Really important question below: why would you even design a T-72 so that the crew literally has to sit on top of hundreds of kilos of highly explosive ammunition and propellant? /1
@clmazin answered this by analogy in his brilliant script for #Chernobyl. In the (fictional) courtroom scene in the final episode, Soviet nuclear scientist Valeriy Legasov explains why Chernobyl was effectively rigged to explode: /2
"It's cheaper". That's the answer to the T-72's design flaws. It's much smaller and lighter than the US M1A1 Abrams or similar British and German tanks. But it costs a fraction of their price, at the cost of crew safety. /3
I think we often forget how much poorer Russia (and the USSR before it) is than the West. Millions of Russians still live in abject poverty, without clean water, indoor sanitation or paved roads - much as their great-grandparents did 100 years ago./4
Russia and the USSR have sought to compete with the West by making cheaper and less safe weapons because they didn't have the means to compete on quality. Unfortunately for thousands of Russian soldiers, that philosophy is now costing them their lives. /end
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1/ Two Russian 'black widows', an army warrant officer and his wife have been charged by the Russian authorities with recruiting vulnerable men into the army, contracting fake marriages, and seeking their deaths in order to obtain compensation payments to share between them. ⬇️
2/ The 'Rakurs' (Angle) Telegram channel has published details of the case, brought by military investigators in the Primorsky Krai region of the Russian Far East against four people who are all linked with the 60th Motorised Rifle Brigade of the 5th Combined Arms Army. They are:
3/🔺 Aleksandr Sergeevich Polischuk, warrant officer, crew member of a self-propelled artillery gun in the 60th MRB;
🔺 Daria Andreevna Polischuk, entrepreneur, wife of Aleksandr Sergeevich Polischuk;
1/ Russian vehicle logistics have virtually collapsed in frontline areas due to the constant threat of drones, forcing soldiers to walk tens of kilometers to obtain fuel, food, water and medical supplies. A first-hand account gives an insight into the extreme danger they face. ⬇️
2/ As previously reported, transporting supplies and evacuating the wounded is now largely done on foot (or, famously, by donkeys) in an area about 20 km deep behind the front lines in Ukraine. Anything that moves is attacked by drones.
3/ Men have to walk across open fields with no concealment or ability to evade drone attacks, leaving them very vulnerable. The Russians constantly take casualties just to keep their front lines supplied.
1/ Russian forces are reportedly suffering from a severe shortage of FPV drones. They only receive a few poor-quality drones a day from state-approved companies, despite volunteer manufacturers having produced much better drones which the state is refusing to support. ⬇️
2/ Russian warbloggers have been complaining for at least a year that volunteer efforts to mass-produce drones, replicating Ukraine's very successful drone programme, are being blocked by the Russian military-industrial complex and its allies in the army.
3/ Russia does have a volunteer drone-production programme, which is described in detail in the thread below. However, the so-called 'people's military-industrial complex' clearly has problems in getting its products to where they are needed.
1/ A Russian air base is seeking urgent donations after its last remaining forklift broke down under the strain of loading 1500 kg bombs onto aircraft. The air base has already had to resort to transporting bombs using bicycles for want of other means of transportation. ⬇️
2/ Russian warbloggers have banded together to fundraise for a new forklift with a capacity of 3 tons, costing around 1.5 million rubles ($17,800). Kirill Fedorov of the 'War History Weapons' Telegram channel writes:
3/ "‼️LET'S LOAD A BOMB ON THE RUSSIAN BOMBER‼️
Unfortunately, our main suppliers of FAB [bombs] to the Ukrainians - report that the LAST working loader broke under the weight of the FAB-1500, heroically loading it onto the Su-34.
1/ Russian veterans of the war in Ukraine have appealed to Vladimir Putin for help against a new and deadlier enemy – their wives, who they say have been corrupted by feminists and "Anglo-Saxons". The men say they have been kicked out "on the street, abandoned and impotent". ⬇️
2/ The 3rd All-Russian Congress of Fathers was held on 15-16 March in Moscow, with 250 participants and several thousand more reportedly watching online. Russian warblogger Sergey Kolyasnikov, author of the 'Zergulius' Telegram channel, writes:
3/ "There have been more and more cases when soldiers who defended their homeland on the front lines are now betrayed on the home front. While they were fighting, their families were destroyed.
1/ Russia's shortage of armoured vehicles and lack of an analogue for the M113 APC or M2A2 Bradley IFV has led soldiers to weld troop-carrying 'booths' onto rusting Soviet-era MT-LB armoured fighting vehicles. It highlights the Russian defence industry's failure to adapt. ⬇️
2/ The MT-LB, built in Ukraine, Bulgaria and Poland from the early 1970s, is designed to carry 11 men in addition to a driver and gunner. However, like other Soviet-era APCs, it suffers from low headroom and narrow exit doors which slow down disembarcation from the vehicle.
3/ This has often been a problem for Russian forces in Ukraine, as it leaves disembarking troops highly vulnerable to enemy fire. In one incident recorded by the Ukrainians, an entire Russian assault squad was wiped out in seconds as it exited its MT-LB.