- cross-posted to:
- news@hexbear.net
- worldnews
Is ukraine even ukraine without the Dnipro? I need a geography nerd to explain me which city along the dnipro river is the most important one.
There wouldn’t be much of value left without it.
Their whole economy revolves around agriculture alongside the Dnipro, controlling the dams that distribute the water is the key here. Russia being close to the river tells me theyre cooked
Exactly, also all the industry is in the east as well. Worth noting too that Russia would be able to shell stuff across the river, so they don’t even have to cross the Dnepr to make that territory a gray zone that Ukraine can’t use productively.
Advance in Dnipro, but apparently haven’t purged Kursk Oblast from AFU? I am confused
Kursk is a roach motel for the AFU. As long as they have presence there, that forces them to divert valuable resources from the collapsing front in the south. There is no chance of AFU being able to hold the towns they have in Kursk in the long term, and there is no strategic value to the territory they managed to capture. All that’s accomplishing is splitting up their very limited resources. Why would Russia want to prevent Ukraine from doing that.
Fusion-grade copium…
[The Russian] momentum has put them in a position to take the highway to the Dnipropetrovsk region, which would cut off Ukrainian forces in Pokrovsk as well as forcing Ukrainian forces to defend from two directions at once.
“They are trying to get maximum territory so that when their forces are eventually exhausted (!), they have something to negotiate with,” said Cherniak.
I love how after three years they still expect people to believe that Russian army is about to collapse. Just wait a little more and they’ll be exhausted, just a little more bro. I promise.
Well, they’ll collapse by the heat death of the universe! Checkmate, tankies…
that’s right it’s all about playing the long game
Not so much copium as projection. Ukraine’s sole strategy now is to cling to as much territory as possible in hopes of getting a more favorable negotiation position. Which is why they assume that Russia wants the same, but nothing in how the Russians have approached this conflict so far indicates that they operate this way.
True, and since Ukraine’s forces are on the brink of exhaustion, they’d love to believe the same is true of Russia’s.