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The Failed Logistics of Russia's Invasion of Ukraine - YouTube
Channel: Wendover Productions
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It all happened so quickly. On February
24th, 2022, just after 2:00 AM Ukraine time,
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Vladimir Putin, the autocrat of Russia,
announced, in a pre-recorded TV address,
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a “special military operation” in Ukraine.
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To the rest of the world, that meant war.
Within minutes, the shelling started,
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the skies lit up, and the Russian
invasion of Ukraine had begun.
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To many Ukranians, though, this was perceived not
as a beginning, but a continuation–a continuation
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of the conflict that began some eight years prior
in the spring of 2014. Ever since Russia and the
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rebels it backed overtook Crimea and swaths of
Eastern Ukraine, the country has maintained an
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enlarged and active military presence along
Ukraine’s borders. In 2017, for example,
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Russia reestablished the famed-but-disbanded
8th Combined Arms Army here, in Novocherkassk.
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Revived under the pretense that it was a
defensive decision, the 8th Combined Army has
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since grown–adding artillery; missile sub-units;
and even, some analysts believe, incorporating
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separatists into its own ranks. This is hardly
an isolated development. From Sevastopol on the
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southern tip of Crimea, to Klintsy along Ukraine’s
Northern border, Russian bases, staging points,
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and general military infrastructure have grown
to increasingly surround Ukraine since 2014. This
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extension of military might was made possible by
the physical seizure of the land and, in the eyes
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of Russian leadership, justified by the threat
that Ukraine could retaliate or try to seize back
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occupied territories. This extension has also, in
turn, quite literally paved the path for Russia
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to amass an extraordinary 75% of their principal
combat units within striking distance of Ukraine.
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On Wednesday, November 3rd, 2021, The Ukrainian
Defense Ministry announced that 90,000 Russian
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troops had encircled the country’s borders and
occupied territories–the Russian forces that
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were in the region for supposed exercises simply
weren’t leaving. Not only were they not going away
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but, as the next few months would reveal, their
numbers were growing. This is a satellite image
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from outside the western Russian town of Yelnya
in September, and this is the exact same spot on
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November 1st. From an empty field and a dirt
road, to the staging area for the Russian
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41st Combined Army, normally headquartered
some 2,000 miles or 3,000 kilometers away,
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suddenly sat north of 1,200 tanks, howitzers,
towed artillery, and support vehicles.
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And November only marked the beginning. Satellite
images and social media posts tracked soldiers
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and supplies pouring into Southwest Russia
across December. But what alarmed analysts
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most was the fact that along with the soldiers and
supplies there were medical units, hospital tents,
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and fuel reserves–the Russians were amassing the
infrastructure for war. The likelihood that this
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was a simulation plummeted. In January, Russian
forces rolled into Belarus for joint exercises.
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Weeks later, it was announced that the soldiers
would stay. Established staging areas like Yelnya
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further expanded while new ones popped up, forming
an increasingly foreboding arc around Ukraine.
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Now, behind the scenes, what made this
massive domestic mobilization of troops,
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weapons, and supplies possible was Russia’s
vast rail network. This rail network’s extent,
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earning its status as third largest in the world,
is a byproduct of the country’s size, sparsity,
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and the suspect nature of its road network.
Meanwhile, the degree of state control, with
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the government owning some 20,000 of the country’s
21,000 locomotives, is a legacy of the Soviet era.
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This control and extensiveness combined means
that Russia’s military is able to rely heavily
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on the rail network. It was trains that moved
the troops, tanks, and trucks to and from Yelnya,
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into Kursk, and across the Bryansk and Smolensk
oblasts. Digital forensics have shown that it
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was also trains that moved supplies from Eastern
Russia all the way to Belarus. And it was largely
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thanks to these trains, or Russia’s reliance on
them, that outsiders were able to so precisely
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document the military buildup as dash cams
filmed transiting-tanks at rail crossing–videos
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which then ended up on TikTok and circulated
the world over. Trains set the stage.
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But then, in the first weeks of February, under a
curtain of clouds, Yelnya emptied out–its troops
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and supplies tracked south. As these Russian
forces pushed ever nearer to the Ukrainian border,
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tanks appeared in Kursk, just a 140-mile or
220-kilometer drive from Kharkiv, while additional
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troops and trucks amassed near Gomel, Belarus–20
miles or 32 kilometers away from the border.
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Across three-and-a-half months, 175,000 Russian
troops had stacked up all along Ukraine’s border,
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ready to unleash death and destruction in the
country they believed they were there to liberate.
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In the opening hours of Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine, the invading force worked to cripple
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Ukraine’s military infrastructure. Some of the
first volleys of the conflict involved airstrikes
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on Ukrainian air bases, in an effort to help
Russia quickly gain air superiority without strong
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resistance. Eleven were destroyed across the first
day of hostilities. By noon, focus shifted from
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anticipatory defense to offense as dozens of
Russian helicopters landed troops at Hostomel
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Airport, mere miles from Kyiv. This was seemingly
in an effort to create an air bridge–seizing
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control of the airport to allow planes to bring
in more troops who would push out into Kyiv. An
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air-based supply line could assure a certain level
of logistical support regardless of conditions
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on the ground between the border and Kyiv.
