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  • O BRASIL EH O QUE ME ENVENENA MAS EH O QUE ME CURA (LUIZ ANTONIO SIMAS)

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    terça-feira, março 29, 2022

    Let's talk about mud, the greatest friend Ukraine ever had

     Ukrainian servicemen ride on tanks towards the front line with Russian forces in the Lugansk region of Ukraine on February 25, 2022. - Ukrainian forces fought off Russian troops in the capital Kyiv on the second day of a conflict that has claimed dozens of lives, as the EU approved sanctions targeting President Vladimir Putin.  Small arms fire and explosions were heard in the city's northern district of Obolonsky as what appeared to be an advance party of Russia's invasion force left a trail of destruction. (Photo by Anatolii STEPANOV / AFP) (Photo by ANATOLII STEPANOV/AFP via Getty Images)

    Before the invasion, I posted a 7-day weather outlook for Ukraine and wrote, “Those are above-freezing temperatures, meaning that grounds are already thawing out, creating a soft mushy mess that would bog down any Russian incursion deep into Ukraine.” It wasn’t a particularly novel observation.

    A brief from the Center for Strategic and International Studies on January 13 noted that, “An invasion that begins in January or February would have the advantage of frozen ground to support the cross-country movement of a large mechanized force [...] Should fighting continue into March, mechanized forces would have to deal with the infamous Rasputitsa, or thaw [...] In March, the frozen steppes thaw, and the land again becomes at best a bog, and at worst a sea of mud.”

    The National Interest devoted an entire story on February 10 to the topic:

    It has been said that Russia's weather helped save the motherland from numerous invasions. While harsh winters played a major role, so too did the Russian mud that came from the fall rains and spring thaws. “Rasputitsa” is the Russian term for the two seasons of the year—spring and autumn—when travel on unpaved roads across the vast plains of the country becomes difficult due to the muddy conditions.

    The term literally translates to "thaw," but it has come to mean "time without roads."

    The lack of passable countryside is a problem for two reasons. One, mechanized units need space to maneuver. There’s a reason we’ve seen so many videos of Russian equipment bogged down in, well, bog. That’s what they’re supposed to do, spread out, and attempt to flank the enemy, attacking it on its sides, attempt to surround them. They’re called “maneuver units” for a reason. When the countryside is swallowing tanks, well, there’s no maneuvering happening. 

    The second reason is the obvious one—by forcing Russian units to remain on roads, it makes it easier to funnel them to ambush points, makes it easier for aircraft and drones to find and hit, and limits their progress toward key objectives to wherever the roads may take them. 

    Russia supposedly invaded as late as it did so it wouldn’t step on China’s Olympics. Whatever the actual reason, it has cost Russia dearly, in time, in material, in lives, and in treasure. Apparently, it’s Russia’s time to learn what Napoleon and Hitler discovered the hard way.

     

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