September 12, 2022:
Information Clearing House-- In the last 72 hours
or so, the pro-Russian side of the internet has
been sent into an tailspin of panic over a new
Ukrainian counteroffensive which is currently
being launched in the Kharkov region, with the
intention of compromising the Russian army
grouping at Izyum. The panic was triggered by
claims that Ukraine was advancing unopposed,
encircling - or perhaps even capturing - the
city of Balakliya - and on the verge of cutting
off supply lines to Izyum.
If you will indulge me, I would like to
revive a bit of optimism.
My view is fairly simple: Ukraine cannot and
will not reach meaningful objectives - what we
call “operational depth” - and has in fact
thrown much of its carefully crafted premium
reserves into a dangerous position. I believe
it’s highly likely that these top rate Ukrainian
formations are about to be savaged - but this is
still an important learning moment for Russia.
Let’s just get straight into it, starting
with an overview of the geography of this area,
why Izyum is important, and why Ukraine has very
poor prospects of reaching meaningful
operational objectives.
Izyum: Gateway to the Donbas
A modest city with a prewar population of
perhaps 50,000 people, Izyum was always slated
to be a focal point in this war, due to its
location at a critical intersection. The
topography of northeastern Ukraine is dominated
by a few critically important features which
determine patterns of movement. These include
the crucial E40/M03 highway, which connects the
metropolis of Kharkov and the urban
agglomeration of Slovyansk and Kramatorsk, which
are the largest and most important cities in the
western Donbas. The region is furthermore shaped
by the Severodonetsk River - alternatively
called simply the Donets (from which the Donbas,
or Donets Basin, draws its name) - which snakes
lazily around the plain.
The Donets forms a geographic barrier between
the Donbas to the south and the Kharkov region
to the north, while the E40/M03 highway forms
the main arterial for transit between Kharkov
and the urban centers of the western Donbas.
Izyum is a strategically crucial city because it
is where the highway crosses the river; as an
added cherry on top, the Oskil River - a major
tributary of the Donets - confluences with the
Donets less than five miles to the east of Izyum,
meaning the city essentially sits directly on
the intersection of all the most important
geographic features of the region. A highly
simplified map of the area looks like this:
Capturing Izyum was a major objective for
Russia in the early weeks of the war (as I
argued in a
previous piece, this was a major reason for
the pinning move on Kiev), because it not only
interdicts and complicates supply to Ukrainian
forces in the Donbas, but it also gave Russia an
early position on the Donets river.
It is obvious why Ukraine would want to
dislodge Russia from Izyum. This would simplify
and secure lines of communication to Slovyansk
and greatly complicate the Russian push in the
Donbas by freeing Ukraine’s northern flank. To
achieve this, they are attempting a thrust
toward Kupyansk, with the aim of cutting the
line connecting Izyum to Belgorod in the north.
This operation, I believe, is doomed to
spectacular failure.
Operational Depth
The panic that set in on the Russian side (on
the internet, at least, for there is no evidence
that the Russian armed forces panicked) was due
to the perception that Ukraine was advancing
unopposed towards the east, rapidly approaching
Kupyansk and doing… something, to Balakliya.
Whether that something is encircling, capturing,
or merely screening remains to be determined, as
conflicting reports abound at the moment. It is
prudent, however, to think about what it means
to “advance.” This is a highly contextual
question, which depends entirely on the level of
resistance being offered and the proximity to
operational goals.
Here, we can introduce a notion in military
theory that we call “Operational Depth.” Please
note, this is not a specific distance - it’s not
20, 50, or 100 km, but it could be any one of
those depending on the situation. We’ll define
it like this:
Operational Depth refers
to the level of advance wherein the
attacking force is no longer attacking the
enemy’s frontline elements, but is instead
directly assailing the enemy’s ability to
sustain itself in combat.
What this means in practice is that instead
of fighting the enemy’s deployed combat units,
the attacking force finds itself directly
attacking the enemy’s lines of communication,
supply depots, command centers, reserves and
assembly points, and all the other facets of the
rear area. In short, this is the phase where an
offensive is exploited. Rather than simply
fighting the enemy’s forces, you begin to
destroy his ability to sustain and deploy forces
altogether.
