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Originally Posted By GTLandser: I've just got my fingers crossed that the Ukrainians will wait until there is a bunch of expensive and rare ship-recovery vessels and equipment nearby, and then when the Russians get part way through scrapping those vessels, the Ukrainians hit the drydock gates and just flood the whole mess. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By GTLandser: Originally Posted By AeroEngineer: I feel pretty confident, saying that kilo class submarine is effectively destroyed. Mini years ago, I was a structural engineer, working for the Navy on submersible systems, including fast attack submarines. This was at the beginning of my career, and I was a very Junior engineer, so I am definitely not a subject matter expert. However, based on my limited experience of the complexities of repairing pressure hulls, I would say that even if the damage is limited such that a repair is theoretically possible, I think the probability of it being able to be repaired to a seaworthy state and return to fight in this conflict is zero. Most likely scenario, it sits there until it gets scrapped. I've just got my fingers crossed that the Ukrainians will wait until there is a bunch of expensive and rare ship-recovery vessels and equipment nearby, and then when the Russians get part way through scrapping those vessels, the Ukrainians hit the drydock gates and just flood the whole mess. I like the way you think. |
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It's not stupid, it's advanced!!
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Apparently the factory on fire makes bearings.
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Deplorable fan of liberty
“I don’t need a ride, I need more ammunition.” |
Brand new Russian Media Monitor from Sergey Mardan, who talks about a recent comment by a Duma member on the military committee - there will be no rotation, mobiks will not come home at all until the special military operation is concluded. Which begs the question (as he points out), what is that conclusion? Mobiks are on the hook until the war is over. Brutal. They're going to break and destroy an entire generation of men (except for the fortunate ones who live in Moscow, St Petersburg, Rostov).
Propagandist discusses bad news for the mobilized |
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Originally Posted By Lieh-tzu: Brand new Russian Media Monitor from Sergey Mardan, who talks about a recent comment by a Duma member on the military committee - there will be no rotation, mobiks will not come home at all until the special military operation is concluded. Which begs the question (as he points out), what is that conclusion? Mobiks are on the hook until the war is over. Brutal. They're going to break and destroy an entire generation of men (except for the fortunate ones who live in Moscow, St Petersburg, Rostov). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M0oY6x-7Ujo View Quote gonna do wonders for morale |
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Jet porn Friday!
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Deplorable fan of liberty
“I don’t need a ride, I need more ammunition.” |
Originally Posted By RockNwood: Jet porn Friday! https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/494438/IMG_3748-2955141.jpg
View Quote |
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How come every time there is a shooting, they want to take away the guns from the people who didn't do it?
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Originally Posted By RockNwood: Apparently the factory on fire makes bearings. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/494438/IMG_3747-2955126.jpg
View Quote Barely damaged, that building was designed to hit undersea mountains |
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Originally Posted By Lieh-tzu: Brand new Russian Media Monitor from Sergey Mardan, who talks about a recent comment by a Duma member on the military committee - there will be no rotation, mobiks will not come home at all until the special military operation is concluded. Which begs the question (as he points out), what is that conclusion? Mobiks are on the hook until the war is over. Brutal. They're going to break and destroy an entire generation of men (except for the fortunate ones who live in Moscow, St Petersburg, Rostov). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M0oY6x-7Ujo View Quote Our war effort is not going well. Let's see what we can do to bump up our rate of desertion, defection, unjustified surrender to the enemy, malingering, and draft avoidance! |
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Originally Posted By BlackHoleSon: I wonder how much of their artillery is old Soviet stock compared to what was made domestically View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By BlackHoleSon: Originally Posted By Auto5guy: "Hey vlad, I'm probably going to need some of those Nork missiles and artillery myself before this is all said and done." I wonder how much of their artillery is old Soviet stock compared to what was made domestically I wonder how this affects China's strategic outlook. Lighting off the Korean peninsula was almost 100% going to be part of their plan to take Taiwan. |
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ISW assessment for September 15th.
https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/russian-offensive-campaign-assessment-september-15-2023 |
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It's not stupid, it's advanced!!
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Originally Posted By RockNwood: Jet porn Friday! https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/494438/IMG_3748-2955141.jpg
View Quote Poland stronk! |
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A Man's Home Trailer is his White Castle!
FL, USA
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Originally Posted By birdbarian: The Nazis just killed them. Guess the Soviets will at least get some utility out of them as the suck up shrapnel and bullets. View Quote The Soviets had more slave labor during world war 2 than Nazi Germany according to a documentary I'm watching "War Factories." |
Sweet baby Jesus on fire. Gonna need a damn lawyer and a miracle to pull my ass outta this.
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Originally Posted By DonKey153: I wonder how this affects China's strategic outlook. Lighting off the Korean peninsula was almost 100% going to be part of their plan to take Taiwan. View Quote China wasn't relying on the Nork's to do much of anything other than attempt to hold a line and shell Seoul, so I doubt it has much effect. |
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1420 is asking some tough questions. This time asking men in Moscow, why are you not in the fight? Several say they don't want to, they don't see a need. One brainwashed child says millions of people have been killed in LPR/DPR, so Russia has to protect them. Millions.
Why are you still not at the front line? |
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It's not stupid, it's advanced!!
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Originally Posted By DonKey153: I wonder how this affects China's strategic outlook. Lighting off the Korean peninsula was almost 100% going to be part of their plan to take Taiwan. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By DonKey153: Originally Posted By BlackHoleSon: Originally Posted By Auto5guy: "Hey vlad, I'm probably going to need some of those Nork missiles and artillery myself before this is all said and done." I wonder how much of their artillery is old Soviet stock compared to what was made domestically I wonder how this affects China's strategic outlook. Lighting off the Korean peninsula was almost 100% going to be part of their plan to take Taiwan. Ditto Russia/Ukraine. Which is why divide and conquer works - if we can take Russia down before Taiwan happens it's one less front when it does. You should also expect Iran to make a move at the same time as well as a bunch of smaller shit. The Chinese aren't dumb. Taking these countries down one by one when we get the opportunity is the strongest strategy |
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Originally Posted By DonKey153: Imo it would tie up sealift assets that could otherwise be used somewhere else. View Quote No doubt, my point was that the Norks giving supplies to Russia probably doesn't affect the Chinese game plan all that much. Either from the depletion of Nork stocks or from the possible tech transfer to the Norks from Russia. |
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Originally Posted By DonKey153: I wonder how this affects China's strategic outlook. Lighting off the Korean peninsula was almost 100% going to be part of their plan to take Taiwan. View Quote I think seeing Western nations sack up and watching the "state of the art" Russian shit they copied not performing favorably against 30 yr old NATO tech gives them more pause. No one relies on NK |
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Originally Posted By RockNwood: Apparently the factory on fire makes bearings. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/494438/IMG_3747-2955126.jpg
View Quote In their news they say it’s oil stored in the basement of an unused building, they don’t know how much oil is there and can’t reach it. |
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Originally Posted By RockNwood: Jet porn Friday! https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/494438/IMG_3748-2955141.jpg
View Quote |
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nothing of value here
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Leftists delenda est
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nothing of value here
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nothing of value here
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Regarding GLSDB delays, leadership at Boeing is a total shitshow that needs a complete cultural overhaul. This totally fits with the reputation Boeing has cultivated in terms of projects failing, going over budget, and getting delayed.
