Brynn Tannehill Profile picture
Apr 23, 2023 27 tweets 8 min read Read on X
I haven't posted a thread on Ukr@ine in a while, since Twitter has been de-boosting all of them, and frankly nothing much has changed since December-ish. But... things are afoot that are worth discussing. A 🧵1/n
Sonce December, Soledar fell, and ~75% of Bakhmut is in Russian hands. Attacks on Vuhledar, Torske, and Avdiivka have failed. The Russian winter offensive mostly failed. The only real debate is whether the defense of Bakhmut was worth it for UAF. 2/n theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/…
Some argue that it bled Russia dry of reserves and pinned down forces while UA prepared for a spring offensive (probably mid-May-ish). Others point out that UA committed some of their best forces and lost people they can't afford to. 3/n nbcnews.com/news/world/ukr…
Russia seems to have mostly exhausted its supply of precision munitions, and most of the attacks on UA are coming from cheap, slow, Iranian Shahed-131/136 drones. Both sides complain that they are running low on mortar and artillery ammunition. 4/n bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
None of this is new. Neither is the ISW's report that UA is operating on the left side of the Dnipro SE of Kherson: UA has been making raids and incursions there since November. The area taken is a roadless, uninhabited swamp. 5/n
While some speculate this is the beginning of a beach head, or a diversion in support of the spring offensive, it remains to be seen. We can take a look at Russian defenses via OSINT, as well as some of the known unknowns, and even speculate. 6/n
First, let's look at where we know Russia has been building defenses. From this we can infer what RU wants to defend most, and where they believe UA wants to strike. I'll look closely at 3 regions: Kherson, Zaporizhia, and Luhansk. (Credit to @bradyafr ) 7/n ImageImageImageImage
In general (but not universally) RU isn't building fortifications around cities and towns. These are defensive barriers in and of themselves, and during the fall UA avoided assaults on defended urban areas, knowing them to be meat grinders that can stall an offensive. 8/n
In Kherson, RU has erected less fortifications. The river is a barrier to logistics, and a schwerpunkt here seems unlikely given this. Russia has erected defensive positions along the chokepoints between Kherson and Crimea and the roads to Melitopol, however. 9/n Image
The conclusion to draw is that Russia either doesn't really care too much if it loses its toe-hold in Kherson, doesn't think Ukraine can sustain an offensive through here, or both. Their main goal here is to prevent a re-taking of Crimea. 10/n
However, the North Crimea Canal, which supplies much of Crimea's water supply, is in this region. Taking it would complicate Russia's ability to sustain the peninsula somewhat. So, there is some incentive for UA in this region. 10/n Image
Next there Zaporizhia. Way back in December I speculated that a thrust towards Melitopol made the most sense for UA, and Russia seems to agree: RU has focused on building defenses here, and are often 3-5 layers thick. Going straight into the teeth of defenses is usually bad 11/n Image
What might make more sense here is an attempt to attack south from Vuhledar towards Maruipol. Retaking Mariupol, or at least surrounding it, would cut rail lines supporting RU troops. It would also allow holding the ports in Mariupol and Berdyansk under fire. 12/n
This would create a logistical nightmare for RU, cutting off both rail and seaport re-supply. It would also allow later offensives to bypass many of the defenses built this winter. How many red dots do you see between Mariupol and Berdyansk or Melitopol? 13/n
Next there's Luhansk, where defenses are thick, but also appear to be one deep. The area here is sparsely populated, meaning less towns to bog down in. Starobilsk is a major supply hub: taking it would create all sorts of logistical problems for RU in Northern Luhansk. 14/n Image
The logistics would make holding Severodonetsk and Lysychansk difficult, and would allow further offensives (Aug/Sep-ish) making a "left hook" to bypass the defenses erected along the current front lines in Luhansk and Donestk. 15/n
Here's my big take-aways from these maps:

* UA has some opportunities to create massive logistics problems for RU down the road.

* US has shown patience before with creating a logistical problem, and then waiting for it to come to fruition (Kherson) 16/n
* War is about creating conundrums for your adversary. Any of these three options creates a problem.

* Ukraine gets one shot at this: they need to pick whatever they think is most likely to work, and provide the most bang for the buck. 17/n
* For Russia, an attack towards Mariupol is the worst threat, followed by Starobilsk, followed by retaking of the Crimean Canal. The last is annoying but mitigable.

* The difficulty of each is the opposite: the canal probably the easiest, followed by Starobilsk, etc... 18/n
* UA doesn't have to win the war in one offensive: simply creating further untenable situations or impossible operational dilemmas for RU is sufficient

* UA MIGHT have the resources to try two at once. Kherson and Luhansk would make the most sense to split RU reserves. 19/n
* RU's use of blocking units 3-deep means that once you create a breach, and there's no one left to shoot people who are retreating, suggests that defenses could crumble quickly if UA secures a breach. 20/n
* I am dubious of RU's ability to quickly and effectively reassemble forces for a counter-attack. Training is bad, morale is bad, vehicles are in short supply / worn down, etc.

* Likely response would be to fall back to the next line of defenses far to the rear (a la Izyum) 21/n
* Ukraine's offensive likely has a built in culmination point based on ammunition and fuel / fuel trucks. We saw this happen in the Kharkiv / Luhansk offensive last year. UA needs to hit hard, move fast, and secure their primary objective(s) quickly. 22/n
* Western aid of tanks (or lack thereof) is going to complicate things a bit.

