At what cost to the future of the country he supposedly cares so much about?So far every prediction about this war in the U.S. media turned out to be false.
Zelensky is desperate for ceasefire, Putin isn't. He knows he is winning.
At what cost to the future of the country he supposedly cares so much about?So far every prediction about this war in the U.S. media turned out to be false.
Zelensky is desperate for ceasefire, Putin isn't. He knows he is winning.
The nuke would be the dumbest move in my opinion, it would end Russia.
They must have every location mapped and, if they still have the means, take out the command and control, staging, manufacturing, etc.
I think that ship has sailed however and they wasted any opportunity in a WWII game plan.
At what cost to the future of the country he supposedly cares so much about?
If true it looks like Russia plans on contuing it's "human wave" strategy referred to as "meat assaults" (Мясные штурмы) where poorly supported infantry formations are sent to frontal Ukrainian defensive lines in waves.![]()
WW3 Monitor (@WW3_Monitor) on X
Russian Media: More than 1.2 million Russians could be mobilized in Russia, they are announcing a large-scale and record-breaking mobilization as early as October ‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️x.com

This is a little disconcerning, probably to many bad actors comming through
![]()
WW3 Monitor (@WW3_Monitor) on X
RUSSIAN MEDIA: RUSSIA HAS NOW CLOSED ALL BORDER CROSSINGS WITH FINLAND, ESTONIA AND LATVIA ‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️ https://t.co/1egkprJbZQx.com
please show me where that actually happened.If true it looks like Russia plans on contuing it's "human wave" strategy referred to as "meat assaults" (Мясные штурмы) where poorly supported infantry formations are sent to frontal Ukrainian defensive lines in waves.
Im definitely thinking spotters or sabotage , drone operators? maybe ? human reconThis probably to protect against possible NATO attack on Kaliningrad enclave and sabotage that can precede it.
Ok, but you can easily find examples yourself. Russian Wave strategy battles have been in use over years in this conflict. They range from massive wave meat grinders to smaller more frequent waves of million cuts that also have had high body counts.please show me where that actually happened
Thats what they have been doing. both sides too.I haven't followed as closely as many others here have done, but I thought Russia has been shifting more away from large scale storm assaults or meat waves, and have shifted their "assault" units to more 3-6 man infiltration teams that spend a week trying to sneak in through the drone no man's land kill zones and once they have enough numbers of survivors organized they may try to attack a position.
It seems like a complete cluster
They did recently evolve on some fronts.I haven't followed as closely as many others here have done, but I thought Russia has been shifting more away from large scale storm assaults or meat waves, and have shifted their "assault" units to more 3-6 man infiltration teams that spend a week trying to sneak in through the drone no man's land kill zones and once they have enough numbers of survivors organized they may try to attack a position.
It seems like a complete cluster
They did recently evolve on some fronts.
The going back to "meat grinder" wave strategy conversations are tied to posts about new significant Russian military mobilization / staffing / recruitment for this fall.





They did recently evolve on some fronts.
The going back to "meat grinder" wave strategy conversations are tied to posts about new significant Russian military mobilization / staffing / recruitment for this fall.
IMO it's more of the same.
Need to bring in replacements for losses either as casualties or to replace other conscripts whose term is expiring and they are released.
Could also be adding more than usual due to potential escalation and expansion of the war on new fronts (Belarus, Finland, Baltic etc) and trying to proactively up force strength.
I know it's different cultures and different tolerances for casualties but I'm honestly shocked at what has happened in this conflict and it's not getting the attention and perspective it should. By most impartial accounts Russia has had more casualties in this conflict than the US had in ww2. Let that sink in and think that over. Ukraine has had major casualties as well, the number is less than Russia but might be a larger percentage of their population. And not to forget by some estimates there are 1 million Ukrainian military aged males who fled the country to avoid being conscripted. The ukranian economy is a mess due to loss of literal manpower.
I just can't fathom how much of a hellscape this conflict has turned into. And as others have said, I don't think it's remotely close to over. I think it's far more likely it expands and drags on more fronts and countries than it ends peacefully.
Isw was only one of several references. Story didn't change without them, it was a pretty consistent concensus and AI confirmed they were plagiarizing some reputable Intel in lieu of doing their own work. BBC story link was given since it matched other sources, I already spent more time on the subject than I cared for, some other potential links to post had pay walls, were not in English (users would need to translate if not fluent) or were not accessible from those using a US IP address.As Russians fought for the city of Vuhledar it used "ineffective human-wave style frontal assaults", according to the Institute for the Study of War (ISW).
"Challenging terrain, a lack of combat power, and failure to surprise Ukrainian forces", it said, led to little gains and high combat losses.
Another significant spike in the graph can be seen in spring 2023, during the battle for Bakhmut - when the mercenary group, Wagner, helped Russia capture the city.
Wagner's leader, Yevgeny Prigozhin, estimated his group's losses around that time to be 22,000.
Russia's capture of the eastern-Ukrainian city Avdiivka last autumn also led to another surge in military deaths.
Your experts at the institute for the study of war are full of shit. first off they name 3 specific places all of which are urban combat. which is notoriously bloodly fights anywhere in the world. its par for the course .
