![]() ![]() RU uses x10 the number of shells (daily) compared to the UC. They need to clear up the 50s inventories because it is costly to dispose of them in other ways. Also, they are moving to use more new and precise shells and rockets. At the current rate of shelling, the Russians will need to slow down the pace of shelling in 20 years (if they don’t increase the production, of course). And there are a lot more where these come from. They used a lot of old ammunition stockpiles. Slowly, if you think territorial conquests are the main goal.Ģ) Spending few Russians lives as possibleģ) Killing more AFU personnel as possibleĤ) Depleting the weapon stockpiles of the Western World in a moment they can not replenish them fast enough. ![]() Even so, the analyst and former tank commander said, it was not clear “that Kyiv has enough combat power to rapidly eject Russian forces”.īarry concluded that, as a result, “we can expect another bloody year” in which the fighting would be unpredictable – after a period in which it is estimated that least 200,000 people have been killed or wounded on both sides.From where I look from (Italy) it appears the Russians are slowly winning the war. That might give it “tactical advantage”, Barry said, if accompanied by enough ammunition and spare parts. Poland has also committed to sending a battalion of Leopard 2 tanks to Kyiv and is currently training Ukrainian troops to use them but Pistorius said “many” were not fit for battle.īen Barry, a land warfare analyst, said he reckoned Ukraine would ultimately receive about a quarter of the 1,000 tanks and fighting vehicles it had sought. ![]() German defence minister Boris Pistorius however cautioned on Wednesday it so far only has “half a battalion” of Leopard 2 tanks to send to Ukraine, 14 newer A6 type Leopard tanks in addition to three from Portugal. Kyiv is hoping to receive a wave of western tanks and fighting vehicles over the next couple of months, which it plans to use to achieve a battlefield breakthrough. It has also had significant donations from Poland, the Czech Republic and other states with Soviet-era armour, but its tank force is currently still half the size of Russia’s. Ukraine, however, has seen its tank count go up to 953 from 858 because it has partly offset its own losses by capturing an estimated 500 from Russia, of which it has “pressed a fair amount into service”, according to the IISS analyst Henry Boyd. ![]()
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