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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1477067)8/11/2024 2:18:23 AM
From: pocotrader1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Doren

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8 years? Gee time flies when you are having fun sparring with crazed maghats, anti vaxxers and Q crazies



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1477067)8/11/2024 1:06:31 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

Recommended By
Doren
Wharf Rat

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1583693
 
Russian Warplanes Are Bombing Russia, Aiming To Block Invading Ukrainian Troops
The Kremlin’s glide-bombing campaign has shifted to Kursk Oblast in Russia.

David Axe
Forbes Staff

David Axe writes about ships, planes, tanks, drones and missiles.

Aug 10, 2024,06:09pm EDT

Updated Aug 10, 2024, 06:43pm EDT


A Russian Sukhoi Su-34 drops a KAB glide bomb.

Via social mediaAs the Ukrainian invasion of Russia grinds into its fifth day, Ukrainian troops have advanced as far as 10 miles into Kursk Oblast—and are beginning to mop up any Russian troops they bypassed in their hurry to extend their zone of control.

The Russians, meanwhile, are finally bringing to bear their heaviest firepower—lobbing powerful glide bombs at Ukrainian columns rolling along Russian roads.

For more than a year, these glide bombs—each ranging 25 miles or farther with hundreds of pounds of explosives—have been Russia’s most powerful offensive weapons, demolishing Ukrainian defenses ahead of Russian ground assaults.

Now they’re defensive weapons—and potentially Russia’s main means of slowing Ukrainian assaults until fresh Russian ground troops arrive in Kursk.

Russian air force Sukhoi Su-34 fighter-bombers drop as many as 100 KAB glide bombs every day. Until this week they mostly dropped them along the front line in eastern Ukraine, where Russian regiments have been advancing—slowly and at great cost—all spring and summer.

The bombing campaign began shifting north around Tuesday, roughly the same time the vanguard of at least five Ukrainian brigades rolled across the border into Kursk, kicking off a surprise counter-invasion in the 29th month of Russia’s wider war on Ukraine.

As Ukrainian battalions attacked from their bases in Sumy Oblast, right across the border from Kursk, Russian bombs rained down. “The intensity of combat in the Sumy direction has increased,” the Ukrainian general staff reported on Wednesday. “The enemy is actively applying aviation, helicopters, heavy weapons.”

“There is a noticeable shift in the focus of the enemy's aviation efforts in the theater of operations,” the Ukrainian Center for Defense Strategies noted. “Up to 50 percent of all guided bomb strikes ... now target the territories of Kursk and Sumy Oblasts.”

Anticipating this development, the Ukrainian military deployed what one Russian blogger characterized as “a significant amount” of air-defense batteries as well as electronic jammers that can block radio signals and, in some cases, even throw off satellite-guided bombs.

With a big assist from explosive drones, the Ukrainian batteries shot down several Russian helicopters. Firing back, Russian artillery damaged one Ukrainian BUK air-defense vehicle.

The bombing of Sumy didn’t stop Ukrainian troops from marching into neighboring Kursk and capturing several towns including most Sudzha, so far the locus of the Ukrainian counteroffensive. The Russian army mobilized reinforcements, but Ukrainian rockets blocked some of them from reaching the front line in Kursk.

So the Russian fighter-bombers shifted their aim points to Russian soil. On Thursday, KABs struck Ukrainian vehicles in the Russian village of Darino, on the northern edge of the Ukrainian advance. On Friday, glide bombs pummeled Ukrainian troops in Leonidovo, not far from Darino.

Russian glide bombs, some weighing as much as three tons, are powerful but inaccurate—and pose a serious danger to any civilians around a target. Assuming, of course, the civilians themselves aren’t the target.

The Kremlin might not mind accidentally killing Ukrainian civilians, but it’s apparently less eager to kill Russians. As the bombing or Kursk intensifies, authorities have ordered an evacuation of the oblast.

It’s an ominous development for the Ukrainian invasion corps. With civilians out of the way, the Russians can bomb with abandon.

Russian Jets Bomb Russia, Aiming To Block Invading Ukrainian Troops (forbes.com)



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1477067)8/11/2024 1:07:32 PM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

Recommended By
Doren
Wharf Rat
zax

  Respond to of 1583693
 
Ukraine Is Determined To Flatten Khalino Air Base, Situated Just 50 Miles From The Front Line Of Ukraine’s Surprise Invasion Of RussiaThe Ukrainians have targeted the air base twice in 11 days.

David Axe
Forbes Staff

David Axe writes about ships, planes, tanks, drones and missiles.

Aug 10, 2024,09:54pm EDT

Updated Aug 10, 2024, 10:21pm EDT


A Sukhoi Su-30SM flying from Khalino air base in Kursk.

Wikimedia CommonsKhalino air base, in the city of Kursk in the oblast of the same name, is the closest military airfield to Sudzha, the border town that’s the locus of Ukraine’s surprise invasion of Kursk Oblast that kicked off on Tuesday.

Khalino hosts the Russian air force’s 14th Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment. The regiment’s 24 Sukhoi Su-30SM fighter-bombers can carry KAB glide bombs, which weigh up to three tons and range 25 miles or farther on pop-out wings.

No sooner had those five Ukrainian brigades rolled across the border on Tuesday than the Russian air force began pummeling the brigades, and their bases in Ukraine’s Sumy Oblast, with around 50 KABs a day—half the KABs the Russians drop all along the 700-mile front line of Russia’s 29-month wider war on Ukraine.

The Ukrainians know how important Khalino is. Which is why they’ve been attacking it harder since the week before the invasion.

Khalino is just 65 miles from the border, placing it within range of a wide array of Ukrainian deep-strike weapons including ballistic and cruise missiles and explosive drones. The Ukrainians have struck the base several times since February 2022.

A drone raid on Khalino in December 2022 triggered a fire at the base’s fuel depot. Another attack eight months later involved Ukraine’s unique cardboard attack drones.

The attacks escalated. On July 31, just six days before the Ukrainian invasion, Ukrainian navy Neptune cruise missiles struck Khalino’s ammunition depot and burned part of it to the ground, possibly destroying any KABs stored there.

Eleven days later, Ukrainian troops have captured nearly 400 square miles of Kursk Oblast—fighting through a barrage of KABs that damaged or destroyed several Ukrainian vehicles. On Saturday night or Sunday morning, a Ukrainian missile was apparently streaking toward Khalino when it fell short and struck an apartment building in Kursk, injuring 13 Russian civilians.

The danger to the 14th Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment and any other Russian forces at Khalino will only increase as long as the Ukrainians control that swathe of Kursk adjacent to the border.

If they attacked Khalino from inside the invasion zone, the Ukrainians could target the air base with their shorter-ranged ground-launched rockets including M30/31s fired by American-made High-Mobility Artillery Rockets Systems.

It’s not clear the Ukrainian army would risk its precious HIMARS that close to the front line. But if it were willing, it could hit Khalino harder than ever.

Ukraine Is Determined To Flatten Russia's Khalino Air Base (forbes.com)