printer
Well-Known Member
The writing is on the wall all the way to Russia.
Interesting, maybe the Russians gave up on Donald as a hopeless case and no real help at all anymore. Will the magats change their tune on Ukraine?The writing is on the wall all the way to Russia.
It wasn't a truck that was carrying ammo. Looked more like what you said. Not just from one angle. Even from the image sent by the drone before things went boom. They scored big on that strike.from one angle it looked like one of the TOS1 systems....i could be wrong..
Yeah they did, didn't they. Only wish I could see the guys faces in the truck behind itIt wasn't a truck that was carrying ammo. Looked more like what you said. Not just from one angle. Even from the image sent by the drone before things went boom. They scored big on that strike.
lol, yes, watching the vid, my thoughts are: "Why on earth did they continue on when things went boom?" They first enter the field of view at 12 seconds and didn't even slow down until 33 seconds, when they turned into the street where the explosion went off. Why not put that thing into reverse at 13 seconds and get the hell out of the area, fast. What? Did they think there was anything left of the crew in that first vehicle to be rescued after that blast? Burning napalm landing all around them was another clue.Yeah they did, didn't they. Only wish I could see the guys faces in the truck behind it
I needed some context and looked it up.
Will not be getting there this year, when the F-16's get there it may be a different story. The big problem is heavy armor across the Dnipro. I have been listening to Andrew Perpetuam they guy that looks for shelling to determine where the front line is. He says he barely sees anything of note around the river. Sure both sides trade ground back and forth, but one thing that the Russians have been doing is saying the Ukrainians took over an area and then in a day or two they say they took it back. They get a pat on the head for giving it to the Ukrainians without a shot fired from either side.I needed some context and looked it up.
View attachment 5338024
The two bodies of water are the Black Sea (bottom left) and Sea of Azov (bottom right). The red mark is where the battle described in your post took place, near Krasnohorivka. In an earlier post by DIY, the narrator describes a battle over a crossing of the Dnipro River, just east of Kherson. Krasnohorivka is about 60 miles north of the Sea of Asov. The beachhead on the east side of the Dnipro River is about 40 miles north of the Black Sea. If one draws a line between Kherson and Krasnohorivka, one can see the threat the Russians are under. First Kherson and then Mariupol will fall if these operations are successful at reaching the sea. Cirmea will be cut off. The Russian Navy has retreated from these regions and no longer control the waters. 40 or 60 miles in this war is a long, hard slog but it's not incredible to think that the Russia is facing the end days of their occupation.
I'm just saying that I think I now have a better understanding of the strategy Ukraine is following. I could be the last one here to understand. Ukraine seems to be event driven ("first we do this, then we do that"). They aren't schedule driven when carrying out their strategy. This is understandable because hurried offenses like the one the Russians tried in Krasnohorivka and Ukraine tried earlier in their counter offensive led to wasted resources without any gain. That Russia continues to try using massed armor charges to break through and continues to experience losses without gain says a lot about their lack of answers to what Ukraine is doing.Will not be getting there this year, when the F-16's get there it may be a different story. The big problem is heavy armor across the Dnipro. I have been listening to Andrew Perpetuam they guy that looks for shelling to determine where the front line is. He says he barely sees anything of note around the river. Sure both sides trade ground back and forth, but one thing that the Russians have been doing is saying the Ukrainians took over an area and then in a day or two they say they took it back. They get a pat on the head for giving it to the Ukrainians without a shot fired from either side.
On the Geo spot, Andrew says that it would be really bad for the Ukrainians if the Russians took Krasnohorivka, it was as big a battle as Avdivka and they lost a lot of armor there. These are two places that makes more sense for the Russians to take rather that something like Vuhledar and Bakhmut. They are trying to take them for a victory to show the people before election day. I am somewhat not surprised that there is not much mention in the Russian press about the loses they have been taken. But then again, they did come down on the bloggers.