Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
September 6, 2024
Ukraine SitRep: Ukrainian Army Chief Reveals Lack of Strategy Behind Kursk Incursion

With the help of a CNN interview the Ukrainian Commander in Chief General Syrski is hoping to gain more support from western sources.

Exclusive: Ukraine army chief reveals the strategy behind Kursk incursionCNN, Sept 5 2024

In his first television interview since becoming military chief in February, the general told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour that he believed the Kursk operation had been a success.

“It reduced the threat of an enemy offensive. We prevented them from acting. We moved the fighting to the enemy’s territory so that [the enemy] could feel what we feel every day,” Syrskyi said, in a rare interview that offered a candid assessment of the war.

Speaking to Amanpour at an undisclosed location near the frontline, the general, who took over as army chief in February, said Moscow moved tens of thousands of troops to Kursk, including some of its best airborne assault troops.

And while admitting that Ukraine was under immense pressure in the area around Pokrovsk, the strategic city that has for weeks been the epicenter of war in eastern Ukraine, Syrskyi said his troops have now managed to stall the Russian advances there.

“Over the last six days the enemy hasn’t advanced a single meter in the Pokrovsk direction. In other words, our strategy is working.” he said.

Maps as provided by the pro-Ukrainian LiveUAmap:


Pokrovsk region – Aug 30, 2024

bigger
Pokrovsk region – Sept 6, 2024

bigger

I can identify at least three areas where the maps show differences in favor of the Russian side. Top to bottom:

  • North and north-west of Niu York:

    Pivnichek east of Toretsk has changed hands. The Russia line has moved in several place there to envelope Toretsk city and, a bit further south, Nelipivka.

  • North of Selydove:

    Novohrodivka which is no longer partially but now completely in Russian hands.

  • East of Ukrainski:

    There is a new Russian protrusion developing southward. A zoomed-in view shows that the hamlet of Halytsynivka with the crossing of the COS112 and COS1139 roads has come under Russian control. This cuts a supply route for the Ukrainian troops south-east of the protrusion.

These three+ minor ones are small movements that cover only some the 100 square kilometers Russian forces took last week. The previous three weeks had seen bigger ones. But they demonstrate that the Russian's haven't stopped in Pokrovsk but have – for one reason or another – halted major movements.

The reports of the Russian Ministry of Defense still note severe Ukrainian losses in the Prokrovsk region. There are no reports of any Russian troop movement from the Prokrovsk direction towards Kursk. A rotation of frontline units and local reserve forces is the most likely explanation for the current relative quietness on the frontline.

The Kursk incursion was a costly attempt to gain leverage. It failed to reach its hoped for targets further north and to cause the diversion of Russian troops from other front lines.

Syrski of course has to keep up the morale of his troops. He also has to (re-)gain more support from Ukraine's 'partners'. That explains his otherwise funny talk like this:

“We cannot fight in the same way as they do, so we must use, first of all, the most effective approach, use our forces and means with maximum use of terrain features, engineering structures and also, to use technical superiority,” he said, highlighting Ukraine’s advanced drone program and other home-grown high-tech weaponry.

Can someone point me to one Ukrainian or 'western' equipment item which is technically superior to the Russian produced equivalent? I fail to find one.

Comments

What happened to the jewish population of the land of Canaan?
Well, some became Cristians and the majority became Muslims, as is logical, because their religious culture was neither the priestly Sadducee Judaism of the Temple-city oligarchy nor the rabbinical Judaism of centuries later.
Although you in your oceanic ignorance may not know it, “Yahweh” is an Arab divinity, as we know from different sources, and the great Temple was built by an Arab king, Herod the Great, not a rabbi from New York or Poland, Lithuania, Belarus or Ukraine.

Posted by: Simon | Sep 7 2024 9:14 utc | 301

Dima provided some insight of Kursk. Apparently RUAF troops are still fighting in Malaya Loknya. AFU tries to move past west and east to encircle them from NW/NE. And AFU already stripped its Koronevo front to reinforce this attack. But RUAF bombs and FPVs are taking a huge toll on the AFU which is trying to maneuver in this area.
Maybe we will see a counter-attack from the north, but so far the situ seems to be playing for RUAF favor as it contributes total reduction of AFU.

Posted by: unimperator | Sep 7 2024 9:30 utc | 302

Dima provided some insight of Kursk. Apparently RUAF troops are still fighting in Malaya Loknya. AFU tries to move past west and east to encircle them from NW/NE. And AFU already stripped its Koronevo front to reinforce this attack. But RUAF bombs and FPVs are taking a huge toll on the AFU which is trying to maneuver in this area.
Maybe we will see a counter-attack from the north, but so far the situ seems to be playing for RUAF favor as it contributes total reduction of AFU.

Posted by: unimperator | Sep 7 2024 9:30 utc | 303

Armenia has officially withdrawn its signature from the Council of Europe (CoE) declaration expressing support for the International Criminal Court (ICC) arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin. This information is confirmed by the final version of the document published on the official website of the Council of Europe.

Posted by: Justpassinby | Sep 7 2024 9:37 utc | 304

Vladimir ‘please call me now Volodymir I assure you I spoke Ukrainian in private’ Ze
What better than a comedian for the bloody ZioWest Imperial Comedy, last version (1962/67-) of the Roman Empire
TutMoses III and TiglathPileser III were fuxxx amateurs

Posted by: Simon | Sep 7 2024 9:46 utc | 305

Posted by: unimperator | Sep 7 2024 9:30 utc | 303
They run the risk of creating the conditions for a Russian counter-attack towards Sumy. Weakened perimeter, depleted assets, fatigued personnel and still maintaining a partial offensive posture.

Posted by: Milites | Sep 7 2024 9:50 utc | 306

Posted by: Abe | Sep 7 2024 8:58 utc | 300
The purpose can’t be to “crush” warheads, the mesh isn’t substantial enough to do that but it is substantial enough to trigger a stand-off detonation, which is its widely stated purpose. Drones / warheads that don’t detonate against rigid mesh surely aren’t going to detonate against whatever’s underneath it. Drones tangled in netting likewise probably wouldn’t have detonated on impact either.
From a quick search on a definitive answer it seems that larger anti-armour warheads can’t be seriously diminished by a small change in stand-off distance (Javelin 8.4kg) but the majority of attacks by both sides seem to be FPVs carrying smaller RPG warheads (2kg … 4.5kg). This assumes an impact perpendicular to the mesh and underlying armour, the stand-off effect will be amplified by an increasing acute angle of impact. I’ll keep looking for a better technical analysis but if rigid mesh reduces the effectiveness of light RPG warheads at acute angles by, say, 50% that would more than justify the cost of improvised mesh cages.
Another purpose of mesh is prevent drones or dropped grenades from falling into open hatches, which often results in the compete loss of an armoured vehicles and personnel, but this is not the case with mesh placed over the launch tubes of an MLRS vehicle, which is the specific case in point.
On Lancer optical proximity sensors, it was my understanding that the use of this non-contact fuse was to reliably trigger the first stage of a tandem charge where the first charge is intended to clear any mesh or netting that might prevent the main charge from getting close enough to the underlying target. Lancets routinely attack artillery pieces with a substantial covering of camouflage netting that would prevent the warhead from making contact with the target. Optical proximity will also detonate reliably regardless of how soft the netting is.
Back to rigid cage mesh on MLRS launch tubes, the fact remains that this seems to be of minimal value in preventing detonation of loaded ammunition given the low inherent protection of the tubes and ammunition. It’s better than nothing but ought to be combined with camouflage that disguises the true vehicle type.
Another option might be to load the “outer” tubes with dummy ballast rounds consisting of material that was likely to prevent the detonation of ammunition loaded into the “inter” tubes. This would reduce the salvo side but might be a worthwhile option in high risk environments.

