praised Putin since the beginning of the crisis and always had a relationship of some odd sort with him.

Anonymous has hacked into Russian news organizations and released 360,000k of files pertaining to their censorship.

Maybe Candace Owens will read them.

JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs are leaving Russia.

The Canadian Army sniper "Wali" has joined the 20,000 foreigners fighting the Russians in Ukraine.

ISIS v. Everyone

ISIL has named Abu al-Hassan al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi its new head.

March 11, continued

Russo Ukrainian War

Russia has started hitting Ukrainian airfields in western Ukraine with missiles.

A third Russian Major General, Andrei Kolesnikov, has been killed in action.

India and Pakistan

India accidentally fired a missile into Pakistan this week.

March 12, 2022

Russo Ukrainian War

Something is going on with the Russian forces, but it's not clear what it is. Lines have not moved for a few days.

The Russians could be stalled for logistical reasons. They were running out of gas early on, and it was assumed they'd simply overcome this and begin moving. They may not have overcome it.

They're being stalled additionally made their lines very vulnerable to attack, which the Ukrainians exploited. They may have therefore pulled back to some extent to regroup in a less vulnerable fashion. And they may be redeploying to attempt to commences a new series of offensives with new plans, given that they've clearly botched these ones.

Or they may simply have pulled back due ot logistical reasons and don't know what to do other than continue some sort of seige on a series of Ukrainian cities. They clearly didn't have even the remotest grasp on the level and extent of Ukrainian opposition, and they might literally have no idea what to actually do now.

The Russian government is acting like the Soviet one, in that it arrested Sergey Beseda, head of the FSB’s foreign intelligence branch, and Anatoly Bolyukh, his deputy.  What their crimes would be isn't clear, but it would suggest that the pre war intelleigence on Ukraine was botched and now they're paying the price.

A collection of conservative Senators, including Wyoming's Senator Lummis, attempted to carve aid to Ukraine out of a must pass budget bill. The act would likely have pushed the aid package into next week.  The nine Senators backing the proposed amendment claimed it could be voted on immediately, but that was incorrect as it would have had to go back to the House, which had recessed.  

The primary vocal opponent to the attempt was Montana's John Tester, which interestingly pitted Wyoming's Lummis against Montana's Tester. Lummis repeated the error about sending it directly to the President's desk.  In the end the effort failed.

It's a little difficult to grasp how the assertion of the carved out funding going directly to the President's desk could be made, as presumably any veteran lawmaker, particularly one like Lummis who had been in the House, would know better.

Officials are looking into whether a yacht in an Italian port may have ties to Putin.

March 12, 2022

Russo Ukrainian War

It was an other day of long range missle strikes. Russian forces aren't advancing.  Instead, the Russians seem to have oddly opted for the time being to lay seige to the cities they haven't taken and pound everything else with rocketry and airstrikes.

It might be worth noting that typically that strategy is an indicator of failure on the ground.

Pope Francis again decryed the war, calling it an act of aggression, and calling war "madness".

While seemingly nothing will convince some of the negative news regarding Trump, this from Adam Kinzinger yesterday.

March 12, 2022

Adam Kinzinger tweeted yesterday:

Thread (and admission): 1) I want to be honest, in congress I have only a few votes that in hindset, I regret. My biggest regret was voting against the first impeachment of Donald Trump.


Replying to
2) It’s important for political leaders to be transparent and admit regret when needed. The bottom line, Donald Trump withheld lethal aid to Ukraine so he could use it as leverage for his campaign. This is a shameful and illegal act, directly hurting the Ukraine defense today…

3) I wish i could go back in time and Vote for it, but I cannot. What we can do now is to ensure that this NEVER happens again, and that we all put the interests of our nation above our party. and others deserve our appreciation.

In Melitopol the Russians abducted the mayor, taking him off with a mask over his head. This resulted in protests in the city.

Iran v. Iraq/Kurds

The Iranian Revolutionary Guard launched a dozen missles at the Kurdish Iraqi capitol yesterday.

Related threads and prior editions:

Wars and Rumors of War, 2022.