A multi-hundred foot chunk of the Nova Kakhovka dam is gone, the Kakhovka Reservoir is quickly emptying out into the Dnipro.
This is probably the most catastrophic amount of damage that could have been done to the dam.
The Kakhovka Reservoir holds roughly 18.2 km3 of water, a significant amount of which is now heading down the Dnipro towards the Black Sea.
The turbine hall suffered major damage, and a number of the control gates are just gone
To give people an idea of the size of the Kakhovka Reservoir, the next dam upstream is in Zaporizhzhia.
Pulling from @Cornubot's article from last year-
"A 4 – 5 m wave will hit the Antonovsky bridge east of Kherson city after 19 hours... Most of Kherson City will not flood, but the harbour and the docklands will be flooded."
Most of the land on the south bank of the river will be flooded. Between that and the upper reservoir turning into a mud flat, it basically ends any threat of a Ukrainian amphibious assault across the Dnipro.
The last @sentinel_hub pass was a little less than 24 hours ago. The water level appears to be fairly high in the reservoir, with several gates open on the dam itself.
Of note, that is the entrance to the Crimean Canal, which is most likely now flowing away from Crimea into the Dnipro.
Ukrainian Operational Command South appears to have officially blamed Russian forces.
Also of note, Russian state media has been incredibly quiet on the dam breach, only really denying that it happened in the first place.
Ivanivske, Donetsk Oblast, a Ukrainian BTR-4E from the 5th Separate Assault Brigade targets a Russian position in the trenches west of Klishchiivka with 30mm autocannon fire, setting an ammunition dump alight.
Relying off Rybar here, so standard Russian milblogger caveats apply.
Russian forces were reportedly driven out of Novodonets'ke by Ukrainian forces using AMX-10RCs (misidentified as Leo 2s by the Russians), indicating that the Ukrainian 37th Marine Brigade made a push there.
Map of the area posted by Rybar, they claim roughly 10 tanks (I’m assuming AMX-10RCs) and 40-100 Ukrainian soldiers took the town.
Rough area map, Novodonets'ke is on the south side of the Shaitanka River. (47.753, 36.960)
Sort of just sitting around waiting for the Russian milbloggers to start panicking and calling for air support over Telegram.
At that point I will concede that the offensive has started.
Right now I’m still seeing shaping operations, light mech/motorized units conducting reconnaissance in force, rear area activities and other actions aimed at preparing a larger movement for success.
The Ukrainians have a qualitative ISR advantage, I expect them to use it.
Some additional @TheOsintBunker thoughts that I wanted to extend from this week’s episode:
The online (English speaking) pro-Russian media sphere is both predictable, funny, and a bit sad. It seems that every few months, a new figure rises to the top, then has a meltdown.
It usually happens after a few months, when a combination of poor hot takes and an absolute disconnect from reality reaches it’s inevitable conclusion, and the weight of embarrassing failures in analysis cause the individual to lose all credibility. Then someone new comes in.
It’s really hard to be right and make accurate predictions when you rely on incorrect information, and that information tends to cause the generation of impressively wrong predictions. (i.e. Kyiv taken in 3 days, entire UAF destroyed day 1, every HIMARS destroyed 3 times over)