Ukraine Blog 62 – Russian Maskirovka and it works (unfortunately)

Dear friends, family and colleagues,

The tweet that I predicted would come in my September 4th blog has unfortunately finally arrived

(3) U.S. Mission to NATO on X: "Ukraine has taken back more than half of its territory seized by Russia’s forces since February 2022. In this tough and dynamic battle, Ukraine’s soldiers are fighting bravely every single day, and they continue to inspire the world with their bravery and courage. We will… https://t.co/ELeU4EbVfK" / X (twitter.com)

Translation: Ukraine: go negotiate with Russia, for “as long as it takes” has a limit. This is the cumulation of a continuous stream of self-inflicted bad news for Ukraine and the West over the past three months. The West brought itself in a very difficult position by appeasing dictators like Putin and Khamenei and showing it’s not willing to mobilize its industrial potential to counter Russia.

So let’s break down where we are right now

First: What’s the state of Putin? Putin is at this moment more rational and more convinced he can win the war than EVER before. I’m sure the champagne corks popped in the Kremlin when the U.S. mission to NATO posted their disastrous tweet. For Putin it is the confirmation that when he persists, he can prevail. And to me it proves that he’s right on more than a couple of points in his assessment of the West, namely:

a.                   The West is weak

b.                   The West has no moral spine

c.                   The West can be divided

One of the most important features of Vladimir Putin that I admire is his patience. Where we in the West want to rush everything and run ourselves to stress in order to reach our supposed goals, Putin has shown that he is willing to wait many years in order to capitalize when the right moment appears. It’s also a personal lesson for me in life: just be patient and wait for the right moment to capitalize. You almost start to think I start to like the guy right? Well, it’s Putin’s other characteristics, his total lack of respect for human life and the prospect that the current Russian state has nothing to offer besides a lot of destruction makes me more convinced we need to fight this man.

Military the Russians also significantly adapted on three fronts

1.       As I predicted earlier this year, Russian artillery ammunition stockpiles were running low. Against all odds, Russia managed to make a deal with North-Korea to supply one million 122mm and 152mm artillery rounds (and I suspect also a couple of hundred D20 and D30 artillery pieces). Where Russia had 15 million artillery rounds before Feb 24th 2022, North-Korea has an estimated whopping 21 million artillery rounds. For North-Korea it’s not a problem to send another 5 million rounds to Russia. There’re limits. Only around one-third of North-Korea’s artillery is of the Russian standard 122mm/152mm caliber. The North-Korean standard is mostly 130mm which the Russians don’t use anymore since the eighties. I don’t think that Kim Jong Un is bound to fight Ukraine or the West. I just think he managed to get quite a good deal from Putin. There are a couple of Western milbloggers who note the supposedly 25 to 40 percent dud rate of the North-Korean shells (rate of shells that fail to explode). I would like to note that this means that even with a 50 percent dud rate, Russia managed to get 200.000 more working! artillery shells than the 300.000 the West delivered during all of 2023. If the West doesn’t start to get serious about ramping up artillery production (something I already spoke about in my blogs during the summer of 2022), it will not only result in a shortage for the Ukrainian army, but it will also further embolden Putin that he can win this.

 

2.       Russian military production versus deep storage activation: there’s some good and some bad news here. 

a.       The Russians are bragging about that they are currently producing 1500 tanks per year. I know that this is pure nonsense when it comes to building new tanks from scratch. Russia has not been building new T-72, and T-80 tanks since the early 1990’s, but there were doubts about the T-90M’s (supposing Russia’s most modern tank). I suspected for the past year that these T-90M’s rolling of the conveyor belts were in fact upgraded T-90A’s, but I couldn’t find a single piece of information about it. Finally of all sources, Forbes posted an article and it confirmed that Russia’s T-90M’s simply have to be rebuilt T-90A’s since T-90A losses disappeared from the battlefield and no T-90A’s are visible on satellite pictures. 

