"All of Vlad's forces and all of Vlad's men, are out to put Humpty together again." (5 Viewers)

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I bet the Ukrainians are about go hell-for-leather for Crimea now.
I'm thinking they'll want to isolate Crimea first. That weakens Russia's hand and quiets down the "just give the Russians Crimea and call it quits" gang. I hope that Putin doesn't defenestrate his fool self until this happens. If Putin is replaced by some seemingly rational thug who'll end it all but they keep Crimea, a bunch of useful idiots will happily cave. I'd like to see Ukraine drop the bridge and isolate Bakhmut. That's gotta' crush what's left of Russian morale. If the AFU can get to Tokmak, that would would bring the bridge into GMLARS range (I think). It would effectively sever the land bridge to Crimea overland. If Russia can't control Crimea, well, that weakens Russia's claims.
 
I'm thinking they'll want to isolate Crimea first.

That's my point: this is the first step in isolating the island.

That weakens Russia's hand and quiets down the "just give the Russians Crimea and call it quits" gang. I hope that Putin doesn't defenestrate his fool self until this happens. If Putin is replaced by some seemingly rational thug who'll end it all but they keep Crimea, a bunch of useful idiots will happily cave. I'd like to see Ukraine drop the bridge and isolate Bakhmut. That's gotta' crush what's left of Russian morale. If the AFU can get to Tokmak, that would would bring the bridge into GMLARS range (I think). It would effectively sever the land bridge to Crimea overland. If Russia can't control Crimea, well, that weakens Russia's claims.

If I were in command of UAF, I'd drop the bridge and sever communications in preparation for the assault on Crimea. The peninsula must be the primary objective. Once it is retaken, it undoes Putin's foreign-policy aims of the last decade, and will be a defeat impossible to hide from the Russian people. It may well bring Putin's downfall.
 

Russia is blaming Ukraine for the fatal attack on a key bridge in Crimea that left two dead and one injured Monday.

One of the sections of the 12-mile Kerch Bridge in Crimea was blown up Monday, killing a married couple and injuring their daughter. Russia's National Anti-Terrorist Committee said that this explosion was caused by two Ukrainian sea drones.

Moscow is labeling the explosion as a terrorist attack as the bridge serves as a key symbol of Russia's claim to Crimea as it connects the two countries. Russia captured Crimea from Ukraine in 2014 and has been utilizing the bridge to aid its military operations in southern Ukraine since the war started.

Dmitry Medvedev, deputy head of Russia's Security Council, said Monday that Ukraine was a "terrorist organization," vowing in a Telegram post to "blow up their houses and houses of their relatives, search and eliminate their accomplices."



The hypocrisy is stunning, even after all this time.
 
That's my point: this is the first step in isolating the island.



If I were in command of UAF, I'd drop the bridge and sever communications in preparation for the assault on Crimea. The peninsula must be the primary objective. Once it is retaken, it undoes Putin's foreign-policy aims of the last decade, and will be a defeat impossible to hide from the Russian people. It may well bring Putin's downfall.
I have to totally agree with this. There must be some choke points on the way out of Crimea through the occupied land, and taking some of those out would also help

Do everything you can to stop both the road and rail bridges from working and the political impact will be huge.
a) A lot of people are on holiday or go on holiday in the Crimea. All of them will be significantly impacted and all the PR in the world will not be able to hide the humiliation from ordinary Russians.
b) Economically the impact on Crimea will be substantial as a good number of people will rely on the tourist trade.
c) Militarily Russia has a lot of people on the ground and keeping them supplied will be close to impossible. They will feel it and morale will fall like a stone.
d) The more morale drops the levels of insubordination will increase
e) Russian knows that this bridge is a high priority target. To let such a successful attack take place with no warning isn't a great advert for the Russian armed forces and a lot of people will be asking those questions
 
What I really appreciate about this current Ukrainian offensive, is that there are pushes and nudges all across the board and the Russians are having to shuttle forces back and forth in an attempt to counter this.

Two takeaways from what I'm seeing:
First, it's keeping the Russians off-balance while consuming their precious resources.

Secondly, while pressure is being applied in one (or more) area(s), eyes are off Ukrainian element movements elsewhere. Which means the ability to conduct a buildup in strategic areas with little or no notice from Russian eyes.

I am still of the opinion that this current "offensive" is just a shell game, with the real fireworks soon to come.
 
I have to totally agree with this. There must be some choke points on the way out of Crimea through the occupied land, and taking some of those out would also help

There are, three roads or bridges aside from that crossing the Kerch Strait, according to a map in this Reuters article (it's right below the opening paragraphs) :


Do everything you can to stop both the road and rail bridges from working and the political impact will be huge.
a) A lot of people are on holiday or go on holiday in the Crimea. All of them will be significantly impacted and all the PR in the world will not be able to hide the humiliation from ordinary Russians.
b) Economically the impact on Crimea will be substantial as a good number of people will rely on the tourist trade.
c) Militarily Russia has a lot of people on the ground and keeping them supplied will be close to impossible. They will feel it and morale will fall like a stone.
d) The more morale drops the levels of insubordination will increase

And they're already having massive morale issues, as well as insubordination in the chain of command. Today's ISW update is a long read but well worth it.


e) Russian knows that this bridge is a high priority target. To let such a successful attack take place with no warning isn't a great advert for the Russian armed forces and a lot of people will be asking those questions

Right, and it indicates that even after last autumn's attacks, the Russians still don't have their act together defensively.
 
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I got a little chuckle out of this:

bridge.jpg
 

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