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In case anyone reads these massive walls of text, I'll copy and paste another post from another forum regarding new Russian formations.
An update on the new Russian formations. The sources are Ukrainian military observer Mashovets, Ukrainian think tank Centre for Defence Strategies, reports by Thord Are Iversen (former Norwegian officer who keeps track of the new Russian formations) and Azeri analyst Jahangir Arasli, who, thanks to his knowledge of the language, unearths many local Russian news articles about the new formations. Mashovets this morning confirmed the deployment of elements of the new 25th Combined Arms Army in the Kreminna sector. The 164th Motorized Brigade would have been deployed to Zhytlivka and would be ready to enter combat around Dibrova, near the Serebrianka Forest. The 36th Motorized Regiment of the 67th Motorized Division would have been deployed in Chervonopopivka and may enter into action between Novosadove and Terny. [That's](https://nitter.net/DefMon3/status/1700151627779355108) the order of battle of the new army made by Defmon. According to what was originally announced, there should be either a second motorized division or a second motorized brigade as well, probably still being created. One of these regiments comes from Bashkortostan (which is a large pool of volunteer units afaik) and would consist of 2500 men. Quite a lot of news have been going around about the military district to which the 25th Army belongs. Initially there was talk of the Central Military District. Then instead it had been confirmed by Russian sources that it will be associated with the Eastern Military District; an article in a Russian online local newspaper (tracked down by Iversen) basically wrote that yes, it will be formed within the latter but the army will eventually be part of the Southern Military District. Another article had been published a couple of weeks ago about the deployment to the front of the Bashkortostan Regiment in an unknown sector under the responsibility of the SMD. The acting commander of the 25th Army was the former deputy commander of the 36th Army of the EMD at the start of the conflict, then he was the chief of staff of the 14th Corps of the Arctic Fleet. At least the initial phase of the training is supposed to take place in the Vladivostok region (except for the Bashkortostan Regiment which was trained in Samara) and it was reported that 10 thousand officers and contract soldiers from the Eastern Military District's armies were to be transferred to the 25th Army, which is supposed to have 30 thousand men. Tbh this leaves me skeptical, because it would considerably bring down the operational capabilities of the existing EMD formations that are already, all of them, very busy on the Southern front. It would make little sense to send an E/SMD formation to the north of Siversky Donets River, which has been the sole responsibility of the W/CMD for over a year. I wouldn't know what to think about that, even because in the ads to recruit volunteers for the 25th Army it was literally written that it would be destined for Kherson and Zaporizhzhia Oblasts. I see two possible options: the Russians changed their minds and framed it in the CMD (for Mashovets it's part of the latter district in fact); or at the moment the 25th Army would still be in an embryonic state as a stand-alone formation, with the Russians needing to hastily transfer to the front the war-ready elements of this army, under the command of a different formation. It's possible that this army could be formed in two separate stages. The "jurisdiction" of the Central Military District ranges from the Svatove sector (where units of its 2nd Army are fighting between Raihorodka and Novojehorivka) to the Siversky Donets River in the Kreminna sector, where the 41st Army is deployed, supported by elements of the 98th VDV Division (in theory the 331st Regiment should still be in the area, although elements of this unit may be in Bakhmut with the rest of the division - the artillery regiment of the 98th is also deployed in Bakhmut) and until last month by the entirety of the 76th VDV Division. Also between Svatove and Kreminna there is the 20th Army of the Western MD: its 144th MRD is active just to the north of the Serebrianka Forest while the 3rd MRD is currently mainly used as a tactical/operational reserve in the Svatove sector. At the moment the deployed elements of the 25th Army would in fact have been attached to the 41st Army, which continues to be deployed in the Kreminna sector. It's important to emphasize this because according to Budanov, sending the 25th Army into the area would have been instrumental in order to transfer the 41st Army to the Southern front. It's possible that at the moment the 25th Army still doesn't have a working general staff and is still too weak to be deployed as a stand-alone formation in a given sector and therefore needs to be framed in another army. The 41st Army itself is not particularly competent (it can boast the crossing disaster of the Siversky Donets in May 2022), but it's pretty large compared to the average: two motorized brigades, a mountain brigade and a tank division are its maneuver formations. This army has been covering the Kreminna sector since October of the last year, when it was beaten in the battles between Lyman and Yampil. A deployment of the army to the Southern front (which has never seen the presence of CMD formations during this conflict) would be a very strange thing. It's possible that the Russians are in a situation where they have no other choice though. If the dispatch to the South is confirmed, I find it possible that they will wait for the arrival of the rest of the 25th Army and then transfer the whole Kreminna sector into their hands. The 41st Army is certainly not at 100% capacities but should still be in acceptable conditions to withstand a deployment to an area far hotter than Kreminna. The 90th Tank Division during the spring received batches of T-90Ms and T-80BVs, certainly an improvement compared to the T-72A/Bs they entered the Chernihiv Oblast with, back in February 2022. It has to be said that the 41st Army has a history of cooperation with the VDV, particularly with the 76th Division. The deputy commander of the 41st Army, Sukhovetsky, was killed in Hostomel. Actually, the 41st Army's task was to take Chernihiv, cross the Desna River and reach Kyiv from the east. It was a resounding failure: its three brigades (35th, 55th, and 74th) were defeated in the siege of Chernihiv while the 90th Tank Division was ambushed several times on the way to Kyiv (also owing to a lack of dismounts) and was finally stopped and then pushed back in Brovary. It was the biggest debacle of the early phase of the conflict, along with the fuck-up of the 1st Tank Army between Sumy and Kharkiv. What was Sukhovetsky doing on the other side of the Dnipro? It's possible that the 41st Army was subordinate to Serdyukov and the VDV General Staff, i.e. the protagonists of the plan to seize Kyiv. In May and June 2022 elements of the 90th Tank Division and 76th VDV Division attacked together in the Lysychansk sector, specifically to the west of Hirske in the clashes to cut the T1302 Highway. The armored vehicles of the 90th Division for instance bore the "V" mark (typical of the VDV) instead of their own "O". Then the 76th