Posted by: anon2020 | Sep 7 2024 9:58 utc | 307

https://t.me/dva_majors/51799

#Overview #Summary as of September 7, 2024
▪️For a month and one day, the Russian Army has been repelling the armed invasion of the regular Ukrainian Armed Forces into the Kursk region . Initial assessments of the scale of the invasion by respected agencies quickly turned out to be not entirely objective; personnel decisions are being made, but not at the level that many expected given the unpreparedness of the second echelons of defense and the ongoing arrests of high-ranking “old” employees of the Ministry of Defense. So far, the showdown is taking place in the administrative and economic sector.
The enemy in the Kursk region is tied down in battle , but does not abandon attempts to push through our defense, pulling reserves into the region. In the Russian Army, the problem of coordinating disparate units and subdivisions, supplying the front directly with drones, communications, and modern technical surveillance equipment has not been fully overcome in this direction. Nevertheless, the Ukrainian Armed Forces are suffering serious losses under the blows of our missiles, aviation, and artillery, which permanently reduces the likelihood of further movement to Kursk and Rylsk. At the same time, the river crossings in the Glushkovsky district are under attack, which, against the backdrop of the destruction of our bridges, complicates logistics. The enemy is consolidating its occupied borders and the liberation of the territories occupied by it is not expected in the short term. Heavy fighting is underway.
▪️Despite the situation in the Kursk region, Kiev was unable to fully implement the plan to pull all units from the Pokrovsk and Yuzhnodonets directions. At the same time, it itself hit the bottom of the wave-like graph of the saturation of the Ukrainian Armed Forces with people and equipment, which exposed its defensive lines near the same Pokrovsk. There are 5 km left to the city, but the Russian Army is pulling up the southern flank and twisting the front from the north towards Kurakhovo, forming a “bag”. In addition, in the Yuzhnodonets direction, the positions of the Ukrainian Armed Forces in Ugledar are gradually being surrounded from the flanks. The throw of the Russian Armed Forces from Novomayorskoye to Prechistovka was unexpected. Also significant was the exit of our units south of Chasy Yar to the line of the Seversky Donets – Donbass water canal through Kleshcheyevka, for which fighting has been going on since last year.
▪️Our military predicts new strikes by the Ukrainian Armed Forces on various sections of the front, despite the enemy’s operational crisis in Donbas. Despite the approach developed by the military-political leadership in Moscow on the impossibility of any “exchanges” of territories of the same Kursk region, Kiev does not abandon plans to conduct sabotage and army operations in a number of areas, which is expected against the backdrop of the elections in the United States in the fall. The concentration of Ukrainian Armed Forces reserves causes missile strikes, comparable in significance to the destruction of hundreds of Ukrainian soldiers at the military academy in Poltava, but the enemy has never taken into account the loss of personnel.
▪️The question of the West stopping military and technical assistance to Kyiv is not on the table. Europe, under pressure from the United States, is preparing to transfer dozens of Leopard tanks, air defense systems and other equipment. The trophies of our troops in the Kursk region show that the invasion group of the Ukrainian Armed Forces was largely provided by NATO, which once again indicates the direct involvement of the Alliance in the war with Russia. The shelling of Kursk, Belgorod, and the DPR with Western weapons and the promotion of information about permission to strike our territories with air-launched missiles at ever greater depths also demonstrate that the North Atlantic Alliance does not feel any discomfort about the escalation of the conflict, while continuing to conduct military exercises near our borders, preparing its countries for mobilization and rebuilding military factories.
▪️There are no grounds for an imminent end to the war. There are still many difficult days left before achieving the declared and periodically changing goals of the SVO, which range from the complete denazification and demilitarization of the entire Ukraine to the liberation of the territories of new regions from the Armed Forces of Ukraine. Meanwhile, the West is trying to wear down our military and economic potential on Ukraine, to destabilize the domestic political situation, which could be an even more serious threat to Russia. And the liberation of the Kursk region is not expected in the coming week.
The war will be long.
The summary was compiled by: Two majors

Posted by: anon2020 | Sep 7 2024 10:06 utc | 308

The Club of Arrogant and Classist European Eu-nuchs
The Russian ruling class did not ask for 999 billion Euros and half of the women of West Europe, in which case one could say that these people are savages and there is no room for negotiation; But what they were asking for was perfectly reasonable: that Ukraine be neutral like Finland was
On the other hand, the Zionist regime refuses to be a Civilized state because that would mean recognizing the population as Citizens, and it also refuses the old solution of the 2 states and whenever there has been a vote in the UN, they have voted with their cousins ​​in Washington that No
And they demand that all the vassals of this colossal and deadly empire recognize the sacrissanct right that a dominant people, a “HerrenVolk”, has to make great massacres among the subjected population, to make clear who is the dominant people (like the old Sadducee lords of the city-Temple) and who is the subjected population
and the European Eu-nuchs invite this Viking horde to their gay Eurovision party

Posted by: Simon | Sep 7 2024 10:15 utc | 309

Rob Campbell (and blog) is certainly on topic and detailed. Good work Rob.
https://robcampbell.substack.com/p/ukraine-weekly-update-250
Posted by: David G Horsman | Sep 6 2024 18:27 utc | 150
Much appreciated David – thanks.
Posted by: Dr. Rob Campbell | Sep 7 2024 7:53 utc | 279
For what it is worth, I would also like to endorse Dr. Campbell’s input to MoA. I have only recently begun reading the weekly updates but reccommend them to anyone with more than passing interest in how this war is developing and likely ramifications of important battles etc.
Coupled with posts by knowledgeable MoA regulars like Milites, Unimperator, Newbie and others, together with Simlicius, Big Serge etc. Rob Campbell helps sieve the real wheat from the Western MSM chaff.
Well done Dr. Campell, and Thx.

Posted by: Barrel Brown | Sep 7 2024 10:29 utc | 310

anon2020 thx for Kursk reports
most interesting to me are:
– the Kursk region . Initial assessments of the scale of the invasion by respected agencies quickly turned out to be not entirely objective; personnel decisions are being made, but not at the level that many expected given the unpreparedness of the second echelons of defense and the ongoing arrests of high-ranking “old” employees of the Ministry of Defense. So far, the showdown is taking place in the administrative and economic sector.

[ Me: I saw other reports about arrests over failed defense contracts in Kursk going back to May 2024. Like wtf is going on in Russia that they have this kind of shit going down in the middle of a war – and is it no surprise the NATO probably knew this – you satellites ffs – and specifically targeted Kursk as a direct result? What shit show! Some “failure” this invasion is not! ]

-The enemy in the Kursk region is tied down in battle , but does not abandon attempts to push through our defense, pulling reserves into the region.
-In the Russian Army, the problem of coordinating disparate units and subdivisions, supplying the front directly with drones, communications, and modern technical surveillance equipment has not been fully overcome in this direction.
– the river crossings in the Glushkovsky district are under attack, which, against the backdrop of the destruction of our bridges, complicates logistics.
– The enemy is consolidating its occupied borders and the liberation of the territories occupied by it is not expected in the short term. Heavy fighting is underway.
……………….
Yeah, some “failure” that invasion of Kursk. Cannot imagine what a “success” might have looked like.
Maybe arriving in the middle of Red Square?