Now, there are a few major factors which lead
to the inevitable conclusion that Ukraine cannot
reach operational depth in this counteroffensive
- furthermore, in the absence of such a success,
they will be savaged and suffer horrific losses.
Let’s run through the issues here.
Izyum: The Non-Salient
In military parlance, a “salient” simply
means a bulge in the frontline, where one side
has achieved some level of penetration at a
particular point. A salient is a classically
vulnerable position - a glaringly obvious
operational focal point, because simultaneous
attacks at the base of the bulge can easily cut
it off and trap the forces inside. Essentially,
a salient is a position where a force is already
encircled on 3 sides, leaving only the exit to
be snapped shut.
In the opening phase of the war, Izyum was
indeed a salient. Russia had captured an exposed
position which jutted out into Ukrainian
territory, and there was talk of a Ukrainian
counteroffensive to take advantage of this.
Furthermore, the only safe supply line to Izyum
ran through Kupyansk, making this a vulnerable
position indeed. Here’s a map from
Ukraine War Mapper from early May, for
reference:
However, throughout the following weeks,
Russia took control of the territory directly to
the east of Izyum, including the town of Lyman.
This concretized the Russian flank and secured
additional lines of communication into Izyum,
creating redundancies for the highway from
Kupyansk. Behold the map in August:
The window of opportunity for an easy
encirclement or interdiction of supply to Izyum
ended when Russia cleared all the Ukrainian
forces from the north side of the Donets river.
Supply lines to Izyum are now shielded from the
south by the Donets, and from the west by the
Oskil.
Because Russia has redundant supply lines to
the northeast of Izyum, for Ukraine to reach
operational depth, they must cross the Donets
and Oskil rivers. Even suppressing Kupyansk is
not enough to disrupt Russia’s ability to
project force here. The Oskil river - which,
incidentally is more than a kilometer wide in
places - presents a major barrier that will
prevent Ukraine from exploiting their early
advances. They have more or less advanced into a
wall, and already the map presents an unfolding
catastrophe for them. Courtesy of
Rybar:
In short, the Ukrainian advance has been too
slow and lacks a clear path to reach operational
objectives. Already, Russia has begun to deploy
huge reserves to this theater, and fear is
beginning to show among the more operationally
aware Ukrainians. One Ukrainian journalist at
the front had this to say:
“There is heavy fighting near Kupyansk,
worse than Balakleysky. We are taking heavy
losses. The enemy is transferring a bunch of
reserves by air. The “Wagnerites” have
already arrived in the city itself. The sky
is filled with aircraft. Hearing about all
this, a haunting feeling of an ambush arises
in the soul. What if this all really turns
out to be a strategic level ambush?”
I do not believe this is an “ambush” per se
by the Russian army. The word ambush implies
that the Russian forces were already in
position, drawing the Ukrainians into a specific
maneuver plan where they could be attacked from
prepared positions. That’s not what’s happening
at all - Russian forces are coming in fresh from
reserve and were not pre-deployed to the sector.
What the operation reflects instead is Russia’s
preference to wage a high-firepower, mobile
defense. Frontline positions are, relatively
speaking, thinly manned, which powerful mobile
reserves are held back. This is a flexible,
firefighting approach which allows the
Ukrainians to advance into vulnerable positions
so that they can be destroyed.
For Ukraine, one of the basic problems is
that Russia has such an enormous advantage in
firepower - aircraft, tube artillery, rocketry,
and tanks - that any offensive must reach
operational depth quickly in order to disrupt
Russia’s ability to bring this firepower to
bear. In the Izyum sector, this simply isn’t
possible.
Lacking the ability to operationally
compromise Russian forces here, Ukraine will
find itself in a good old fashioned shootout
against an enemy with vastly superior firepower
- not only that, but it is in fact Ukraine that
now faces operational complications, having
blasted their way into a salient with no
prospects for crossing the Oskil in force and
exploiting.
What Happens Now?
It seems probable to me that Ukraine’s
advance has reached, or is nearing its
culmination, as Russian reserves flood into the
area, Russia missile strikes attack the
Ukrainian command post in Chuguev, and Russian
aviation and artillery begin to lay it on thick.
