Jesus' Coming Back

Failure to Control Ukraine’s Skies Betrays Key Flaw in Russia’s War Strategy; Ukrainians’ Resilience Persists Despite New Russian Barrage; Ukraine Shot Down 85-86% of Russian Drones Involved in Latest Attacks; Ratio between Ukrainian and Russian losses in Ukraine’s south 1:6.5, LIVE UPDATES and MORE

WSJ: Failure to Control Ukraine’s Skies Betrays Key Flaw in Russia’s War Strategy:

Without air supremacy, Moscow can’t stop Kyiv’s offensive or target precisely, relying on drones and missiles

Russia’s struggling invasion of Ukraine has faced problems from poor coordination to unmotivated soldiers, but overshadowing and aggravating all was a critical blunder in the war’s early days, say Western military officials: failure to win control of Ukraine’s skies.

Without air superiority, Russia has been unable to stop Ukrainian attacks on its soldiers with U.S.-supplied M142 High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems, or Himars, and other weapons. Kyiv’s forces have capitalized on Russia’s limited ability to respond by retaking hundreds of square miles of territory from the invading army since early last month.

Russia has recently reacted to Ukraine’s battlefield successes by unleashing deadly attacks on civilian targets using missiles and drones. But even those strikes betray weakness in Moscow’s air strategy, Western military analysts say, because it must rely on remote aircraft rather than piloted planes, out of fear they will be shot down.

“Failure to achieve air supremacy is one of the decisive things that cost Russia their advantage in the war,” said Jakub Janovsky, a military analyst with Oryx, an independent team of analysts that has tracked open-source intelligence on equipment losses throughout the war. By mid-May, Russian losses in Ukraine had fallen to fewer than 10 planes and helicopters a week, compared with more than 60 a week in early March, according to data from the Ukrainian defense ministry.

Russia’s Defense Ministry didn’t respond to a request for comment on its air war in Ukraine.

When Russia launched its large-scale invasion on Feb. 24, military experts on both sides of the fight assumed Moscow would target Ukraine’s air defenses and quickly work to eliminate them before pushing further. That was the approach U.S. forces took in both Gulf wars and Libya because it helps to protect attacking aircrews and ground or naval forces the aircraft support.

But after Russia achieved some initial successes hitting Ukraine’s antiaircraft systems and disrupting its communications backbone, Kyiv regrouped and managed to thwart Russian air attacks. By early March, Ukraine was shooting down growing numbers of Russian planes and helicopters. Ukraine’s air force, despite early losses, kept flying and engaged Moscow’s pilots in dog fights. —>READ MORE HERE

Ukrainians’ resilience persists despite new Russian barrage:

When massive, coordinated Russian bombardments shook cities and towns across Ukraine a week ago to trigger a new phase in the Kremlin’s war, one strike left a huge crater in a popular Kyiv children’s playground and ripped open a central intersection.

The next day, traffic flowed over the newly asphalted road, and life in the capital had returned to near normal. The response to Russia’s new wave of attacks was to get back to work, stroll in the warm autumn sun and tend to final harvests from summer vegetable gardens.

A similar scene played out in the central Ukrainian city of Dnipro that day, where city workers repaired a road overnight after it was destroyed by shelling in that coordinated attack.

“We worked all night, gritting our teeth,” wrote Dnipro Mayor Borys Filatov on Facebook the day after the Oct. 10 attack. The post included before and after photos of where the strike had hit and the completed repairs.

“We will restore and rebuild everything. But our hatred will live for centuries,” he said.

Ukrainians’ resilience in the nearly 8-month-old war continues to be unwavering, despite an uptick in attacks that are seen as Russian President Vladimir Putin’s vengeful response to an explosion that damaged a Moscow-built bridge to the Kremlin-annexed Crimean Peninsula on Oct. 8. —>READ MORE HERE

Follow links below to +++++relevant+++++ and related stories:

+++++Russia-Ukraine News LATEST UPDATES: (REUTERS) (AP) (NY POST) and (WSJ)+++++

+++++Ukraine shot down 85-86% of Russian drones involved in latest attacks – air force+++++

+++++Maliar: Ratio between Ukrainian and Russian losses in Ukraine’s south 1:6.5+++++

Ukraine’s Air Force destroys Russian helicopter and 6 Shahed drones in 30 minutes

City Hall building struck in Russian-occupied Donetsk

“They send us to certain death”: story of conscript who managed to survive in Ukraine

Ukraine troops hold key town, Russia fires more missiles, Zelenskiy says

Ukraine: Rockets strike mayor’s office in separatist Donetsk

Shooting at Russian Military Training Ground Leaves 11 Dead, 15 Injured

Ukraine war latest: Russia kidnaps Ukrainians from Kherson Oblast amid Ukraine’s advances

Russians report 16 explosions over Belgorod

Elon Musk abandons threat to cut off satellite Internet service to Ukraine

Nearly 65,000 Russian troops killed in Ukraine war, Zelensky says

Russian Troops in Belarus Spark Fears of New Front for Ukraine

Winter’s Approach Raises Stakes in European Energy Crisis

France ramps up war support for Ukraine, rebuilds armories

Governor: Russian forces destroy 2 schools in Zaporizhzhia Oblast

Russians wanted to paralyse Ukraine’s energy supply but did not achieve their aim

Russians are trying to put all their forces together in Ukraine’s south but even nature is on side of Ukraine

If you like what you see, please “Like” and/or Follow us on FACEBOOK here, GETTR here, and TWITTER here.

Source

Comments are closed.

This website uses cookies to improve your experience. We'll assume you're ok with this, but you can opt-out if you wish. Accept Read More