Russian Report: "Ukrainian Tactics are Hit & Run"
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- Опубліковано 14 тра 2024
- We look at a Russian manual titled "I live, I fight, I win! The Rules of Living in War" (Живу, сражаюсь, побеждаю! Правила жизни на войне) and a British-Ukrainian Report Preliminary Lessons in Conventional Warfighting from Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine: February-July 2022 that is based on information provided by the Ukrainian General Staff. This video covers various lessons learned from the Ukraine War or "Special Operation" as the Russians call it.
Cover: Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, CC BY-SA 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons, commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
Photo by military journalist Taras Gren, Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, CC BY-SA 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/..., via Wikimedia Commons, commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
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Mykhaylo Zabrodskyi, Jack Watling, Oleksandr V Danylyuk, Nick Reynolds: Preliminary Lessons in Conventional Warfighting from Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine: February-July 2022, RUSI, London, 2022.
rusi.org/explore-our-research...
Разумов А.Н., Крюков Г.А., Кузнецов А.Н.: Живу, сражаюсь, побеждаю! Правила жизни на войне. ОБЩЕРОССИЙСКАЯ ОБЩЕСТВЕННАЯ ОРГАНИЗАЦИЯ РОССИЙСКИЙ СОЮЗ ВЕТЕРАНОВ АФГАНИСТАНА И СПЕЦИАЛЬНЫХ ВОЕННЫХ ОПЕРАЦИЙ, Москва 2022.
Razumov A.N., Kryukov G.A., Kuznetsov A.N.: I live, I fight, I win! The Rules of Living in War. All-Russia Society, Russian Union of Afghan and Special Military Operation Veterans, Moscow 2022.
/ 1571260425743831041
/ 1600218597124542465
www.currenttime.tv/a/32157385...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ilya_St...
00:00 Intro
02:37 Lesson 1: There is No Sanctuary
06:23 Lesson 2: Slack Capacity
08:23 Lesson 3: Drones for everyone
11:14 Lesson 4: Precision
11:57 Lesson 5: Disperse, Dig Deep or Move Fast
16:59 Looting
18:43 Summary & Merry Christmas
#UkraineLessonsLearned #UkraineWar #RussianSource
As a person who speaks Russian the translation of Russian Report was done correctly. Kudos!
It was good, but I chuckled at "omen" (примета)
da komrrad extra plutonium next kgb visit extra vodka too!
Could you provide a link to the document please 🙏
This is a praiseworthy accomplishment?
@@yurinator4411 Yes, why wouldn't it be? Russian, and similar Eastern European languages that use Cyrillic, can be notoriously difficult to translate into English and many other Western European languages for not only all the typical nuances of translating one language to another but also the fact that they both use a whole separate alphabet and simply have a very different culture and mindset, which in turn affects their language and all those other little nuances.
If you've ever learned a foreign language, it's not easy even when you share an alphabet and a general sense of the world and cultural values. It only gets harder the more 'foreign' the culture and language is. So, yes, it is an admirable accomplishment, especially when so many others make massive mistakes in translating Russian to English even in more formal writings. The fact this one was full of metaphors, idiomatic phrases, and colloquial language in general makes it all the more impressive how relatively close it was to being accurate and understandable.
Of course, from what I understand, Bernard didn't translate this himself, but the fact he went through the steps to make sure it was reasonably accurate and got some help from someone who does speak Russian is good practice on his part and very dutiful to the source material being studied.
Oh, or is this another "Russia bad, therefore anything to do with Russia bad too." post?
"Everytime you stop, drill yourself into the fatherland".This was a very basic lession I learned in the Finnish army. Always dig yourself a foxhole when stop moving in exercises, keep distance, always observe
I can’t even imagine the shitstorm Finnish conscripts would endure if they left a mountain of trash around them.
Ditto British soldiers.
Actually this basic rule comes from the Roman army: whenever you stop for no matter how long - start building a camp.
15:26 Russian guide: "With a dull shovel, just like with dull people, you don't get much work done."
MHV: "As you can see, the guide also addresses the Austrian bureaucracy - although in a far more positive light than I would."
That was brilliant. Savage, and brilliant.