Russia's Modern Tanks Are AWOL In Ukraine War (forbes.com)


So, this is the good news. The bad news has everything to do with the earlier mentioned deep storage facilities of the Russians

b.       Russia has an estimated 100 so-called deep storage facilities where they store tens of thousands of tanks, AIFV’s, APC, artillery and MLRS systems that had to be decommissioned because of the Conventional Forces Europe (CFE) treaty that was made between NATO and the former Warsaw Pact countries. Per country it puts limits to the amount of conventional weapons a country can possess per a couple of categories. The loophole is that the treaty applies to Europe. Russia simply moved huge amounts of equipment east of the Urals. This did not guarantee a solid backup of military hardware. Most of the equipment has been stored in the open in rain and the Siberian winter and a lot of it can’t be instantly re-activated as such. For many years the deep storage facilities looked like pig sheds, with derelict equipment scattered around, stripped of parts by corrupt officers and chaotic scrapyards. Thanks to

 

Twitter account (3) high_marsed (@HighMarsed) / X (twitter.com) and

Youtuber Covert Cabal - YouTube

 

we know that the Russians are actively emptying their deep storage facilities right now. I’m not going to replicate their work, but by looking at some recent satellite images and comparing current and historical imagery on Google Earth I noticed something else: the Russians are organizing, structuring and cleaning up their deep storage facilities. And after showing continuous incompetence over the past two years, they are finally doing something according to the book. I will use an example that you can replicate yourself on Google Earth.

 

The example I use is the 1295th tank storage facility that you can find on Google Earth via the following coordinates: 44.127297,133.280762. If you look at the historical image from one year ago (you need Google Earth desktop for this) you can see the chaotic setup of the site. However, in the most recent image of 2023, you see that the site is much more empty, organized and there’s even structure visible in the scrapyard. To me it’s clear the Russians are doing the following:

                                                                                 i.            They perform assessments on equipment. Equipment in good condition will go straight to the front or limited service (replacing oils, cables, paint job etc.).

                                                                               ii.            Equipment that is not serviceable will be taken apart for parts. Good parts will be sent to the factories. In such a way, Russia is able to make one “good” new tank from two or three “bad” tanks.

                                                                             iii.            Parts that can’t be used will end up on the scrapyard for processing in metal factories.

 

This is actually a very good way to keep your war supplies going, get rid of old military legacy without the need to mobilize your industry in a total war scenario. In October we saw the Russians losing sometimes hundreds of tanks, AIFV’s and APC’s per day. During two weeks around Avdiivka, the Russians lost more equipment than they lost during two years in the First Chechen war (where we saw column after column of destroyed Russian equipment in Grozny). The sad truth is, Russia will be able to continue to throw all this metal at Avdiivka for at least the coming 1,5 years. I’m fully convinced that by early spring the Russians will capture Avdiivka, which will provide Putin with a tangible “victory” on the home front and by then the U.S. election will be much closer. So in short, we’re seeing Russian maskirovka (the use, by Russia or the former Soviet Union, of military deception intended to confuse Western intelligence) here. No new Russian weapons, but refurbished old ones. But hey, it’s working.

 

3.       Hybrid warfare: Russia’s hybrid warfare (as formulated in the Gerasimov doctrine is more active than ever). Russia is throwing everything it has at Europe short of direct military confrontation.

a.       Sending refugees over the Finnish border. You might have missed it, but at the Finish border we see a repeat of what we saw in the autumn of 2021 at the Polish and Baltic borders.

b.       Russian dis-information bots are more active than ever on social media and I highly suspect are able to influence Western public opinion (I think a lot of people will be surprised by the amount of votes the Dutch PVV party will get during tomorrow’s elections)

c.       I already mentioned it in my previous blog, but I’m more convinced than ever that Putin is going to test NATO’s article 5. Primary target will be the Baltic states. Trump will be the Republican candidate and most likely the next president of the United States and as soon as that happens, it’s very likely Putin will go on the attack against the Baltics. Whereas one year ago I expected the chance of success in such a case at one percent, right now I would say it’s 30 percent and rising.

