Small Wars Journal

The 8 Reasons Why Russia’s Much-Hyped Coming Offensive Will Fail Miserably

Mon, 02/20/2023 - 9:25pm

The 8 Reasons Why Russia’s Much-Hyped Coming Offensive Will Fail Miserably

Enough with the “Russian offensive” hype.  Whatever the Kremlin manages to stitch together in the coming weeks and months, there is no reason to suspect it will be anything different from what Russian operations have been for the more than ten months since the end of March, the last time Russia saw any major successes on the battlefield: that is, ineffective and incompetent.

By Brian E. Frydenborg Twitter @bfry1981(link is external) February 20, 2023

Image

U.S. President Joe Biden and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in central Kyiv on Feb. 20Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP via Getty Images

 

As the phase of the war in Ukraine marked by Russian President Vladimir Putin’s February 24, 2022 incredible escalation of the war beyond long-contested parts of the Donbas and Crimea is closing in on hitting its twelfth month, or one-year-mark, there is much hullaballoo about some sort of coming large-scale Russian offensive, presumable in the coming weeks or months.  But when considering this potential Russian offensive, there are a number of obvious and clear factors that mean whatever may be Russia’s offensive will not succeed, but, instead, will fail spectacularly.  Here they are…

 

1.) “What Have You Done for Me Lately?”

I think a sports analogy works pretty well here.  If you are big sports better and a team starts its season with 5 wins, and then goes onto lose every game or match for months straight after that, you would not want to bet on that team given the more recent trends in its performance.  It’s the same thing with investing: if a company’s performance has been poor for many quarters in a row, a few quarters of very strong performance before that long, consistent period of poor performance will not be a major factor in the minds of investors, who would avoid investing in a company that had not been performing well lately.

As far as Ukraine, it should be noted that out of nearly twelve months since Russia’s major February 24, 2022, escalation of its 2014-launched war(link is external) of imperialist(link is external)colonialist(link is external), and genocidal(link is external) war of national annihilation(link is external) against Ukraine, Russia has had roughly just five weeks of major winning, all in the beginning(link is external) from the end of February until late March; the rest of this period of escalation, Russia has been almost entirely losing(link is external).  That’s right, that’s little more than five weeks out of over nearly fifty-two weeks of Russia winning with soon-to-be eleven straight months of Russia losing, its miniscule gains coming at such terribly Pyrrhic costs(link is external) that considering them “victories” is a stretch.  So, when trying to ascertain how Russia will perform in the coming months, as with many things, recent history is the best indicator especially when compared to more distant history and the recent history tells us not to expect much from Russia’s military as far as winning.

 

2.) A Tale of Maps

In a directly related point, for more than ten months straight, Russia has experienced a massive net loss of territory(link is external) that it occupies in Ukraine: nearly all of its gains were made in the first five weeks of Putin’s “special operation,” as he dubs the February 24 escalation of this war, and since then, since the end of March and beginning of April, Russia has lost far, far more territory than the tiny amount of Pyrrhic territorial gains(link is external) it has made.  If Russia has been unable to make significant gains of territory for approaching eleven months, why should we expect that to change anytime soon?

The Three Maps showing why Ukraine is winning and Russia is losingClick map collage to zoom(link is external) and click here for Brian’s related explanatory piece(link is external)

Russian "Progress" in Bakhmut the past 4 monthsRussian “progress” in Bakhmut from September 12-January 12; click here to zoom in on Brian’s map collage(link is external) and also see Brian’s explanation(link is external) of the collage and his discussion(link is external) of the Bakhmut/Soledar situation being Pyrrhic for Russia

 

3.) Russia’s Insanely High Casualties

Destroyed Russian tankPast as Prologue-A destroyed Russian tank is seen by the side of the road in Kupiansk, Ukraine, on December 15. (Chris McGrath/Getty Images)

