Mark Hertling Profile picture
Mar 22 19 tweets 6 min read
Today's thread, a deeper dive on the current discussion of what a Theater Commander (CDR) does....

This is a followup to the excellent article published yesterday by @ZcohenCNN and @KatieBoLillis . 1/18
KatieBo's & Zach's article reports the Pentagon is stumped about who is leading RU's effort in Ukraine.

Is that important? From my perspective, yes. Knowing "who" provides us insight into that commander's background, potential actions & ways he might conduct a campaign. 2/
Several people posit there may be no overall theater commander...that the Combined Arms Army Commanders (several 3 star Col-Generals) are coordinating amongst themselves.

If true, that also provides insight into how RU forces are acting, why there's dysfunction. 3/
Early in this campaign, I spoke to @brikeilarcnn about the Principles of War. One of those is UNITY OF COMMAND.

As defined: UNITY OF COMMAND requires a single commander with authority to direct ALL forces in pursuit of a unified strategy.

IOW, CDRs drive the MISSION.
4/
So what kind of "Mission" drive? It's what emanates from the political strategy?

Roosevelt's guidance to Eisenhower for D-Day (below) is an example of a perfect mission, based on desired strategic ends. Short, sweet, w/ few details. It requires the CDR to analyze & plan.

5/
Now, I have no idea of Putin's mission to the Theater CDR, but it might be something like:

1. Execute regime change in Ukraine
2. Control of Black/Azov Sea Ports & land bridge to RU
3. Destroy Ukraine's Army
3. Subjugate Ukraine's population
4. Further Divide NATO/US 5/
If those - or something like those - were Putin's words, it is his political strategy.

And the Theater Cdr must translate this into operational action.

He analyzes with staffs & subordinate CDRs to determine essential missions they must accomplish together.

Things like... 6/
-The Forces required
-The Intelligence needed
-A logistics execution plan
-Analysis of terrain/weather
-Tasks subordinate cdrs MUST accomplish (when, where & why)
- The coordination of other service commanders (air, navy, artillery, cyber, etc)

And hundreds of other things. 7/
And that's just the PLANNING. As we all know, no plan survives first contact with the enemy...or, as a famous boxer once said: "Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the mouth!" 8/
After planning, a Theater CDR is responsible for overall mission execution.

He must:
-Place Forces
-Synchronization all actions
-Distribute intelligence
-Guide Subordinate CDRS' execution
-Conduct Resupply Operations
-Synchronize other services (navy, air force, etc) 9/
As I told @ZcohenCNN: "Unity of Command means 1 person is in charge— to coordinate fires, direct logistics, commit reserve forces, measure the success (and failure) of different 'wings' of the operation, synchronize the entire joint force, & adjust actions based on that." 10/
In effect, A Theater CDR is the "Operational Artists" of a campaign, blending science with art.

They know the political strategy, and they plan the sequence and execution of the operations so that the tactial battles achieve the political strategy.

11/
What was the operational plan?

Here's my guess:

1.Main Effort (ME): Attack Kyiv from N & E (regime change)
2.Secondary Effort (SE) 1: Attack E & W from Crimea (to establish land bridge to Odesa (& beyond?))
3. (SE) 2: Envelop & Annihilate UKR's Donbas army. 12/
Here are SOME issues with this plan:
1. RU deployed 190k troops...UKR's army has 240+k & territorials. Force mismatch
2. RU force training is substandard; leadership at all levels is poor.
3. Terrain & weather known, but ignored
4. Intelligence on UKR forces poor
(cont) 13/
5. Naval amphibious landing dependent on ground force reaching Odesa.
6. Air Force poorly trained, Navy not synchronized
7. Communication plan disconnected
8. Troop-to-task requirements excessive
9. No massing of long range fires (rocket, missile, artillery) 14/
Critically important to a theater campaign plan: Logistics support.

A War College Maxim: "If you forget logistics...you'll lose."

Russia did not adequately plan or execute logistics.

Russia has "Exterior Lines," UKR has "Interior Lines."

Here's what that looks like: 15/
RU Commanders had to deal with 1400 miles around the perimeter of Ukraine on the Exterior Lines for resupply, troop movements, deployment and communication.

UKR can more easily resupply and move forces with Interior lines. 16/
All are part of the planning and execution responsibilities of a Theater CDR.

In combat-as a subordinate (Division) commander-I've worked for 2 General Theater CDRs who bore these responsibilities.

In peacetime, I worked for another Theater CDR (an Admiral) who did the same.17/
RU came into this fight with a purported advantage in force quality & quantity. Their plan was to conduct an extremely complex battle of annihilation & regime change.