* Don't underestimate how good the Bradley is.

* This is probably an overestimate of how much UA has available, but it's a start. 23/n
* We don't know how much ammunition RU or UA has kept in reserve for this

* RU milbloggers are jumping at their shadows over every move UA makes

* The US has consistently underestimated UA capabilities, and over-estimated RU 24/n
* UA is not stupid. If the offensive fails, it could dramatically hurt their ability to retain vital western support. Whatever Course of Action (COA) they select, I believe that they will pick one they believe to have a near 100% chance of success. 25/n
* RU is spread thin enough, and UA has enough forces, that I believe UA will select a COA that is very likely to succeed, and will create the maximum ongoing operational dilemma possible for RU. However, without access to very specific intel, it is impossible to predict. 26/n

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More from @BrynnTannehill

Oct 6, 2024
I made the mistake of reading the comments. I suspect many of the blue-check comments dumping on the National Guard are either Russian disinformation, or getting their information from their outlets.

I have enough experience here to comment semi-intelligently. 1/n
First off, I've been a rotary wing aviator on and off since 1999. I'm currently a UH-60L pilot at MEDEVAC US ARNG unit. We just did a major disaster preparedness drill in April.

What's being said about the Guard denigrates some VERY good people. 2/n
First off, the Guard draws from the state's own population. This is North Carolinians trying to help North Carolinians.

They're also people who wand to be there: it's an all volunteer force. 3/n
Read 13 tweets
Aug 20, 2024
So, I opened up my account briefly so people can follow if they like. I watched much of the RNC convention, speeches Trump, Vance, Harris, and Walz, the first night of the DNC. I've watched the polling and worked on my own modeling. A few thoughts. 1/n
First off, the polling has shown a swing towards Harris since Biden dropped out. My sources say the decision was made based on inputs from a lot of people close to him (including Jill). Ultimately, he made it because he didn't want Trump to win more than he wanted to stay. 2/n
The swing comes from a lot of factors. All the way back in August 2023 I outlined why Biden would face an uphill fight: and I was right. Part of the problem was Biden saw no path to victory when he made the decision. 3/n newrepublic.com/article/174929…
Read 26 tweets
Apr 30, 2024
With dogs in the news, and handling of behavioral issues, I thought I'd talk about our experience with difficult dog breeds. Namely: the Siberian husky.

And not just any huskies: every one of ours are behavioral surrenders. 1/n Image
Loki somebody's Christmas present for their significant other. He, ummm... didn't work out. We got him from the Fairfax County pound in January 2019.

Major behavioral issue: food aggression.

Medical issues: worms, coccidia, giardia, hernia, torn ACL

He's 10k in vet bills. 2/n Image
Meet Thor. Surrendered at 1 YO b/c owner kept him in a crate all day.

Initial behavioral issues: small dog aggression, fear of loud / chaotic situations / fireworks / firearms. Children made him nervous. Abandonment

Upside: best running buddy ever. And yes, he's judging you 3/n Image
Read 17 tweets
Apr 29, 2024
There's a new anti-trans book out that's been endorsed by JKR. I took a glance at the excerpts, and at the summaries, and realized it's a rehash of a bunch of anti-trans talking points we see coming from Gays Against Groomers and LGB Alliance. 1/n Image
The basic premise is that transgender people are stealing all the baby gays by forcing them to be transgender. He believes that LGB people are intimidated into supporting trans people. (He blocked me, so....)

The basic premises are not backed up by the facts, however. 2/n
First, there's the notion that transgender activists are forcing all the young gays to transition. If a boy touches a Barbie, or a girl climbs a tree, BAM!, puberty blockers and transition.

The DSM/ICD won't give a GD diagnosis w/o a cross gender ID 3/n Image
Read 17 tweets
Apr 27, 2024
By now, almost everyone has heard that Kristi Noem is a puppy killer (and goat murderer who wasn't particularly good at the job). She killed a 14 month old dog because it wasn't working out as a hunting animal (prey drive too high).

I have thoughts. 1/n
rollingstone.com/politics/polit…
So, I'll qualify this by saying I've got a fair bit of understanding with dogs. I wrote about them for DAME. I've had all sort of breeds of dogs in my life: border collies, shit tzu, poodle, labs, Australian Kelpie, huskies, doberman, mutts. 2/n damemagazine.com/2022/06/16/dog…
I'd also add that I've had a lot of experience with huskies, which are considered notoriously difficult dogs with a high prey drive. On top of that, all three of ours are surrenders who were neglected. Two of them had big behavioral issues. 3/n brynntannehill.medium.com/17-things-you-…
Read 20 tweets
Apr 22, 2024
Here's a fun thread for the day. Have you ever wondered what sort of things you have to know in order to fly a military aircraft? Well buckle up, here's an abbreviated list of just some of the unclassified stuff. 1/n
First, there's the Operator's Manual. (NATOPS in Navy parlance, the -10 in Army). This has systems, normal and emergency procedures, limitations, and charts for calculating performance. 1392 pages. 2/n books.google.com/books?id=dsxFD…
You have federal flight regulations, contained in the FAR/AIM. This governs all the legal and regulatory aspects of flying (FAR), and then the standardization of everything. AIM is 899 pages. 3/n faa.gov/air_traffic/pu…
Read 13 tweets

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