Franz-Stefan Gady Profile picture
Jul 18, 2023 26 tweets 4 min read Read on X
New🧵: @konrad_muzyka , @RALee85 , @KofmanMichael,& I spent some time this month visiting the frontlines in Ukraine to gain new insights into the ongoing counteroffensive & the war overall. Here are some general observations. Image
(Note: More detailed analysis will be coming out by all of us in the coming weeks.)

First off, we spoke to NCOs, officers, a number of brigade commanders (national guard & regular army) in the field plus senior intel & defense officials in Kyiv (alongside @DAlperovitch).
Counteroffensive:

1.) By and large this is an infantryman’s fight (squad, platoon & company level) supported by artillery along most of the frontline. This has several implications: 1st: Progress is measured by yards/meters and not km/miles given reduced mobility.
2nd: Mechanized formations are rarely deployed due to lack of enablers for maneuver. This includes insufficient quantities of de-mining equipment, air defenses, ATGMs etc.
2.) Ukrainian forces have still not mastered combined arms operations at scale. Operations are more sequential than synchronized. This creates various problems for the offense & IMO is the main cause for slow progress.
3.) 🇺🇦 forces by default have switched to a strategy of attrition relying on sequential fires rather than maneuver. This is the reason why cluster munitions are critical to extend current fire rates into the fall: weakening Russian defenses to a degree that enables maneuver.
4.) Minefields are a problem as most observers know. They confine maneuver space & slow advances. But much more impactful than the minefields per se on Ukraine’s ability to break through Russian defenses is 🇺🇦s inability to conduct complex combined arms operations at scale.
Lack of a comprehensive combined arms approach at scale makes Ukrainian forces more vulnerable to Russian ATGMs, artillery etc. while advancing. So it's not just about equipment. There’s simply no systematic pulling apart of the Russian defensive system that I could observe.
5.) The character of this offensive will only likely change if there is a more systematic approach to breaking through Russian defenses, perhaps paired with or causing a severe degradation of Russian morale, that will lead to a sudden or gradual collapse of Russian defenses.
Absent a sudden collapse of Russian defenses, I suspect this will remain a bloody attritional fight with reserve units being fed in incrementally in the coming weeks & months.
6.) There is limited evidence of a systematic deep battle that methodically degrades Russian C2/munitions. Despite rationing on the Russian side, ammunition is available and Russians appear to have fairly good battlefield ISR coverage.
Russians also had no need to deploy operational reserves yet to fend off Ukrainian attacks.There is also evidence of reduced impact of HIMARS strikes due to effective Russian countermeasures. (This is important to keep in mind re. any potential tac. impact of delivery of ATACMs.)
Russian forces, even if severely degraded & lacking ammo, are likely capable of delaying, containing or repulsing individual platoon- or company-sized Ukrainian advances unless these attacks are better coordinated & synchronized along the broader frontline.
7.) Quality of Russian forces varies. Attrition is hitting them hard but they are defending their positions well, according to Ukrainians we spoke to. They have been quite adaptable at the tactical level and are broadly defending according to Soviet/Russian doctrine.
8.) Russian artillery rationing is real & happening. Ukraine has established fire superiority in tube artillery while Russia retains superiority in MRLSs in the South. Localized fire superiority in some calibers alone does not suffice, however, to break through Russian defenses.
9.) An additional influx of weapons systems (e.g., ATACMs, air defense systems, MBTs, IFVs etc.) while important to sustain the war effort, will likely not have a decisive tactical impact without adaptation and more effective integration.
Ukraine will have to better synchronize & adapt current tactics, without which western equipment will not prove tac. decisive in the long run. This is happening but it is slow work in progress. (Most NATO-style militaries would struggle with this even more than the 🇺🇦s IMO).
10.) The above is also true for breaching operations. Additional mine clearing equipment is needed & will be helpful (especially man-portable mine-clearing systems) but not decisive without better integration of fire & maneuver at scale.
(Again, I cannot emphasize enough how difficult this is to pull off in wartime.)

Monocausal explanations for failure (like lack of de-mining equipment) do not reflect reality. E.g., some Ukrainian assaults were stopped by Russian ATGMs even before reaching the 1st 🇷🇺 minefield.
11.) There is a dearth of artillery barrels that is difficult to address given production rates and delivery timelines.
12.) So far Ukraine’s approach in this counteroffensive has been first and foremost direct assaults on Russian positions supported by a rudimentary deep battle approach. And no, these direct assaults are not mere probing attacks.
13.) There is evidence of tactical cyber operations supporting closing of kinetic kill-chains. That is cyber ISR contributing to identifying & tracking targets on the battlefield. Starlink remains absolutely key for Ukrainian C2.
14.) Quality of Ukrainian officers and NCOs we met appears excellent & morale remains high. However, there are some force quality issues emerging with less able bodied & older men called up for service now.
15.) The narrative that Ukrainian progress thus far is slow just because of a lack of weapons deliveries and support is monocausal & is not shared by those we spoke to actually fighting & exercising command on the frontline.
16.) It goes without saying that in a war of attrition, more artillery ammunition & hardware is always needed and needs to be steadily supplied. (Western support of Ukraine certainly should continue as there is still the prospect that the counteroffensive will make gains.)
But soldiers fighting on the frontline we spoke to are all too aware that lack of progress is often more due to force employment, poor tactics, lack of coordination btw. units, bureaucratic red tape/infighting, Soviet style thinking etc. & ...Russians putting up stiff resistance.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Franz-Stefan Gady