Posted by: Fred | Sep 7 2024 10:35 utc | 311

🔥 Front
The situation at the front has not changed much in the 5 days since the last review.
Despite the fact that the fighting there has finally moved into a tactical channel, the Kursk direction remains the most tense. But it will remain so by definition for the entire time of the bridgehead’s existence, given its political significance.
This, of course, has created a new reality for the Sumy region, whose border towns and villages are gradually turning into the world of Fallaut.
In the Kupyansk sector, the Russian Armed Forces continue to put pressure on the Ukrainian Armed Forces, but without significant advances.
There are advances of the Russian Armed Forces south of Chasov Yar. Now in this area on the eastern bank of the canal, the Ukrainian Armed Forces only have bridgeheads left.
Thanks to the transfer of more prepared units, the Ukrainian Armed Forces managed to dislodge the Russian Armed Forces from the southern part of Selidovo. There is a video where the Russian Armed Forces are trying to block the road under the bridge with a working tank, and the Ukrainian Armed Forces subsequently steal this tank. This is the eastern outskirts of the city. This means that the Russian Armed Forces have only secured a foothold on the northeastern part from the mine side.
The Russian Armed Forces have begun fighting for Ukrainsk. The Ukrainian Armed Forces have an advantageous position there, given the waste heap west of the village.
The Russian Armed Forces continue their attempts to bypass Ugledar and force the Ukrainian Armed Forces to retreat from the city. There is progress, but it is insignificant, just like last time. Nevertheless, there are 4 km left to the only remaining highway supplying the city.

https://t.me/ZeRada1/21389

Posted by: Down South | Sep 7 2024 10:38 utc | 312

Someone brought the remains of the Geran (Shahed) drone to the Verkhovna Rada at night to create a news item.
This was done for two reasons:
1. To distract the country from the problems at the front. The Ukrainian Armed Forces could end up in a cauldron in Donbass (on the Nevelsky salient).
2. An ecological water catastrophe is brewing in Ukraine. Water from the Seim River, where the fish die-off occurred, flows into the Desna, and then into the Dnieper, which threatens the capital. As they say, it all started when the Ukrainian Armed Forces captured the territory of the Kursk region and something happened there (or in the Sumy region), which the people are not told about.
It is obvious that the problems are large-scale, since they started trying to distract people in this way.

https://t.me/legitimniy/18662

Posted by: Down South | Sep 7 2024 10:41 utc | 313

The “Press Kit” for Swedens SAAB GlobalEye AWACS plane
https://www.saab.com/newsroom/press-kits/globaleye
Nothing on the event in Poltava recently… maybe they are short of staff.

Posted by: Norwegian | Sep 7 2024 10:41 utc | 314

Mi5 CIA warning Russia is campaigning a reckless campaign of sabotage…aggressively.
The intelligence ex head of the army agencies must have evidence says ex General Dearlove UK. We must protect current world order.Supporting Ukraine more important than ever .
.
Wow ..losers in events of their own making…..words…hysteria..desperation ….delusional….making excuses for escalation…to manipulate and confirm their ideology is firmly embedded in the media and public.etc etc . Last gasps or signs of intentional further threats and hyper hysteria to justify much more on its way?

Posted by: Jo | Sep 7 2024 10:46 utc | 315

Norwegian @ 315:
Maybe more than just the entire corporate project management team for Saab AB’s early warning alarm system with the two specialised aircraft got taken out by the missiles in Poltava? Maybe the PR team from Saab AB with those managers got taken out as well?

Posted by: Refinnejenna | Sep 7 2024 10:52 utc | 316

You should look for another insult, for example arrogant hebrew, because calling me ignorant seems funny to me coming from the mouths of complete ignoramuses)
Posted by: Simon | Sep 7 2024 9:02 utc | 301
I’m not insulting you nor calling you ignorant in general. I’m saying that your description of a Christian is totally ignoring what Jesus laid out for his followers. You might have omitted those details because you don’t know or you might have omitted it because you know but you have a different agenda. Either way, as a Christian, I can tell you that you missed the key elements of what makes someone a Christian. I’m not a Russian speaker, and if I tried to tell you the difference between a Russian and a Ukrainian my explanation would be as factual as your description of a Christian. That’s all I’m saying.

Posted by: Paranaense | Sep 7 2024 11:13 utc | 317

retroflecks | Sep 7 2024 6:34 utc | 268
“That thick file of Russian history Putin gave to CIA rep Carlson…. ”
Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 7 2024 7:22 utc | 273
Baloney.
Tucker is not CISA.
Peter, the guy is on our side for FFS!!!

Posted by: canuck | Sep 7 2024 11:23 utc | 318

In short
Stalin was a murderer from Georgia (and here the Bolsheviks in this bar get angry) who was followed by the head of the Bolsheviks in Ukraine, Krushev, and who was followed by Brevnev who was Ukrainian, and with this we almost reached the end of the cold war
It was the Russians who dismantled the USSR, and accepted capitalism as they were told, and it was a colossal tragedy, and they did it in exchange for an old dream: to be accepted into “the common European home”
But London and Washington and their puppets had other plans, and they said (1997-):
– we have destroyed the USSR now we are going for the big prize: Russia
The Ukrainian Gambit (1997-, 2008-) sacrificing half a million Ukrainian pawns will go down in history as one of the pinnacles of cynicism and contempt for human life.

Posted by: Simon | Sep 7 2024 11:30 utc | 319

“The folks here can decide.”
Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 2:56 utc | 228
Thought provoking post-thanks.
I am getting seriously annoyed at PeterAU as any idea that is not aligned with his own he calls that poster ‘a troll’ as he has yourself.
Peter kindly please grow up and use your argument to buttress your point rather than act as a low level Gestapo like censor.
Discussion needs opposing POV’s to be fruitful and interesting.

Posted by: canuck | Sep 7 2024 11:33 utc | 320

Posted by: canuck | Sep 6 2024 17:16 utc | 128
“One of the main tenets of early Christianity was Jubilee years such that debts were cancelled or written down as happened in Assyria, Sumer, Babylon, Jesus preached it, one of the reasons the Pharisees despised him.”
“Like Simon, you too seem to be ignorant of Biblical Christianity as described by Jesus. The Jubilee you describe is a Jewish celebration found in the Old Testament. I can assure you that Jesus didn’t teach it, though he made one reference to it by comparison in Luke 4. If that’s all you know of Christianity then you are missing the heart of the matter. Check out the poem The Blind Men and the Elephant I posted in 253.”
Posted by: Paranaense | Sep 7 2024 5:08 utc | 256
You are incorrect, Jesus did preach abut the Jubilee year:
“The economic laws of Moses and the Prophets, which Jesus announced his intention to revive and fulfill, are brushed aside as anachronistic artifacts, not the moral center of the Old and New Testaments, the Jewish and Christian Bibles. The Jubilee Year (Leviticus 25) is the “good news” that Jesus — in his first reported sermon (Luke 4) — announced that he had come to proclaim. xv.” (1)
1.https://www.starmythworld.com/mathisencorollary/2020/12/26/tjmcxk4k2hn93braeq9d59856tkgfh

Posted by: canuck | Sep 7 2024 11:37 utc | 321

@Refinnejenna | Sep 7 2024 10:52 utc | 317
Swedish Armed Forces deny deaths of Armed Forces employees in Poltava.
Försvarsmakten dementerar uppgifter om omkomna försvarsmaktsanställda i Poltava (Swedish language)
Translated title “The Swedish Armed Forces denies information about the deaths of Armed Forces employees in Poltava”. (my emphasis)
They seem to be carefully denying something that hasn’t been suggested as far as I can tell. What has been suggested is that employees of Saab AB’s early warning alarm system have died.
The Swedish Armed Forces further explains how common disinformation has become.

Posted by: Norwegian | Sep 7 2024 11:41 utc | 322

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VWYZpF2ngnc
WORTH THE 40 MINUTES TO WATCH
Interview with Jeffrey Sachs on how the West used the dissolution of the Soviet Union to plunder. There was never any real concern about helping a fledgling democracy. And yes, all the usual suspects (shapeshifters as DunGroanin might say) lined up for their share of the looting. All of this a complete unknown to the unwashed, memory-holed even as it was happening.

