Thank you @SeventyTwoTrillion for all your effort. :sankara-salute:

Old Map for reference

If you have any useful resource links please tag me in a comment with the link:

Examples of racism/euro-centrism during the Russia-Ukraine conflict

Add to the above list if you can, thank you.

Links

Time/Map: https://time.is/Ukraine

https://www.google.com/maps/place/Ukraine/@49.1162725,31.7993839,7z/data=!4m5!3m4!1s0x40d1d9c154700e8f:0x1068488f64010!8m2!3d48.379433!4d31.1655799?hl=en

https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer?mid=1B1PLMhbHmG1aJ2-QNxHY1TksI6HlNhqF&ll=48.60777942568106%2C36.4496511633501&z=7

Leftist discussion threads:

https://hexbear.net/post/177324

https://old.reddit.com/r/GenZedong/comments/t03foy/genzedong_russiaukraine_master_discussion_thread/ :kitty-cri-texas:

https://lemmygrad.ml/

Others:

http://thesaker.is/. (Right wing pro Russian , little unhinged about covid , but interesting war analysis, gets quoted by naked capitalism )

https://www.understandingwar.org/backgrounder/ukraine-conflict-updates

Twitter military updaters:

https://nitter.42l.fr/RWApodcast

https://nitter.net/ASBMilitary :kitty-cri:

https://nitter.42l.fr/ArmchairW

https://nitter.net/Militarylandnet

https://nitter.net/MihajlovicMike

https://nitter.net/KofmanMichael

https://nitter.net/TadeuszGiczan/status/1498673348183744518

https://www.youtube.com/c/DefensePoliticsAsia/videos

Global South Perspective: https://nitter.net/kiranopal_/status/1498723206496145413

https://www.understandingwar.org

https://www.moonofalabama.org/

News updates:

https://www.cgtn.com/special/UkraineCrisis.html

Live: https://www.cgtn.com/special/Live-update-Ukraine-Russia-border-crisis.html

YT/Video in Ukraine:

https://www.youtube.com/c/PatrickLancasterNewsToday/videos

https://www.youtube.com/c/RussellBentleyTe

Previous megathreads

First

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Twenty-Second

Twenty-Third

Twenty-Fourth

Twenty-Fifth

Twenth-Sixth

Twenty-Seventh

Twenty-Eighth

Twenty-Ninth

Thirty

Thirty-First

Thirty-Second

Thirty-Third

!news@hexbear.net RSS Feed https://hexbear.net/feeds/c/news.xml

  • SeventyTwoTrillion [he/him]
    ·
    edit-2
    3 years ago

    The Summary So Far; or "yo, what the fuck, why isn't Russia around Kiev anymore? what happened?"

    TLDR: Russia is winning pretty hard, Ukraine is losing pretty hard, this is (and always has been) a West-Russia proxy war, and the west is content to sacrifice every last Ukrainian for no particular gain other than to their military-industrial complexes. Russia may take control (annexation or otherwise) of potentially a third of Ukraine but have expressed no specific desire to do so yet. Extremely difficult times ahead for the world economically, even in western nations, but also a genuine chance to be finally rid of US hegemony over the coming decades. We will almost certainly see an increase in self-sufficiency in many countries but the road there is rocky for many developing nations.

    There's been a lot of action over the last month or so, way too much to mention every single troop movement and village taken. There are/were, I would say, 4 distinct fronts in this war: the Kiev + Chernigov front (now withdrawn); the Kharkiv + Donbass front; the Kherson + Mykolaiv front; and the Mariupol "front".

    First things first: the Kiev + Chernigov front. The motivations of the Russians here have been a subject of controversy in the megathreads. Did Russia intend to capture Kiev? Was that going to be via urban fighting or a slow siege after complete encirclement until surrender? As they didn't, is that a failure on the Russian's part, either due to poor logistics or extreme Ukrainian resistance? Or was the intention never to capture Kiev? All these points and more, we have argued about. I think there is a general but probably not overwhelming consensus that there were multiple purposes of the Kiev offensive. There may have been an element of seeing if they could snag Kiev without too much fighting if the Ukrainian forces were unable to mobilize in time, but when that didn't occur, the purpose of the Kiev front switched to a feint attack designed to hold the Ukrainian forces in place. This conflict is about the Donetsk and Luhansk republics, and Russia engaged (among other reasons) to free them from Ukraine after 8 years of fighting there that killed 14,000 people on both sides. Therefore, to aid the fighters of those republics, Russia attacked towards Kiev to force Ukraine to defend it instead of being able to freely move and reinforce the Donbass. A similar action may have occurred towards Mykolaiv on the southern side of Ukraine.

