Early reports that the liberation of Lyman has begun.
Ukraine's military leadership is excellent
Early reports that the liberation of Lyman has begun.
Reckoned to be somewhere between 1500 and 5000 Russian/separatist soldiers in Lyman that are surrounded, I hope they surrender quickly.
In 2014 a large number of Ukrainian fighters were surrounded, Russian and separatist fighters agreed to let them walk out if they left their weapons, then slaughtered them as they marched out unarmed. I hope we don't see anything like that here, but if I had seen what some of the Ukrainians have seen in the towns and villages they have already liberated, I am not sure I would behave properly.
10 foot wall, 12 foot ladder:Excellent article on the catastrophic consequences for Russia, should they use tactical nuclear weapons.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2022/09/26/what-do-us-mean-when-say-catastrophic-consequences/
[Behind paywall, unfortunately].
Russian accounts of the trapped soldiers escaping from Lyman seem to be rather wide of the mark.
Sounds like plenty have been killed or captured/surrendered. A fair bit of equipment has been gained as well
I was wondering if the victorious Ukrainians kind of allowed them to slip back through the last avenue. The Russians had lost all their hardware and this meant the Ukrainians won’t have the logistical issue of having to maintain thousands more POW’s.
That would be a mistake. Ukraine aren't a superpower with 10 times the resources of Russia, so they can't afford to fight an infinite supply of Russian soldiers (ie, keep letting them go to later fight them again). They should have marched them across Ukraine if they had the chance, but I assume they didn't.I was wondering if the victorious Ukrainians kind of allowed them to slip back through the last avenue. The Russians had lost all their hardware and this meant the Ukrainians won’t have the logistical issue of having to maintain thousands more POW’s.
On the contrary, quite handy to let demoralised Russian troops flee minus most of their gear.That would be a mistake. Ukraine aren't a superpower with 10 times the resources of Russia, so they can't afford to fight an infinite supply of Russian soldiers (ie, keep letting them go to later fight them again). They should have marched them across Ukraine if they had the chance, but I assume they didn't.
Each to their own, as I completely disagree.On the contrary, quite handy to let demoralised Russian troops flee minus most of their gear.
They are going to make a marvellous example to the conscripts being pushed forward to plug the line..if regular or elite Russian units are being mauled they can see the writing on the wall and rebel or refuse to fight.
There are lots of Ukrainian boarders in Poland. Maybe NATO has decided to militarise them?