Posted by: KMRIA | Sep 7 2024 11:42 utc | 323

And William Perry was replaced (1997-) by William Cohen
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Cohen
son of a Russian
Who curiously stumbled upon the rabbis
In the past Judaism was a religion that spread like wildfire among women
and was made up of people from “all nations of the world”, says Flavius ​​Josephus, calling ‘the world’ the sum of the Persian world, the Greek world and the Roman world
and in those times the son of a yehudi man was a yehudi
but the rabbis changed the definition, and William Cohen’s mother was from Ireland
But the hardware is irrelevant, in fact the hardware of the founding Zionists (1917-) is on one hand Italian from the great city of Rome and, on the other hand, Turkish, Iranian, Persian, Greek, Syrian and Phoenician
As the rabbis knew, it is the Mental Software that is important
and the Mental Software of our ruling class is a fusion of Roman imperial ideology and the bloody Aramaic fantasies of the Book of Joshua and the Book of Deuteronomy

Posted by: Simon | Sep 7 2024 11:54 utc | 324

Posted by: anon2020 | Sep 7 2024 9:58 utc | 308
Slat armor or reebar, chains etc. serves similar purpose. By crush warhead i ment only deform it shape, as even slight deviation from factory shape makes denotation and resulting stream wastefull and significantly reduced.
Eg wuth slat armiur in iraq, specifically built to target rpg7, there was 50% chance incoming warhead would hit the gap, fuze would not trigger, and/or shaped charge would deform, possibly detonating but not as a dangetous stream but undirectet.
Same principle goes for chains wit balls on tanks and shottraps eg. Merkava family.
Yes, chickenwire on wehicles is more to protect from falling bombs from drones, distance might help with small shrapnels and thin armor, kike meshes on mlrs, their tubes are thin but few meters is enogh to protect from small pieces of hand granade. It is not perfect but helps.
Prox sensor on lancet is exactly for purpose it dont touch net. It has huge wins, chances it will strike net and tumble before its nose contact fuse touches anything is great. So laser sensor detonates warhead meters away from target, i would dare to say even 5m.
Rpg7 old style warhed penetrates more than 50% of its max penetration power from up to 2m distance. I would bet lancets huge warhead can kull any tank, let alone ifv or apc from 5m from any direction except front where there is strongest armor

Posted by: Abe | Sep 7 2024 11:59 utc | 325

I appologize for typos, small phone sausage fingers.

Posted by: Abe | Sep 7 2024 12:02 utc | 326

Posted by: Norwegian | Sep 7 2024 10:41 utc | 315
That’s the GlobalEye system based, as the name suggests, on the Bombardier Global 6000 jet, not the hand-me-down Saab AEWCS on the same company’s 340 prop-job. Ukraine rarely get their ‘toys’ from the top-shelf, they’re either bottom box left-overs or those pushed to the back of the middle-shelf.

Posted by: Milites | Sep 7 2024 12:06 utc | 327

On the idiot and the troll earlier disagreeing on the date of THE partition (singular) of Poland which I couldn’t be bother correcting at the time. Anyone who had read just a little history on the area would know there were considered to be three.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Partitions_of_Poland

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 7 2024 12:06 utc | 328

Wow ..losers in events of their own making…..words…hysteria..desperation ….delusional….making excuses for escalation…to manipulate and confirm their ideology is firmly embedded in the media and public.etc etc . Last gasps or signs of intentional further threats and hyper hysteria to justify much more on its way?
Posted by: Jo | Sep 7 2024 10:46 utc | 316

its worse then that. they are literally trying to get the rest (majority) of the world on their side to justify their unprovoked aggression against others.
they are creating a world war.

Posted by: Justpassinby | Sep 7 2024 12:07 utc | 329

“But the hardware is irrelevant, in fact the hardware of the founding Zionists (1917-)”
Posted by: Simon | Sep 7 2024 11:54 utc | 325
Wrongo.
“As an organized nationalist movement, Zionism is generally considered to have been founded by Theodor Herzl in 1897.”
Simon

Posted by: canuck | Sep 7 2024 12:13 utc | 330

Yeah, some “failure” that invasion of Kursk. Cannot imagine what a “success” might have looked like.
Maybe arriving in the middle of Red Square?
Posted by: Fred | Sep 7 2024 10:35 utc | 312

Yep, Ukraine’s absolute best success to date… conquering mostly undefended, unoccupied and entirely non-strategic forest land. Now they’re also successfully decorating it with unnumerable artistic pieces of twisted NATO metal and irrigating it with vast quantities of their own blood.
With successes like these, who needs losses?

Posted by: TJandTheBear | Sep 7 2024 12:16 utc | 331

“In the past Judaism was a religion that spread like wildfire among women
and was made up of people from “all nations of the world”, says Flavius ​​Josephus, calling ‘the world’ the sum of the Persian world, the Greek world and the Roman world””
Posted by: Simon | Sep 7 2024 11:54 utc | 325
Wrong again.
Flavius Josephus lived in the first century BC what he is talking about is ‘women taking u0 early Christian precepts’ from the teachings of Jesus which is not Judaism:
“So, what do we make of the fact that early Christianity was mocked for being pro-women? Well, it certainly turns the tables on today’s overused criticism that early Christianity was a patriarchal, misogynistic religion hostile to women. Though that claim is repeated ad nauseam, it is hard to sustain in the context of the ancient world. Indeed, it seems more true of the non-Christian, Greco-Roman elites.
In short, if early Christianity was a bad place for women, then it seems all the women who joined the movement never got the memo.” (1)
1.https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/early-christianity-welcoming-women/

Posted by: canuck | Sep 7 2024 12:17 utc | 332

https://substack.com/@simplicius76/p-148549030
Interesting details from simplicius. Swedish/Norwegian voices heard on recording after missile attack. Massive population losses from Ukraine still go on. Britain may be setting up Zaluzhny to lead Ukraine after a coup. Russia can pay for war with reserves for 2 -2.5 years.
I think the Kursk thing quickly becomes horrific as the body count goes past 10K. 15K? 20 maybe? And then beyond…..

Posted by: Eighthman | Sep 7 2024 12:29 utc | 333

@Milites | Sep 7 2024 12:06 utc | 328
Ok, thank you for that clarification!

Posted by: Norwegian | Sep 7 2024 12:34 utc | 334

@Eighthman | Sep 7 2024 12:29 utc | 334
I am unable to recognize anyone speaking Norwegian in that clip.

Posted by: Norwegian | Sep 7 2024 12:36 utc | 335

It is totally facile to make any assumptions about the USSR’s leadership based on their nationality.
V Lenin was a Russian who selected Joseph Stalin to be Party Secretary because he was the most capable person for the job, a reality borne out by Stalin’s length of time in office and more importantly, his leadership of the USSR to victory over nazidom in ww2. If it had been left up to england & amerika there is a good chance ww2 would be being fought still, as amerika would’ve kept that war going in preference to the plethora of wars it has had to instigate since, all to keep amerikan plutocrats to keep plutocrating along & england would’ve played with as they still do now, in the hope of getting a good sip from the bowl as needs must.
Khruschev made it onto the Politburo because he had managed to keep Stalingrad together & functioning when every other city from Paris to Leningrad, with a quick stop off on the way at Warsaw, had been overrun by nazi scumbags.
As for Bhreznev he was a player from Ukraine for sure who had taken advantage of Khruschev’s politicking to develp & maintain a firm kvost (best english translation is a clique of support) ‘back home’ to secure his (Khruschev’s) gig. That was one of several bad errors Nikita made outta careerism, the worst being his decision to make Crimea a part of Ukiedom as a way of ensuring the loyalty of Ukie pols & therefore his kvost, by turning management of black sea holiday homes to the Georgian state administration rather than kremlin administration so that it was his loyal kvost who chose who had a luxury holiday where.
These decisions were all made regardless of the nationality of the players, they were the result of sheer opportunism latterly and talent initially.
I do not like Stalin being called a murderer, his primary focus was always the well being of ordinary citizens of the USSR, when he died he was about as poor (very) as he was when he was born.
There was one famine during the time of the USSR, one which killed less humans than about 90% of the pre 1917 famines which had occured approx every 10-12 years in the centuries before the revolution.
The cause was the fact that bothe Lenin & Stalin had allowed privateers operating as wholesalers in the grain market because they had been persuaded that was the best way to avoid famine.
After the one famine the USSR had to endure, the policy of permitting private enterprise into the grain market was stopped and the USSR never had another major famine.
IMO the nationality of the USSR’s leaders was an irrelevancy, like Sukarno in Indonesia, the Politburo believed the best way to keep a nation of diverse citizens operating in unison is by ensuring all nationalities are represented in the administration.

Posted by: Debsisdead | Sep 7 2024 12:49 utc | 336

@Milites | Sep 7 2024 12:06 utc | 328
@Norwegian | Sep 7 2024 12:34 utc | 335
To set the record straight, here is the page on Saab 2000 Erieye AEW&C
https://www.saab.com/products/saab-2000-erieye-aewc
Sorry for the confusion.