Form early(link is external) in March(link is external) through the present, I’ve noted repeatedly(link is external) how ridiculously high(link is external) casualties on the Russian side are, and why I essentially trust Ukraine’s casualty estimates for Russia(link is external).  That estimate passed 100,000 killed(link is external) on December 22 and is now over 143,000 killed(link is external), and that may not even include non-combat deaths, which are considerable in any major conflict and are going to be worse for Russia than other nations because Russia is… Russia (former U.S. Department of Defense civilian logistics expert Trent Telenko puts forth a serious effort(link is external) to calculate these additional losses and comes up with a rough-yet-plausible 1.33 multiplier of an additional third of combat deaths to be added to the total combat deaths to account for noncombat deaths).  Beyond the massive personnel human losses, there are over 3,300 tanks, over 2,300 artillery systems, over 6,500 armored personnel carriers, nearly 300 planes, nearly 300 helicopters, and thousands of other vehicles lost by Russia.  Recent mainstream analyst estimates of total Russian casualties—killed, wounded, and missing—range from 200,000 to 270,000(link is external).  The more Russia attacks, the more it loses, and in nearly every case since the beginning of April, those losses have come with zero territorial gains, with only a few exceptions yielding pitifully small gains over long periods of time.  Any military that takes casualties like this even over years, let alone months, is going to have serious problems with its performance, and there is no reasonable analysis that expects Russia’s military to perform better—let alone not worse—as a result compared with when it was intact before February 24.  Even if Ukraine’s estimate is significantly exaggerated, Russia’s losses(link is external) are still obviously catastrophic(link is external)—unprecedented for decades for any major military over such a short period of time—and far, far worse than Ukraine’s(link is external).  Russia’s manpower issues are, therefore, endemic and here to stay, and absurd, desperate measures like recruiting prisoners(link is external) form within Russia have not and will not bring Russia success.

Image

 

4.) Russia Already Tried Offensives with a Much Better Military and Still Lost

This next point is deeply related to the last point: Russia‘s military at the beginning of the war and in other early months was in a far better state than it is now: it used many of its best troops and equipment in the initial assaults and in the months after, and, as I have previously discussed(link is external), most of its best troops have been killed or wounded or shattered, sometimes(link is external) their entire units destroyed(link is external), leaders and equipment no more.  There is no replacement for experienced troops and leaders.  Even normally-trained recruits would not be replacements for more experienced troops, but Russia is even rushing that training now(link is external) or is barely even training(link is external) new recruits, who are often barely equipped(link is external) (or even have(link is external) to pay for their(link is external) own equipment(link is external)), some even given tsarist-era rifles(link is external) and tanks taken out of long-term storage(link is external) that are a 1961 model (T-62) upgrade of a 1958 tank (T-55) or a 1983 upgrade of that 1961 model (T-62M)(link is external).  That is because, as this war has dragged on, much of Russia’s best equipment has been wiped out, including most of its military truck fleet(link is external) and at least(link is external) a very large(link is external) portion—perhaps most(link is external)—of its best tanks(link is external), among thousands of other(link is external) pieces of equipment, vehicles, and weapons system(link is external), with far, far more Russian equipment confirmed(link is external) destroyed than Ukrainian.  Russia even lost its best ship in its Black Sea Fleet: the flagship Mosvka (the sinking of which I predicted a few days before it happened(link is external)).  And as I have noted(link is external), Russia is so afraid of Ukraine’s anti-ship missiles and air defenses that both its navy and air force have been cowed largely into irrelevance save for lobbing cruise missiles from a distance.  Russia is even running low(link is external) on such missiles and (non-expired) artillery rounds.  It is also important to note the examples discussed in this paragraph are not just recent trends but trends that have been ongoing for many months.

leedrake5/GitHub(link is external)

Basically, Russia’s military is currently in shambles, and its effort we saw early in the war is by far the best Russia is going to be able to offer in this war (and even that was not very good); it will not be able to attack with better troops and better weapons and better leaders than it had in the early months of the war as those men are dead and that equipment destroyed.  In fact, as time goes on, Russia’s capabilities will only continue to decrease in most significant areas (even when it has increased them in the case of receiving Iranian drones, those drones along with Russia’s cruise missiles are rather impotently(link is external) not effective against military targets and are instead being used—increasingly ineffectively(link is external)—to target civilian and civilian infrastructure).  Time is simply not on Russia’s side, despite some thinking(link is external) to the contrary(link is external).

 

5.) Ukraine’s Military Keeps Getting Better as Russia’s Keeps Getting Worse

Conversely, Ukraine’s military keeps getting better and better—better trained and better equipped, increasingly nimble and adaptable(link is external)—so that now, just about any Ukrainian military unit lined up against its Russian equivalent will be qualitatively superior(link is external).  One major example of this is the newer Western air defenses being sent to Ukraine dramatically reducing(link is external) the effectiveness of Russian cruise missile and drone attacks.  Another is the very-near-future arrival of advanced Western tanks, with Ukrainians currently training in them(link is external).  There is also the case the Ukraine is more and more nearing parity(link is external) with Russia on the number of artillery shots fired when earlier in the war Russia enjoyed an overwhelming advantage.  Those are just a few of many examples on top of numerous earlier ones that have already had a huge impact on this war, and there will be more and more such capability increases for Ukraine with its allies standing by it steadfastly throughout the war.  And, unlike Russia, Ukraine actually values the lives of its troops(link is external) and tries to take care of them, planning its battles so as to avoid and its minimize casualties(link is external), while the Russians do not take even basic steps(link is external) to care for their troops(link is external) and waste so many of their men’s lives needlessly, even cruelly(link is external).