was sent to Kherson where it remained until the Russian withdrawal; the fates of the two formations met again in November, since then the 41st Army and the 76th VDV Division fought side by side until last month in the Serebrianka Forest. The 90th Tank Division, which fields BMPTs, was instrumental in providing armored support and increased fire volumes to VDV units. Mashovets last month spoke of the deployment of the 70th Motorized Division of the new 18th Combined Arms Army in the first rear line near Kherson. It's a full-manned division: three motorized, one tank and one artillery regiments. It would have been transferred from Crimea according to what he said, where it was probably trained. At least one regiment appears to be largely made up of Dagestanis. Meanwhile, it had been said that the new 18th Army will include two corps: the 22nd and the 40th. The 22nd Corps already exists (since 2016), it's formed by the 126th Coastal Defense Brigade and the 127th Reconnaissance Brigade and is deployed near Kherson. The 40th Corps is being formed and had been said to be composed by the 47th Motorized Division and the 144th Motorized Brigade. It will definitely be part of the Southern Military District and will be led by the former commander of the 22nd Corps. The 47th MRD would be formed in Crimea, and includes many mobilized locals. If there's anything I have tried to figure out but have not been able to, it's to get whether the 47th and 70th are the same division that perhaps changed numbering during the recent months or they are two different divisions. I personally lean toward the first hypothesis, but we cannot know that for sure yet. In any case, the deployment of this division allowed the 7th VDV Division to be sent to the Orikhiv sector (okay, surely the quality of the two formations is not remotely comparable). The personnel of the 144th MRB appears to be largely made up of volunteers (and perhaps mobilized?) from the North Caucasus, such as Kabardino-Balkaria and Karachay-Cherkessia. They would have carried out the first phase of training in Stavropol (where the 40th Corps is based) and are now finishing the training in Crimea. I find it likely that once they are done with the training they will join the rest of the 18th Army in the Kherson Oblast along the Dnipro, allowing other units, such as the elements of the 49th Army still in Kherson or the 80th Brigade of the Arctic Fleet, to depart towards the Southern front. Second part below. View Quote What is certain is that initially the time frame for setting up the new formations was thought to be longer, but it seems that the Russians are cutting the time frame as much as possible. CDS states it's likely Russia will have another wave of mobilization in the fall, with a call to arms of 170/175 thousand reservists. By the end of the year, the Russian government also hopes for 130 thousand new contract personnel. This number may actually seem exaggerated, like Medvedev's statement earlier this month in which he said that 280 thousand contracts would have been signed in 2023 so far. What's sure is that mobilization efforts in 2023 had slowed down substantially and the new recruits of this year (although I doubt Medvedev's numbers) are mainly contract soldiers: the wages, bonuses, promised support measures to the families, etc. are enough to attract enough a sizeable amount of desperate people from the poorest regions of the country. Immigrants from Central Asian countries who obtain Russian passports would also being pushed into signing. Young guys from the military service, who cannot be sent to Ukraine, can however sign a contract already after the first month of service. There have been cases of officers pressuring conscripts to sign. It's rare compared to the total, but I occasionally come across obituaries of fallen Russian soldiers who were born in 2003 or 2004. There are no updates on the intention to divide the Western Military District between the Moscow and Leningrad MDs. The Rosgvardia is also reportedly creating new units. Between Donetsk Oblast and Crimea, the 116th Special Purpose Brigade is being formed. It's supposed to field a tank company; it will be motorized with MRAPs. The Ministry of the Interior, of which the Rosgvardia is part along with the police forces, would have staffing difficulties: in July alone, 5000 policemen took early retirement. This is contrary to Putin's intentions to increase personnel in these branches as well. Russian federal subjects would have been allowed to create (and fund) their own military units outside the Ministry of the Defense, for internal use. Belgorod Oblast is reportedly creating eight battalions to garrison the area near the Ukrainian border. The oblasts are being pushed by the federal government and evaluated based on the speed and the amount of new units they assist in creating. Irregular formations continue to exist, although under the control of the Ministry of Defense. The "Cossack Volunteer Assault Corps", consisting of four brigades (three of which already exist and have been active in Ukraine since last year) and 20 thousand men, has been formed. Volunteers in this Corps have to sign contracts with the MoD; the Corps encloses several BARS detachments and the PMC Redut. The PMC Sokol-1, owned by the magnate Deripaska (who owns Rusal) and close to the 7th VDV Division, is reportedly converting into an air assault regiment. My theory that some of the members of the dissolving PMCs might be destined for the VDV would thus find confirmation. Recall that the latter is forming two new regiments to be assigned to the 98th and 106th Divisions; it's also forming a new division (the 104th, which should be formed by the 31st VDV Brigade, a regiment of the Territorial Forces and another one formed by elements of the 83rd Brigade) and an artillery brigade. New VDV brigades might be created in the future. Then there is the 44th Airborne Division, which, however, owes its name to the fact that it's trained in Ryazan by the VDV but I'm not sure whether it's going to be an integral part of the paratroopers; it consists of a regiment from the Mobilization Reserve and one from the Territorial Forces. The "Hispaniola" Battalion, active in Bakhmut, close to PMC Wagner and formed by football hooligans with far-right sympathies, is set to become a special forces unit (it already boasts an UAV company). In Kherson a militarized detachment made up of local collaborationists is deployed. On September 1 in Russian military academies 15 thousand people began training to become officers. Among them are 1500 veterans selected to become officers. The courses have been shortened by at least 2 months for the young aspiring officers. Meritorious veteran sergeants and warrant officers will be able to become lieutenants with a 2-month rushed course. That's a sign, along with the fact that the age up to which a retired officer can be recalled to service was raised to 70, that Russia needs a flood of officers for the new formations and to replenish losses. Recruitment in the prisons and penal colonies for Storm Z units is going on as usual; there is, of course, the question regarding for how long they will still find available prisoners. Sending them on a mandatory basis might be a bad idea in my opinion. That's all for today. View Quote |
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It's not stupid, it's advanced!!