d.       Draining Western airpower: yes, Russia is successful at this without even firing a shot. Let me explain how this works. I was always ok with sending Ukraine every artillery shell we have in our stocks, till the last one. For the simple reason that if Russia would ever touch NATO, NATO would unleash its massive airpower to which Russia has no answer. The news that got me very concerned is that Israel in the first week of the Gaza war dropped 6000 aircraft bombs on Gaza. God knows how many they have dropped by now, but just 6000 raises all alarm bells with me. The thing is that the stocks of aircraft bombs of non-U.S. countries are very low. For example the Netherlands barely has more than a thousand aircraft bombs available. The bombs Israel uses are backfilled with U.S. bombs from so-called Prepositioned Organizational Material Storage (POMS) sites. While I fully support Israel’s effort to eradicate Hamas, it’s irresponsible of Israel to use so many high value aircraft bombs against an insurgent army. Besides that Western stockpile runs low on bombs, Israel should also keep up its stocks to defend against Hezbollah and Syria (most notably other Iranian proxies in Syria). You might think I’m exaggerating a bit, but both during the 1999 bombing campaign against Serbia and the bombing campaign against Libya in 2011, NATO was seriously running out of aircraft bombs.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/nato-runs-short-on-some-munitions-in-libya/2011/04/15/AF3O7ElD_story.html


https://www.theguardian.com/world/1999/may/07/richardnortontaylor

So, pretty depressive right? Yeah, thanks to Western politicians we got ourselves in deep sh*t. Is it all doom? Well, fortunately not

1.       Fact is that during the early months of their invasion in Ukraine, the Russians completely self-destructed their capable military units. Currently around 20.000 Russians are killed each month and around 20.000 are recruited each month. This makes sure that Russian lines don’t collapse and they are able to make slow incremental gains (Avdiivka). However, Russian force generation (the foundation of new combat capable units) will be impossible for many years to come and it ensures that Russians forces won’t be able to capitalize on any breakthrough of enemy lines they achieve (be it in Ukraine or the Baltics). To Putin and many Russians this won’t matter. It’s perfectly in line with “the Russian soul” that believes that only by suffering while enduring hardship in the end something better will arise. I still owe you guys a special on Russian political theory, but in case you want to make an effort to grasp the Russian soul, please read the following works (all of them are in my top 20 literature):

a.       “Dead Souls” by Nikolai Gogol

b.       “Crime and Punishment” and “The Brothers Karamazov” by Fyodor Dostoevsky

c.       “War and Peace” by Leo Tolstoy

 

2.       Despite all the problems with the new U.S. speaker of the house Mike Johnson upholding a vote on aid to Ukraine, Ukraine has proven to be very skilled in weaponizing the First Person View (FPV) drones. Ukrainian drone operators are already able to operate them sometimes more than 40 kilometers behind Russian lines. According to reports and footages, Ukrainian FPV drones are already responsible for more than 50 percent of Russian losses and have proven to be extremely effective against the feared Russian TOS-1 Burantino flamethrower MLRS

 

(3) Alf Really ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡ต๐Ÿ‡ฑ๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ช๐Ÿ‡ช๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฉ๐Ÿ‡ช๐Ÿ‡ซ๐Ÿ‡ฎ on X: "1. Quite creepy footage from Ukrainian drones from near #Avdiivka, which all #russian propaganda “patriotic” Z-channels will of course bypass, and will definitely not show on russian TV. It’s scary to even imagine the number of losses in the russian army, which continues⬇️ https://t.co/7oGSMTC0la" / X (twitter.com)

 

(3) (((Tendar))) on X: "An Ukrainian drone detected this Russian TOS-1A flamethrower. The consecutive hit by a drone completely incinerated the vehicle (and the crew probably, too). The explosion is a dead-giveaway that the TOS-1A was loaded with ammunition and therefore about to open fire. Very unlucky… https://t.co/SWZVbPaK6k" / X (twitter.com)

 

Whereas long range artillery and more than 20 ATACMS (that’s all what the US delivered) will definitely help, this kind of innovation will make sure Ukraine at least stays in the fight and in the long run can shift the balance.

Major problem remains that besides the Russian soul and lots of casualties, Russia has a plan with strategic dots on the horizon, with a 30 percent chance of succeeding. Russia definitely stepped away from a piecemeal approach and finally seems to get its war supply from deep storage facilities in order. What the West wants is unclear and it is in a weird state of disarray and hibernation. 

It is sad though that the West had the option to end the war by mid-2023 if they had provided the right equipment with sufficient political will. Last year I was optimistic the war would end in 2023, but now I can tell you for sure: the war will not end in 2024, possibly not even in 2025...

ะกะปะฐะฒะฐ ะฃะบั€ะฐั—ะฝั–!

Niels

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