I'm very amused by the sarcastic comments about Russian officers in the Russian report. It reminds me of Soviet jokes about the nomenklatura, but rather more out in the open.
They hope that shaming them in the report will bring about some change.That's why there are also some references to people from history to inspire 'courage'. In my opinion any real guide/report should not contain such out of place additions, but russians are from other reality.
I just guess the soldiers in all countries, atleast you can see the same on German Army memepages, Austrian, American and so on, that soldiers allways make jokes about officers and vice versa
@@kamsko5957 Well it's published by a veteran's association. Enlisted men are the same everywhere.
@@kamsko5957 In my experience it's vodka that inspires courage.
@@kamsko5957 That's because you are less capable of analysing such documents than the average high schooler. Ie ask yourself the Nature, Purpose, Origin and Content of the document is and countless reasons for why and how they have done it this way and why that may be optimal are obvious
"How to recognize when your own country is shooting you: they don't conserve ammunition"
"The main value in war is life."
That's the all-star sentence from the palmphlet I think.
You're job is not to die for your country, but to make some poor Son of a Bitch die for theirs -- Patton
I think it was Patton who said make other fellow die for his country.
You can’t win if you’re dead.
Dying for mother Russia is an honour and a priviligie comrade. It is your duty.
You die for mother Russia, fake nazis, or you die for oil, narcotics or perhaps fake WMDs. Loving it.
I love the unique Russian sense of humor ever so slightly poking at the establishment!
"Dull shovels are like dull people, you don't get much work done "
We got trained in the Finnish army to not to use cell phones for communication in exercises. Just because they might not work in a real hot international shooting competition and they can be located pretty easy and quick.
And remember, the British GCHQ is listening to all of those conversations.
@Swarmpope Yes
"international shooting competition" Love it 🤣
@Swarmpope it's the opposite or at least equal on the other end. Russians were able to accurately hit Ukrainian bases due to concentration of Ukrainian cell phone sims.
@@spechund7109 Russians also hit Russian bases due to the number of stolen and looted Ukrainian phones present, mistaking them for dense civilian formations in unprotected areas and thus solid artillery targets. This is is not helped by the Russians not having good army wide position mapping, and general refusal to share specific details between units unless necessary.
I have to say, this was written with a lot more "fun", then I would have expected. All of the insults, the metaphors, I would not have expected from such a manual
Shows how important these points are for the men if it is written to appeal to them.
This guide is meant for the regular soldier, not for the Officer Academy staff. In order for it to be read, it must be engaging.
@@F3nomz personally, i just think it shows the deterioration of the quality of the russian army.
They used to have good and propper survival guides. Recommended by their peers (other armies).
Now its;
- dont litter
- dont loot
- be selr suficient
- dont forget god is with us
Writtrn in a snarky language, trying yo shift the blame to individual bad appels. Its less of a guide and more of a russian officer wish list;
'I wish my soldiers would stop litter, loot and tiktok all day"
@@F3nomz good point
@@F3nomz good point
I was a 19D (armored reconnaissance specialist) and was particularly sensitive to keeping of pressence hidden. Our survival was dependent on not being detected. If we have to use or guns, we screwed up. Our best weapon system is our radios, connected to an artillery unit.
An unarmed drone is just as dangerous as an armed drone.
Did the Russian rules sound like your units SOP?
Scouts, out
@@Losantiville
I suspect general concepts are the same, but I suspect the training and execution is greatly lacking. LOL
Not to mention cheaper and more expendable!
"If you stop, dig a trench" was something hard-learned by soldiers in the later period of the American civil war.
Most people interested in war related topics focus on flashy things like tanks, planes, missiles, etc. Logistics and basic tactics for survival learned the hard way are rarely focused on and probably far more important most things that get most of the attention. This is for me what makes your channel fairly unique because it looks at things such as this much more than other channels that just “stick to tanks” so to speak. Very informative video. Love your work!