However, also recognizing this, Ukraine tasked
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its 4th Rapid Reaction Brigade to retake the
airport, which it successfully did by 8:00 pm.
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Across the same day, as fighting reached the
Chernobyl Exclusion Zone and troops poured in
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from every direction, work continued behind the
frontlines to support the continued invasion.
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In Brest, Belarus, Russian forces could be
seen unloading supplies from railcars and
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assembling into a convoy configuration facing
south, towards the warzone. In Chojniki,
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near Belarus’ closest point to Kyiv, satellite
imagery captured a road that the Russians
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converted into a helicopter base, with an
“X” marking each landing zone. To the east,
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in Russia itself, a field hospital could be seen
ready to treat early casualties, while nearby,
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another makeshift facility home to artillery
and rocket launchers used in the opening hours
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of the conflict stood ready for more. However,
despite all the well-planned war infrastructure
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constructed around Ukraine, things inside the
warzone were seemingly going less to plan.
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As the sun rose from a bloody night onto the
second day of battle, Russian forces set their
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sights on Kyiv–the country’s capital, home to its
government and lauded leader, Volodymyr Zelensky.
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Under the assumption that Russia’s ultimate
ambition was to install a puppet government,
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Kyiv was the grand prize for the invading force,
and yet they only made it to the city’s suburbs.
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Still there, they met fierce resistance,
and made little progress–turning
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the night that many feared would mark
the capital’s fall into but a night.
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As day two became three, photos and videos emerged
that started to paint a more cohesive picture.
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Russian tanks were running out of fuel and
left abandoned, strewn across the country;
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the invading troops were seen looting stores for
food, potentially due to a lack of their own;
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stories emerged of Russian forces asking Ukrainian
civilians for supplies and directions, seemingly
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unaware of the average person’s opinion on them
in the country they were attempting to conquer.
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Across the board, as they approached the urban
areas that could only be taken with the most
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tactful coordination, the Russian military
was looking disorganized and disconnected–just
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a few disparate forces tasked with going in, guns
blazing, to induce a quick and easy surrender. Of
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course, that is not what came to fruition.
The Ukrainian defense included a recognition
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of what the Russian offense seemingly
missed: the importance of logistics.
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In the famous words of General John J. Pershing,
“Infantry wins battles, logistics wins wars.”
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So, Ukraine went for Russia’s logistics. On
social-media platforms adapted to organize the
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country’s guerilla-style defense, posts circulated
stressing the value of destroying fuel trucks. Of
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course, if you stop the fuel trucks, you stop the
tanks, and unlike tanks, fuel trucks are typically
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unarmored and can be destroyed with cheap,
accessible bullets or molotov cocktails. When
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the Russians started disguising their fuel trucks
to look like more traditional transport trucks,
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posts and messages quickly followed
making the updated target profile clear.
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Ukrainian forces also destroyed two key bridges
into Kyiv, allowing them to focus on defending a
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smaller number of choke-points, and similar
tactics were used elsewhere in the country.
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The Ukrainian military also destroyed all
connections between the Russian and Ukrainian
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rail networks to prevent the invading force from
taking hold of them to ramp up their supply lines.
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Elsewhere, across the country, towns and cities
dismantled their street signs or, in some cases,
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painted over them to read “welcome to hell,”
making it harder for Russian troops, many of which
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relied solely on paper maps, to navigate around
the country. Meanwhile, with the Russian military
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relying nearly entirely on analogue, unsecured
radio communications, amateur radio enthusiasts
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and hacktivist organizations like Anonymous worked
to block and surveil enemy radio frequencies–some
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even went further to broadcast pig sounds,
thematic music, or written messages that would
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appear when analyzed on a spectrogram. Russia
countered this with strategic disinformation,
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purportedly spreading this post listing fake
frequencies across social media, but the Ukrainian
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side quickly caught on and spread the corrected
frequencies across their means of communication.
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Now, to experts, the Russian military’s logistics
difficulties were hardly surprising. In fact,
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they represented a historical throughline.
When analyzing the disastrous Soviet-Afghan
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War of the 1980s, poor logistics performance is
an oft-cited reason for the USSR’s failure to
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achieve its objectives. According to tacticians,
their logistics support forces were inflexible and
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under equipped, which left the fighting forces
too under equipped to perform their jobs.
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Of course, thanks to their vast railway network,
which nearly entirely falls under state control,
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Russia’s military has that incredible
domestic mobilization capability.
