• Top Story
  • Weekly
  • Latest
  • Editorial
  • Opinion
  • Interview
  • Feature
  • Sports
  • News
  • J&K
  • World
  • Education
  • Health
  • Economy
  • Culture
  • Literature
  • Lifestyle
  • Books
What's Hot

Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?

January 8, 2025

Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public

December 25, 2024

America’s Waning Global Position

November 4, 2024
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?
  • Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public
  • America’s Waning Global Position
  • Book Review—Shawls and Shawlbafs of Kashmir
  • Hundreds of Sheep Face Starvation as Forest Officials Bar Grazing
  • Photo Essay: Fire Fighting Service In Dal Lake
  • Pheran—How Kashmir’s Traditional Attire Evolved Through Centuries
  • Pheran—How Kashmir’s Traditional Attire Evolved Through Centuries
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
 Kashmir Newsline – Expression Unleashed Kashmir Newsline – Expression Unleashed
  • Weekly

    Weekly Dec 25 – Dec 31, 2022

    December 25, 2022

    Weekly Dec 05 – 11 Dec,2022

    December 7, 2022

    Weekly Nov 28 – Dec 04, 2022

    November 30, 2022

    Weekly November 21-27

    November 22, 2022

    Weekly November 14-20

    November 16, 2022
  • News
    1. India
    2. South Aisa
    3. World
    Featured
    Recent

    Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?

    January 8, 2025

    Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public

    December 25, 2024

    America’s Waning Global Position

    November 4, 2024
  • Feature
    1. Interview
    2. Literature
    3. Editorial
    4. Opinion
    5. Top Story
    6. Books
    7. View All

    Interview: ‘Travel, Observing and Tasting is the Best Way to Learn’

    October 2, 2023

    AS Dulat’s Kashmir Stories

    February 4, 2023

    Interview: ‘People are Deeply Pained by Mirwaiz’s Absence from Jamia Masjid’

    November 16, 2022

    ‘Abrogation of Article 370 has Made Kashmir More Dangerous than 1990s’

    October 18, 2022

    The Poet of Love—Daagh Dehlvi’s Poetry has Native Idiom and Sufi Undercurrent

    May 30, 2023

    The Breadth and Sweep of Sahir Ludhianvi’s Works

    March 8, 2023

    Memories of Gulmarg

    January 28, 2023

    ‘If This Language Lives On, Rahi Also Lives On’

    January 18, 2023

    Kashmir Needs Collective Fight against Glaring Drug Abuse

    December 27, 2022

    Healthcare Emergency

    December 7, 2022

    Traffic Mess: Who is to Blame? 

    November 30, 2022

    Give the Artists the Space They Need

    November 23, 2022

    Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?

    January 8, 2025

    Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public

    December 25, 2024

    America’s Waning Global Position

    November 4, 2024

    Writer’s Block What!

    October 8, 2023

    Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?

    January 8, 2025

    Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public

    December 25, 2024

    America’s Waning Global Position

    November 4, 2024

    Book Review—Shawls and Shawlbafs of Kashmir

    September 12, 2024

    Book Review—Shawls and Shawlbafs of Kashmir

    September 12, 2024

    Book Review: The Divine Dialect of Flowers

    October 5, 2023

    The Collision That Birthed Religion

    March 18, 2023

    Book Review: What is the Meter of the Dictionary?

    March 2, 2023

    Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?

    January 8, 2025

    Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public

    December 25, 2024

    America’s Waning Global Position

    November 4, 2024

    Book Review—Shawls and Shawlbafs of Kashmir

    September 12, 2024
  • J&K

    Hundreds of Sheep Face Starvation as Forest Officials Bar Grazing

    March 14, 2024

    Photo Essay: Fire Fighting Service In Dal Lake

    March 8, 2024

    Tatakooti—Challenges of Owning a Towering Peak

    October 5, 2023

    Interview: ‘Travel, Observing and Tasting is the Best Way to Learn’

    October 2, 2023

    What is Ailing the Apple Farming?

    September 16, 2023
  • Lifestyle

    Eating Together Binds Families

    November 22, 2022

    How Smartphones are Harming Children

    October 25, 2022

    Raising a Champion

    October 11, 2022

    The Reluctant ‘Urban Poor’

    August 28, 2022

    The Reluctant ‘Urban Poor’

    August 21, 2022
  • Economy

    Explained: What is a Credit Score and Why is it Important?