Probably has to do with Rommel's performance in WW2. Tanks and Tactics were his speciality and it worked wonders
Montgomery BARELY stopped Rommel in Egypt DESPITE having a Defensive AND Numerical advantage! (Montgomery's men suffered more deaths than Rommels)
Great Logistics can't reverse the bad effects of Terrible Tactics or Strategies
Better to have a Balance than be Specialized in MOST circumstances
If Montgomery had less men he would have lost to Rommel even though he is a better strategist than the Tactician Rommel
Patton's offensive drives were taxing on logistics during WW2
@@christiandauz3742 modern war is just drones fighting positions. Heaven help the army
A vet coworker quipped months ago to separate people who say they know to people who do know is to have them show you how a tourniquet works.
@@christiandauz3742
Not sure why Patton is up there despite being a contender for "Most incompetent general of WW2" that easily defeats Clark and aproaches Stilwell.....
@@nvelsen1975
Who was the American Commander at Kessarine Pass where Rommel's Italian troops break the US defenders?
I find it interesting that half of these lessons were the same lessons stressed in old WW2 era writings such as infantry attacks. Funny how some parts of war never changes.
Murphy's Law of Combat: Look unimportant, the enemy may be low on ammo.
Also: A gallon of sweat saves a gallon of blood. Dig your trenches deep.
Dig your trenches deep, you'll make the rockets weep, and when they take to sweep, there'll be no one that they meet, until they pass your keep, then they're yours to reap.
As an ex Infantryman, this is all literally week 1 shit. It's pretty shocking that they're having to reinforce this absolute basic stuff to troops in war.
@@WozWozEre A large portion of said troops are mobilized conscripts, not professional troops; some have barely touched a weapon before, much less been in a gunfight or a war.
@@SlackJaw00 And if the Ukrainians are to be believed, most of those fast tracked conscripts lack basic gear such as shovels to dig a trench if they wanted to. or the few that are issued shovels quickly drop them to carry ammo or stolen food.
The russian guide is indeed very cool, updated, realistic and casual enough. Quite a read.
I am reminded that during the Pacific War, US military intelligence was able to estimate the numbers of Japanese soldiers stationed on a base or island with great accuracy (more or less) simply by counting the number of privies that were observed by aerial reconnaissance, and the Japanese military never caught on.
This truly is the aspect of war, My father talked to me about it when he said looters are bad and will likely be the first killed and also he told me the importance of camouflage and having to move or get in a trench, So even after 40 years the basic things are the same.
It is ironic because apparently looting was highly encouraged by officers, some of whom punished soldiers who failed to procure enough loot for their officers (and officers throwing out munitions and radios to haul stolen goods, like the colonel shot down with 4 washing machines strapped to his chopper).
@@littlekong7685 I'm sorry am i missing something here? My father never said the army officers encouraged looting and if you are talking about the Russians then that means those few officers should have never got a single strap of rank in the army in the first place.
@@KingdomRepublic Modern Russian army has a lot of issues. Many career officers are underpaid, even higher ranked ones. And abuses of and stealing from conscripts has been an ongoing issue for decades.
In this war, many conscripts fled to surrender to Ukrainians because their own officers warned if they didn't return from patrols with enough loot (Phones, jewellery, money, booze, clothes, appliances, etc) they would be punished, or even shot.
@@littlekong7685 i suppose that was an Issue in the Iraqi army after 1991 when the embargo hit them and when America faced them in 2003 they couldn't hold for much.
It seems every army who had the Soviet Doctrine and Soviet Weapons performed very poorly, countries like Poland, Russia and Iraq and so on will perform Generally a lot worse against countries like Germany, France and Britain.
When the Russians attacked i thought they will win in 8 or 9 weeks now it's been almost a year and Ukraine is no where near defeated.
Why the Russians didn't learn anything in the past 32 years since the USSR collapsed is a mystery to me.
This is an excellent. I forwarded it to 2 family members on active duty in US Army
Excellent video. Love how you go straight to primary sources and do the comparison and find common points between the two documents from opposite sides of this war.
Survival Rule #1 was covered better by Monty Python: How Not To Be Seen
For those who aren't familiar: ua-cam.com/video/C-M2hs3sXGo/v-deo.html .
This came to mind as well lol.
Excellent video and I look forward to seeing your work in 2023. Merry Christmas.
Wow. It's rare a video commands my full attention but this did. Great, great work here! Thank you!
Thx for the great content! and Merry Christmas to you and your family as well!
