It's Thursday meaning it's #ThrowbackLoss time! About this day year ago #Russia attempted Siverskyi Donets river crossing near Bilohorivka in Luhansk oblast. You've surely heard this name before. This photo dated exactly 11 May 2022 is why.
The name of the place has since become an epitome of #RussianArmy incompetence as well as #Ukraine's ability to exploit it at the right time and in what appears to be incredibly efficient manner.
There's an evidence of up to a 100 armoured vehicles #Russia lost in the vicinity of Bilohorivka over the course of nearly two weeks, which is more than a brigade worth of material: ukr.warspotting.net/search/?bellig…
Not that it's something new today with Kharkiv oblast and Vuhledar losses on the record. But back in the day this was a serious blow in the face of #Russian war effort.
In other news: this captured MT-LB recorded on 11 May 2022, reportedly previously owned by 🇷🇺 200th MRB.
By that day this was 69th confirmed loss by the 200th brigade, which somehow still existed 🤯
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While hesitation with enabling 🇺🇦 attack capabilities leading to further protracting this war is undoubtedly the case, it's worth remembering the risks and - should we say - the other side of the coin.
Longer range = lower accuracy. Let's imagine allies provided 🇺🇦 with long range ground strike means, and by damn chance 🇺🇦 hit residential building/hospital/school while aiming at 🇷🇺 military base around the corner, which is around pretty much every other corner as we all know /i
Now let's think for a moment what immediate as well as longer-term effect that might have on the military support, and what kind of dark spin it might take in the media if this was ATACMS provided by 🇺🇸.
Here's the latest updates to documented material #Russia losses in #Ukraine as of today, and a brief overview of the past month in the micro-🧵
Although April might seem not that different from the past, it actually is, with total 203 recorded losses compared to 306 in March, and 347 in February.
'50% drop' would sound overly optimistic for #Russian MoD, though. That's still nearly a tank, a truck, over 2 IFVs each and every day, and occasional IMVs, SPGs, MRLs, helicopters and whatever else #RuAF can sustain every now and then.
Here's March updates to photo documented #Russia losses in #UkraineWar. These are not supposed to be monthly but since we've been busy with development and data processing lately *types with Rober De Niro voice* this is what it is 🤷♂️
But since they are, here's some higher level view of what's #RussianArmy has been up to last month. First, with little over 300 losses added, it successfully attacked... 3000 figure for IFVs and 1700 for tanks lost, pretty much as expected.
Speaking of the equipment types here's top 🇷🇺 losses in March:
🥇 106 IFVs
🥈 77 tanks
🥉 36 trucks
+ 13 SPGs & 13 MRLs
+ 10 AA systems etc, check out yourself: ukr.warspotting.net/search/?bellig…
2️⃣0️⃣2️⃣2️⃣ Good, bad, or ugly, one thing's for sure: this year turned nothing like #Russia was hoping it would be. With ~26 average confirmed daily losses, it seems to have become one of the greatest material dumps in recent history. Or has it? Let's find out 🧵
But first: while average figures are quite reliable, daily counts not so much, since loss dates are almost never known accurately. Good example is Mar 30, seemingly the worst day with 166 recorded losses: ukr.warspotting.net/search/?bellig…
Most of them didn't happen on that day, though, only discovered as #RuAF was 'regrouping' away from north #Ukraine. This applies to many more entries on our list with few exceptions. One of them: infamous river crossing attempt near Bilohorivka in mid May.
With fog of war settling down, and dozens of new losses being discovered daily as an aftermath of #Ukraine️'s counter-offensive in #KharkivOblast, we thought maybe it's time to stop for a moment and look back at what's been done 🧵
A lot, apparently. #Russia seems to have sustained unprecedented material losses. Total 533 lost units since Sep 6th to be precise: ukr.warspotting.net/search/?bellig… and counting. That's #Bilohorivka on steroids kind of things.
Out of those 533, total 137 have been found destroyed: ukr.warspotting.net/search/?bellig… It's important to acknowledge a lot of these have been lost much earlier when #Russia was taking over the area, and only discovered these days. Some of them known losses.