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Originally Posted By Jaehaerys: In case anyone reads these massive walls of text, I'll copy and paste another post from another forum regarding new Russian formations. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Jaehaerys: In case anyone reads these massive walls of text, I'll copy and paste another post from another forum regarding new Russian formations. An update on the new Russian formations. The sources are Ukrainian military observer Mashovets, Ukrainian think tank Centre for Defence Strategies, reports by Thord Are Iversen (former Norwegian officer who keeps track of the new Russian formations) and Azeri analyst Jahangir Arasli, who, thanks to his knowledge of the language, unearths many local Russian news articles about the new formations. Mashovets this morning confirmed the deployment of elements of the new 25th Combined Arms Army in the Kreminna sector. The 164th Motorized Brigade would have been deployed to Zhytlivka and would be ready to enter combat around Dibrova, near the Serebrianka Forest. The 36th Motorized Regiment of the 67th Motorized Division would have been deployed in Chervonopopivka and may enter into action between Novosadove and Terny. [That's](https://nitter.net/DefMon3/status/1700151627779355108) the order of battle of the new army made by Defmon. According to what was originally announced, there should be either a second motorized division or a second motorized brigade as well, probably still being created. One of these regiments comes from Bashkortostan (which is a large pool of volunteer units afaik) and would consist of 2500 men. Quite a lot of news have been going around about the military district to which the 25th Army belongs. Initially there was talk of the Central Military District. Then instead it had been confirmed by Russian sources that it will be associated with the Eastern Military District; an article in a Russian online local newspaper (tracked down by Iversen) basically wrote that yes, it will be formed within the latter but the army will eventually be part of the Southern Military District. Another article had been published a couple of weeks ago about the deployment to the front of the Bashkortostan Regiment in an unknown sector under the responsibility of the SMD. The acting commander of the 25th Army was the former deputy commander of the 36th Army of the EMD at the start of the conflict, then he was the chief of staff of the 14th Corps of the Arctic Fleet. At least the initial phase of the training is supposed to take place in the Vladivostok region (except for the Bashkortostan Regiment which was trained in Samara) and it was reported that 10 thousand officers and contract soldiers from the Eastern Military District's armies were to be transferred to the 25th Army, which is supposed to have 30 thousand men. Tbh this leaves me skeptical, because it would considerably bring down the operational capabilities of the existing EMD formations that are already, all of them, very busy on the Southern front. It would make little sense to send an E/SMD formation to the north of Siversky Donets River, which has been the sole responsibility of the W/CMD for over a year. I wouldn't know what to think about that, even because in the ads to recruit volunteers for the 25th Army it was literally written that it would be destined for Kherson and Zaporizhzhia Oblasts. I see two possible options: the Russians changed their minds and framed it in the CMD (for Mashovets it's part of the latter district in fact); or at the moment the 25th Army would still be in an embryonic state as a stand-alone formation, with the Russians needing to hastily transfer to the front the war-ready elements of this army, under the command of a different formation. It's possible that this army could be formed in two separate stages. The "jurisdiction" of the Central Military District ranges from the Svatove sector (where units of its 2nd Army are fighting between Raihorodka and Novojehorivka) to the Siversky Donets River in the Kreminna sector, where the 41st Army is deployed, supported by elements of the 98th VDV Division (in theory the 331st Regiment should still be in the area, although elements of this unit may be in Bakhmut with the rest of the division - the artillery regiment of the 98th is also deployed in Bakhmut) and until last month by the entirety of the 76th VDV Division. Also between Svatove and Kreminna there is the 20th Army of the Western MD: its 144th MRD is active just to the north of the Serebrianka Forest while the 3rd MRD is currently mainly used as a tactical/operational reserve in the Svatove sector. At the moment the deployed elements of the 25th Army would in fact have been attached to the 41st Army, which continues to be deployed in the Kreminna sector. It's important to emphasize this because according to Budanov, sending the 25th Army into the area would have been instrumental in order to transfer the 41st Army to the Southern front. It's possible that at the moment the 25th Army still doesn't have a working general staff and is still too weak to be deployed as a stand-alone formation in a given sector and therefore needs to be framed in another army. The 41st Army itself is not particularly competent (it can boast the crossing disaster of the Siversky Donets in May 2022), but it's pretty large compared to the average: two motorized brigades, a mountain brigade and a tank division are its maneuver formations. This army has been covering the Kreminna sector since October of the last year, when it was beaten in the battles between Lyman and Yampil. A deployment of the army to the Southern front (which has never seen the presence of CMD formations during this conflict) would be a very strange thing. It's possible that the Russians are in a situation where they have no other choice though. If the dispatch to the South is confirmed, I find it possible that they will wait for the arrival of the rest of the 25th Army and then transfer the whole Kreminna sector into their hands. The 41st Army is certainly not at 100% capacities but should still be in acceptable conditions to withstand a deployment to an area far hotter than Kreminna. The 90th Tank Division during the spring received batches of T-90Ms and T-80BVs, certainly an improvement compared to the T-72A/Bs they entered the Chernihiv Oblast with, back in February 2022. It has to be said that the 41st Army has a history of cooperation with the VDV, particularly with the 76th Division. The deputy commander of the 41st Army, Sukhovetsky, was killed in Hostomel. Actually, the 41st Army's task was to take Chernihiv, cross the Desna River and reach Kyiv from the east. It was a resounding failure: its three brigades (35th, 55th, and 74th) were defeated in the siege of Chernihiv while the 90th Tank Division was ambushed several times on the way to Kyiv (also owing to a lack of dismounts) and was finally stopped and then pushed back in Brovary. It was the biggest debacle of the early phase of the conflict, along with the fuck-up of the 1st Tank Army between Sumy and Kharkiv. What was Sukhovetsky doing on the other side of the Dnipro? It's possible that the 41st Army was subordinate to Serdyukov and the VDV General Staff, i.e. the protagonists of the plan to seize Kyiv. In May and June 2022 elements of the 90th Tank Division and 76th VDV Division attacked together in the Lysychansk sector, specifically to the west of Hirske in the clashes to cut the T1302 Highway. The armored vehicles of the 90th Division for instance bore the "V" mark (typical of the VDV) instead of their own "O". Then the 76th was sent to Kherson where it remained until the Russian withdrawal; the fates of the two formations met again in November, since then the 41st Army and the 76th VDV Division fought side by side until last month in the Serebrianka Forest. The 90th Tank Division, which fields BMPTs, was instrumental in providing armored support and increased fire volumes to VDV units. Mashovets last month spoke of the deployment of the 70th Motorized Division of the new 18th Combined Arms Army in the first rear line near Kherson. It's a full-manned division: three motorized, one tank and one artillery regiments. It would have been transferred from Crimea according to what he said, where it was probably trained. At least one regiment appears to be largely made up of Dagestanis. Meanwhile, it had been said that the new 18th Army will include two corps: the 22nd and the 40th. The 22nd Corps already exists (since 2016), it's formed by the 126th Coastal Defense Brigade and the 127th