    December 27, 2022

    Rights of Special Bank Customers

    November 30, 2022

    How to be a Socially Responsible Investor

    November 23, 2022

    Stock Exchange Crimes

    November 16, 2022

    Avoid Debt Trap

    November 8, 2022
  • Culture
  • Entertainment
  • Sports

    Tatakooti—Challenges of Owning a Towering Peak

    October 5, 2023

    When Salim was in the Mood

    July 12, 2023

    Why Does Team India Fail Consistently?

    December 27, 2022

    Hail Ben Stokes and Co.

    December 7, 2022

    England Tour of Pakistan

    November 30, 2022
 Kashmir Newsline – Expression Unleashed Kashmir Newsline – Expression Unleashed
Home»Opinion»Ukraine War—Beyond PR Victories
Opinion

Ukraine War—Beyond PR Victories

Kashmir NewslineBy Kashmir NewslineMay 11, 2023Updated:May 12, 2023No Comments6 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
While a lot of chest-thumping will be witnessed in the NATO capitals in the first few weeks of the fresh counter-offensive, the war is bound to go only one way.
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

As the much hyped counteroffensive begins, the Ukrainian forces are faced with multiple disadvantages.

  Saurabh Kumar Shahi           

After months of dithering, the much-hyped Ukrainian counteroffensive is about to start, weather permitting. Ukrainian regime, which thrives on optics and PR victories, considers WWII Victory Day celebrations month of May, as a perfect month for such an operation. It also makes sense bearing the weather in mind. The spring has been unusually rainy in Ukraine, and it has turned the black soil of the Donbas into sludge. Any counter-offensive in such a situation will falter before it starts. Therefore the date got pushed ahead several times. We are already in the month of May and Russia and its allies are celebrating the Victory Day with a grand parade at the Red Square. Rain has subsided and the ground has solidified. The much vaunted 47th Mechanised Brigade & 82nd Airborne Brigade of the Ukrainian Army has already taken an offensive posture near the frontline. Under the circumstances, a push in the near future is not unimaginable.

Advantage Russia

This is the third Ukrainian Army on the battlefield. The first Army –  and the most formidable one  –  equipped with Soviet and post-Soviet weapons was laid to waste by the Russians in three months. Its offensive potential was, in fact, destroyed within four days.

Ukraine and NATO raised the second Army and equipped it with Soviet and post-Soviet weaponry from the erstwhile Warsaw Pact countries. This army secured Pyrrhic victory by pushing Russians out of Kharkov and the Eastern banks of Dnieper along the Kherson Front. The Russians traded time for territory and withdrew, and destroyed half of this second Ukrainian Army from the prepared defences on the other side of Oskil and Dnieper rivers.

The remaining half of this second Ukrainian Army was destroyed in different fire-bags the Russians created in Donbas including, but not limited to, the ones in the cities of Bakhmut and Soledar.

NATO has raised a third, and in all probability the last, Ukrainian Army now. This one is almost entirely equipped with Western weaponry. On paper, it looks to be the strongest one considering the weapons it has conjured up from disparate sources. However, a closer look suggests that there’s more than meets the eye here.

For starters, it is the most poorly trained one. Different NATO countries have trained small groups of new recruits in crammed-up courses that aspire to train them on a new weaponry system, leave alone new weapons, in a few weeks – something that regular soldiers take several months if not years to train. This can prove fatal in a life-or-death situation.

However, this is just one of the issues. The second issue is the on-field maintenance. A big part of the weapons donated by NATO countries is in various stages of disrepair. There is a lack of spares. This is before the battle has even started. Once it starts and weapons and equipment get battered, it will be a nightmare repairing them on the field. Withdrawing them will make them even more vulnerable to secondary attacks and destruction.

Then comes into picture what is known as Lanchester’s Laws of Combat. The law suggests that an offensive army needs a personnel advantage of at least 3:1 to break the prepared defences. This third Ukrainian Army consists of around 1, 00,000 soldiers of various qualities – from the battle-hardened ones to the newly mobilised who let out a childlike shriek in the face of certain death. Facing them is a 3,00,000-strong Russian contingent stretching from North to South. Rather than an advantage of 3:1, Ukrainians are at a disadvantage of 1:3. It does not take a genius to realise what will happen when the fog of war settles a few weeks following the initial push.

