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13 votes
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Turtle tanks, "cope cages" and modified vehicles in Ukraine - Purpose, evolution and effectiveness
20 votes -
Russia suffers highest daily casualties of war so far: Kyiv
12 votes -
Russia attempts ground offensive into Ukraine’s Kharkiv
15 votes -
Ukraine pulls US-provided Abrams tanks from the front lines over Russian drone threats
31 votes -
US announces $6 billion long-term military aid package for Ukraine
30 votes -
Russia's meat grinder soldiers - 50,000 confirmed dead
39 votes -
Mass use of guided bombs driving Russian advances, says Ukraine
8 votes -
US House approves $95 billion aid bill for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan
41 votes -
How Russian-language poets and their translators have responded to the war in Ukraine
8 votes -
Kyiv confirms Ukrainian drones destroyed six Russian planes at air base, as many as three sites blasted
38 votes -
The Ladoga was the Soviet Union’s plush nuclear-war command vehicle. A drone just blew one up in Eastern Ukraine.
18 votes -
Collecting the dead Russia left behind
6 votes -
Russia awakes to biggest attack on Russian soil since World War II
31 votes -
Masters of illusion: Ukraine’s decoy makers outwit Russia
8 votes -
Ukrainian forces strike Russian troops at Avdiivka coke plant using AASM Hammer guided bombs
16 votes -
Volodymyr Zelenskyy in bind over how to draft more troops as Russian forces advance
35 votes -
Inside the brazen Arctic trip supplying Vladimir Putin’s flagship energy scheme
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Ukrainian forces withdraw from Avdiivka; megathread for news/updates/discussion of Russian invasion of Ukraine - February 17
There hasn't been a megathread for a while so I wanted to post the latest news as well as a couple other pieces of news from the past week along with a couple articles providing additional...
There hasn't been a megathread for a while so I wanted to post the latest news as well as a couple other pieces of news from the past week along with a couple articles providing additional context.
The latest piece of news is Ukrainian forces withdraw from Avdiivka to avoid encirclement, army chief says. This is very concerning and I hope encourages people to continue urging their politicians to find ways of supporting Ukraine in a larger capacity than they have in recent months.
The other day there was also this article titled Rate of Russian military production worries Europe's war planners. If you don't have time to listen to Perun's hour-long PowerPoint from 4 months ago on the same subject (Russian Defence Production 2023 - Can Russia keep up with equipment attrition in Ukraine?), then The Guardian article is a decent primer.
It also links to a Foreign Affairs article published in January of 2024 going into more detail about Russia's economic expenditures and its uneven footing: Putin’s Unsustainable Spending Spree: How the War in Ukraine Will Overheat the Russian Economy (Archive.is link). This is a particularly interesting article as it details the expenses as a percent of GDP that have recently made the rounds in the news this week, as well as how military spending as spurred growth in some industries, while others also tangentially related are lagging behind despite the government's stimulus. Additionally, Russia is spending the equivalent of billions of dollars on annexed regions of Ukraine. It then details the consequences of this substantially increased spending and increased wages that may be dislocating the civilian economy in favor of maintaining enough supplies for a further extended attritional war.
The Guardian article say that:
New analysis by the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) estimates that Russia has lost 3,000 armoured fighting vehicles in the last year and close to 8,800 since the war began.
Unable to produce anywhere near that number of vehicles, Russia has mainly refurbished ageing hardware ...
Russian factories claimed to have delivered 1,500 main battle tanks this year, of which 1,180 to 1,280 had been reactivated from storage, according to IISS. Those numbers, along with reactivated armoured personnel carriers and infantry fighting vehicles, meant Russia would “be able to sustain its assault on Ukraine at current attrition rates for another two to three years, and maybe even longer”, the group said.For reference, the landing ship that was recently destroyed by Ukrainian Unmanned Surface Vessels (Magura V5 sea drones), Caesar Kunikov, could carry 10 main battle tanks and 340 troops or 12 armored personnel carriers and 340 troops. Though it's not clear what role that ship was playing, as trains play a significant role in deploying men and materiel to the frontlines.
Finally, an article I'd meant to post several months ago to just sort of talk about in general terms: What would happen if Russia invaded Finland? I went to a giant war game in London to find out. Has anyone ever participated in war gaming, have a background or took a class on game theory, or enjoyed the history of tabletop gaming that dates back to this war-time activity? Just interested in what people have to say.
50 votes -
How Kharkiv’s tech start-ups became the ultimate test of business resilience
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Russia has massed 500 tanks for an attack on Kupyansk. Thousands of Ukrainian drones await them.
31 votes -
Another Russian general reportedly killed in devastating Ukrainian strike on Belbek air base
22 votes -
EU leaders approve €50 billion deal for Ukraine after Viktor Orbán lifts his veto
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The Ukrainian marines hit the Russian marines so hard, they blew the Russians back to 1980
16 votes -
Russia State Duma to prepare statement to US Congress and German parliament regarding Belgorod plane crash
17 votes -
The insane machine that conquered Antarctica for the USSR - the Kharkovchanka
9 votes