War update: Ukraine’s ground counterattacks failed but it claims Russian ship sunk with unmanned surface vehicle
By Stephen Bryen, ASIA TIMES 6 March 2024
A U.S. M1A2 Abrams fires during the 2022 Sullivan Cup at the Army Armor School on Fort Benning, Ga., April 29, 2022. The Sullivan Cup is a biennial competition held at Fort Benning, GA, to evaluate the performance of the best tank crews from across the Armor Branch, the U.S. Marine Corps and international partner militaries. (Photo by Spc. Joshua Taeckens) Credit: Spc. Joshua Taeckens
A number of counterattacks by the Ukrainians, in some cases using reserve forces, have taken place along the line of contact. While reports are not yet complete, it appears that all the Ukrainian attempts to roll back Russian gains have failed, with the possible exception of Robotyne.
Meanwhile the Russians have either taken or will soon take a number of villages including Ivaniska, Bilohorivka, Berdichev, Pobjeda and Novomikhailovka.
Since February 28, the Russians have destroyed three Abrams tanks. The most recent was knocked out on March 4 by an anti-tank missile, probably a Russian Kornet. The first two Abramses were hit by low-cost Russian drones carrying RPG-7 warheads.
The low-cost drones go under the name Ghoul. They are quadcopters that are battery powered. The Ghoul is a first-person-view (FPV) drone.
An Abrams tank on fire in Ukraine
The drone can communicate with a sister relay drone, extending its operational range and making it effective in hilly and built-up areas where its near line-of-sight radio transmissions are relayed by the sister drone.
The Russians say that the Ghoul drone uses a special transmission frequency and is difficult, if not impossible, to jam. The drone costs around $500, according to its Russian maker in the Sverdlovsk region. It is made from plastic and some of its parts are 3-D printed. The cost of an Abrams tank is north of $10 million.
A Ghoul drone with an RPG payload
The drones have also been used to knock out Bradley fighting vehicles and mine clearing systems using the Abrams chassis. More than 50 Bradleys have been damaged or destroyed.
A Russian commander, only identified as Rassvet, says that the Abrams has two vulnerabilities. One of them is behind the turret above the engine compartment. The other is between the turret and the tank hull.
The Ukrainians held back using Abrams tanks until February 25 when the first one was spotted on the battlefield. Three days later either that one or another was knocked out by two drone strikes, after the tank’s track had been hit by an RPG, immobilizing the Abrams.
The Abrams tanks sent to Ukraine had been degraded by the Pentagon to protect certain secrets, particularly the armor protection.
The tanks were fitted with explosive reactive armor (ERA), but the EBAD armor is a dated design that the Pentagon started fitting to Abrams tanks deployed in Europe starting in 1999. This reactive armor, called M19 ARAT-1 (and a curved version called M-32 ARAT) is similar conceptually to Russia’s Kontakt-1 ERA. The ERA kits, in Pentagon jargonese, are known as Urban Survival Kits.
In Iraq around 23 Abrams tanks were either damaged or destroyed. Prior to that conflict, the Pentagon believed that its composite armor system was enough to protect the Abrams. But in Iraq Abrams tanks were knocked out by anti-tank Kornets and by RPGs.
DOD is not relying on M-32 ARAT armor for the future. It has contracted with General Dynamics, partnered with Rafael in Israel, for a more advanced ERA based on Rafael’s “Armor Shield R.” It is not in use in Ukraine.
Israel was the first country to actually mount ERA on its Merkava tanks. The designer was a German named Manfred Held. The Russians followed, starting with Kontakt 1, then Kontakt 5, and more recently with a system called Relikt. Relikt can be installed on T-72B and T-90 tanks and was adopted in 2006. The Russian Army T-72B3M main battle tank incorporates Relikt. Most of the ERA seen in the Ukraine war appears to be the older type.
The problem with ERA is that it cannot cover the entire tank and does not guarantee that a weapon can’t penetrate the ERA tiles. Tanks face high kinetic threats, rockets, artillery and older, slower grenades like the RPG-7.
German Leopard tanks do not have reactive armor. However, the Ukrainians scavenged Kontakt-1 blocks from wrecked Russian tanks and bolted them onto some of the Leopards. The Ukrainians also installed “bird cages” above the tank turret to try and trigger the explosive charge of enemy weapons. Some of the Merkava tanks in use in the Gaza strip also have Bird Cages installed.
Israeli tanks with bird cages over the turrets.
Ukraine counterattacked the Russians rather than falling back to new defense lines for the simple reason that there were no pre-prepared fortifications for their army even though they were supposed to have been built. This has created a significant controversy and there are hints that the money for the materials needed for the fortifications was siphoned off (stolen). Corruption in Ukraine is rampant and despite some efforts to curtail it, it is growing.