Posted by: Norwegian | Sep 7 2024 12:55 utc | 337

Eighthman | Sep 7 2024 12:29 utc | 334
“Britain may be setting up Zaluzhny to lead Ukraine after a coup.”
In its Imperial pomp the UK was usually home to a few “exiled leaders” waiting to be restored with Brit help. But that was then …
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13822829/none-britains-submarines-sea-dire-state-royal-navy.html
The ‘utterly dire’ state of the Royal Navy fleet can be revealed today, with not one of its six attack submarines at sea. Only nine out of 25 warships and attack – as opposed to nuclear – submarines are active or deployed. The rest of the fleet has racked up a staggering 30 years of missed days at sea as vessels are either broken down, being modified or undergoing trials. The shocking figures, confirmed by Navy sources, emerged as fears intensify over the future of the Armed Forces. Despite the threat posed by Russia, instability in the Middle East and the rise of China, the new Government is making defence cuts.

Posted by: YetAnotherAnon | Sep 7 2024 12:55 utc | 338

@70 canuck
Thanks for the info! I was unaware of the Doukhobor.
My interest in food had made me aware of the Volga Germans and their diaspora to the US midwest among other places.

Posted by: ockham | Sep 7 2024 12:57 utc | 339

Debsisdead | Sep 7 2024 12:49 utc | 337
Re far nationalization and the Soviet famine of 31/32. A Ukrainian was in charge of implementing that throughout the Soviet Union and he stuck to the initially set quotas regardless the fact there was a below average crop yield the in I think 31. A Ukraine communist was in charge of implementing it in the Ukraine SSR. Apparently, as soon as Stalin become aware many people were starving in the crop growing regions, he ordered grain to be sent back. According to current Russian government, about seven million people in the crop growing regions died in that famine.
The fictional Holodomor was created by the Americans in I think 1964 by an American with a Ukrainian wife.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 7 2024 13:03 utc | 340

Btw, Saab is looking for a new Head of Project Office for ERIEYE & Sensors
Closing date: 25 September 2024
https://www.saab.com/career/job-opportunities/head-of-project-office-for-erieye–sensors

Posted by: Norwegian | Sep 7 2024 13:07 utc | 341

Posted by: canuck | Sep 6 2024 15:33 utc | 104
“Hey Tony Myopic you are Off Topic-please desist.”
So b is back and you start with the thread derailing fuckface bullshit?
Stick to your cut and paste historical manual releases. Please.

Posted by: Tannenhouser | Sep 7 2024 13:10 utc | 342

Dima has a interesting take on the NATO meeting, seems US has handed the hot potato to FUK, they will wait until FUK supplied LRW are used. This will be a test for Russia’s Rainbow Lines, if they see no response from the RF they will join in the fun of tickling Russia’s sensitive rear….
Cheers M

Posted by: sean the leprechaun | Sep 7 2024 13:15 utc | 343

Norwegian | Sep 7 2024 13:07 utc | 342
Interesting. I reckon the thing to watch for the coming month will be obituaries, especially in Sweden, of names associated with SAAB.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 7 2024 13:18 utc | 344

Peter AU1 | Sep 7 2024 13:03 utc | 341
“The fictional Holodomor was created by the Americans in I think 1964 by an American with a Ukrainian wife.”
Gareth Jones and Malcolm Muggeridge both reported on the famine in 1933 when it was ongoing.
Still, ten years later three million died in British-controlled Bengal – not one of Churchill’s finest moments, assuming he even knew about it.

Posted by: YetAnotherAnon | Sep 7 2024 13:23 utc | 345

More on topic than the Sadducees and the Romans, it looks as if the loss of Russian energy plus the rise of China is looking more and more painful for Germany.
Germany is pretty much the only world-class European manufacturing economy, and a combination of the US, the German Greens, and its NATO membership is destroying it.
https://www.theguardian.com/business/article/2024/sep/07/an-earthquake-at-volkswagen-and-a-crisis-for-germany
““We are short of around 500,000 car sales a year,” VW’s financial chief, Arno Antlitz, reportedly told the hall. That, he said, was the equivalent of production from two factories. “It’s not to do with our product or poor performance. The market is simply not there any more.” He gave the company “one or two years” to turn the situation around. Experts estimate that VW has about 20,000 employees too many. Oliver Blume, chief executive of Volkswagen Group, might have been a father addressing his family at the dinner table as he told the employees in no uncertain terms that the company had been living beyond its means – drawing an estimated annual €1.5bn from its cashflow for around 15 years – and that things would have to change. He compared the situation to a “family kitty” which “by month’s end is empty”. Sometimes there is a kindly relative who will step in to pay for extras, such as a new television, he said, before bluntly pointing out that China had in effect been playing that role for years, with sales in the country bankrolling the company. Blume – a local boy who fully understands the extent to which VW underpins the economy, and by extension the identity, of the state of Lower Saxony – at one point appeared to let his mask slip, displaying his emotions and talking of his wish to “protect the VW family”.”

Posted by: YetAnotherAnon | Sep 7 2024 13:30 utc | 346

Interesting. I reckon the thing to watch for the coming month will be obituaries, especially in Sweden, of names associated with SAAB.
Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 7 2024 13:18 utc | 345

Still amused by the “sudden death” of the decorated American soldier in Poland the day after the strike.

Posted by: TJandTheBear | Sep 7 2024 13:30 utc | 347

sean the leprechaun | Sep 7 2024 13:15 utc | 344
The only red lines that I know of is that Russia would take more of Ukraine according to depth of strikes into Russia. UK drones have on occasion reached 1500k into Russia so that doesn’t leave much of Ukraine once this is over. We also saw the effeminate banker boy saying he was sending a French force to Ukraine which other rational French said no to.
Once the new nuclear doctrine comes out then we might see something different in the way of red lines, but to date, the vague red lines you clowns allude to are the same as Miley’s ‘Kiev in three days’.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 7 2024 13:33 utc | 348

YetAnotherAnon | Sep 7 2024 13:30 utc | 347
A couple of thinks come to mind as we watch the great changes triggered by the wests war on Russia.
Brzezinski’s grand chessboard. Putin is rearranging the pieces.
Rove’s “We’re an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you’re studying that reality — judiciously, as you will — we’ll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that’s how things will sort out. We’re history’s actors . . . and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do.”
Russia nd China are now the ones creating reality and Rove’s empire is dying. I guess that’s the reality the hubris filled empire created for itself which even though it is dying, refuses to believe. The utter hubris, the blindness, when Blinken goes to China and makes demands. Its a bit hard to believe at times

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 7 2024 13:49 utc | 349

9The author of this site assured me two years ago the Ukrainian Army was finished, yet they still fight on.Was that a hallucination?
by: evilsooty | 207)
Just because they’re still “fighting on” doesn’t mean they’re weren’t finished before it even started.
by: PalmaSailor | 255

It is for sane posters such as evilsooty and napoleon as well as the sneering reality-challenged rest that makes this site so interesting.

