I'd presume that troops deployed for the Ukrainian operation don't include those in Crimea or defending the Russian border. And Ukraine is attacking that front with about 75 troops per mile.whiterock said:150k on the invasion, plus 300k for the "partial mobilization" = 450k. From that you have to deduct 225k battlefield casualties. Plus, Russia now has to guard the entire Finland border, to include the portion near St. Petersburg quite heavily. That will soak up a big percentage of any new recruits.Sam Lowry said:At the one-year mark, they had over 300K in Ukraine and as many as 500K for the Ukraine operation altogether, according to Ukrainian officials. That's well over twice the initial commitment of 200K (I don't know where you got the 450K number). The partial mobilization contributed to that both directly and through domestic deployments. And it was only the beginning. They've continued to train more both in Russia and Belarus (they were training 250K reservists a year in peacetime). Most recently they've announced a 50 percent increase in the total size of forces. So not all in...by a long way.whiterock said:That other half is not reserves for the Ukraine operation. It's mostly deployed elsewhere inside Russia to defend borders and domestic threats. That's why they did the "partial" mobilization 0f 300k last year.Sam Lowry said:Far from it. They only committed about half their troops to begin with, and they've been actively replenishing reserves for almost a year.whiterock said:Russia is all in...no reserves.Doc Holliday said:Wouldn't flooding deny Ukraine an opportunity to launch an offensive along the 100kms from the dam to the ocean and free up thousands of Russian soldiers to deploy along this front to reinforce their lines further north?whiterock said:Ukraine dammed up the canal after the 2014 Russian seizure of Crimea, creating significant hardship. They can't stop the canal now, but they can deny the source of the water. Repairing the dam would require Russia to control both sides of the lake and lower Dnieper. Status quo is, Ukraine owns the north bank, so Russia will not be able to repair the dam, even if it retains everything east of the Dnieper. That creates a new basis for negotiation - water rights for Crimea.Doc Holliday said:
We're gonna find out whose right.
If this thing continues for the next two years or surpasses a trillion dollars...ya'll have some explaining to do.
BTW none of this is going as planned:Ukrainian sabotage of Kakhovskaya dam is said here to threaten water supply to Crimea. A result consistent with Ukro-nazi strategy.
— Stephen McIntyre (@ClimateAudit) June 6, 2023
This is major escalation in US -NATO sabotage. https://t.co/V1rYbnhAHV
Second implication: The lake was a secure flank for the Russian army positions between Kherson and Zapo. That flank has been compromised. Yes, the river barrier remains and it will take a few days/weeks for the bottom to dry out, but the Russian positions at Kherson and Zapo are now inadequate. This requires more Russian troops & fortifications.
Meanwhile, irregular Russian forces are operating in force inside Russia on the eastern end of conflict.
Ukraine turning up the heat on depleted and overextended Russian forces.
Of the 450K troops committed to Ukraine, they've suffered 225k casualties. Ergo why we see Ukraine sponsoring auxiliary action inside Russia - the Russian lines are already thinly defended and Putin simply does not have enough troops to extend the line further.
But let's take your 500K number for giggles and do some more math. The front in Ukraine is approx six-hundred miles long. That works out to 833 troops per mile. Is that enough to defend the line? not well. But it's worse than that. Russia is having to garrison every town it captures. It also has bases to maintain in Crimea. And it has a defense in depth structure.....several lines of trenches between Zapo and the Sea of Azov, and several lines of trenches in Crimea all they way back down to Sebastopol So it's not 833 troops per mile along the front. Closer to half that.
And that's before we get to the Russia/Ukraine border outside the war zone. There is at least one line of fortifications there, too, so it's not a 600mi front. It's a 1000mi front (which is why we see action by irregular forces in Belgorad). When you rework the math, Russia has something closer to 200 troops per mile along the front.
THAT is why Russia is are blowing dams to flood valleys.