As Ukraine’s situation deteriorates, get-rich-quick and exit schemes are growing.
Zelensky on Tuesday fired another field general as part of the purge that started with Zaluzhny. The Mayor of Kiev, who has been challenging Zelensky, said today said that firing Zaluzhny had been a mistake. He is calling for a national government to replace Zelensky.
One ship sunk, two damaged
A Russian patrol ship, the Sergey Kotov, apparently was sunk in the Kerch Strait by Ukrainian Magara-V USVs (unmanned surface vehicles). Ukraine has published a video of the attack and claims the vessel was destroyed.
At least two other Russian patrol craft have been either damaged or destroyed by Ukrainian USV attacks. So far, Russia has not confirmed the attack.
German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius confirmed that the leak of a conversation among four German officers suggesting using Taurus missiles to attack the Kerch Strait bridge and targets inside Russia came about as a result of a Webex conversation in Singapore, where one of the (unnamed) officers was attending the Singapore Air Show.
Pistorius hinted there may be punishments for using an insecure line. The German officer in Singapore used either a non-secure Hotel Wifi connection or his mobile phone to participate in the discussion.
Singapore has an experienced security service and probably monitors foreign phone conversations. There also are hints that China extensively monitors activities in Singapore.
Also from Singapore is a statement from Defense Minister Ng Eng Hen. In a story reported on Google News on March 3, the minister claimed that US F-35 jets were flying in Ukrainian air space targeting Russian air defense assets.
According to the Minister, the targeting information was passed to US NATO allies and, presumably, to Ukraine. The F-35 has one of the world’s most advanced radars onboard, which includes synthetic aperture capability allowing targets to be seen even in bad weather.
The Pentagon rejected the Minister’s claim saying that no F-35s were operating in Ukrainian airspace.
In political news, Victoria Nuland has resigned from the State Department. She was serving as acting deputy secretary of state but was replaced recently when Kurt Campbell was confirmed by the Senate.
Nuland had hoped to be approved for the deputy job but was judged unconfirmable. Called a “neoconservative” and a “hawk” on Russia, Nuland was the architect of the Ukraine conflict, in her role in the Obama administration and under Biden. Her future plans have not yet been announced.
Stephen Bryen served as staff director of the Near East Subcommittee of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and as a deputy undersecretary of defense for policy. This article was first published on his Weapons and Strategy Substack and is republished with permission.
His name is Vitali Klitschko and you should keep your eye on him. He has been positioning himself for a national leadership position in Ukraine since he was kept out of the Nuland formed govt, after the Nazi’s were not kept out of the govt, back in Feb 2014. Notably, Klitchko had previously made it clear that he intended to prosecute those radicals who he could link to the murders committed during the Maidan Massacre. Of course, after those radicals were included in the newly formed govt back in 2014, and he was not, he changed his tune readily enough to keep his seat of power as Mayor of Kiev, and has maintained that position ever since.
Now that Zel is about to become the first Ukrainian President to rule beyond his term of office, a first even for the well known corruption of Ukrainian presidents, Klitschko seems to be ready to make his bid to replace Zel, and, ironically, it seems he will be doing so while using the termination of the Far Right endorsed Zaluzhney as his rally point.
Yulia Tymoshenko is also expected to try to unseat the Green Tshirt guy. Unlike Klitscho, Tymoshenko is a well known first to lose candidate in national elections in Ukraine, having lost in 2010, 2014, and 2019. She is herself a leader of a far right party in Ukraine and has also made it known that she opposed Zel having fired Zal. When Zel’s term of office finally ends, the constitution requires that the power of the president be passed to the head of the Rada, the Ukrainian parliament, and to deal with this nuisance constitutional provision, Zel has very recently placed a close confidant in the position of the head of the Rada in hopes that he will be able to ignore the constitution once more without too much opposition from the army, the far right or the public. It is unknowable at this time how this will all turn out, but it will be quite a neat trick if Zel is able to pull this rabbit out the hat while facing down all the allies which have previously stood in support of his outrageously despotic actions as ‘president’, heretofore.
Russian casualties this year have far outnumbered Ukrainian — in tanks, other vehicles, aircraft, ships and personnel — in spite of America and other allies falling woefully behind in their commitments to supply arms. Russia, meanwhile, has begun producing Iranian drones in Russia, part of an ever-deepening Russia-Iran alliance.
Yes, Raphael, Tactics have been changing with this new world war. Tanks, bombers, aircraft carriers and other ships, etc… all are more vulnerable now, and being exposed to new weapons. Russia has lost about a fourth of its Black Sea fleet to Ukrainian drones and missiles, a huge loss.
Tanks may be going the way of the battleship. If they don’t come up with a work around for drones and ATMs, it is surely done for. If that happens, then the way wars have been fought for the last 100 years will likely change.