2nd off they are a propaganda outlet run by liberal chicks barely 35 years old and a few possibly homosexual looking dudes. and few even which have ever served in the military .
Ill post a few
View attachment 285097
Jennifer Cafarella is the Director of Strategic Initiatives at the Institute for the Study of War (ISW). Ms. Cafarella works closely with ISW’s President, Board of Directors, and other senior leaders to envision, scope, and develop new programs supporting long-term growth of the Institute. Ms. Cafarella is also an ISW National Security Fellow and leads the Institute’s Geopolitical Risk Analysis practice, which builds upon the foundational work of ISW’s open-source analysis on ongoing and potential conflicts in Ukraine, Russia, China, and the Middle East. She regularly advises senior military leaders as well as policymakers on the threats the US and its allies face. She also briefs financial services companies and investors regarding global risk and geopolitical forecasts.
View attachment 285098
Christina Harward is the Russia Deputy Team Lead on ISW’s Russia Team. She contributes to ISW’s daily Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment as a writer and editor. Before coming to ISW, Christina interned with the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, where she co-led a student project forecasting shifts in Russian, Chinese, and Iranian foreign policy in the coming decades. Christina previously graduated from the Vaganova Academy of Russian Ballet in St. Petersburg, Russia, and danced professionally in Estonia and the United States.
Christina’s research at ISW focuses on the Black Sea region, with a particular emphasis on Russian efforts to interfere in Moldovan and Romanian politics. Christina speaks and reads Russian.
View attachment 285099
Katie Kelly joined the Defense of Europe Project as a Researcher on June 1. Prior to joining ISW, she served as an intelligence analyst at the Northern Virginia Regional Intelligence Center (NVRIC) for several years, focused on threats to Virginia’s critical infrastructure. She also interned with the former International Security Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).
Katie graduated from the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) with a Master of Arts in International Relations focusing on European security. She received her BA in Global Studies from Loyola University Maryland.
View attachment 285100
Anjou Kang-Stryker is a Russia Researcher at the Institute for the Study of War. His work builds on foundations in Russian historical research and prior experience at the Jamestown Foundation, where he edited for the Eurasia Daily Monitor and designed research on Russian espionage and sabotage recruitment patterns in Europe.
Anjou is a graduate of McGill University in Montreal, Canada, where he studied history and Russian. Besides military analysis, Anjou takes particular interest in the Russian sociocultural landscape, Russian occupation in Ukraine, hybrid warfare, and the historical makings and continuities of Russian power. His honors thesis dissected experiential tropes of social ills in 1990s Russia presented in postmodernist literature.
17 Oct 2023
Arts Internship Spotlight
My name is Anjou Kang-Stryker and I will be a U4 student in history during the upcoming semester. This summer, I spent two and a half months working remotely with the Jardins de Métis on a history research project for their exhibition on the exotic plants they grow at the gardens and the rich history behind them.
Kid was a student 3 years ago WTF??
View attachment 285101
Grace Mappes is a Russia Analyst on the Russia/Ukraine portfolio at the Institute for the Study of War. Grace is an alumna of the Hertog War Studies Program and supported ISW’s Russia/Ukraine portfolio as an intern during the buildup to and initial weeks of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. Her research interests include Kremlin societal control, domestic extremism in Russia, and Russian global energy politics.
Education
The University of Texas at Austin - College of Liberal Arts
Bachelor of Arts - BA, International Relations and Global Studies
Aug 2017 – May 2022
Russian Minor, Security Studies Certificate
![]()
People
ISW is dedicated to improving American and allied decision-making on conflict and national security threats. This is our team.understandingwar.org
Dude ,this is a bullshit site, I was useing them when the war broke out , and they failed to post accurately about what was happening in the war often times days late on any developments This is a propaganda site . I dont think any of them are over 35
anything comming off this site is utter bullshit , or cherry picked , or spun . its not a legitimate source.
the BBC isnt a whole lot better , Ill give you the casualty rate is high , but the human wave assaults are pretty funny , at least generally speaking,
The fundamental difference is that Ukraine is fighting for it's very existence.IMO it's more of the same.
Need to bring in replacements for losses either as casualties or to replace other conscripts whose term is expiring and they are released.
Could also be adding more than usual due to potential escalation and expansion of the war on new fronts (Belarus, Finland, Baltic etc) and trying to proactively up force strength.
I know it's different cultures and different tolerances for casualties but I'm honestly shocked at what has happened in this conflict and it's not getting the attention and perspective it should. By most impartial accounts Russia has had more casualties in this conflict than the US had in ww2. Let that sink in and think that over. Ukraine has had major casualties as well, the number is less than Russia but might be a larger percentage of their population. And not to forget by some estimates there are 1 million Ukrainian military aged males who fled the country to avoid being conscripted. The ukranian economy is a mess due to loss of literal manpower.
I just can't fathom how much of a hellscape this conflict has turned into. And as others have said, I don't think it's remotely close to over. I think it's far more likely it expands and drags on more fronts and countries than it ends peacefully.
