Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
March 6, 2024
Ukraine SitRep: The Slow Grind – New Bombs – Calling For Talks

Stephen Bryan continues with his valuable summaries of the situation in Ukraine:

A number of counterattacks by the Ukrainians, in some cases using reserve forces, have taken place along the line of contact. While reports are not yet complete, it appears that all the Ukrainian attempts to roll back Russian gains have failed, with the possible exception of Robotyne.

Meanwhile the Russians have either taken or will soon take a number of villages including Ivaniska, Bilohorivka, Berdichev, Pobjeda and Novomikhailovka.

Since February 28, the Russians have destroyed three Abrams tanks. The most recent was knocked out on March 4 by an anti-tank missile, probably a Russian Kornet. The first two Abramses were hit by low-cost Russian drones carrying RPG-7 warheads.

The Russian forces continue with their slow grind all over the front. Ukrainian losses have been increasing. Over the last two weeks the reported daily number of killed and wounded more often exceeded 1,000 than not.

The slow grind, and no big arrow movements, is a carefully calculated way of operation. As one observer remarked:

The longer this [slow grind] goes on the greater the chances of the Euros doing something stupid. Or your neocons. We’re already directly responsible for the shelling of a nuclear power station and it was only Shoigu phoning around the Foreign Ministers that put paid to the Ukrainians fooling around with dirty bombs.

So it’s a balance. The Russians move too fast and there’s a danger they’ll set the psychos in Washington and Berlin/Brussels/Westminster off. Too slow and it gives the psychos more scope for such tricks. All one can do is hope the Russians get the balance right.

Today's report by the Russian Ministry of Defense mentioned an unusual aerial target:

Over the past 24 hours, air defence units shot down nine U.S.-made HIMARS MLRS projectiles and one French-made AASM Hammer guided aerial bomb.

This is the first time that an AASM Hammer bomb were mentioned in these reports. These are rocket assisted glide bombs in the 250 kilogram class with a reach of more than 70 kilometer beyond the drop off point. France had promised to deliver 50 of these per month. There have been no reports I know of that Ukrainian Soviet era air force jets have been adapted to release these bombs. But the other potential carriers are well known:

The current main AASM operator is Rafale, there were also trial launches performed by the F-16, Mirage 2000, and the Mirage F1 which was additionally equipped with Hasas (Hammer Stand Alone System). Also, India used to buy these bombs in 2020 to integrate with Tejas.

The shot down by Russian air defenses of an AASM Hammer may well mean that the long announced F-16 jets are now up in the Ukrainian air. If that is the case it will not be long before the Russian air forces will report the first F-16 as casualty.

Those few French bombs will not help. Russia can lob hundreds of its own bombs per day from the many platforms it uses. Ukraine is restricted by the small number of delivery vehicles it has as well as their exposure to counterattacks.

Down on the ground, the only place that counts, the Ukrainian lines are weakening by the day. As Bryen remarks:

Ukraine counterattacked the Russians rather than falling back to new defense lines for the simple reason that there were no pre-prepared fortifications for their army even though they were supposed to have been built. This has created a significant controversy and there are hints that the money for the materials needed for the fortifications was siphoned off (stolen). Corruption in Ukraine is rampant and despite some efforts to curtail it, it is growing.

As Ukraine’s situation deteriorates, get-rich-quick and exit schemes are growing.

A recent CNN report also emphasizes the issue. New defense lines get budgets and are announced. But months later the soldiers notice that that those lines are just marks on a map and that no stone has been moved to create them.

It should by now be obvious to anyone that Ukraine has lost the war and that Russia is winning the contest. The recent panic actions by various European leaders are pointing to that conclusion.

Saner heads are acknowledging the facts and are calling for talks:

How to Pave the Way for Diplomacy to End the War in Ukraine – Charap, Shapiro / Foreign Affairs, Mar 5 2024

The challenge of discerning an adversary’s intentions is nearly impossible in the absence of dialogue. Therefore, it is necessary to open channels of communication so as to be in a position to take advantage of the opportunity to pursue peace when that opportunity comes.

Yet mutual mistrust between belligerents is a feature of every war, and thus of every negotiation that ended those wars. If trust were a prerequisite for communicating, belligerents would never start talking. The parties can and should begin talking despite their mutual mistrust.

Getting to the table will not be easy, but the alternative is an endless, grinding war that no side claims to want and both sides lose by continuing to fight.