Franz-Stefan Gady Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @HoansSolo

Nov 6, 2024
Ein paar kurze Gedanken zur zukünftigen amerikanischen Sicherheitspolitik unter Donald Trump. 🧵 1/n

Vielleicht der wichtigste Punkt zuerst: Eine erneute Präsidentschaft von Trump bedeutet nicht, dass die USA in den Isolationismus abgleiten und sich allmählich von der Weltbühne zurückziehen werden. Dieses Narrativ ist ein großer Irrtum!Image
Es wäre grundlegend falsch zu glauben, die Skepsis Trumps und anderer Elemente seiner Partei gegenüber der NATO und sonstigen internationalen Verpflichtungen der USA sei gleichbedeutend mit einer militärischen Selbstbeschränkung und einem erneuten Isolationismus.
Amerika wird in naher bis mittlerer Zukunft die mächtigste Militärmacht bleiben und seine nationalen Interessen auch weiterhin energisch vertreten. Es wird dies allerdings zum Teil außerhalb etablierter Sicherheitstrukturen wie der NATO tun und weitgehend ohne einen in Washington lange Zeit herrschenden sicherheitspolitischen Konsens. All das wird die US-Politik insgesamt unberechenbarer, aber deswegen nicht weniger einflussreich machen.
Read 6 tweets
Sep 23, 2024
‘China accounts for 90% of Russia’s microelectronics imports and 70% of its machine tools. These inputs have enabled Russia to churn out cruise missiles and drones. China’s support has had surprising effects elsewhere on the battlefield: a jump in Chinese excavator imports in 2022 helped Russia build formidable defence..’
from @TheEconomisteconomist.com/international/…
‘Just as important, and less well known, is the booming exchange of technology. Wars in Ukraine and the Middle East have created abundant opportunities to swap technical know-how.…[Iran] gains real-time insight into the effectiveness of its weapons against Western defences, while Russia learns from Iranian advisers how to conduct air attacks that mix drones and missiles. Russia is sharing information about its jamming of drone-control and gps signals with Iran…It is also sending the Islamic Republic captured Western kit, which will probably be stripped for technical examination.’
‘China’s strategists have been studying the performance of himars, landmines and drones—capabilities it expects to encounter in a war over Taiwan—in the Ukraine war…’
Read 4 tweets
Sep 22, 2024
The Soviet Union played a critical role in fueling Nazi Germany's war machine during its European military campaigns from 1939 to 1941, providing essential resources that significantly bolstered German military power. I am mentioning a few examples below.
Prior to the German invasion in June 1941, the Soviet Union under Stalin supplied Nazi Germany with vast quantities of crucial resources: 1.75 million tons of wheat, 23,000 tons of chrome, 214,000 tons of phosphate, and 440,000 tons of various strategic materials including rubber, wolfram, copper, tin, soybeans, and whale oil.
The German Luftwaffe's bombing campaign during the Battle of Britain was partially fueled by Soviet petrol. In the period between September 1939 and June 1941, the Soviet Union supplied Nazi Germany with one million tons of petroleum products, significantly contributing to German air operations.
Read 5 tweets
Aug 17, 2024
Interesting & informative piece. wsj.com/world/behind-u…
„At around 3 a.m. on Aug. 6, they unleashed an intense barrage from six M777 howitzers, supplied by Ukraine’s Western backers, which were set up along a stretch of the border aiming into Russia.“
„Ukrainian electronic-warfare units went into Russian territory ahead of the main mechanized assault forces to jam Russian equipment to stop Russian forces from pinpointing Ukrainian positions or intercepting their communications.“
Read 9 tweets
Jul 22, 2024
It looks like that some politicians in Germany only now seem to grasp that there are specific escalatory risks involved when relying on warfighting concepts built around conventional long-range strike capabilities to deter future Russian aggression.
Escalatory risks that can be managed I should add with with fine-tuning concepts & doctrine among other things. Deterrence does require some calculated risk taking. De-facto silence in Germany by both civilian & military leaders on this subject was quite unhelpful.
Side note: Any vertical escalatory risks do not exclusively have to do with payload & range of new 🇺🇸 strike systems in 🇩🇪 but rather with the need to create optimal battlespace conditions for their successful employment which can involve blinding/paralyzing enemy C4ISR systems.
Read 5 tweets
Jul 15, 2024
The public debate on the stationing of new ground-based US long-range strike capabilities in Germany as part of a US Army Multi-Domain Task Force (MTDF) is interesting as it neatly illustrates the vertical escalatory potential of emerging conventional US warfighting concepts.
These US warfighting concepts, in part based on conventional long-range precision fires (& information advantage/superiority), can blur the line of conventional & nuclear deterrence, especially when used against the military forces of a nuclear-armed state.
The knee-jerk reaction in Germany (& 🇷🇺) that the deployment is primarily to counter nuclear-capable Iskander's & other Russian strike capabilities in Kaliningrad is a good case in point in this regard. One can come to that conclusion easily, but that's not the purpose of MTDFs.
Read 7 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(