Reconnaissance Brigade and is deployed near Kherson. The 40th Corps is being formed and had been said to be composed by the 47th Motorized Division and the 144th Motorized Brigade. It will definitely be part of the Southern Military District and will be led by the former commander of the 22nd Corps. The 47th MRD would be formed in Crimea, and includes many mobilized locals. If there's anything I have tried to figure out but have not been able to, it's to get whether the 47th and 70th are the same division that perhaps changed numbering during the recent months or they are two different divisions. I personally lean toward the first hypothesis, but we cannot know that for sure yet. In any case, the deployment of this division allowed the 7th VDV Division to be sent to the Orikhiv sector (okay, surely the quality of the two formations is not remotely comparable). The personnel of the 144th MRB appears to be largely made up of volunteers (and perhaps mobilized?) from the North Caucasus, such as Kabardino-Balkaria and Karachay-Cherkessia. They would have carried out the first phase of training in Stavropol (where the 40th Corps is based) and are now finishing the training in Crimea. I find it likely that once they are done with the training they will join the rest of the 18th Army in the Kherson Oblast along the Dnipro, allowing other units, such as the elements of the 49th Army still in Kherson or the 80th Brigade of the Arctic Fleet, to depart towards the Southern front. Second part below. What is certain is that initially the time frame for setting up the new formations was thought to be longer, but it seems that the Russians are cutting the time frame as much as possible. CDS states it's likely Russia will have another wave of mobilization in the fall, with a call to arms of 170/175 thousand reservists. By the end of the year, the Russian government also hopes for 130 thousand new contract personnel. This number may actually seem exaggerated, like Medvedev's statement earlier this month in which he said that 280 thousand contracts would have been signed in 2023 so far. What's sure is that mobilization efforts in 2023 had slowed down substantially and the new recruits of this year (although I doubt Medvedev's numbers) are mainly contract soldiers: the wages, bonuses, promised support measures to the families, etc. are enough to attract enough a sizeable amount of desperate people from the poorest regions of the country. Immigrants from Central Asian countries who obtain Russian passports would also being pushed into signing. Young guys from the military service, who cannot be sent to Ukraine, can however sign a contract already after the first month of service. There have been cases of officers pressuring conscripts to sign. It's rare compared to the total, but I occasionally come across obituaries of fallen Russian soldiers who were born in 2003 or 2004. There are no updates on the intention to divide the Western Military District between the Moscow and Leningrad MDs. The Rosgvardia is also reportedly creating new units. Between Donetsk Oblast and Crimea, the 116th Special Purpose Brigade is being formed. It's supposed to field a tank company; it will be motorized with MRAPs. The Ministry of the Interior, of which the Rosgvardia is part along with the police forces, would have staffing difficulties: in July alone, 5000 policemen took early retirement. This is contrary to Putin's intentions to increase personnel in these branches as well. Russian federal subjects would have been allowed to create (and fund) their own military units outside the Ministry of the Defense, for internal use. Belgorod Oblast is reportedly creating eight battalions to garrison the area near the Ukrainian border. The oblasts are being pushed by the federal government and evaluated based on the speed and the amount of new units they assist in creating. Irregular formations continue to exist, although under the control of the Ministry of Defense. The "Cossack Volunteer Assault Corps", consisting of four brigades (three of which already exist and have been active in Ukraine since last year) and 20 thousand men, has been formed. Volunteers in this Corps have to sign contracts with the MoD; the Corps encloses several BARS detachments and the PMC Redut. The PMC Sokol-1, owned by the magnate Deripaska (who owns Rusal) and close to the 7th VDV Division, is reportedly converting into an air assault regiment. My theory that some of the members of the dissolving PMCs might be destined for the VDV would thus find confirmation. Recall that the latter is forming two new regiments to be assigned to the 98th and 106th Divisions; it's also forming a new division (the 104th, which should be formed by the 31st VDV Brigade, a regiment of the Territorial Forces and another one formed by elements of the 83rd Brigade) and an artillery brigade. New VDV brigades might be created in the future. Then there is the 44th Airborne Division, which, however, owes its name to the fact that it's trained in Ryazan by the VDV but I'm not sure whether it's going to be an integral part of the paratroopers; it consists of a regiment from the Mobilization Reserve and one from the Territorial Forces. The "Hispaniola" Battalion, active in Bakhmut, close to PMC Wagner and formed by football hooligans with far-right sympathies, is set to become a special forces unit (it already boasts an UAV company). In Kherson a militarized detachment made up of local collaborationists is deployed. On September 1 in Russian military academies 15 thousand people began training to become officers. Among them are 1500 veterans selected to become officers. The courses have been shortened by at least 2 months for the young aspiring officers. Meritorious veteran sergeants and warrant officers will be able to become lieutenants with a 2-month rushed course. That's a sign, along with the fact that the age up to which a retired officer can be recalled to service was raised to 70, that Russia needs a flood of officers for the new formations and to replenish losses. Recruitment in the prisons and penal colonies for Storm Z units is going on as usual; there is, of course, the question regarding for how long they will still find available prisoners. Sending them on a mandatory basis might be a bad idea in my opinion. That's all for today. I read everything, so I do appreciate this info. |
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It's not stupid, it's advanced!!
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Originally Posted By AlmightyTallest: Originally Posted By Jaehaerys: Regarding GLSDB delays, leadership at Boeing is a total shitshow that needs a complete cultural overhaul. This totally fits with the reputation Boeing has cultivated in terms of projects failing, going over budget, and getting delayed. To be completely fair, a lot my information about Boeing comes from a rather ecentric buddy of mine that used to work there and believes that the leadership was spying on him in order to get him to breed with their daughters, so... |
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Originally Posted By RockNwood: Jet porn Friday! https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/494438/IMG_3748-2955141.jpg
View Quote Considering how large their planned army expansion is, having 100 planes is far too small. 40 F-15EX would help make it a proper and well rounded military. |
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Originally Posted By Jaehaerys: To be completely fair, a lot my information about Boeing comes from a rather ecentric buddy of mine that used to work there and believes that the leadership was spying on him in order to get him to breed with their daughters, so... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Jaehaerys: Originally Posted By AlmightyTallest: Originally Posted By Jaehaerys: Regarding GLSDB delays, leadership at Boeing is a total shitshow that needs a complete cultural overhaul. This totally fits with the reputation Boeing has cultivated in terms of projects failing, going over budget, and getting delayed. To be completely fair, a lot my information about Boeing comes from a rather ecentric buddy of mine that used to work there and believes that the leadership was spying on him in order to get him to breed with their daughters, so... lol, well it does happen, I've been involved in projects that are over budget and delayed, and not Boeing, but I also have worked on stuff that was ahead of schedule and under budget so it happens. |
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It's not stupid, it's advanced!!