 

6.) Logistics, Logistics, LOGISTICS

As noted, much of Russia’s military truck fleet has been all but destroyed in a longstanding excellent and constantly-improving campaign of precise targeting(link is external) by the Ukrainian military, with everything from drones to HIMARS.  This campaign been so effective that just by visually-confirmed destroyed equipment, Ukraine is successfully taking out Russian logistics targets by a margin of some ten for every one(link is external) Ukrainian logistics target hit by Russia.  It is so bad that Russia is throwing in civilian trucks(link is external) ill-suited to a military environment.

When a military does not have good mechanized truck support for its front-line troops, all manner of crippling issues arise: wounded troops cannot get a casevac (casualty evacuation) in time to save them(link is external) or keep their wounds from staying minor, resulting in far more dead and incapacitated soldiers; vehicles cannot be fueled promptly in order to keep them useful as opposed to making them stranded easy targets; food and water, let alone ammunition, cannot get to troops quickly; all this means even with many, many troops, it is incredibly difficult if not impossible to advance more than one or few dozen miles(link is external) with any sense of speed, crushing the ability(link is external) to even launch any large-scale offensives that actually take large pieces of territory and hold them over time while also crushing the ability to fend off counterattacks, denying the military the ability to quickly move reinforcements to a collapsing part of the line and evacuate men and equipment.  And the trucks and drivers are not being properly cared for, compounding all these issues and adding others(link is external) (for this discussion on trucks, I have relied heavily on Trent Telenko, the essential person to follow on Twitter regarding logistics in this Ukraine war, as I have noted before(link is external).)

But it’s not just the trucks: Russia has been unable to protect vital bridges(link is external)rail lines(link is external)ammunition depots(link is external)communications(link is external) channels, command centers(link is external), and even bases deep inside Russia(link is external).  Ukraine’s attacks on Russia’s already poor logistical system have been so effective that tactics for Russia resemble Pyrrhic World War I-era, even nineteenth-century-style human-wave attacks(link is external), so degraded are their technical capabilities (although Russia’s tactics in general are often an era behind, so in the Russian context the difference may not feel as pronounced).

With a logistical situation like the Russians have, you get results that have a half-year of attacks resulting in single-digit mile gains at tremendous costs (e.g., the Bakhmut area(link is external)) or practically no gains (just about everywhere else).  It means when defeats come, they come as rapid entire-front collapses(link is external) as has happened to Russia outside Kyiv, Chernihiv, and Sumy, then Kharkiv, Izyum, Kupiansk, Lyman, and lastly Kherson throughout the course of this war.  This will be repeated, it’s just a matter of where and when, as I have explained before(link is external).

 

7.) Morale

All of this adds up to a situation with miserable morale: it doesn’t take much time(link is external) for any soldier serving in Ukraine to know(link is external) that Putin is, to use the technical term, completely full of shit on everything from the reasons why(link is external) Russia is fighting this war(link is external) to the performance of Russia’s military in the war; they know people at home are being gaslit(link is external) as they have been, the gaslighting knowing no bounds(link is external).  They literally record(link is external) videos asking the Russian government(link is external) to give them proper equipment(link is external) so they have a fighting chance not to be slaughtered(link is external) or even just asking to go home(link is external), with some specialized units publicly begging(link is external) to be deployed to do their specialty instead of being used as cannon fodder(link is external) while other troops are forced into roles for which they have not been properly trained(link is external).

