Comments by "Harry Mills" (@harrymills2770) on "Covert Cabal" channel.

  1. Pretty much my thinking. In many respects, tanks are now obsolete. I think the tank losses have a lot to do with the stand-off weapons like StormShadow. But I think that such munitions are in relatively short supply, which calls for a different approach from the Russian side. The meat-grinder strategy doesn't work when the Ukrainians can reach out and touch armor formations from long range, with precision-guided artillery. These tit-for-tat, low-level skirmishes are too close to even. Trade a couple-few tanks destroyed every day, and the losses slowly mount. The WORST tank in WW 2 was the Sherman, but it could be mass-produced with ease, and the farmers who manned them could fix a lot of what went wrong in the field. Their standard cannon was very weak, but if they could attack from the sides or rear, they could take out a Panzer IV or even a Tiger, and the Germans couldn't afford the losses. If Russia gears up and go all-out blitzkrieg with everything they've got, I don't think Ukrainian forces have enough ammo to take them all out. They may suffer serious losses, but between their air superiority and overwhelming armor and artillery advantage, they could swamp the trickle of advanced weapons NATO is able to provide. I think the dysfunction of Russian MoD is greatly exaggerated, but we are at a tipping point, where doctrine must change, because at the skirmish level, Ukraine's giving almost as good as it's taking. I think there is probably a big strategy debate taking place, with the advent of StormShadow and possibly ATACMs in the near future. The USA meanwhile, has a new-gen weapon beyond the ATACM. One of the dangers of introducing StormShadow and ATACM is it opens the door to the Russians and reverse-engineering Iranians to get their hands on these new systems. The Pentagon claims to not even know where a lot of the military aid is going. The Israelis refused Ukraine any Iron Dome air defense systems out of precisely that fear. There's also a fear that the Chinese will get their mitts on these systems. Who knows how much of that military aid is going elsewhere to line the pockets of Ukrainian oligarchs? Who can guarantee that none of these systems will be captured by the Russians? Anyway, good points made. I wonder if there will be a shift away from tanks and toward lighter, faster vehicles with lethal weapons systems on-board. Maybe the Bradley attack vehicles, themselves are too big and slow.
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  7. Does it mean they're running out or does it mean they're dispersing them? The old rules for concentration of forces may not hold any longer. It may be that both sides are so good at long- and intermediate-range attacks, that putting too many eggs in one basket is an invitation for a strike. It's not like WW II where you can mass for an attack and surprise anybody. This goes for ammo and fuel dumps well behind the front lines, but especially massed armor. What little we actually see from either side are small (solo runs and small convoys). Much is made of relatively little, it seems. I'm no expert, but I doubt that Russian tank losses have seriously cut into their tank lead or tank production, and near as I can tell, they're not sending many of their newer tanks to the front, but are sending older, refurbished tanks. And the way they're using them in probing/suicide runs seems more aimed at drawing out and using up the Ukrainian forces. Modern warfare isn't combined arms like the Germans used on the Eastern Front, with total air superiority (in 1941-2). The closest thing that might be U.S. forces in Iraq, after they obliterated Iraq's air defenses, after which, they coordinated attacks using AWACS, without fear, and with near-perfect intelligence from satellites against an enemy without satellites or air defenses. When both sides have satellite coverage and neither side can safely sortie manned aircraft over enemy territory, "traditional" tank strategy and tactics and combined-arms strategy and tactics are a thing of the past, unless you can overwhelm a 2nd- or 3rd-rate opponent, which neither NATO-backed Ukraine nor Russia are.
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