Are there any sites that provide reasonably objective reporting on this conflict?As Russians fought for the city of Vuhledar it used "ineffective human-wave style frontal assaults", according to the Institute for the Study of War (ISW).
"Challenging terrain, a lack of combat power, and failure to surprise Ukrainian forces", it said, led to little gains and high combat losses.
Another significant spike in the graph can be seen in spring 2023, during the battle for Bakhmut - when the mercenary group, Wagner, helped Russia capture the city.
Wagner's leader, Yevgeny Prigozhin, estimated his group's losses around that time to be 22,000.
Russia's capture of the eastern-Ukrainian city Avdiivka last autumn also led to another surge in military deaths.
Your experts at the institute for the study of war are full of shit. first off they name 3 specific places all of which are urban combat. which is notoriously bloodly fights anywhere in the world. its par for the course .
2nd off they are a propaganda outlet run by liberal chicks barely 35 years old and a few possibly homosexual looking dudes. and few even which have ever served in the military .
Ill post a few
View attachment 285097
Jennifer Cafarella is the Director of Strategic Initiatives at the Institute for the Study of War (ISW). Ms. Cafarella works closely with ISW’s President, Board of Directors, and other senior leaders to envision, scope, and develop new programs supporting long-term growth of the Institute. Ms. Cafarella is also an ISW National Security Fellow and leads the Institute’s Geopolitical Risk Analysis practice, which builds upon the foundational work of ISW’s open-source analysis on ongoing and potential conflicts in Ukraine, Russia, China, and the Middle East. She regularly advises senior military leaders as well as policymakers on the threats the US and its allies face. She also briefs financial services companies and investors regarding global risk and geopolitical forecasts.
View attachment 285098
Christina Harward is the Russia Deputy Team Lead on ISW’s Russia Team. She contributes to ISW’s daily Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment as a writer and editor. Before coming to ISW, Christina interned with the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, where she co-led a student project forecasting shifts in Russian, Chinese, and Iranian foreign policy in the coming decades. Christina previously graduated from the Vaganova Academy of Russian Ballet in St. Petersburg, Russia, and danced professionally in Estonia and the United States.
Christina’s research at ISW focuses on the Black Sea region, with a particular emphasis on Russian efforts to interfere in Moldovan and Romanian politics. Christina speaks and reads Russian.
View attachment 285099
Katie Kelly joined the Defense of Europe Project as a Researcher on June 1. Prior to joining ISW, she served as an intelligence analyst at the Northern Virginia Regional Intelligence Center (NVRIC) for several years, focused on threats to Virginia’s critical infrastructure. She also interned with the former International Security Program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS).
Katie graduated from the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) with a Master of Arts in International Relations focusing on European security. She received her BA in Global Studies from Loyola University Maryland.
View attachment 285100
Anjou Kang-Stryker is a Russia Researcher at the Institute for the Study of War. His work builds on foundations in Russian historical research and prior experience at the Jamestown Foundation, where he edited for the Eurasia Daily Monitor and designed research on Russian espionage and sabotage recruitment patterns in Europe.
Anjou is a graduate of McGill University in Montreal, Canada, where he studied history and Russian. Besides military analysis, Anjou takes particular interest in the Russian sociocultural landscape, Russian occupation in Ukraine, hybrid warfare, and the historical makings and continuities of Russian power. His honors thesis dissected experiential tropes of social ills in 1990s Russia presented in postmodernist literature.
17 Oct 2023
Arts Internship Spotlight
My name is Anjou Kang-Stryker and I will be a U4 student in history during the upcoming semester. This summer, I spent two and a half months working remotely with the Jardins de Métis on a history research project for their exhibition on the exotic plants they grow at the gardens and the rich history behind them.
Kid was a student 3 years ago WTF??
View attachment 285101
Grace Mappes is a Russia Analyst on the Russia/Ukraine portfolio at the Institute for the Study of War. Grace is an alumna of the Hertog War Studies Program and supported ISW’s Russia/Ukraine portfolio as an intern during the buildup to and initial weeks of the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. Her research interests include Kremlin societal control, domestic extremism in Russia, and Russian global energy politics.
Education
The University of Texas at Austin - College of Liberal Arts
Bachelor of Arts - BA, International Relations and Global Studies
Aug 2017 – May 2022
Russian Minor, Security Studies Certificate
![]()
People
ISW is dedicated to improving American and allied decision-making on conflict and national security threats. This is our team.understandingwar.org
Dude ,this is a bullshit site, I was useing them when the war broke out , and they failed to post accurately about what was happening in the war often times days late on any developments This is a propaganda site . I dont think any of them are over 35
anything comming off this site is utter bullshit , or cherry picked , or spun . its not a legitimate source.
the BBC isnt a whole lot better , Ill give you the casualty rate is high , but the human wave assaults are pretty funny , at least generally speaking,
Are there any sites that provide reasonably objective reporting on this conflict?
Private news sites are a business and anymore click bait headlines are more profitable that objective reporting.Are there any sites that provide reasonably objective reporting on this conflict?
They are worse than the ny times and/or washington post in this country. Completely woke and narrative driven.BBC used to be excellent . but they're just a globalist mouth piece now
