Dara Massicot Profile picture
Dec 8, 2024 12 tweets 3 min read Read on X
There are many rumors that Russia is evacuating its bases at Tartus and Khmeimim in Syria, but most assets remain there. If evacuation happens, it will be obvious. A brief thread on what is happening now and what future moves would look like. 🧵
As of 7 December, most of Russia’s ships are in or near port in Tartus. Follow @KaptainLOMA for updates on their presence.
These ships cannot return to the Black Sea while Turkey has closed the straits under the Montreux Convention so they would have to attempt a very long journey to the Baltic Fleet, or try to find a temporary accommodation nearby at a limited number of ports (Libya, Sudan, Algeria)
Air lift. An air evacuation would take hundreds of sorties of IL-76 and An-124, not the handful identified yesterday at Khmeimim. When Russian forces deployed to Syria in 2015, they flew almost 300 sorties in two weeks, and that was before base expansion.
The 4 transport aircraft yesterday are probably taking cargo/people out, but we do not know what Russia brought IN on those aircraft. Options for inbound cargo that I think are possible are limited mercs or weapons/supplies/ammunition to defend their bases.
IL-76s (and less often AN-124) land at Khmeimim as a major transport hub, sporadic arrivals were part of normal patterns. A change signifying a major evacuation will be clear. Also to watch: will they still be able to use Syrian airspace for their routes into Africa or not.
What happens to the fighter aircraft will also be very telling. If Russia thinks they are going to be attacked, they can fly out the way they got them in. They can also pack up helicopters and air defense in AN-124s too.
If Russian airlift continues to fly the short route back to Russia over Turkey, it means Turkey has agreed to it of course. There is an air corridor that is much longer that runs over Iraq and Iran if NATO airspace is denied.
I don't know how the politics of Russia's continued base access will play out at this point in time. But, I know that the airlift requirements would be massive and the signature would be unmistakable if initiated as a negotiated exit or urgent evacuation.
I assume Russia wants to hold bases if they can through negotiations. Resources they can offer: money, barter, oil/gas, limited mercs, etc. What matters is if the Syrian coalition would entertain anything from them, and I leave that assessment that to others.
Russia's power projection in the Med for ten years was makeshift, which was known. They didn't complete redundant basing deals nearby. I assume they are trying to make deals in Syria or other locations right now., let's see if bargains are struck under duress or not. /x
Update: regarding deals, anonymous sources told TASS “Syrian opposition guaranteed the security of Russian military bases and diplomatic institutions in Syria.” let’s see.

• • •

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

Keep Current with Dara Massicot

Dara Massicot 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 @MassDara

Jan 9
Russia claims last night’s strikes were “retaliation” for Ukraine’s drone strikes. Let’s talk about the Oreshnik strike on Lviv for what it is: a flashy lash out to scare the west and distract from what has been an embarrassing week of setbacks for Russian interests. /1
For the second time, it seems like russia used inert (or low explosive at best) warheads during this strike. Russia has used other weapons to target critical infrastructure near Lviv previously. Oreshnik is not operationally required. It’s a demonstration and IMO, a stunt./2
Russia claims it was in response to Ukraine attempting to target ‘one of the Putin residences’. US intelligence did not find Russia’s claim be true. By the Russian military’s admission, they shot down drones in bordering regions./3
nytimes.com/2025/12/31/us/…
Read 10 tweets
Sep 10, 2025
Regarding drones entering Poland last night: the event is serious and requires a muscular response, otherwise Russian carelessness and provocations will continue. A brief thread on flight paths+ the behavior of Russia/Belarus since this event and what it reveals /1 Image
Flight path: after the pink line (mine), Gerbera and other drones from two northern routes veer in multiple directions into Poland. Launch routes to the south continue to their targets. /2 Image
This is what typical Russian launch patterns look like lately: drones skim the border of Belarus and drop in sometimes, and often they loop around cities. Compared to last night, the drones got choppy up top and some try to complete a loop but went wide into Poland /3 Image
Image
Image
Read 20 tweets
Jun 23, 2025
For the second time, Russia finds itself with few military options to support a critical partner in the Middle East. This thread explains Russia’s military options and limitations for supporting Iran before, during, and after this conflict. /1 Image
Note: this thread doesn't delve into the political balancing Russia engages in across the Middle East, which informs their choices. Here, I address Russian military and defense base capacity and how it shapes options. /2
I didn't expect the Russian military to intervene last minute to head off IDF operations – there was no viable “dash to Tehran” type of scenario here for Russia. And, the cooperation treaty between Russia and Iran has no mutual defense clause. /3
Read 29 tweets
May 22, 2025
It’s official- the new commander of the Russian ground forces is Mordvichev. Previously op group center commander (Donetsk front & longest in post as op group commander). It signals a few things about the next phase for the Russian army 🧵 /1 Image
Mordvichev’s appointment to Ground Forces commander is a signal that the military intends to integrate experience from the war in Ukraine. This position is responsible for force posture/employment, training, readiness and other roles critical for reconstituting the army. /2
As the most experienced op group commander, he could have been placed into a higher command role as a deputy commander of the special military operation in Rostov, along with other senior generals like Kim or Rudskoi . The choice to put him in the GF role is telling …/3
Read 6 tweets
Mar 19, 2025
Russia did not call off a large drone attack last night within ten minutes of the presidents’ call, and 100+ drones were launched last night from 1900 (when call ended) until after midnight Moscow time. We can step through this with basic timelines and calculations. /1
We know Shaheds speeds, launch sites thanks to various monitors, we know general routes, and what time they impacted cities last night. (Older image below for reference). /2 Image
Ukraine said the attacks began at 1900, close to when the call ended, until 0200+. So some Shaheds were probably already airborne by 1800 Moscow time, but Russia continued to launch fresh waves up to 5-6 hours after the call ended. /3
Read 9 tweets
Mar 4, 2025
On the operational impact of US aid suspension to Ukraine: frontline stability for the AFU rests on effective drone and artillery use. The timeline below is a gradual degradation and not off/on switch. The suspension will have other problems for soldier morale and operations. /1
Morale: Ukrainian forces are undermanned already, and this problem is unresolved. Desertions, recruiting, soldiers going AWOL for a few weeks to recover, are known problems. Suspension of aid and simultaneous rapprochement with Russia worsens these problems /2
Will to fight: Ukrainian forces continued to fight through wavering US support in 2024 when aid was paused in Congress for over six months. They are tough. Too soon to assess impact of this situation but there are negative potentials here and I will watch closely. /3
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!

:(