Either you and the Chieftain read Russian, or it is available in translation. It sounds like an interesting read.
Neither of us do, but translation software works fairly well and when it looked odd, I asked Peter for help.
It is, it's very depicting
@@MilitaryHistoryVisualized congratulation for this good work.
Vielleicht sollten Sie etwas an ihrer Aussprache üben. An einigen Stellen musste ich stoppen um den Text zu lesen. Ist aber jammern auf hohem Niveau von mir:)
Thanks, and merry Christmas & a happy New Year to you, too!
An excellent presentation as always. Merry Christmas to you as well!
Have a Merry Christmas Bernhard.
Thank you for the great videos.
Thank you for making this, this was absolutely fascinating
Enjoy the holidays. Thanks Bernhard. Nice summary.
Fascinating stuff. Thanks for sharing. Best wishes for the holidays from Aotearoa New Zealand!
Yeah, I built a system to identify where people are for a Telco once. It's crazy how much precision we could get 5 years ago with just metadata.
Wow! That was an incredible video. It really cleared the fog on a lot of what is going on over there and how each side views the war.
I liked the russian perspective and it seems a lot more personal. You cant fight in the war if you are dead.
The russians are doing every but what they say... " I live - I fight _ I win! It appears the Ukrainians are the only ones with the intelligence to follow even russian indoctrination! eh?! Slava Ukraini!
@@sqnhunter I have heard that the Ukrainian KIA are over 100,000 as reported by the appointed EU leader (I dont know her name or title) and Russian KIA are estimated around 15,000-20,000.
Obviously you cant trust the ukrainian government or russian to give accurate numbers but it sounds like the russians are doing a lot better at not dying.
Actually the best way to stop the killing would be a peace deal. Let the territories that want to be part of russia join the federation and those that want to stay ukrainian stay with ukraine.
The Russian view was written to be more personal. It's to troops, not analysts
@@ew3612 No person has reported any figures for Ukrainian KIA or wounded. Its kept a state secret for a reason....not like stupid Russian reporters blurting theirs out. Russian KIA is 96k+ you can go on whatever figures you like ..but Ukrainian small precision strikes decimate Russian troops and equipment while Russia still decimates civilians. You cant kill troops while you are firing in another direction at civilians...fuktard! Russia wont let small areas break away from it...why should Ukraine let break away areas influenced by russian activists break away??????? no double standard...no peace deal...obliteration to every Russian soul on Ukrainian soil...and its going that way right now.
@@sqnhunter Here is an analysis on the KIA for both sides.
ua-cam.com/video/Bfj2c5racUY/v-deo.html
Excellent work Bernhard!!
Regarding the accuracy of locating active cell phones via standart telco gear (specialized HW can obviously do better) I have experience of operating such system some time ago - the resulting accuracy was between 20 and 200 meters (around 500 meters in areas with very poor coverage) depending on how many cells were able to detect that phone and obstructions (terrain, buildings, etc.)
Honestly that is good enough to point your normal recce assets in the right direction and area
@@hippoace BM-21 battalion salvo will cover that entire area of uncertainty.
You are not considering the US military satellite based real time surveillance system it is the best in the world and Ukraine has access to it . Calls are pinpointed to the exact location
assuming the phone is not moving you can accumulate the track over a longer time and get a more precise location
Detecting a cell phone down to 3 Meters? Yes, plausible, playing with CB radio, RF loops (wire coat hangers in place of a base loaded antennas 'whip') and RF Strength meters we could ID which tower block a person was broadcasting from... we were kids with crude analogue kit, with more modern digital systems with computer support, you could do that as long as you have at least 2 receiving towers, 3 or more points of reception, 3 meters could be very possible.
And a 12cm mortar battery target zone is 100×100m...
And a *Metal New Year* to you too! 🤘🔥
Interesting and useful content as usual. Thanks for a job well done.
Interesting lessons to be learned, I'm sure that these studies will be passed around many militaries.
Nice bit of "trivia" about Nicolas Moran being a "light bird" colonel, thanks for that.!
And Merry Christmas to you as well!!
