• Sedan@lemmy.ml
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    3 days ago

    I’m expecting Sloviansk/Kramatorsk will get taken this summer

    ))) No, Comrade, that’s unlikely.

    Ukraine has massed forces in the Zaporizhzhia sector and intends to launch a counterattack. The Russians are currently trying to disrupt this counteroffensive.

    Ukraine definitely still has potential.

    and why there’s such a major panic now

    I monitor the mood among Russian pro-military bloggers. There was some confusion when Ukraine began actively striking deep into Russian territory, though the panic seems to have subsided somewhat now.

    Belousov recently met with these bloggers in person; the key issue on the agenda was countering UAVs.

    We can see that a feedback loop exists within the Russian Federation.

    Lately, strikes deep inside Russia have become less effective, and it is evident that countermeasures are being implemented; Russia is successfully countering these new threats.

    As for Ukraine, there is no panic there so far—except, perhaps, among those being sent on “meat-grinder” assaults. But no one asks for their opinion.

    And nobody cared before because people were getting grabbed from eastern Ukraine, now the kidnappings are starting to happen in western Ukraine more and more. I think it’s also an indication of how desperate the situation is. See how Europeans are now trying to send people back too. There are real manpower problems nobody wants to talk about.

    Yes, I agree with you, but this isn’t aimed at the immediate present—it’s looking toward the future. Once this becomes widespread, then we can talk about a catastrophic shortage of mobilization resources within Ukraine. For now, these are just plans.

    As for the current situation: recently, the EU banned granting refugee status to newly arrived Ukrainians of conscription age. Right now, the goal is to round up everyone inside Ukraine; they’ll go after the refugees later. I think there are enough people here to last another year…

    Unfortunately, my outlook on this isn’t quite as rosy as yours, Comrade…)))

    By the way, another good summary https://youtu.be/9EpDoB-xgOE

    Yes, his description is roughly accurate.

    This breakthrough occurred because Ukraine is mounting counterattacks in other sectors of the front; it is not currently in a state of purely static defense.

    And Sloviansk is a symbolic city for both Russia and Ukraine. The “Russian Spring” of 2014 began there. The battle for it will be fierce. If you like, you can call Sloviansk “Stalingrad”—and you wouldn’t be wrong! It strikes me as the key battle of this war.

    • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.mlOP
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      3 hours ago

      and thread is full here too

      Oh yeah, the media campaign worked, and the US is back in the game until Trump does a 180 again in a few weeks. I expect the next big event will be Russia taking all of Donbas. That’s when the real panic will start.

    • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.mlOP
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      3 days ago

      I guess we’ll see, I think the only potential left is in the media at this point. And that’s precisely why the west is in a panic again.

      I’ve found Russian military bloggers are drama queens of the highest order. They’re really not a useful gauge for what’s actually happening.

      Also, think about this logically, if the AFU had serious fighting capacity left then they would be defending Sloviansk/Kramatorsk right now instead of doing raids in Zaporozhye. This is by far the most important part of the front. They know they can’t hold it, so they’re doing ‘offensives’ to demonstrate that there’s fighting capacity left. These have no staying power.

      • Sedan@lemmy.ml
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        5 hours ago

        Also, think about this logically, if the AFU had serious fighting capacity left then they would be defending Sloviansk/Kramatorsk right now instead of doing raids in Zaporozhye.

        Comrade, I’m not telling you that Russia is losing; I’m telling you that—thanks in part to Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia counteroffensive—Trump has regained faith in Europe. Consequently, the war is dragging on, which implies fatigue for both Ukraine and Russia.

        If Ukraine realizes it is unequivocally losing, there will be an immediate mobilization of everyone aged 18 and up; we will see that happen.

        The three-month period I spoke about back in the spring has passed. Russia has adapted, more or less. A new wave of the Russian offensive is coming now.

        Also, I observe that Russia’s massive strikes on Kyiv are becoming increasingly damaging, whereas Russia is beginning to adapt to deep-strike attacks. Ukraine recently launched 800 drones, yet the effect was practically nil.

      • Sedan@lemmy.ml
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        5 hours ago

        I’ve found Russian military bloggers are drama queens of the highest order. They’re really not a useful gauge for what’s actually happening.

        So is that why they run to Belousov in a panic to complain? )))) Belousov hands out heart medication to them. )))

        Comrade, if it weren’t for those “panic-mongers,” we likely wouldn’t have such a detailed picture of the situation, because, according to pro-Kremlin media, everything is always fine.

        That is precisely why Belousov summons bloggers—to get information from the ground, rather than from the reports of bloated generals who love sending “flag-bearers” just to snap a photo of a flag. The Russian General Staff then presents this disinformation as fact. Thanks to one of those “panicking” bloggers, several generals—the type who love planting flags—have already been relieved of their commands.

        Remember when the Russians captured Kupyansk a couple of years ago? That general was dismissed, too.

        Still, I understand why you call Russian bloggers panic-mongers. It started back during the Kursk operation, when bloggers caused public panic—but if you look closer, they were telling the truth back then. The Ukrainians caught the Russians off guard; that’s a fact.