    If you say "well, this is clearly cope, obviously Russia tried and failed to take the city and then decided to make it seem like that was their plan all along" then I only really have five counterarguments: a) taking Kiev would not instantly end the war - the government of Ukraine could shift to Lviv in the west, and taking capitals does not grant you a Domination Victory in real life; b) if the plan hinged on Kiev being taken, then Russia would have used more of its military and airforce (which we know that they have because they're using them literally as I'm typing this out); c) Russia did not do anything to hold on to the villages and towns surrounding Kiev, unlike in the south (as I'll mention later); d) Russia was able to do a full, organized retreat without much fuss at all, which would be impossible if the ferocious Ukrainian resistance was hounding them all the way to the border, and e) it's impossible to truly tell the difference unless Russia decides to reveal its war plans from the first week of the invasion, so it's not worth fixating on.

    Anyway, Russia retreats from Kiev and Chernigov, as I say, without much fuss. Ukraine and the neo-Nazi battalions advances very quickly and "retakes" towns (there was nobody to advance against or fight to retake towns) and spends a couple days making fun of Russia and posting images of Russian-free towns. Then, and only then, once there had been a few days of silence, do the allegations of massive Russian human rights abuses and killings of civilians start filtering through to the western media, with the main case being in Bucha. The media goes berserk at this news. Then, there are inconsistencies: why did they wait days to report these killings? Why do the civilians killed have white armbands that signify they are pro-Russian? Why are there videos of Ukrainian soldiers asking if they can shoot civilians and being given the affirmative? Very strange. Russia denies all involvement, Belarus calls it a British operation, China and other nations call for patience, and an actual investigation first. Meanwhile, one Ukrainian authority calls for the slaughter of all Russians around the world. A little later, a railway station in Ukraine is hit by a missile, killing tens of refugees. The remains of the missile are clearly Ukrainian. It makes significantly more sense that the neo-Nazis would be doing this than Russia. Testimonies of civilians in warzones attest to this - that Azov shells their homes despite there being no Russians around, and use them as human shields. If Russia didn't care about civilian losses, they would have carpet-bombed Kiev to rubble.

    Meanwhile, on the Donbass front in the east. The key thing to understand about the Donbass front is that it's seen fighting for 8 years. There are massive trench systems there, and the anti-tank weaponry means that if you're Russia, you can't just blast through it with vehicles. It's a very slow moving front that has many Ukrainians on it - I've seen estimates from 40,000 to 100,000. Even so, the LPR has about 90% of its claimed territory, with the city of Severodonetsk being the last major stronghold for them to take. Meanwhile, the DPR has about 50%. They didn't take all that during this invasion - most of it they already had. But the LPR and DPR have been consistently taking territory from Ukraine. Russia has very recently massively stepped up its efforts to directly help the LPR and DPR, and is now shelling and bombing across the entire front. Russian forces are also advancing southwards from Izyum, which would allow them to eventually completely encircle the Ukrainian troops there and force them to surrender or die of starvation.

    Kharkiv, northwest from Donbass, has been a hotspot for most of the war. Tons of bombing there, and a lot of destruction. There isn't a lot to say about it that doesn't get needlessly granular for this summary. Ukraine has recently attempted an offensive outwards from the city to take advantage of the Russian focus elsewhere, but it is unlikely to achieve much in the end. There has also been Ukrainian shelling into Belgorod in Russia, but it's largely hitting small border villages. There was an incident a while ago when two Ukrainian helicopters blew up a Russian fuel depot but these are infrequent events for now.

    Next, the Kherson front. The forces from Crimea splayed outwards and took basically everything up to the Dnipro river, which includes Kherson on the north side. The river is extremely defensible, with only a few (and I mean literally 3 or so) crossing points across hundreds of kilometers. Ukraine has recently tried to blow up one of them, but the missiles were shot down. The front between Mykolaiv and Kherson has been confusing because there hasn't been a lot of information. Russia has a strong emplacement near Mykolaiv that they're using to shell it sometimes, but has not encircled it nor seemed to have attempted to in weeks. There have been claims of Ukrainian counteroffensive that seem plausible, although they once suggested they're near Kherson and would retake it over a weekend which was pretty ridiculous.

    I think the bigger news with Kherson and the area between it and Crimea is that there hasn't been much fighting really, and that life has returned to some degree of normalcy for the people there. This is partially because Russia has introduced the ruble there as a currency to replace Ukraine's currency, and is now reteaching the teachers there to educate in the Russian style rather than the Ukrainian style, which, as I said, didn't happen near Kiev. So I think Russia may intend to hold this territory for a long time, and perhaps never let go of it. Russia always wants more coasts I suppose.