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In fact, some 30,000 of their personnel
serve in the Russian Railway Troops, whose
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task involves the defense, use, and construction
of railways for military purposes. This force,
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larger than that of most countries, is indicative
of just how crucial this one infrastructure asset
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is to their military machine. However, this
domestic advantage, this reliance on the rails,
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simultaneously represents an achilles heel when
conflicts take place beyond their borders.
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When war stretches past their furthest railyards,
Russian military logistics capabilities are,
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at best, mediocre. In the case of this invasion,
the primary advanced railyards being used are in
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Belarus and Russia itself, so for any further
supply lines, especially any stretching into
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Ukraine, Russia had to resort to trucks. And
simply put: Russia doesn’t have enough trucks.
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Each of Russia’s combined arms armies, the largest
organizational unit of their ground forces,
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is typically supported by one material-technical
support brigade–essentially, their logistics
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support forces. Each of these brigades is
composed of around a thousand personnel
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operating 408 transport vehicles
capable of hauling 1,870 tons of cargo.
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This, it turns out, is rather inadequate.
According to retired US Lieutenant Colonel
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Alex Vershinin, a conflict modeling and
simulations expert, Russia’s forces,
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under their current configuration, are simply
incapable of properly supporting a fight more than
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90 miles or 145 kilometers from supply dumps–in
this case, railyards. And these assumptions were
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based on a 45 mile or 70 kilometer per hour
average transport speed, which is likely only
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attained when territory is firmly within Russian
control–something that proved elusive in the
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opening days of this invasion. A highly-active
conflict relient on rocket artillery fire,
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which accurately describes this war, is even more
resource-intensive on the logistics support forces
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as each individual rocket requires a
dedicated truck for transport to the
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launcher. With the frequency of artillery
fire in the early days of the invasion,
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a large chunk of Russia’s material-technical
support brigade’s capability was certainly
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tied up in supplying ammunition to launch-sites.
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This general incapability seemingly reflects
in Russia’s strategy in Ukraine. Currently,
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the predominant characterization is that Russia
believed that through a combination of dramatic
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airborne and land-based attacks in the
opening hours and days of the invasion,
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the Ukranians would quickly capitulate. They’d
either surrender or Russian forces would quickly
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reach Kyiv, topple the government, and install
a puppet government–a belief that was supported
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by nearly all independent analysts prior to the
conflict’s start. Analysis suggests that when
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invading, Russia’s forces can operate largely
self-sufficiently, without logistics support,
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for about three to five days. So, when the
conflict did not conclude within that time
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frame, the Russians found themselves
scrambling to regroup and resupply.
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Now, most western forces, which are generally
much better equipped from a logistics standpoint,
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operate on a pull-based system where
fighting forces request resupplies as needed,
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based on what actually occurs. Meanwhile, the
Russian military operates predominantly on a
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push-based system, where forces are resupplied
on a more predictable basis, as determined by
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leadership. This means that, in practice, there is
more strategic decision-making and prioritization
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on which forces most need or warrant resupply, and
which materials are most important to resupply.
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So, in Ukraine, it’s likely that ammunition was
prioritized ahead of, say, fuel for tanks on
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less strategically important fronts. In the
context of perpetual logistics limitations,
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as is the case for Russia’s military, this
is likely the more effective approach,
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but in the grand scheme of things it’s certainly
less effective than the western pull approach,
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which focuses on flexible logistics that
adapt to real-world conditions. In short,
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western forces let strategy lead logistics, while
Russian forces let logistics lead strategy.
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The single factor that can best address
these issues, however, is time. The Russian
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military does have the capabilities to set
a warzone up for a more prolonged conflict.
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Its material-technical support brigades include
tactical pipeline battalions, for example,
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that can quickly construct networks in Ukraine to
bring fuel and water closer to the active fronts,
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without the need for burdensome supply convoys.
Russia’s Railway Troops can do the same with rail
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infrastructure–mending or constructing networks
to support a long-term conflict or occupation.
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And the country can take a page out of the Soviet
playbook, leveraging the full might of the public
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and private sectors to support the military’s
operations. What the opening days of Russia’s
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invasion of Ukraine have done, however, is exposed
a weak-point in the nation’s military might–or
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perhaps, demonstrated that the weak-points of
the Soviet military are still present. Logistics
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capabilities are arguably one major strategic
advantage of many western militaries–especially
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the US’, whose global network of military
bases and massive sea and airlift capabilities
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allow it to properly supply a conflict truly
anywhere on earth. For Russia to have failed
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so visibly mere miles from its border exposes
its Achilles Heel to any future adversary.
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Tragically, however, these early struggles
appeared to make the Russian military only more
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desperate. As the conflict prolonged, the invaders
resorted to looting, to shelling civilian areas,
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to increasingly destructive weaponry, and to
more deadly techniques to compensate for their
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lack of strategic tact. Therefore,
the true cost for Russia’s failure
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is borne on the innocent casualties of war:
Ukrainian defenders; Russian conscripts;
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and perhaps most tragically, the Ukrainian
civilians who were displaced, injured, or killed
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simply for staying in the place they called home.
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