Great job THX
"For simplicity, I will call the report by yet a third name I had not previously used"
He's using a (culturally) German definition of "simplicity".
excellent. thank you
_Slackness_ and _reserves_ are not synonyms. I've not read the report, but assuming the authors chose their words deliberately, the difference is important. _Slackness_ implies excess working capacity while _reserves_ imply a resource set aside that cannot be called upon at a moment's notice. If, say, your communications staff only work half time, you can quadruple your man-hours in a moment's notice; however, if half your communications staff are reservists, you're behind the 8-ball if a crisis develops suddenly.
_Slackness_ is more expensive to maintain, but is immediately responsive; _reserves_ are much less costly to maintain, but slower to bring to bear.
Merry Christmas Military History Visualized
God that was super interesting. Stuff like this is just so cool to learn about like being a soldier and what not. Keep up the great work! Btw I love the German accent, im also German
I vaguely remember reading that the Nazi Wehrmacht in Stalingrad complained that the Russians were using "Gangster Tacticts" against them. it's amusing how often you can find historical parallels.
That wouldn’t be the first comparison available between modern Russia and Nazi germany…
You don't remember the guerrilla tactics of the Vietcong?
Thank you very much. I will be definitely download Russian one, seems to be a very useful thing in general. I got partisan manual from 1942 which is a very practical guide how to survive, live off the land and be combat effective in a para military context. This pocket book with illustrations was printed by Soviet Union and distributed behind enemy lines.
Yes, but now Ukraine is urban territory. Cities not engaged in guerilla. Because to feed yourself in the city you need job, monetary system, grocery stores, logistics egc. Country life still possible, but not for many, because to "live off the land" you need a lot of land. Without working city centers - Ukraine can feed about 10 millions people at most..Rest will leave - and already leave - no matter where, Russia or EU.
Nice video.
Remember your old video on finish tactics in ww2, Could you do a video on tactics in the desert, showing tactics from ww1 and 2 and the cold war
I wonder where my life has gone that I felt a genuine sense of frisson upon hearing of reports putting together operational information on the new war
RUSI is pretty good at analysis & Jack Watling often pops up on the radio(BBC) to give his thought about military matters.
Thanks for the video, very interesting. No getting away from the eye in the sky.
as usual, an excellent video!
Point 66 : - "God Is With Us" .... HHMMMMM .... Now where have I heard that before? ...
It is a saying from the time of the Tsars. Way before a certain mustached man was born.
Pretty much everyone from the British Grenadiers, to Swedish Carolingeans, to Crusaders, to Spanish Tercios, to Prussian Jaegers used that phrase. Not sure what you are trying to imply.
@@dimakapeev3156 Gott mit uns was also not coined by the mustache man, but I apologize, I forgot that Germany has no history prior to 1933, if you stratch it maybe 1914!
@@999mi999 Did they also decorate their belt buckles with this inscription ?
@@flitsertheo Does putting a phrase on some item make it your intellectual ownership? Did Nietzsche print t-shirts?
I can't believe we live in a time where you can find OPSEC on UA-cam while the war is still raging on.
Lots of information of this type has been posted to various sites since the beginning. The Russians do not seem to have placed high enough priority on keeping containment, especially at lower levels.
@@wills2140 The Russian government has not hid its absolute disdain for the lower troops, pretty much anything outside Wagner group or below General is essentially a tool to be used, abused, and discarded until parade day. They keep denying death payments "because we can", or reducing them "because we can", when your own government calls you a hero for invading, a martyr for dying, promises your family wealth, then takes half for itself, changes its mind, calls you a coward and keeps the other half, its a sign of systemic disdain.
3:09 "Private Conscriptovich has learned the first rule of not being seen: Not To Stand Up."
I love this video in the level of insight we have
It is astonishing how much sound and profound information is available about an ongoing war
Excellent video
The Germans in WW2 had a saying, "sweat saves blood", reminding their troops that they must put in the effort or pay the blood price for their laxity.
That theme seems to run throughout this video.. A solider on the front needs to be constantly on top of is admin, keeping himself and his position in good order, or he will rapidly become a casualty. Given how mentally and physically tiring this constant effort is, i can only imagine it really increases the importance of regular unit rotations to get troops back to a comparatively safer location and let them "switch off" for a little bit.
also, i disagree with your statement at 16:50 that "discipline is not that important to well motivated troops". Discipline is VITAL, but well motivated troops are able to apply Self-discipline, to do that hard work without the NCOs constantly chasing them to do it properly, which in turn frees those NCOs to concentrate on other tasks.