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Originally Posted By Et2ss: Some late war production planes were actually Me 109 plated View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Et2ss: Originally Posted By 4xGM300m: Bf 109 from the first until the last plane. Some late war production planes were actually Me 109 plated No original "Me 109" main data plate was ever found. Even the last K4 models built in late March 1945 were plated Bf and not Me. Many data plates only showed "109" without prefix and without the model suffix. There are some ME 109 data plates known, all of them fake or original plates stamped after the war. Some component data plates (engines, instrument panels, radios) stamped with Me 109 are known. Source: Messerschmitt Foundation No freeloading and BTT. Ukrainian 220-mm MLRS BM-27 strikes Russian positions (end of August or beginning of September) |
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„From a place you will not see, comes a sound you will not hear.“
Thanks for the membership @ toaster |
Originally Posted By BlackHoleSon: I wonder how much of their artillery is old Soviet stock compared to what was made domestically View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By BlackHoleSon: Originally Posted By Auto5guy: "Hey vlad, I'm probably going to need some of those Nork missiles and artillery myself before this is all said and done." I wonder how much of their artillery is old Soviet stock compared to what was made domestically Yeah Russia is scraping for clones of clones |
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Deplorable fan of liberty
“I don’t need a ride, I need more ammunition.” |
Originally Posted By Saltwater-Hillbilly: Our war effort is not going well. Let's see what we can do to bump up our rate of desertion, defection, unjustified surrender to the enemy, malingering, and draft avoidance! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Saltwater-Hillbilly: Originally Posted By Lieh-tzu: Brand new Russian Media Monitor from Sergey Mardan, who talks about a recent comment by a Duma member on the military committee - there will be no rotation, mobiks will not come home at all until the special military operation is concluded. Which begs the question (as he points out), what is that conclusion? Mobiks are on the hook until the war is over. Brutal. They're going to break and destroy an entire generation of men (except for the fortunate ones who live in Moscow, St Petersburg, Rostov). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M0oY6x-7Ujo Our war effort is not going well. Let's see what we can do to bump up our rate of desertion, defection, unjustified surrender to the enemy, malingering, and draft avoidance! As that old Russian saying goes on the front: Things were going very bad…then it spiraled out of control. |
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Deplorable fan of liberty
“I don’t need a ride, I need more ammunition.” |
Originally Posted By m35ben: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/390973/7zapcn-2955224.gif View Quote Lol wtf |
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Originally Posted By BerettaGuy: Poland stronk! View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By BerettaGuy: Originally Posted By RockNwood: Jet porn Friday! https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/494438/IMG_3748-2955141.jpg
Poland stronk! I think Poland’s Defense purchasing dept drinks vodka martinis all day and just leans on the ENTER key for the Raytheon/Lockheed/Grumman online sales page. |
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Deplorable fan of liberty
“I don’t need a ride, I need more ammunition.” |
Originally Posted By m35ben: At this rate there will be a piece of military equipment in every driveway in Poland. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By m35ben: Originally Posted By RockNwood: Jet porn Friday! https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/494438/IMG_3748-2955141.jpg
The poors will have F16s up on blocks, nose half off and primer painted. The lower to middle class will have a range of F15s in the driveway from C to the EX. The wealthy will have Charles bring the F35 around for an evening cruise. The burning money for atmosphere rich will have F22 or modded retro F117 in underground garage. “Oh great now we have to make room for an Abrams and a Patriot launcher by the weekend says the mayor!” |
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Deplorable fan of liberty
“I don’t need a ride, I need more ammunition.” |
Originally Posted By m35ben: https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/390973/7zapcn-2955224.gif View Quote If you can reach it, it’s plumb! |
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Deplorable fan of liberty
“I don’t need a ride, I need more ammunition.” |
Ukraine says bomber deployed British and French cruise missiles 'perfectly' in major attack on Russian navy
Ukraine has confirmed that British and French cruise missiles - fired from either wing of a Ukrainian bomber - were used in a major attack against Russia's navy in occupied Crimea and worked "perfectly". The strikes, in the early hours of Wednesday morning, devastated one of four Russian cruise-missile-capable submarines in its Black Sea Fleet and a large warship that had been undergoing maintenance in a dry dock in the port city of Sevastopol. Lieutenant General Mykola Oleshchuk, the head of the Ukrainian air force, explained that British Storm Shadow missiles had been attached under the left wing of a Ukrainian Su-24 jet and French Scalp missiles under the right wing. "Both missiles work perfectly, without a chance for the occupier!" he wrote. It is very rare for Ukrainian commanders to release specific details of an operation. The air chief signaled his Su-24M bomber aircraft also had the capacity to carry German Taurus missiles - a weapon that Berlin has signalled it may give to Kyiv. More at link https://news.sky.com/story/ukraine-says-bomber-deployed-british-and-french-cruise-missiles-perfectly-in-major-attack-on-russian-navy-12962116 |
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“If by chance you were to ask me which ornaments I would desire above all others in my house, I would reply, without much pause for reflection, arms and books.”
Baldassare Castiglione |
Somewhere, Putin waves around a shaky samurai sword, and whispers "There can only be one." |
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Originally Posted By Prime: Ukraine says bomber deployed British and French cruise missiles 'perfectly' in major attack on Russian navy Ukraine has confirmed that British and French cruise missiles - fired from either wing of a Ukrainian bomber - were used in a major attack against Russia's navy in occupied Crimea and worked "perfectly". The strikes, in the early hours of Wednesday morning, devastated one of four Russian cruise-missile-capable submarines in its Black Sea Fleet and a large warship that had been undergoing maintenance in a dry dock in the port city of Sevastopol. Lieutenant General Mykola Oleshchuk, the head of the Ukrainian air force, explained that British Storm Shadow missiles had been attached under the left wing of a Ukrainian Su-24 jet and French Scalp missiles under the right wing. "Both missiles work perfectly, without a chance for the occupier!" he wrote. It is very rare for Ukrainian commanders to release specific details of an operation. The air chief signaled his Su-24M bomber aircraft also had the capacity to carry German Taurus missiles - a weapon that Berlin has signalled it may give to Kyiv. More at link https://news.sky.com/story/ukraine-says-bomber-deployed-british-and-french-cruise-missiles-perfectly-in-major-attack-on-russian-navy-12962116 View Quote |
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nothing of value here