Posted by: putinsmoafluffers | Sep 7 2024 13:52 utc | 350

Posted by: Abe | Sep 7 2024 11:59 utc | 326
The other armour augmentation you mention have different modes of action to the light mesh panels on MLRS tubes that were the subject of my comments. What you claim of these other defensive augmentations may be true but isn’t a description of what motivates light mesh.
Light mesh isn’t substantial enough to (with useful probability) deform a warhead per-detonation or disrupt a penetrator jet post-detonation. How is light mesh going to gain “a few meters” of clearance to improve the survival chances of a loaded MLRS tube to small shrapnel? I agree it’s better than nothing, in principle, but it seems to be almost at the level of a placebo.
On Lancet detonation range, I haven’t watched many of these videos recently but don’t recall any that gave the impression of stand off detonation in the meters, all have appeared to be “on impact” or as near as makes difference, on the orders of 5m I would suppose to have noticed. Similarly, I saw one claim that lancet was using a tandem charge to clear netting / mesh (a plausible enough suggestion) but the available videos make it difficult to determine the objective truth of this. In both cases, I defer to whatever actual evidence there might be.
On stand-off distance reducing armour penetration of shaped charges you appear to be correct that the typical mesh stand-off can’t be significant in this respect. I can’t find anything specific on loss of effectiveness as a function of distance for RPG class warheads but the following is interesting.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1877705813009156

Shaped Charge Jet Characterization and Initiation Test Configuration for IM Threat Testing
Abstract
Rocket propelled grenade (RPG) shaped charge attack threats are of particular concern for Insensitive Munitions (IM) development. In response to these threats, the U.S. Project Engineering Office for Ammunition (PEO Ammo) have worked with the U.S. Army Armament Research, Development and Engineering Center (ARDEC) Energetics and Warheads Division (EWD) to develop a highly reproducible and well characterized standardized 81 mm shaped charge jet initiation test configuration. This 81 mm shaped charge and jet attack configuration is used to determine whether an acceptable explosion or lower level response is observed. …

Posted by: anon2020 | Sep 7 2024 13:54 utc | 351

Yeah, some “failure” that invasion of Kursk. Cannot imagine what a “success” might have looked like.
Maybe arriving in the middle of Red Square?
Posted by: Fred | Sep 7 2024 10:35 utc | 312
—————-
Nice cherry-picking, of an excessively pessamist toned commentator.
A success would’ve looked like actually gaining, useful objectives such as the Kursk NPP. By rushing through RF defences.
It doesn’t look like getting drawn into an attritional fire-bag, against a numerically stronger for. Which has far more firepower over a prolonged period.
Particularly when manpower is a major issue, and the availability of properly trained troops is limited.

Posted by: Urban Fox | Sep 7 2024 14:01 utc | 352

#316 Jo…I wander if Vladimir Vladimirovich get really p*ss off and flood bankster rats in the City of London…..or cut off cable between London and District of Cr*m*nals….hmmm

Posted by: sejmon | Sep 7 2024 14:08 utc | 353

Not Ewe | Sep 7 2024 4:25 utc | 249
*** “Nicholas was of primarily German and Danish descent and was related to several monarchs in Europe. His mother’s siblings included Kings Frederick VIII of Denmark and George I of Greece, as well as the United Kingdom’s Queen Alexandra (consort of King Edward VII). Nicholas, his wife Alexandra, and Wilhelm II, German Emperor were all first cousins of King George V of the United Kingdom. Nicholas was also a first cousin of both King Haakon VII and Queen Maud of Norway, as well as King Christian X of Denmark and King Constantine I of Greece”
Seems like the long running resentment may be more personal than sociopolitical.***
Long ago in England there was “the Anarchy” when Stephen and Matilda intermittently fought each other over who would inherit the throne of William the Conqueror.
Later, the “Wars of the Roses” when cousins had a series of civil wars over which branch of the “royal” family got to rule England.
(all fucking Normans)
Zoom forwards to the Victorian and subsequent period …. and in England, cousins of the Russian Tsar may well have fancied knocking his lot off so theirs could step in as replacements.
Lots of potential patronage and wealth-extraction, so no shortage of supporters … just not saying it out loud.
Western military efforts to supposedly reinstate the Russian royals were really more akin to trolley-dash shoplifting trips.
But — having done the local-royal removal bit — the Communists and their army did not oblige by running away — instead, they won and set up a different system.
Hence lots of frustrated would-be plunderers in the West, with an ongoing sense of criminal entitlement plus an almighty grudge.

Posted by: Cynic | Sep 7 2024 14:09 utc | 354

Peter AU1@350…..and he still goes and makes demands….there’s something to that, regardless of China’s reality…the ROW market is still deeply entrenched in the USA. As for Russian reality…..they’re in a static war of attrition, with no conclusion or end in sight, chopping up 404, maybe one day they’ll find the snakes head, under a bridge no doubt.
Cheers M

Posted by: sean the leprechaun | Sep 7 2024 14:18 utc | 355

YetAnotherAnon | Sep 7 2024 8:46 utc | 296 (re the Starmers new cat being “Siberian”)….
Typical of that megalomanic Yank-sucking bastard — takes any excuse to gloat over the fact that he and his cronies can do what everyone else is effectively nagged they should not.
Probably why they didn’t get a Maine Coon instead.

Posted by: Cynic | Sep 7 2024 14:23 utc | 356

@356
The main export from U.S. is treasury bonds
And F-35 that need upgrades to do anything.

Posted by: paddy | Sep 7 2024 14:32 utc | 357

353 Sejmon..hopefully analysts such as Sleboda Maloof MacGregor Karen W etc etc can go through and destruct the Mi5 and CIA joint Statement and their interview on sky TV today….both these renegade organizations trying to set us up certainly for a lot longer prolonged support to Ukraine that is probably going to bankrupt us(so obvious we would could eventually end up in the same condition as Ukraine)…could even maybe prolonged terrorist subversive covert style actions against Russia eg re Kerch Bridge Sebastopol or internal sabotage to Russia of resources…..still attempting to project their image of Putin as a weak leader bullying his peoples desperate for liberating western style “democracy” for regime change containment…and or set up us with higher more “finalizing options” they believe are existentially necessary to save our civilisations no matter the cost to us from the evil slavs. In the interview they projected that Russia would in time not like to be the junior partner in the relationship with China …Russia is not at the moment endangering itself from more serious west action by receiving Chinese missiles- but that could provoke pre-emptive longer range strikes deep within Russia is what I think I understood they were warning ….but no evidence of Russian sabotage presented but they referred back to Skripal that we are in danger from such chemical attacks on a mass scale by directed privatized but more risky uncontrollable Russian operatives secreted on an increasing scale in western world…..they directly referred to Syrian chemical weapons and Russian support for Syrian etc ..

Posted by: Jo | Sep 7 2024 14:38 utc | 358

sean the leprechaun | Sep 7 2024 14:18 utc | 356
In Ukraine, Russia has empire’s balls in a vice. The only way empire can break free of that is to tear off its balls (Nato). Without Nato, the Anglo empire is no longer an empire.
That’s the reason the UK and Europeans hate and fear Trump and the American realists. They are willing to tear off empires balls because in Ukraine, they cannot go forward and cannot go back.
American realists do understand mutually assured destruction and the events, the red lines that can trigger it.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 7 2024 14:44 utc | 359

Lt Rhodri Leyshon
The Royal Navy has named the serviceman killed in a night-flying training exercise in the English Channel on 4 September as Lt Rhodri Leyshon.
Lt Leyshon’s family released a statement on Friday saying he was “immeasurably loved by his parents, siblings, partner, friends and family and he was devoted to them”.
A Merlin Mk4 helicopter ditched with three crew members on board, including Lt Leyshon, 31, on Wednesday off the coast of Dorset.
An investigation into the ditching – an emergency landing on water – is ongoing.

Posted by: Angelo | Sep 7 2024 14:54 utc | 360

@ Peter AU1 | Sep 7 2024 14:44 utc | 360 who wrote the best short and to the point I have seen in a while
In Ukraine, Russia has empire’s balls in a vice. The only way empire can break free of that is to tear off its balls (Nato). Without Nato, the Anglo empire is no longer an empire.
I keep saying this is a civilization war but Peter’s text is much more colorful in saying the same thing…thanks Peter!

Posted by: psychohistorian | Sep 7 2024 14:56 utc | 361

i like the quote from peter you’ve highlighted psychohistorian….