They failed..

Not having a Theater CDR may have been the reason.

It will be tough for RU to recover.18/18

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Mark Hertling

Mark Hertling Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @MarkHertling

Mar 24
Yesterday on @CNN, I was asked several times about Ukraine "morale."

A difficult quality to define. It's something commanders (& all leaders) struggle to ensure.

There's tons of research on the subject. Even Clausewitz discusses it.

So here's a thread of some thoughts. 1/16
Clausewitz says that morale (& will) is critical. For soldiers & commanders.

He says this quality is found through moral & physical courage, the acceptance of battlefield responsibility, & suppression of fear.

Interesting. But how do you achieve that? 2/
On 2/24 I wrote a thread discussing how power on the battlefield is defined by resources and will. I said then the RU had advantage in "resources," but UKR had a greater advantage in "will." And I predicted UKR would win.

Will can often override resource advantage. 3/
Read 17 tweets
Mar 21
A new stream on an unfortunate topic: battlefield deaths & casualties.

Last night, @ErinBurnett on @CNN asked me why it seemed the casualty rates on the RU side were so high.

I didn't want to talk "body counts," as the numbers differ depending on who is reporting. 1/25
So I started by reminding her that early in this fight I had predicted that the casualties incurred on a high-intensity, technology-heavy, conventional force battlefield would likely be significant...in the tens of thousands.

When I first said that, it was met with surprise. 2/
But that shouldn't suprise anyone.

The kind of fight we see in UKR is nothing like what the US army experienced in OPN Just Cause, OPN Desert Storm...& especially not what we saw in OEF & OIF.

The 1st two were one sided affairs, the latter 2 were complex counterinsurgencies. 3/
Read 25 tweets
Mar 19
A short thread on day 24.

UKR Ministry of Defense reports UKR's forces in Kyiv are continuing to engage RU forces in the NW, N and E of the city and have pushed those forces BACK several miles.

Indicates confusion & lack of supplies in RU force. 1/13

edition.cnn.com/europe/live-ne…
UKR Army and territorial forces (& citizens) continue fight against RU forces trying to take/bypass Mykolaiv in the south.

A critical fight. If the RU can't get across the Bug River in this city, it will be tough to link with a proposed RU Navy landing at Odesa 2/
RU continues shelling the once-beautiful city of Kharkiv, but the UKR Army & Territorial Defense fights to block RU ground force advancement. 3/

bbc.com/news/world-eur…
Read 13 tweets
Mar 18
Today's thread on the ongoing RU invasion. (NB: All of this are just some personal thoughts to contribute to understanding)

3 things:
-Difference between Annihilation & Attrition
-How RU's logistic plan did not support their operation
-How logistics affects both sides now 1/20
From their original plan with 4 Axis of Advance, it appears to me the RU wanted an classic battle of annihilation.

What's that? It isn't what is sounds to be. 2/
"Annihilation" is a military strategy where the attacking army seeks to destroy the enemy through a series of battles in an overarching campaign.

Successful battles of annihilation attempts to use overwhelming force, surprise and "grand maneuvers" from at least 2 directions. 3/
Read 21 tweets
Mar 17
Just finished a segment with the terrific @biannagolodryga where I described some of the things in the $800M package.

I know weapon systems can be confusing, so here's a bit of an explanation (plus another "bonus" NFZ comment at the end) 1/17
First, anti-tank.

The Javelin is a phenomenal shoulder-fired weapon. It's expensive, but it's designed to destroy a multi-million dollar tank or personnel carrier (BMP, BTR, etc)

It has both a side attack & top-down attack mode, and tankers fear this kinds of weapons. 2/
It can accurately hit & destroy enemy armor at ranges up to 3000+ meters. But...it also has an "arming requirement," and can't be used against close-in targets during ambushes.

For those, a soldier needs an LAW (light antitank weapon) or an RPG. Countries have variants 3/
Read 17 tweets
Mar 15
These RU loss charts of equipment & personnel are questionable, but if they are even close to reality they are significant.

In 2007-9, I commanded the @1stArmoredDiv, 1 of 5 “heavy” divisions (10 total active divisions) in our Army.

Here’s how those losses would compare 1/8
The 5 US Army divisions that have tanks contain from 101 up to 303 tanks, because US division vary from 1 to 3 armored brigades.

That’s hard for civilians to understand, but each Division is organized for different missions. 2/
Current US Army divisions have from as few as 15,000 Soldiers (in a division of only two Armored Combat Arms Brigades) to well over 20,000+ Soldiers (in Divisions where there are four ACABs). 3/
Read 8 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(