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Originally Posted By Jaehaerys: In case anyone reads these massive walls of text, I'll copy and paste another post from another forum regarding new Russian formations. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Jaehaerys: In case anyone reads these massive walls of text, I'll copy and paste another post from another forum regarding new Russian formations. An update on the new Russian formations. The sources are Ukrainian military observer Mashovets, Ukrainian think tank Centre for Defence Strategies, reports by Thord Are Iversen (former Norwegian officer who keeps track of the new Russian formations) and Azeri analyst Jahangir Arasli, who, thanks to his knowledge of the language, unearths many local Russian news articles about the new formations. Mashovets this morning confirmed the deployment of elements of the new 25th Combined Arms Army in the Kreminna sector. The 164th Motorized Brigade would have been deployed to Zhytlivka and would be ready to enter combat around Dibrova, near the Serebrianka Forest. The 36th Motorized Regiment of the 67th Motorized Division would have been deployed in Chervonopopivka and may enter into action between Novosadove and Terny. [That's](https://nitter.net/DefMon3/status/1700151627779355108) the order of battle of the new army made by Defmon. According to what was originally announced, there should be either a second motorized division or a second motorized brigade as well, probably still being created. One of these regiments comes from Bashkortostan (which is a large pool of volunteer units afaik) and would consist of 2500 men. Quite a lot of news have been going around about the military district to which the 25th Army belongs. Initially there was talk of the Central Military District. Then instead it had been confirmed by Russian sources that it will be associated with the Eastern Military District; an article in a Russian online local newspaper (tracked down by Iversen) basically wrote that yes, it will be formed within the latter but the army will eventually be part of the Southern Military District. Another article had been published a couple of weeks ago about the deployment to the front of the Bashkortostan Regiment in an unknown sector under the responsibility of the SMD. The acting commander of the 25th Army was the former deputy commander of the 36th Army of the EMD at the start of the conflict, then he was the chief of staff of the 14th Corps of the Arctic Fleet. At least the initial phase of the training is supposed to take place in the Vladivostok region (except for the Bashkortostan Regiment which was trained in Samara) and it was reported that 10 thousand officers and contract soldiers from the Eastern Military District's armies were to be transferred to the 25th Army, which is supposed to have 30 thousand men. Tbh this leaves me skeptical, because it would considerably bring down the operational capabilities of the existing EMD formations that are already, all of them, very busy on the Southern front. It would make little sense to send an E/SMD formation to the north of Siversky Donets River, which has been the sole responsibility of the W/CMD for over a year. I wouldn't know what to think about that, even because in the ads to recruit volunteers for the 25th Army it was literally written that it would be destined for Kherson and Zaporizhzhia Oblasts. I see two possible options: the Russians changed their minds and framed it in the CMD (for Mashovets it's part of the latter district in fact); or at the moment the 25th Army would still be in an embryonic state as a stand-alone formation, with the Russians needing to hastily transfer to the front the war-ready elements of this army, under the command of a different formation. It's possible that this army could be formed in two separate stages. The "jurisdiction" of the Central Military District ranges from the Svatove sector (where units of its 2nd Army are fighting between Raihorodka and Novojehorivka) to the Siversky Donets River in the Kreminna sector, where the 41st Army is deployed, supported by elements of the 98th VDV Division (in theory the 331st Regiment should still be in the area, although elements of this unit may be in Bakhmut with the rest of the division - the artillery regiment of the 98th is also deployed in Bakhmut) and until last month by the entirety of the 76th VDV Division. Also between Svatove and Kreminna there is the 20th Army of the Western MD: its 144th MRD is active just to the north of the Serebrianka Forest while the 3rd MRD is currently mainly used as a tactical/operational reserve in the Svatove sector. At the moment the deployed elements of the 25th Army would in fact have been attached to the 41st Army, which continues to be deployed in the Kreminna sector. It's important to emphasize this because according to Budanov, sending the 25th Army into the area would have been instrumental in order to transfer the 41st Army to the Southern front. It's possible that at the moment the 25th Army still doesn't have a working general staff and is still too weak to be deployed as a stand-alone formation in a given sector and therefore needs to be framed in another army. The 41st Army itself is not particularly competent (it can boast the crossing disaster of the Siversky Donets in May 2022), but it's pretty large compared to the average: two motorized brigades, a mountain brigade and a tank division are its maneuver formations. This army has been covering the Kreminna sector since October of the last year, when it was beaten in the battles between Lyman and Yampil. A deployment of the army to the Southern front (which has never seen the presence of CMD formations during this conflict) would be a very strange thing. It's possible that the Russians are in a situation where they have no other choice though. If the dispatch to the South is confirmed, I find it possible that they will wait for the arrival of the rest of the 25th Army and then transfer the whole Kreminna sector into their hands. The 41st Army is certainly not at 100% capacities but should still be in acceptable conditions to withstand a deployment to an area far hotter than Kreminna. The 90th Tank Division during the spring received batches of T-90Ms and T-80BVs, certainly an improvement compared to the T-72A/Bs they entered the Chernihiv Oblast with, back in February 2022. It has to be said that the 41st Army has a history of cooperation with the VDV, particularly with the 76th Division. The deputy commander of the 41st Army, Sukhovetsky, was killed in Hostomel. Actually, the 41st Army's task was to take Chernihiv, cross the Desna River and reach Kyiv from the east. It was a resounding failure: its three brigades (35th, 55th, and 74th) were defeated in the siege of Chernihiv while the 90th Tank Division was ambushed several times on the way to Kyiv (also owing to a lack of dismounts) and was finally stopped and then pushed back in Brovary. It was the biggest debacle of the early phase of the conflict, along with the fuck-up of the 1st Tank Army between Sumy and Kharkiv. What was Sukhovetsky doing on the other side of the Dnipro? It's possible that the 41st Army was subordinate to Serdyukov and the VDV General Staff, i.e. the protagonists of the plan to seize Kyiv. In May and June 2022 elements of the 90th Tank Division and 76th VDV Division attacked together in the Lysychansk sector, specifically to the west of Hirske in the clashes to cut the T1302 Highway. The armored vehicles of the 90th Division for instance bore the "V" mark (typical of the VDV) instead of their own "O". Then the 76th was sent to Kherson where it remained until the Russian withdrawal; the fates of the two formations met again in November, since then the 41st Army and the 76th VDV Division fought side by side until last month in the Serebrianka Forest. The 90th Tank Division, which fields BMPTs, was instrumental in providing armored support and increased fire volumes to VDV units. Mashovets last month spoke of the deployment of the 70th Motorized Division of the new 18th Combined Arms Army in the first rear line near Kherson. It's a full-manned division: three motorized, one tank and one artillery regiments. It would have been transferred from Crimea according to what he said, where it was probably trained. At least one regiment appears to be largely made up of Dagestanis. Meanwhile, it had been said that the new 18th Army will include two corps: the 22nd and the 40th. The 22nd Corps already exists (since 2016), it's formed by the 126th Coastal Defense Brigade and the 127th Reconnaissance Brigade and is deployed near Kherson. The 40th Corps is being formed and had been said to be composed by the 47th Motorized Division and the 144th Motorized Brigade. It will definitely be part of the Southern Military District and will be led by the former commander of the 22nd Corps. The 47th MRD would be formed in Crimea, and includes many mobilized locals. If there's anything I have tried to figure out but have not been able to, it's to get whether the 47th and 70th are the same division that perhaps changed numbering during the recent months or they are two different divisions. I personally lean toward the first hypothesis, but we cannot know that for sure yet. In any case, the deployment of this division allowed the 7th VDV Division to be sent to the Orikhiv sector (okay, surely