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RUSSIA VS UKRAINE: A WAR THAT CAN WRECK THE WORLD

The Sunday Guardian

|

April 03, 2022

Should the war spill beyond Ukraine there is a clear danger of the use of tactical nuclear weapons.

- MAJ GEN (DR) G.D. BAKSHI

RUSSIA VS UKRAINE: A WAR THAT CAN WRECK THE WORLD

A few days before the start of the Russia-Ukraine war, the Indian Military Review had done an in house war-game. Based upon known Russian doctrines and recent demonstrated combat performance in Afghanistan, Chechnya, Georgia and Syria, we had forecast that Russia's likely war aims would be to seriously wreck Ukraine as a functional military state and attempt a regime change. They would advance on multiple thrust lines but seek to retain ground only in Donetsk and Luhansk provinces in the east and Crimea and the coastal areas in the south. These would be terrain objectives that would be retained at any cost. Russia had a huge advantage in airpower, missile power and traditional artillery fire power. Its T-72 and T-90 tanks were clearly superior to the Ukrainian T-80 tanks and the T-64, especially in optronics and night fighting capabilities.

The signature Russian way of war has been to use massive fire assaults to create shock and awe and thereby economise on force levels and military lives. This was most evident in WWII when Stalin called artillery the God of war and quipped that quantity generates its own quality. Russian forces have traditionally relied on “echelonment" of forces. Second and third echelon forces were kept in reserve and used to maintain relentless momentum in any offensive once the first echelon was used up or petered out. Based on this anchor premise most military observers felt that Russia could achieve these objectives in 10 days (two to three weeks at best) in Ukraine. This war however has now entered its second month.

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

The Sunday Guardian

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The Sunday Guardian

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The Sunday Guardian

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time to read

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The Sunday Guardian

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Using welfare for political gain is inappropriate

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2 mins

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The Sunday Guardian

PM MODI PROPOSES THREE NEW G20 INITIATIVES AT AFRICA SUMMIT

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The Sunday Guardian

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Surprise inspections follow terror-linked findings in doctors’ lockers at Kashmir hospitals.

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The Sunday Guardian

Delhi Police uncover ISI-backed gun running operation

Drones were used to airdrop Turkish pistols and Chinese weapons.

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The Sunday Guardian

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time to read

5 mins

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The Sunday Guardian

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Siddu vs D.K. once more

The power tussle in Karnataka between the supporters of Chief Minister Siddaramaiah and his deputy and Pradesh Congress Committee (PCC) chief D.K. Shivakumar appears to be unending. The latest round is currently on and i coincides with Siddu completing two and a half years in office.

time to read

3 mins

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The Sunday Guardian

Reverse migration of Bangladeshis may impact TMC in polls

Since the rollout of the Election Commission's Special Intensive Revision (SIR) in West Bengal on November 4, border posts like Hakimpur in North 24 Parganas district have witnessed a marked increase in Bangladeshi nationals returning home, with district authorities and the Border Security Force noting that more than 1,600 Bangladeshi migrants had crossed back in just days. Many of these individuals had lived in India for over a decade, enrolling in voter lists and welfare

time to read

4 mins

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