The choice Ukraine now faces is whether to
continue to funnel forces into the salient that
they have created for themselves - in other
words, Ukraine now gets to decide the scale of
its losses. According to Ukrainian insider
channels, they are currently planning to double
down and feed more reserves in, promising a
correspondingly larger defeat.
I don’t like to make concrete predictions
about dates or casualty numbers. There are far
too many unknowns for anyone to actually think
they can predict such specifics. But regarding
the general trajectory, I am confident
predicting that Ukraine’s offensive is nearing
the high water mark and will soon become a mass
casualty event for the Ukrainian army. It may
take a few more days for the situation to
stabilize entirely, but that point is rapidly
approaching and many of Ukraine’s best units
face destruction.
However, I would be remiss if I did not make
an appropriate critique of Russia’s conduct of
this operation. There are still important
lessons to be learned.
Future Conduct of the War
While the actual counteroffensive is turning
into a catastrophe for Ukraine, the fact that
they were able to launch this operation at all
has important implications, specifically in
regards to Ukrainian manpower.
Russia has been fighting an economy of force
operation that aims to destroy the Ukrainian
army through attrition. Ukraine’s ability to
launch two counteroffensives (Kherson and
Kupyansk-Izyum) suggests two important reasons
to modify Russia’s force deployment.
1) The Deficiency of Tripwire
Defenses
Many sector’s of Russia’s front are thinly
manned, with forces being held in reserve to
wage a mobile defense. The actual troops at the
front amount to a string of token forces who are
there primarily to try to slow the enemy while
reserves are brought forward. While holding a
mobile reserve is the correct approach given the
force deployment that Russia has made, this is
problematic because it allows the Ukrainians to
make temporary gains.
In an operational sense, this isn’t a
catastrophe. Russia has the firepower and
mobility to crush these offensives. The problem
is that it allows Ukraine to temporarily retake
settlements, which exposes the civilians in
these areas to reprisal killings, such as
occurred in Bucha. In the current example, we
can look at Balakliya. In and of itself, these
city does not have major operational value, but
it does have Russian civilians in it who would
be exposed to Ukrainian revenge if the city was
temporarily recaptured. Russia must reconsider
its force deployment so that it can more firmly
hold settlements at the frontline for the sake
of these civilians.
2) Ukrainian Force Generation
Ukraine’s meta-strategy so far is predicated
on a two-tier army. The lower tier consists of
poorly trained cannon fodder who man defensive
belts and slow down the Russian army with their
bodies, by forcing an exchange of artillery
shells for their lives. This is the army that
Russia is attriting at horrific loss ratios in
the Donbas. The first tier Ukrainian army are
the forces that are being trained and equipped
by western handlers. The Ukrainian scheme is to
delay Russia by trading their conscript cannon
fodder while they assemble the first tier forces
for counteroffensives.
Ukraine has demonstrated that, even if they
haven’t competently used these first tier
forces, they still have the capability to
assemble real strike packages with western help,
so long as the lower tier army is able to buy
time. This calls into question the Russian
strategy of attrition, because it means that
Russia is attriting soldiers that Ukraine
doesn’t care about. It is probably unwise to
allow the west to build yet another army in the
rear for yet another wave of counteroffensives.
Russia should evaluate ways to deny Ukraine
access to its manpower pool and raise its force
deployment to that effect. Nikolayev,
Dnepropetrovsk, Zhaparozhia, Odessa, and Kharkov
must be taken from Ukraine to that end, and the
Russian army must become serious about
destroying Ukrainian infrastructure and
logistics to prevent Ukraine from continuing the
buildup of first tier forces in the rear.
Russia continues to attempt to win the war
with a light hand - bare minimum force
deployment and precision strikes, sparing
critical infrastructure. While the defeat of the
current counteroffensives demonstrate that it is
still well on the path to victory, the mere
existence of these counteroffensives suggests
that Russia must raise its force deployment -
taking advantage of its significant powers of
force generation - and deny Ukraine access to
its population pools, or else victory may well
be slower and more costly than necessary.
Views expressed in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the opinions of Information Clearing House. in this article are
solely those of the author and do not necessarily
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