1/ I'm not going to try to suggest definitively what caused the explosion on the Crimea/Kerch Bridge, but I thought I'd suggest a useful way of thinking about it. A short 🧵 on the subject.
2/ Lots of theories have been suggested – a long-range missile strike, a truck bomb (the preferred Russian explanation), a boat bomb under the bridge, some kind of sabotage. It was clearly a very big explosion, in any case.
3/ The UK has unfortunately seen a lot of explosions of this kind due to the Northern Ireland conflict. This video is a police helicopter's view of the IRA bombing of Manchester city centre on 15 June 1996. It provides an interesting point of comparison.
4/ The explosion caused the equivalent of $1.5 billion in property damage and made a crater 15m (45 ft) wide, but didn't kill anyone. The bomb weighed 1,500–1,600 kg (3,300–3,500 lb) and was made from a mixture of the plastic explosive Semtex and ammonium nitrate fertiliser.
5/ The vehicle carrying the 1996 Manchester bomb was a 7.5 ton Ford Cargo van. The truck implicated by the Russians appears to be an International ProStar, weighing between 14.5-27.2 tons (32,000-60,000 lb). If a bomb was aboard, it could have been far bigger than in Manchester.
6/ The suspect truck was given a brief and apparently only cursory inspection by bridge security guards at 05:52 before it was allowed to pass. It reportedly exploded around 06:05, shortly before dawn.
7/ I wouldn't be surprised if the truck's arrival took place just before a shift change by the bridge security guards. At that time the night shift were likely hungry, tired, and cold, and would have been focusing mainly on going home to get warm and rested.
8/ In considering which of the possibilities I mentioned above are the more likely, it's worth bearing the principle of Occam's Razor in mind.
9/ This says (per Merriam-Webster) "that the simplest of competing theories be preferred to the more complex or that explanations of unknown phenomena be sought first in terms of known quantities."
So how does this inform views of the competing possibilities? It's quite useful.
10/ Long-range missile: an unknown quantity. There's no clear indication that Ukraine has anything like this, whether the US ATACMS or a home-grown alternative.
Explosive boat: also an unknown quantity, same reasoning.
11/ Sabotage: Ukraine has certainly been able to strike behind enemy lines, as various places in Crimea have discovered. So this is a known(ish) quantity.
12/ Vehicle bomb: As with sabotage, car bombs have certainly been used, as this assassination of a collaborator in occupied Starobilsk in August shows. A truck bomb is just scaling up. Another known quantity.
13/ Let's eliminate the two unknown quantities, leaving us with sabotage and a truck bomb. Comparing the Manchester and Crimea Bridge explosions, it's clear that the bridge explosion was much bigger. More explosives or more powerful explosives, but likely several tons' worth.
14/ Video footage from the rail bridge shows that there were cameras mounted underneath it to monitor possible intrusions (no boats were supposed to be under there, they go under the main span).
15/ Common sense suggests that any attempt to plant several tons of explosives on the bridge would have been easily spotted. Which likely rules out the possibilty of sabotage.
16/ So, thanks to Occam's Razor, it's fairly safe to say that the Russian theory of a truck bomb is the most probable. That's not to say it's correct – but it's the least complicated explanation and is most within the area of known quantities. /end
Some views linked below from a Finnish explosive ordnance disposal expert:
1/ Russian warbloggers are continuing to provide examples of how Telegram is used for frontline battlefield communications, to refute the claim of presidential spokesman Dmitri Peskov that such a thing is "not possible to imagine". ⬇️
2/ Platon Mamadov provides two detailed examples:
"Example number one:
Aerial reconnaissance of Unit N spotted a Ukrainian self-propelled gun in a shelter in the middle of town N."
3/ "Five minutes after the discovery, the target's coordinates and a detailed video were uploaded to a special secret chat group read by all drone operators, scouts, and artillerymen in that sector of the front.
1/ Russian soldiers overwhelmingly prefer to use Telegram for tactical communications despite the Russian army having its own dedicated military messengers. The reason isn't complex – the military's own alternatives are unreliable and difficult to use. ⬇️
2/ 'Vault No. 8' explains the problem:
"The Telegram slowdown is particularly nasty because Telegram is used for communication on the front lines.
Military messengers have been around since I wrote about this, but... Guess what you have to do to get a firmware-ready smartphone?
3/ "That's right! Buy it [with your own money] and send it in for a firmware update. On top of that, one of the military messengers periodically crashes like crazy, and the phone has to be sent in for a [periodic] firmware update, which takes at least a couple of weeks.
1/ The Russian government's throttling of Telegram has deprived the Russian army of a huge repository of information for its soldiers' professional development and a key source of essential technical advice and instruction, as Russian warbloggers explain. ⬇️
2/ 'Kiba's Signalman's Diary' explains:
3/ "Telegram alone has been the only place where self-organised closed chats and knowledge bases on communications, in demand by the military at the moment, were quickly created and developed, independent of decisions and initiatives from above.
1/ Russian warbloggers are outraged at the Russian government's view that blocking Telegram is no big deal for frontline troops. They say it's a catastrophe heaped on the disaster of losing Starlink and that anyone who says Telegram isn't needed is talking "complete bullshit". ⬇️
2/ Dmitri Peskov, Vladimir Putin's spokesman, says: "I don't think it's possible to imagine frontline communications being provided via Telegram or some other messenger. It's difficult and impossible to imagine such a thing."
3/ However, it is very much a thing, as warbloggers have been pointing out furiously. 'Callsign Bruce' provides an example of how it is used to avoid friendly fire incidents:
"I'll give you a real-life example from one of the directions."
1/ Life after Starlink is proving to be difficult and frustrating for the Russian army. Russian warbloggers appear to be going through the stages of grief, expressing anger and alarm at the crisis and concern that Ukraine will exploit it. One anticipates "24/7 fucking". ⬇️
2/ Further instances of price-gouging are being reported, with the cost of US-made Ubiquiti WiFi bridges – illegally imported into Russia – doubling overnight. 'Strong Word' complains:
3/ "Elon is certainly a real jerk. But we have some real assholes in the rear who decided to ride the wave and make money off their own soldiers. Wi-Fi bridges instantly doubled in price. It's maddening, some are spilling blood, and others are making a living off of it."
1/ What can Russian soldiers do with thousands of useless Starlink terminals? One Russian warblogger has some humorous suggestions. ⬇️
2/ 'BKGB Casuar' writes:
"Here are 10 ways to use a broken terminal in the Special Military Operation zone:
3/ "1. Butt Kick.
The ground in the trench is cold and damp, and Elon Musk's plastic is warm and high-tech. Use it as an elite seat. Now you're not just a soldier in the mud, but a cyberpunk on a throne, whose butt is protected from moisture by American technology.