I think that saying originally comes from the Greeks (Sparta maybe?). But the Germans were smart to live by it.
I totally agreed about what you wrote on discipline
Shoot and scoot is the name of the game it works especially in urban combat
13:45 "диверсионные группы" not particularly "sabotage groups" it is more like "recon group", deep diving through enemy line group nowadays
Damn that Russian handbook is amazing and actually has some great advise. I love the digs they take at higher ups and the bad apples lmao.
Bravo!!!
"Gott mit uns" sounds scary in every language.
God is on the side with most artillery.
"My hands are cold, you _gott_ _mit_ _uns_ I can borrow?" Hmm, English doesn't seem to check out with your hypothesis.
@@msytdc1577 omfg that's a brutal pun. Nice.
good documents and analysis, thank you. The ammunitions stockpile problems reflect closely the recurring disaster of western peacetime munitions inventory since before WW1.
5:33 I think they mean that meta data that's embedded in the (f.e.) JPEG's raw data... that meta data contains the geo location data.
of course, that is written in the quote in brackets.
The writer of the Russian text knows how to make a text interesting. Great writing style
An excellent analysis. Looks like these reports should both be essential reading for Western soldiers
Merry Christmas
17:18 amazingly the British Army also uses the word 'Buckshee' which in military terms means extra or spare. But I beleive came from the Hindi word 'baksheesh' which I think means gift. Probably a word picked up by soldiers serving in India during the colonial times and passed down to the current generation of soldiers.
Well, he does say "Oriental languages" and doesn't specify which.
He may well be referring to Hindi.
@@moritamikamikara3879 that's true. I guess orient means all of Asia not just the far east.
You’re probably right about where the British picked it up, but the word is even older- originally Persian, it has been integrated into languages across the Middle East and South Asia to mean a small gift, sometimes implying a bribe or backhander.
@@DarkSlug then I wonder if it was picked up by both army's during their joint occupation of Iran during WW2?
@@DarkSlug Pretty much this. Bakshish also became the general word for "pay", "tip" or 'bounty" in 19th century archaeological digs in the North Africa and the Levant, when basically everyone made locals do the hard manual labour and a little bonus was paid out when someone found something significant.
15:35 Also works for Spanish bureucracy as well.
Most amazing thing I have ever heard, in 40 years of obsession with war & weapons... better than any Seal team 6 book.
6:10 - My old Galaxy S3 could use cell towers as a substitute for GPS (it did have GPS. This is a backup) and gave my position to well within 6m, in 2012.
What a sharp contrast to Soviet Doctrine !!!! Can you do a video on Russian "counter-battery" fire as they seem to be the best in history in that endeavor ..... Great video as usual !!!! 🙂
Hello there 👋. I absolutely adore all of your well crafted videos and I am thinking about supporting you perhaps either on subscribe star or patron.. which would you recommend? Your videos are by far some of the most high quality videos and your isnsight is invaluable. As well as this I am always astounded by all the sources you provide.
This is useful information.
PLEASE post a link to an English translation of the Russian doc for we linguistically handicapped. Bitte
Try using DeepL after you download the manual.
@@Lokislav I was not aware of that translation tool, thank you. But where do we download from in the first place please?
@@peterfeeney721 vvo.ric.mil.ru/upload/site176/s0uiIlbANp.pdf
Thank you. The poor men in the war deserve our sympathy.
I got to 3:38 and couldn’t help but think of the Monty Python skit “How not to be seen.”
Well, Nucking Futs Yuri described his units tactics on his channel and it's very Hit and Run
tbf they are specifically a recon unit afaik
So much military experience without furthering world tensions. Soon we’ll be able to deck out our jets and tanks with max upgrades.
Is there any way or source to get the russian report translated in english? I don't speak russian but the report looks to be interesting and leaning more into the camp of "no nonsense"
Is there a way to read the Russian document in full?