There are intercepted calls(link is external) between Russian troops(link is external) and their families(link is external) in which the truth(link is external) is laid bare(link is external), that everything(link is external) is horrible and hopeless(link is external).  Expecting men under such conditions to fight and fight well in a war not in defense or the Motherland but to commit physical(link is external)cultural(link is external), and national genocide(link is external) against Ukraine(link is external)—its people(link is external)children(link is external), even the(link is external) very concept(link is external) of Ukrainian statehood(link is external)—is a losing bet and Russian history has shown what can happen when leaders mistreat their troops in imperialist wars of aggression while callously treating(link is external) their men as disposable nothings(link is external): I am now reading Antony Beevor’s excellent new account(link is external) about the massive collapse on the Eastern Front during World War I of the Russian Army in 1917 amidst multiple revolutions back in Russia, when common Russian soldiers turned on their abusive officers killing many of them, surrendered en masse, abandoned their positions, switched sides, and/or became revolutionaries who turned on their political leaders and helped overthrow them, bringing down Russia’s centuries-long Tsardom and eventually getting behind the Bolsheviks to create the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR, or Soviet Union).  We are already seeing a real hate(link is external) on the part of Russian fighting men(link is external) for their commanders, some even murdering(link is external) (“fragging”) their officers(link is external).  And there is even a whole unit of Russians—the Russian Legion—in the Ukrainian Army led by Ukrainian officers and composed of Russians who have turned on their government and are fighting for Ukraine against Russian forces(link is external) in some of the most intense fighting of the war.

Such incidents are examples of the beginning of revolution or at least a revolutionary spirit(link is external), and a revolutionary spirit can break out and spread quickly over large masses of men and move them to actual rebellion and revolution: such things can be more contagious than COVID, as history shows us all too well, and Russian’s history of peasant rebellions(link is external) and revolutions(link is external) mean that Putin should be(link is external) watching over his shoulder(link is external).  In fact, too few analysts are really considering the possibility of a coup inside Russia, something I have predicted—unless Putin dies (or “dies”)—since early March(link is external), for which I have been criticized(link is external) and even mocked(link is external), and yet, the assumption that Russians are some superhumans or such sheep that they will indefinitely allow themselves to be treated as cannon fodder and practically slaves in a losing war of imperial conquest is what strikes me as absurd.

And those Russians will face a Ukrainian foe possessing excellent morale, to boot.

 

8.) Leadership (or Lack Thereof)

Stalin could make huge mistakes in war, but he showed an ability to adapt, if not quickly, in important enough ways that he could snatch victory from the jaws of defeat.  In the Soviet-Finnish Winter War of 1939-1940—a conflict bearing much resemblance both militarily(link is external) and thematically(link is external) to the current Russia-Ukraine war, as I have argued(link is external) in great detail(link is external)—it took some two awful months for Stalin to course correct in Finland and quickly bring about a moderate victory after two months of humiliating and costly defeats.  Today, Putin has failed to course correct sufficiently still nearly a year into this war.  Between Putin, his defense minister Sergei Shoigu, Yevgeniy Prigozhin as the leader of the mercenary Wagner Group that is a de facto extension(link is external) of the Russian military, and the rest of the Russian leadership clown-show in their failing generals and officers—who are taking incredible casualties(link is external) even among their own ranks(link is external)incompetence(link is external) has been the modus operandi(link is external) of the Russian military from February 24 through the present(link is external), and casualties(link is external) are actually increasing again(link is external) and increasing significantly(link is external), meaning not only is Russia’s performance not improving, it is actually getting worse(link is external).

Specifically, it took almost exactly ten months of war for Russia to hit 100,000 dead Russians since February 24 by Ukraine’s estimates, but with the Pyrrhic Bakhmut campaign peaking in terms of Russia’s primitive assaults, 40,000 additional dead have been added to the total in about seven-and-a-half weeks: this is more than twice the rate of Russians getting killed as the previous ten months of the war, and this can be attributed to terrible leadership form the top—Putin is micromanaging(link is external) this war in deeply counterproductive ways—down to the bottom(link is external) in the Russian military, not just Ukraine’s increasing capabilities and skills.  There is far(link is external) more finger-pointing(link is external) than problem-solving going on within the Russian high command, and rearranging the deck chairs of the Titanic with multiple replacements at the top(link is external) are having few to no positive effects for Russia.  It is even likely that that number of Russians killed since December 22, when the 100,000 mark was hit, will hit 50,000 just a few weeks from now or less, which would mean it will have taken little over two months to reach half of the deaths that Russia accumulated over the preceding 10 months.

Ministry of Finance of Ukraine(link is external)

That is the state of the Russian military right now.  This is not a military led by people who know how to win in a major war, this is an army that simply cannot win led by people who simply cannot win.