    Now, Mariupol, on the south of Ukraine on the Sea of Azov, which is where the urban combat has been happening for the last few weeks. As best as I can tell, about 8000-9000 Ukrainian soldiers and lots of Azov neo-Nazis were encircled there and have been slowly being killed (or surrendering) by the DPR and the Chechens. Kadyrov, the head of the Chechens, has visited there a few times and given updates. After a period of apartment-to-apartment fighting, the Ukrainian forces were beaten back to the industrial zones, and now they only inhabit the Azovstal factory, which is currently being blown to fucking smithereens with them trapped inside. In all, about 1500 Ukrainians surrendered there. The civilians are deeply unhappy with Ukraine and Zelensky and their neo-Nazi occupiers and generally grateful to Russia - as much as you can be to the technically invading force, anyway. Lots of evacuations and humanitarian aid by Russian, and that evacuation has been called "forced deportations" and even "genocide" by some in the media.

    Continued below.

    • SeventyTwoTrillion [he/him]
      ·
      3 years ago

      While all this has been going on, the arsenals of many western nations have been funnelled into Ukraine. It's not clear to me what proportion is actually making it to the front line, but large amounts of it are being blown up by Russia as they're being transported, as Russia maintains its air superiority (with a Ukrainian plane occasionally cropping up and then being immediately shot down). As a further display of force, Russia has used a hypersonic missile to demonstrate that it possesses the technology, and nothing other than several tens of meters of metal or an even faster missile can stop a hypersonic missile, and the US doesn't seem to have them yet, so Russia has shown that it can strike almost anywhere in Europe in about ten minutes. While all these weapons being used, even if they're then being immediately destroyed, benefits the military-industrial complex greatly, it's getting to the point now where some nations are having to stop pouring arms into Ukraine because otherwise they'd have nothing left for themselves. Greece is in this position, and I think Germany might be there shortly. Ukraine is going through something like a week's worth of equipment every day, and, for example, it will take the US, with its limited industry, years to replace what Ukraine has already lost in a month or two. The combined might of the west is not causing major issues for Russia.

      How is Russia faring with the rest of Europe? After a sanction blitzkrieg, the Russian fortress economy is ticking along okay. Not amazingly, but the worst effects have been contained, and due to parallel imports and a loose-but-strengthening alliance with China and Central Asian countries including India, Russians are generally okay considering the situation as a whole. The ruble is now on a gold standard and is roughly back to its pre-invasion levels. Russia has demanded that all non-friendly countries (which includes basically all of Europe) pay for its natural gas in rubles, which some are doing (e.g. Hungary and I think Austria), but many are not, including Germany, which relies quite heavily on Russia's gas for its industry and power. The alternative is to cobble together imports from other countries such as Algeria, which won't be sufficient, or to buy it from the US. However, the US's production and transport is already at capacity, meaning that natural gas given to Europe will mean taking it away from other countries, such as in Asia. Additionally, Europe does not have enough port terminals to receive gas transported on tankers, and won't have that capability until 2025-6. There has been a large amount of messaging from the German government to its citizens to prepare for electricity shortages and try and make do with much less - don't drive if you can avoid it, take fewer showers, and so on, but these measures won't save German industry for very long. Also, Finland and Sweden are likely going to join NATO, and in response, Russia is going to strengthen its border there and make sure there are nukes nearby if NATO decides to advance there.

      In addition, there has been economic calamity around the world due to price increases in fertilizers and food - the former requires natural gas to make, and the latter requires the former and is also supplied in significant amounts from Ukraine and Russia. Diesel is also facing major shortages, which is used to transport goods around the globe as well as power agricultural equipment. In response to these changes, countries are either strengthening trade with Russia, and/or trying to become self-sufficient, but these are major changes to make in only a few months and so we will likely see major food shortages around the world before too long. As countries slowly switch from the Western sphere of influence to the Eastern sphere, backed up by the massive material and commodity suppliers that are Russia, China, and India, we may see some very deranged shit. Expect some regime changes and wars. Iran better watch out. @granit, among others, has done some very good posts on the economic side of things, so check them out if you're interested.

      • MaeBorowski [she/her]
        ·
        3 years ago

        Just want to say thank you for this summary. It's extremely helpful to those of us who can feel overwhelmed by the info and misinfo.

        • Frank [he/him, he/him]
          ·
          3 years ago

          Word. It's nice to just have a narrative strung together out of all this chaos.

    • Commiejones [comrade/them, he/him]
      ·
      3 years ago

      Why do the civilians killed have white armbands that signify they are pro-Russian? Why are there videos of Ukrainian soldiers asking if they can shoot civilians and being given the affirmative?

      Can I get your source on this? The whole Bucha thing smells fishy but I wasn't aware of any reasonable evidence one way or the other.