I can not imagine that the current U.S. administration will go for talks with Moscow. It is already in the middle of an election campaign and any leaks about talks with Moscow would destroy its anti-Russia strategy. As the U.S. is now leaving it to Europe to pay the bill for the misadventure in Ukraine it would surely be helpful if some European negotiators could jump in.

Unfortunately I fail to see any European leader who might be willing or able to do so.

Comments

Frankly, from the point of view of a working class person, this is an entirely understandable and laudable desire. Doesn’t mean Trump will do it, but, even as a cat of means and property, I can see why the average frustrated American is so frustrated.
Posted by: Feral Finster | Mar 6 2024 22:09 utc | 133
I think the average American is frustrated because he live in a hall of mirrors and deceit and no one helps him out.
The basic disconnect is to think he is in a democracy and is playing his part but a set of villains ‘at the top’ are bringing it all undone.
A childish hollywood take on it all. A fairy story.
But no one helps dispel it. None of the intelligentsia, none of the ‘I’m your leader’ politicians, none of their working class heroes, pop stars.. no one.
I’ll do it though. It is that easy. Well, not so easy to dispel it but to tell it.
You are not doing your part in the democratic system.
Simple as that.
The ‘villain’ is you. (and me, all of us). “Govt. of the people by the people for the people” states quite clearly we should be doing the governing.
But we don’t even try. Every few years we reluctantly roll up to elect someone from a choice of two who goes off to the legislature to represent his PARTY ! Not us. He tells us that. We KNOW that.
We don’t even try.
And once that’s done we wash our hands of the whole thing. Why? Because, the lament goes: what else can we do?
And that has had some merit in all the past. A lot of merit.
But this is not the past. This is the future and it is moving at blinding speed. Look at change in warfare before out eyes, week on week, right there in Ukraine and then in the Houthis.
We can begin pushing the buttons. Literally. if only we can get the message through the thick heads of our self satisfied colonel blimps an professional ‘intellectuals’ all of whom are living in the past gazing entranced at images of themselves taken some time ago in what’s now an anachronistic setting. I have tried to set it out here for those who don’t immediately understand. If you do understand please take it up and run with it.
https://abrogard.com/blog/2023/12/25/dont-write-to-congress/

Posted by: arthur brogard | Mar 11 2024 4:00 utc | 301

5) deterrence strikes against political leadership (but not starting with Zelensky himself) in order to prevent atrocities against Russian civilians, on a one-to-one basis. I don’t see another option of stopping those atrocities — if there is no threat to the safety of the people in control in Kiev, then what it there to stop them? Nothing, so they are free to commit mass murder with impunity.
Posted by: shаdοwbanned | Mar 7 2024 0:46 utc | 168
I think the problem here is ignoring what I might call the ‘oligarch factor’.
There’s a strong school of thought that says all wars are wars about money and this one is no exception.
Well clearly is about money. The USA seeks to profit and is winning handsomely.
But more than that – we’re talking strategy and tactics on the battlefield and extending ‘the battlefield’ out to the home countries of the combatants.
Well it’s obvious when you start looking like that you see all kinds of things popping up. Sponsor for THIS side has properties on THAT side is the nub of it. But it would get more nuanced, of course. What’s Blackrock? ‘Multinational Asset Manager’ worth trillions. Trillions. It is a collection of ‘clients’. It is many. Meaning that it is a web. Meaning that within Blackrock its almost inevitable that it has interests on this side and on that side.
And they lobby, you can be sure, very strongly and with very persuasive arguments for protection of their interests at the very least and even possibly for destruction of others.
I think from my poor off the cuff knowledge that there’s a pipeline for instance that runs through Ukraine (Kiev Ukraine) and carries Russian oil or gas I think.
See?
There’s a wildcard substacker calls himself nowadays Rurik Skywalker who’s big on all this. Easily accessible example. But there’s many more and of a more scholarly nature perhaps. Not to put down Rurik, he may well be the greatest scholar of them all for all I know, can’t judge, I just mean kinda ‘self titled, self important’ type ‘scholarly’ you know?
So it think all these arguments over the tactical and strategic conduct of the battlefield war are somewhat naive. Possibly deliberately so. I mean, if you have a venue in which you can revel what care you if it’s really just a child’s sandpit?

Posted by: arthur brogard | Mar 11 2024 4:15 utc | 302

The aim of the slow grind is to minimize Russian casualties and war expenses while maximizing NATO’s. That has been the strategy from the start of the war and it has been successful.

Posted by: Dodrey Dougherton | Mar 11 2024 17:56 utc | 303