*****

 

I don’t blame Ukraine for hyping up this threat: it needs as much Western help as it can get to save as many Ukrainian lives as possible and defeat Russia as soon as possible, and much of Ukraine’s success does come from the historic level of support the West has provided it in such a short time under a coalition led by American President Joe Biden, who just made an unprecedented visit to wartime Kyiv to reaffirm America’s resolute support for Ukraine (a visit unlike anything in U.S. history since U.S. President Abraham Lincoln’s 1864 visit at the height of the Civil War to Fort Stevens protecting Washington, where he came under fire(link is external)).  The Ukrainians need to keep Western publics and governments engaged and they are doing this masterfully; indeed, many in the West don’t need any encouragement(link is external) in wanting to support Ukraine.  Thus, it is not realistic that Western support will disappear or lessen anytime soon, and, indeed, we know it will increase, but this is in part to Ukraine’s desperate pleas for help even though Ukraine is clearly not in a desperate situation (though it costs and sacrifices can be tremendously high even if not approaching anywhere near the losses suffered by the Russians).  It’s not much of a sell to say “Hey, this Russian offensive has no chance, but we still need a lot of stuff,” so they are making the right pitch, and that supports is absolutely necessary, but as things are going, that support is coming and coming and coming and Ukraine is winning and winning and winning.  If anything, the speculative “Russian offensive” that is now receiving so much airtime and ink is going too far more be a great selling point for Ukraine to receive more aid than it will actually be an offensive that can ever succeed.

Again, that is not to minimize the death and destruction that will result, the lives of brave Ukrainian soldiers and innocent civilians and Russians treated like Mordor orcs that will pay the ultimate price in Ukraine’s righteous war of self-preservation, but as far as any chance Russia has of taking and holding any large parts of Ukrainian territory beyond what it holds now—not that it can even hold that over the long run—this apparently-coming Russian offensive is essentially not any kind of serious threat for the clear, obvious reasons laid out herein.

Brian’s Ukraine analysis has been praised by: Mykhailo Podolyak(link is external), a top advisor to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky; the Ukraine Territorial Defense Forces(link is external)Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges(link is external), U.S. Army (Ret.), former commanding general, U.S. Army Europe; Scott Shane(link is external), two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist formerly of The New York Times Baltimore Sun (and featured in HBO’s The Wire, playing himself); Rep. Adam Kinzinger(link is external) (R-IL), one of the only Republicans to stand up to Trump and member of the January 6th Committee; and Orwell Prize-winning journalist Jenni Russell(link is external), among others.

 

This article is an adapted and updated version of an article previously published on Brian’s news website Real Context News(link is external) on February 16 under a different title: Offensive Smensive: 8 Reasons Why Russia’s Expected Offensive Cannot Succeed(link is external); see all Brian’s Ukraine coverage here(link is external).

Also see Brian’s related eBook, A Song of Gas and Politics: How Ukraine Is at the Center of Trump-Russia, or, Ukrainegate: A “New” Phase in the Trump-Russia Saga Made from Recycled Materials, available for Amazon Kindle(link is external) and Barnes & Noble Nook(link is external) (preview here(link is external)).

About the Author(s)

Brian Frydenborg has spent two decades studying, writing about, or working in the fields of conflict analysis, counterterrorism, international affairs, public policy, politics, history, and humanitarian aid and international development.  His work has been featured in Newsweek, Jerusalem Post, Modern War Institute at West Point, London School of Economics and Political Science Middle East Centre, Jordan Times, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (RFE/RL), and Real Clear Defense/History, among others.  You can follow him on Twitter @bfry1981 and on his website, Real Context News.

 

Comments

financial material translation services in belarus(link is external)

financial material translation services in georgia(link is external)

financial material translation services in cyprus(link is external)

financial material translation services in romania(link is external)

financial material translation services in turkey(link is external)

financial material translation services in qatar(link is external)

financial material translation services in syria(link is external)

financial material translation services in japan(link is external)

financial material translation services in south korea(link is external)

financial material translation services in dubai(link is external)

financial material translation services in algeria(link is external)

financial material translation services in sudan(link is external)

financial material translation services in australia(link is external)

financial material translation services in belgium(link is external)

financial material translation services in germany(link is external)

financial material translation services in monaco(link is external)

financial material translation services in russia(link is external)

financial material translation services in ukraine(link is external)

financial material translation services in oman(link is external)

financial material translation services in united arab emirates(link is external)

financial material translation services in malaysia(link is external)

financial material translation services in sri lanka(link is external)

financial material translation services in sharjah(link is external)

financial material translation services in bahrain(link is external)

financial material translation services in tunisia(link is external)

hospitality material translation services in the united states(link is external)

hospitality material translation services in denmark(link is external)

hospitality material translation services in greece(link is external)

hospitality material translation services in netherlands(link is external)

hospitality material translation services in slovakia(link is external)