As a German tank commander I learned all of this back in the 90s, nothing of that is new. (Cept that there were no drones back then, people didnt have cell phones, there were no networked vehicles and GPS was brand new... the details evolved, but the principles remain the same.)
Also, I am amazed that the Orkz dont do any of that, at least as far as one can tell from the social media footage. Even more amazing, that all of that is found in their field manuals.
All good solid advice for war.
Also, the Roman legions would have been quite familiar with the need to constantly dig in.
50 pages of "Keep your head down, Yevgeny!"
15:32 amazing
Thank you Bernhard. The Russian comment on rubbish reminds me of recent comments by Lars of the Survival Russia channel. He shows examples in his videos of the rubbish left in remote areas and on parts of the family property that are adjacent to public roads. He advises that Russians are particularly bad in this respect. It appears to be a general societal problem that has transferred to the Russian army.
I can't find the Russian report online, does anyone know where i can find it?
Does anyone know where we can find an English translation of said "I live, I fight, I win" ? Seems to be an interesting read.
could you please give the link to the chieftan clip in your video?
5:42 I suspect traditional geolocation techniques aren't mentioned because they aren't real time. It can take a fairly long time to geolocate a photo based on landmarks because you have to comb through a ton of data, so even if people have been fairly quick to geolocate things in this war it's still usually on the scale of hours, not minutes. Therefore it's not really a threat to the individual soldier and isn't included in this guide. Also that section was warning them to watch out for civilian intelligence so obviously the same advice applies to geolocation via landmarks and geotagging. The immediate threats to a soldier's survival are things that can result in an immediate fire mission on their location, geolocation is not one of those things, it's a somewhat higher level threat to a position as a whole and not an individual soldier.
How can I gain access to the Russian book, “I live, I fight, I win! The Rules of Living in War.”
I cannot even verify the existence of this document in any language
vvo.ric.mil.ru/upload/site176/s0uiIlbANp.pdf
Excellent video, very informative. May be, the Russian would have been better off if they had watched, "Monty Python flying circus", how not to be seen.
This is a bit off topic but I was wondering why NO ONE seems to be considering another option when it comes to whether or not to send main battle tanks to Ukraine. Feel free to pass this on to Mr. Moran or anyone else you think would like to expand on my idea. With the numbers they have in storage, Why doesn't the United States send hundreds of the M60-A3 tanks. I would think they could be reconditioned and sent in the kind of numbers to significantly impact the conflict. Any thoughts?
"Omen" at point 54. Should translate as "Note" or "Notice this".
No, "Omen" is the most accurate translation. "Примета. Мусор на позиции - к обстрелу" is not a simple "note", it's an ominous warning, that was deliberatly worded this way.
@@XumukRC You may be correct, never seen this word used in an official document. Just sound too much like "superstition" in this translation. It still works either way.
@@StubbornBishopWell I'm sure to know, becasue I'm Russian :) And you right, this structure "sign - к outcome" is used in common supersitious expressions, maybe whole document done in less oficial tone to be easier to memorise.
@@StubbornBishop This isn't an official document.
Sweden eliminated Norway in training 5 times in a row and got accused of cheating. Then they told how they won. Some women soldiers in the Norwegian group was using tinder on their cellphones and constantly gave away their position to the Swedes that where triangulating their signals and bombing them on exact position.
"constantly gave away their position to the Swedes .." they swiped right on. "I would like to meet you, baby. Where's your foxhole?"
Sorry, I couldn't stop myself.
I note with interest that one of the authors of the RUSI report is Mykhaylo Zabrodskyi. I would pay close attention to anything this man has to say on military matters, particularly those involving conflict with Russian forces in Ukraine.
He commanded the 95th Airmoble Brigade in the Great Raid of 2014 during the War in Donbas - one of the longest armoured raids behind enemy lines in military history! This is an event that has largely been ignored by military historians out side of Ukraine, and particularly on UA-cam. Perhaps it is time to look at it again.
UA-cam algorithm! I have no kids and I am ready to watch a video on reports of combat and I get 2 unskippable youtube ads, a 20 second one of Barbie and a 20 second one of Dinosaur toys!
You should've included at least a couple of ideological chapters, it's a fascinating read as well 😏
Is there an English copy of I live I fight I win ?