Russia-Ukraine War - News, Discussions & Updates

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Russian losses now exceed 22,900
 
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The video shows a Ukrainian FPV drone attempting to attack a Russian ATV belonging to soldiers of the 83rd Separate Guards Airborne Assault Brigade. Judging by the video, the ATV is equipped with extensive electronic warfare systems, which may have contributed to the drone's miss.

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Why Supply Lines are Collapsing in Ukraine


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Within the last year, logistics has become the defining problem of the war in Ukraine for both the Ukrainian Armed Forces and the Russian military. This video explores how weapons, artillery shells, drones, and fuel actually move from factory floors to the frontlines, and why supply chains are now just as contested as the battlefields themselves.Russia fires an estimated 120,000 artillery shells and launches 3,000 drones every month, while Ukraine fires 60,000 shells and deploys 125,000 FPV drones. But the real fight is keeping these supplies moving across a frontline more than 1,200 kilometers long. From American factories in Scranton to Polish hubs in Rzeszów, and from Russian depots in Rostov to the last-mile resupply near Pokrovsk, both sides face drone ambushes, cyberattacks, HIMARS strikes, and fuel shortages that threaten to grind their war machines to a halt. This is the story of how logistics wins, or loses, the war in Ukraine.

@Panzerkiel
 
A Ukrainian firefighter witnessed the impacts of Russian FAB bombs, the location of the shooting was not reported..

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Why Supply Lines are Collapsing in Ukraine


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Within the last year, logistics has become the defining problem of the war in Ukraine for both the Ukrainian Armed Forces and the Russian military. This video explores how weapons, artillery shells, drones, and fuel actually move from factory floors to the frontlines, and why supply chains are now just as contested as the battlefields themselves.Russia fires an estimated 120,000 artillery shells and launches 3,000 drones every month, while Ukraine fires 60,000 shells and deploys 125,000 FPV drones. But the real fight is keeping these supplies moving across a frontline more than 1,200 kilometers long. From American factories in Scranton to Polish hubs in Rzeszów, and from Russian depots in Rostov to the last-mile resupply near Pokrovsk, both sides face drone ambushes, cyberattacks, HIMARS strikes, and fuel shortages that threaten to grind their war machines to a halt. This is the story of how logistics wins, or loses, the war in Ukraine.

@Panzerkiel

I intend to watch this later. On the US-based forum which I'm a member of, this has been discussed extensively literally from the day the war started. As someone who works in the logistics industry and a number of friends who work in the defense industry, I've got a good grasp on how this works not to mention just how precarious things still are even after 3-1/2 years.
 
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Russia still has the Sakhalin oil fields which is one of the biggest in the world and out of range of Ukraine's drones.

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Russia still has the Sakhalin oil fields which is one of the biggest in the world and out of range of Ukraine's drones.

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Nothing is out of range for the Ukrainians.
 
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