Ukraine’s PR Victory

However, since the Ukrainians value optics more than substance, we need to discuss the scenario in the first few weeks as well, which is where the PR victories will be achieved by the Ukrainians.

The best case scenario for the Ukrainians is to concentrate the force in one sector and then make a push to break the defence line there. Russians have made prepared-defences all along the front in multiple layers. These are formidable arrangements.

For a PR victory, the Ukrainians need to employ three options. Push towards Melitopol and cut the land bridge to Crimea. Occupy a Russian border town. Last, but not the least, inflict a large numbers of casualties on the Russians even if it means complete annihilation of their own forces.

The Russians understand that force-on-force defensive measures will lead to lots of casualties. It is therefore entirely possible that while facing an attack, Russians will make tactical withdrawals. If their first line of defence is breached even after inflicting massive damages on the Ukrainians, they are likely to withdraw to the second and then the third line of defence all the while hitting Ukrainians trapped between the two layers of defence. In fact, this shall be the most likely plan of action.

However, this does not mean that the Russians are sitting idle waiting for the counter-offensive to begin. While the Bakhmut meat grinder is inflicting horrible numbers of dead and damage on the Ukrainians, there are other measures too that the Russians are taking. After several months of degrading once formidable air defence and air force of the Ukrainians, Russian Aerospace forces are now finally dominating the skies. The use of massive glide bombs that destroy prepared Ukrainian defences without the bomber even coming in the range of the Ukrainian ADs have wreaked havoc on men and material that Ukraine has been accumulating for the counter-offensive. Unlike the costlier cruise missiles that are limited in numbers and can only be used judiciously, these glide bombs are stored in the Russian armouries in several tens of thousands. Expect Russia to use them copiously when the counter-offensive is off the mark.

Wagner Private Military Company fighting on behalf of the Russians will be deployed to another front once Ukrainians decide to not send more fresh meat in the Bakhmut grinder and finally withdraw. Wherever the Wagner Group is next deployed will turn into another meat-grinder and start once again sucking Ukrainian troops from among what has been gathered for the counter-offensive – the long-term result of which is not very difficult to guess.

Expect a lot of self-congratulations and chest-thumping in the NATO capitals in the initial few weeks amidst the fog of war. The war, however, will go only one way.

Saurabh Kumar Shahi has covered The Greater Middle East for over 15 years and has reported from Kabul, Peshawar, Baghdad, Aleppo, Damascus, Beirut, and Jerusalem among other places.

 

 

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Kashmir Newsline
  • Website

Related Posts

Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?

January 8, 2025

Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public

December 25, 2024

America’s Waning Global Position

November 4, 2024

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Team India’s Next Big Thing

July 6, 202227,463 Views

Why This Alpine Lake Trek Stands Out

July 6, 202225,423 Views

India’s Majoritarian Politics and the Role of Media

July 6, 202224,120 Views

Fragile Media Economies and Lack of Opportunities in Kashmir

July 6, 202223,225 Views
Don't Miss
Top Story

Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?

By Kashmir NewslineJanuary 8, 20250

BRI’s transformative potential extends beyond economic development. It has the power to reshape global trade…

Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public

December 25, 2024

America’s Waning Global Position

November 4, 2024

Book Review—Shawls and Shawlbafs of Kashmir

September 12, 2024
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

Based out of Srinagar (Jammu & Kashmir) and brought out in print as a weekly with online presence as well, Kashmir Newsline is solely committed to ethical, fearless journalism. We at Kashmir Newsline cover politics, geopolitics, international relations, social issues, health, sports and almost everything else as objectively as humanly possible. Kashmir Newsline carries detailed reports and in-depth analysis on multiple developments happening in Kashmir and around the world.

Facebook X (Twitter)
Our Picks

Belt and Road Initiative: How Real is ‘Debt-trap Diplomacy’?

January 8, 2025

Why Pegasus Report Must be Made Public

December 25, 2024

America’s Waning Global Position

November 4, 2024
Most Popular

Team India’s Next Big Thing

July 6, 202227,463 Views

Why This Alpine Lake Trek Stands Out

July 6, 202225,423 Views

India’s Majoritarian Politics and the Role of Media

July 6, 202224,120 Views
Facebook X (Twitter)
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Politics
  • J&K
  • E-Paper
  • Contact Us
© 2025 Kashmir Newsline. Designed by NexG IT Solutions.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Go to mobile version