the quality of the two formations is not remotely comparable). The personnel of the 144th MRB appears to be largely made up of volunteers (and perhaps mobilized?) from the North Caucasus, such as Kabardino-Balkaria and Karachay-Cherkessia. They would have carried out the first phase of training in Stavropol (where the 40th Corps is based) and are now finishing the training in Crimea. I find it likely that once they are done with the training they will join the rest of the 18th Army in the Kherson Oblast along the Dnipro, allowing other units, such as the elements of the 49th Army still in Kherson or the 80th Brigade of the Arctic Fleet, to depart towards the Southern front. Second part below. What is certain is that initially the time frame for setting up the new formations was thought to be longer, but it seems that the Russians are cutting the time frame as much as possible. CDS states it's likely Russia will have another wave of mobilization in the fall, with a call to arms of 170/175 thousand reservists. By the end of the year, the Russian government also hopes for 130 thousand new contract personnel. This number may actually seem exaggerated, like Medvedev's statement earlier this month in which he said that 280 thousand contracts would have been signed in 2023 so far. What's sure is that mobilization efforts in 2023 had slowed down substantially and the new recruits of this year (although I doubt Medvedev's numbers) are mainly contract soldiers: the wages, bonuses, promised support measures to the families, etc. are enough to attract enough a sizeable amount of desperate people from the poorest regions of the country. Immigrants from Central Asian countries who obtain Russian passports would also being pushed into signing. Young guys from the military service, who cannot be sent to Ukraine, can however sign a contract already after the first month of service. There have been cases of officers pressuring conscripts to sign. It's rare compared to the total, but I occasionally come across obituaries of fallen Russian soldiers who were born in 2003 or 2004. There are no updates on the intention to divide the Western Military District between the Moscow and Leningrad MDs. The Rosgvardia is also reportedly creating new units. Between Donetsk Oblast and Crimea, the 116th Special Purpose Brigade is being formed. It's supposed to field a tank company; it will be motorized with MRAPs. The Ministry of the Interior, of which the Rosgvardia is part along with the police forces, would have staffing difficulties: in July alone, 5000 policemen took early retirement. This is contrary to Putin's intentions to increase personnel in these branches as well. Russian federal subjects would have been allowed to create (and fund) their own military units outside the Ministry of the Defense, for internal use. Belgorod Oblast is reportedly creating eight battalions to garrison the area near the Ukrainian border. The oblasts are being pushed by the federal government and evaluated based on the speed and the amount of new units they assist in creating. Irregular formations continue to exist, although under the control of the Ministry of Defense. The "Cossack Volunteer Assault Corps", consisting of four brigades (three of which already exist and have been active in Ukraine since last year) and 20 thousand men, has been formed. Volunteers in this Corps have to sign contracts with the MoD; the Corps encloses several BARS detachments and the PMC Redut. The PMC Sokol-1, owned by the magnate Deripaska (who owns Rusal) and close to the 7th VDV Division, is reportedly converting into an air assault regiment. My theory that some of the members of the dissolving PMCs might be destined for the VDV would thus find confirmation. Recall that the latter is forming two new regiments to be assigned to the 98th and 106th Divisions; it's also forming a new division (the 104th, which should be formed by the 31st VDV Brigade, a regiment of the Territorial Forces and another one formed by elements of the 83rd Brigade) and an artillery brigade. New VDV brigades might be created in the future. Then there is the 44th Airborne Division, which, however, owes its name to the fact that it's trained in Ryazan by the VDV but I'm not sure whether it's going to be an integral part of the paratroopers; it consists of a regiment from the Mobilization Reserve and one from the Territorial Forces. The "Hispaniola" Battalion, active in Bakhmut, close to PMC Wagner and formed by football hooligans with far-right sympathies, is set to become a special forces unit (it already boasts an UAV company). In Kherson a militarized detachment made up of local collaborationists is deployed. On September 1 in Russian military academies 15 thousand people began training to become officers. Among them are 1500 veterans selected to become officers. The courses have been shortened by at least 2 months for the young aspiring officers. Meritorious veteran sergeants and warrant officers will be able to become lieutenants with a 2-month rushed course. That's a sign, along with the fact that the age up to which a retired officer can be recalled to service was raised to 70, that Russia needs a flood of officers for the new formations and to replenish losses. Recruitment in the prisons and penal colonies for Storm Z units is going on as usual; there is, of course, the question regarding for how long they will still find available prisoners. Sending them on a mandatory basis might be a bad idea in my opinion. That's all for today. Shake and bake lieutenants, what could go wrong?! Boris, load those lieutenants up in the truck and send to front. They don’t need anymore training since most will be dead before they get there. Hurry! Add some “cube” pallets and wrap while you are at it. |
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Deplorable fan of liberty
“I don’t need a ride, I need more ammunition.” |
I stand with Ukraine. Fuck Putin! And fuck Russia!
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Originally Posted By Charging_Handle: Even Tom Clancy himself couldn't have dreamed up some of the shit we've witnessed during this war. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Charging_Handle: Originally Posted By m35ben: Russian made aircraft firing British and French stuff all in one try. I just can't. Even Tom Clancy himself couldn't have dreamed up some of the shit we've witnessed during this war. Russian made aircraft firing British and French missiles at Russian warships no less. |
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Originally Posted By Charging_Handle: Even Tom Clancy himself couldn't have dreamed up some of the shit we've witnessed during this war. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By Charging_Handle: Originally Posted By m35ben: Russian made aircraft firing British and French stuff all in one try. I just can't. Even Tom Clancy himself couldn't have dreamed up some of the shit we've witnessed during this war. But can you imagine how boring a submarine spy thriller novel would be all at a dry dock?! |
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Deplorable fan of liberty
“I don’t need a ride, I need more ammunition.” |
Originally Posted By RockNwood: I think Poland’s Defense purchasing dept drinks vodka martinis all day and just leans on the ENTER key for the Raytheon/Lockheed/Grumman online sales page. View Quote They’re like the guy who puts in drunk bids on every single auction on Gunbroker and then wakes up and finds out he won them ALL |
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nothing of value here
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Originally Posted By m35ben: At this rate there will be a piece of military equipment in every driveway in Poland. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Originally Posted By m35ben: Originally Posted By RockNwood: Jet porn Friday! https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/494438/IMG_3748-2955141.jpg
IshouldmovetoPolandmemecat.jpg |
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Originally Posted By THOT_Vaccine:
Somewhere, Putin waves around a shaky samurai sword, and whispers "There can only be one." View Quote As an update with no further implication or meaning intended, there were three posts on his Telegram account today, written as if by him. |
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“If by chance you were to ask me which ornaments I would desire above all others in my house, I would reply, without much pause for reflection, arms and books.”
Baldassare Castiglione |
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