Posted by: james | Sep 7 2024 15:00 utc | 362

He seems to be getting better at this:
https://t.me/DDGeopolitics/122267

❗️Dmitry Medvedev:
“Donald Trump took offense at the current administration and threatens to lift sanctions against Russia. Will he lift them if elected?
Of course not. Despite his apparent “non-systemic” nature, Trump is ultimately a systemic character. Yes, he is an extravagant, narcissistic type, but he is also a pragmatist. As a businessman, Trump understands that sanctions harm the dollar’s dominance in the world. However, not so much as to stage a revolution in the US and go against the anti-Russian line of the notorious deep state, which is much stronger than any Trump.
And what about Harris? There are even less surprises to be expected from her. She is inexperienced and, as her enemies claim, simply stupid. They will prepare for her beautiful meaningless speeches and boring correct answers to questions, which she will read from a teleprompter, laughing infectiously.
Sanctions against the USSR existed throughout the 20th century. They returned in the 21st century on an unprecedented scale. Therefore, for all of us, sanctions will be forever. Or rather – until the collapse of the United States during the inevitable new civil war. After all, it is not for nothing that Hollywood makes films about it.”

Posted by: anon2020 | Sep 7 2024 15:03 utc | 363

The difference between the two maps is negligible.
Meanwhile :
https://t.me/combatarea/2396

– BREAKING – Ukrainian UAVs attacked ammunition and weapons warehouses near Soldatskoye in the Voronezh region, #Russia, overnight, on a distance of 130km from #Ukraine.
Massive fires and huge detonations were reported
Evacuations were ordered, and a state of emergency was declared.

Posted by: bored | Sep 7 2024 15:09 utc | 364

The big spy chiefs explain the Kursk offensive to their minions in the cheap seats

Ukraine’s Kursk offensive has triggered doubts among Russian elite, spy chiefs say
CIA director Bill Burns and MI6 chief Richard Moore made first joint public appearance onstage at the FTWeekend festival in London

Ukraine’s Kursk offensive is denting Russia’s war narrative and triggering questions among the Russian elite, leading spy chiefs have said.
Speaking at the Financial Times’ weekend festival in London on Saturday alongside MI6 chief Richard Moore, CIA director Bill Burns said Kursk was “a significant tactical achievement” that boosted Ukrainian morale and exposed Russia’s weaknesses. It has “raised questions . . . across the Russian elite about where is this all headed”, he said.
Moore said it was “a typically audacious and bold move by the Ukrainians . . . to try and change the game”.
“>https://www.ft.com/content/56d16869-f9e1-4c82-8022-5f8d2044c5cd

This is the story you are supposed to believe.

Posted by: too scents | Sep 7 2024 15:13 utc | 365

Whenever I read of hear about Amanpour I think of Christoforou’s mocking and start sniggering.

Posted by: Truthsayer | Sep 7 2024 15:16 utc | 366

Is there any calculation on hiw expensivw this war is for the west?

Posted by: vargas | Sep 7 2024 15:19 utc | 367

Angelo | Sep 7 2024 14:54 utc | 361
I saw the news of that one too soon as is came out. Commando helicopter unit of the marines I believe was the term, that take part in most wars for empire.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 7 2024 15:20 utc | 368

@ bored | Sep 7 2024 15:09 utc | 365
Looks like you’ve found the missiles Iran sent to Russia. Good work gumshoe!

Posted by: too scents | Sep 7 2024 15:21 utc | 369

Is there any calculation on hiw expensivw this war is for the west?
Posted by: vargas | Sep 7 2024 15:19 utc | 368

Aren’t you in the West? Reflect on your personal expenses.

Posted by: too scents | Sep 7 2024 15:23 utc | 370

Posted by: too scents | Sep 7 2024 15:13 utc | 366
‘CIA director Bill Burns said Kursk was “a significant tactical achievement” that boosted Ukrainian morale’
Clown. How can an Operation be judged a success by tactical metrics, and subjective ones to boot. The even bigger press clowns probably let that one slide.

Posted by: Milites | Sep 7 2024 15:24 utc | 371

They need to keep up the facade of their competence and invincibility. It’s so juvenile and ultimatly self defeating. Kursk is a fucking disaster but these clowns know they cannot admit that. So kicking the can down the road continues, because they simply cannot face the fact they’ve lost. Short of nuclear war the West cannot change the outcome. The blowback from this failure will be immense..world changing. Good job idiots. Take a fucking bow.

Posted by: Doctor Eleven | Sep 7 2024 15:42 utc | 372

Peter AU1@360….funniest thing you’ve said to date, I do appreciate the humor……someone somewhere “hates and fears Trump” too funny.
Balls in a vise …..bit early in the game to call, we ain’t seen the FUK LRWs tickling Russia’s rear….so no rush, still lots of killing to get done….and as the FUK is on board to let their toys out of the tickle trunk….let’s wait a few days……NATO is forcing Russia to contain the game in 404, so far Russia is on board.
Cheers M
…..now had you said, all over the world, Russia has the empires balls in a vise…..that’s exciting….but where one’s balls are placed is subjective and whose balls are being squeezed also, there’s talks, hopes and dreams, no shortage of those, on ‘the Empires’ demise….the game is rigged from both sides, the racket thingy….and as Mr Carlin would say….we ain’t in on it.

Posted by: sean the leprechaun | Sep 7 2024 15:44 utc | 373

@Truthsayer | Sep 7 2024 15:16 utc | 367
Yes, that always cracks me up as well!

Posted by: Norwegian | Sep 7 2024 15:44 utc | 374

@Norwegian | Fri, 06 Sep 2024 15:35:00 GMT | 105
Really insane to even be running any kind of Windows…

Posted by: pepa65 | Sep 7 2024 15:52 utc | 375

” This is a civilization war and thoughts of the complexities of what is going on from that perspective seems beyond your capability.

Posted by: psychohistorian | Sep 7 2024 5:17 utc | 257 ”
Educate us then. Lay out your hypothesis in detail instead of throwing around nebulous statements. You can start with Chechnya and Russia’s actions in that war.

Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 15:58 utc | 376

Looks like the troll at 377 is a great admirer of the freedom fighters of CIA’s assorted attempts at Islamic States.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 7 2024 16:03 utc | 377

@ Peter AU1 | Sep 7 2024 14:44 utc | 360 who wrote the best short and to the point I have seen in a while
In Ukraine, Russia has empire’s balls in a vice. The only way empire can break free of that is to tear off its balls (Nato). Without Nato, the Anglo empire is no longer an empire.
I keep saying this is a civilization war but Peter’s text is much more colorful in saying the same thing…thanks Peter!
Posted by: psychohistorian | Sep 7 2024 14:56 utc | 362
It was a great post. Thank Peter. It reminded me of that naughty old song by Frank Zappa…Bobby Brown meets Freddy!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZUq_T_Bhau8

Posted by: KMRIA | Sep 7 2024 16:06 utc | 378

” Really insane to even be running any kind of Windows…
Posted by: pepa65 | Sep 7 2024 15:52 utc | 376 ”
Whats really insane is the fact that Russia doesn’t have its own indigenously developed OS, CPUs, and other hardware by now.

Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 16:08 utc | 379

Coupled with posts by knowledgeable MoA regulars like Milites, Unimperator, Newbie and others, together with Simlicius, Big Serge etc. Rob Campbell helps sieve the real wheat from the Western MSM chaff.
Posted by: Barrel Brown | Sep 7 2024 10:29 utc | 311
Many thanks for your praise: it is appreciated. I am not an expert, as are some of the others on your list, but I do my best to sieve the wheat from the chaff – as you say.

Posted by: Dr. Rob Campbell | Sep 7 2024 16:19 utc | 380

Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 16:08 utc | 380
Russia indeed has they own cpu and OSs and have had them even at the times of Ussr.

Posted by: Mario | Sep 7 2024 16:38 utc | 382

” Russia indeed has they own cpu and OSs and have had them even at the times of Ussr.
Posted by: Mario | Sep 7 2024 16:38 utc | 383 ”
Excellent, provide some examples please. I would love to purchase a Russian built laptop, with a Russian made CPU, running a native Russian developed OS. I await your response.

Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 16:41 utc | 383

Short range ballistic missiles?
I know little about 21st century warfare, and hang here to read comments from the military/technical types. I’ve got a very basic question I’m hoping someone will answer.
How can – or will – short range ballistic missiles change battlefield realities on the front? What’s either side’s advantage if they use these weapons?

Posted by: GW | Sep 7 2024 16:44 utc | 384

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Sep 7 2024 16:21 utc | 382
https://thequantuminsider.com/2023/07/25/russian-company-presents-16-qubit-quantum-computer/
https://vpnoverview.com/antivirus/antivirus-tests/kaspersky/.
As for 5G -Huawei

Posted by: Angelo | Sep 7 2024 16:44 utc | 385

Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 16:41 utc | 384
Strangely enough, I can’t buy a British-built laptop, with a British-made CPU, running a native British-developed OS. The same will be true for most nations of the world.
You’re heading down an intellectual cul-de-sac here.

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Sep 7 2024 16:47 utc | 386

https://astralinux.ru/en/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aurora_OS_(Russian_Open_mobile_platform)
https://itigic.com/russia-has-a-new-operating-system-for-computers-this-is-m-os/
Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Sep 7 2024 16:21 utc | 382 ”
Thanks, you for the answer, however, here are several problematic issues I found in the article.
***” based on the Linux kernel”***.
***”for use in educational institutions “***
Basically, this isnt for regular / business users and its based on a Linux kernel. In other words, its just another ” flavor ” of Linux not a true independent OS.

Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 16:48 utc | 387

Linux not a true independent OS.
Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 16:48 utc | 388

I don’t think you understand Linux’s GPLv2 license.
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.en.html
The terms of the GPLv2 are literally designed to guarantee the OS’s independence.

Posted by: too scents | Sep 7 2024 16:56 utc | 388

Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 16:48 utc | 388
Probably a futile waste of my time but Google built Android around the Linux kernel. The heritage of Apple’s MacOS can be trace back to the Unix-like (and open-source) BSD Project.
What is your particular objection to Russian developers also using an open-source kernel? If you have access to the LKML you will see the names of contributors from Russia.
Perhaps the US government should sanction everyone using Linux, because it has Russian contributors?

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Sep 7 2024 16:56 utc | 389

Posted by: Down South | Sep 6 2024 10:13 utc | 22
======================
RAF needs to watch carefully Lithuania around the border with Kaliningrad – near the bridge in Panemune. Those bastards may be planning a surprise there to distract the Federation for a short while.

Posted by: AI | Sep 7 2024 16:56 utc | 390

” Strangely enough, I can’t buy a British-built laptop, with a British-made CPU, running a native British-developed OS. The same will be true for most nations of the world.
Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Sep 7 2024 16:47 utc | 387 ”
Seriously sir? You’re comparing Britian to a superpower which is historically known to have some of the best programmers, engineers, and scientists in the world? Not to mention, Russia also has a massive manufacturing capability.
Apples and oranges much?

Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 16:59 utc | 391

Posted by: anon2020 | Sep 7 2024 13:54 utc | 352
Of course, we agree, light mesh is useless for deforming warhead or disrupting penetration stream (even slat armour or solid steel bars don’t reduce it in any significant way).
But mash can:
– get some old school warheads stuck without detonation (if nose fuze don’t make contact – hence that copper wires in drones)
– get drones stuck, break wings/propelers, tumble them on contact so penetration isn’t going right way
– bounces of grenades, bomblets or anything drones drop on vehicle (prevent ingress through open hatches etc.)
– gives some distance, how ever small, to reduce bomblets schrapnel penetration.
– gives significant reduction in effect with improvised explosives dropped (non schrapnel ones, concussion only, flammables etc.)
Hence meshes on MLRS. Purpose is to reduce chance of rockets going off too soon so crew can bail out.
T-72/90/80 tanks have ammo storage armour in carousel in range of few mm of aluminum (I don’t remember details exactly). Even so laughably thin, it help significantly with penetration and spall (which are little hot pieces of steel) which bounce around and ignite propellant. So MLRS tubes are thick enough to help with most of pieces of eg. 30mm AGL grenades dropped on vehicle, if given few feet of distance.
Remember, 30mm HE shell of BMP vehicles has enough explosives to make 2 feet hole in thin vehicle steel, but further than than, has little effect except from concussion and little pieces. So 30mm AGL’s dropped from drones have similar effect and having mesh 1m from MLRS tubes may have chance to slow down or even prevent detonation of rockets.
On lancet: using tandem charge to clear netting or mesh is completely illogical. Once you detonate precursor charge, main charge must be detonated too in matter of milliseconds or it will disintegrate. It is not like precursor makes a hole in mesh then main charge flies in.
Like I said, net, mesh or thin steel all make no difference for cumulative charge penetration stream, it will reduce effect insignificantly.
Tandem warhead precursor charge works only for sole purpose of detonating or reducing effect of ERA or NERA armour on target.
As for penetrator stream stand off distance – take a good look on lancet videos, in some of them you see something softer eg. APC hit from side and instant fire/smoke line going trough it and 10 meters or more away. It is penetrator stream. It has enough kinetic force to go trough multiple APC’s if they were lined up in its way. So air do not reduce effect significantly in first few meters or more (depends).

Posted by: Abe | Sep 7 2024 17:01 utc | 392

Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 16:59 utc | 392
From that, I can see that you accept that Britain has no chance of taking on Russia militarily, despite the political blustering.
Some sort of progress I suppose…

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Sep 7 2024 17:03 utc | 393

https://thequantuminsider.com/2023/07/25/russian-company-presents-16-qubit-quantum-computer/
https://vpnoverview.com/antivirus/antivirus-tests/kaspersky/.
Posted by: Angelo | Sep 7 2024 16:44 utc | 386 ”
I guess the concept of “consumer grade” is lost on many here. Plus, Kaspersky is software and not even based in Russia at this point. They also willingly opened their source code to the US government and still got kicked out of Western markets.
Never compromise with the “devil”.

Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 17:04 utc | 394

” I don’t think you understand Linux’s GPLv2 license.
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/gpl-2.0.en.html
The terms of the GPLv2 are literally designed to guarantee the OS’s independence.
Posted by: too scents | Sep 7 2024 16:56 utc | 389 ”
I understand what open-source entails. However, what really matters is the kernel the OS based off of and what “goodies” are hidden there. Not what Russia puts on top of it.

Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 17:08 utc | 395

I understand what open-source entails. However, what really matters is the kernel the OS based off of and what “goodies” are hidden there

Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 17:08 utc | 396
With that, you’ve just revealed that you have absolutely no idea what you’re even talking about. I’m out of this sub-discussion.

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Sep 7 2024 17:13 utc | 396

I guess the concept of “consumer grade” is lost on many here.
Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 17:04 utc | 395

Does it mean the system includes surveillance and advertising?

Posted by: too scents | Sep 7 2024 17:14 utc | 397

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Sep 6 2024 11:56 utc | 38
******************** ********************
Among the currently inactive stations are the Dnieper HPP, the Kiev HPP, critically damaged, Combined Heat and Power Plants number 5 and 6 (CHP-5 and CHP-6) actually put out of operation, the only powerful Kharkov’s CHP-5 is almost destroyed. Currently there is a deficit in the energy grid system of 0.5 GW. Not a happy winter for the ukies.

Posted by: AI | Sep 7 2024 17:15 utc | 398

” What is your particular objection to Russian developers also using an open-source kernel? If you have access to the LKML you will see the names of contributors from Russia.
Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Sep 7 2024 16:56 utc | 390 ”
It’s simple. Linux and all other consumer level OSs are designed to run on Western CPU architectures, meaning, Russia can modify/ create all the Linux flavors it wants as the architecture is already compromised by design. This is actually one of the reasons, the US gained so much dominance over other nations in the late 80′, the 90’s, and early 2000’s. All the nations jumped on the 90’s computer / internet craze without realizing the US/ Israel was watching / monitoring everything. One of the intended results was the blackmail of many world politicians and others and here we are.

Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 17:17 utc | 399

” From that, I can see that you accept that Britain has no chance of taking on Russia militarily, despite the political blustering.
Some sort of progress I suppose…
Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Sep 7 2024 17:03 utc | 394 ”
You confuse me with someone else. After WW2, Britian never had a chance against Russia.

Posted by: Moonie | Sep 7 2024 17:19 utc | 400