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Whiskey's Briefing Room II - Section 104

Whiskey's Briefing Room II 

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  #1031  
07-14-2023, 07:27 PM
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II

I like the picture of Putin :D

I imagine that face expression when anyone asks him how is demilitarization of the UA going :D

In case you haven't seen it yet... Putin's video diary leaked. 2nd video in this post: https://www.documentingreality.com/f...2/#post7947931
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  #1032  
07-14-2023, 07:55 PM
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II

This video is perfect for Putin: "should I stay or should I go?" !!! Totally hilarious.
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  #1033  
07-14-2023, 08:12 PM
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II

I had to screengrab the video.

Source: https://www.reuters.com/world/europe...ws-2023-07-14/

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Ukraine's spymaster comes out of the shadows
By Tom Balmforth
July 14, 202312:43 PM EDTUpdated 7 hours ago


Summary
  • Ukrainian spy boss builds up unusually public profile
  • Kyiv is beating Moscow in 'information war', he says
  • Spy chief says his agency is focused on agent network

KYIV, July 14 (Reuters) - He wears a pistol to interviews with foreign journalists and discusses wartime intelligence. Weapons and military gear are strewn on the floor of his Kyiv office. He says he has "sources" close to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

For an intelligence chief running Ukraine's spy operations during war with Russia, Kyrylo Budanov, 37, has built up an unusually public profile that he has used to get his message out and to menace Russia from afar.

These days, a spy boss cannot stay in the shadows, he says.

"It's not possible without this, not anymore," the head of Ukraine's Main Intelligence Directorate (GUR) told Reuters in an interview at his heavily defended headquarters in the capital.

"And all the next wars are going to look like this. In any country in the world. We can say that we're setting a trend here."

Ukraine drew conclusions about the need to get its message across since 2014, when Moscow took the world by surprise to seize Ukraine's Crimean peninsula and unleash a proxy war in the east, he says.

"We completely lost the information war in 2014. And the war, which began in (2022) - we started here in a completely different way. And now the Russians are losing the information battle."

Since a mercenary mutiny in Russia last month made Moscow's ruling system appear more opaque and unstable, Budanov has used the opportunity to weigh in about what Ukraine's spies know about their enemy.

In parts of his interview reported by Reuters earlier this week, he said the mutinying Russian mercenaries had headed for a nuclear base in pursuit of a backpack-sized atomic weapon. Several Russian sources that spoke to Reuters confirmed parts of that account.

Budanov also cited an intercepted survey conducted by the Russian Interior Ministry that he said showed mercenary boss Yevgeny Prigozhin had support inside Russia.

He provided no evidence, but noted that he accurately predicted Russia would invade before the full-scale war broke out last year. "Who turned out to be right? Us."

"We have our own sources. In the closest offices (to Putin), so to say. This is why we usually know what's going on."

REVILED IN RUSSIA

Enigmatic and intense, Budanov sat behind his desk in military fatigues under a painting of an owl - the symbol of his agency - sinking its talons into a bat, the emblem of Russia's military intelligence directorate.

The blinds of his office were drawn with sandbags in the windows.

Appointed in August 2020, Budanov has seen his popularity and public profile surge inside Ukraine during the war, where he is portrayed as a behind-the-scenes mastermind of efforts to strike back at Russia. In Russian media he is a hate figure.

The Kremlin decried as "monstrous" a remark he made in May that "we will keep killing Russians anywhere on the face of this world until the complete victory of Ukraine".

Russia has blamed Ukrainian secret services for the murders of a pro-war Russian blogger and a pro-war journalist. Kyiv denies involvement. Russian media reported that a court in Moscow had arrested Budanov in absentia in April on terrorism charges.

The prospect of a spy agency sending assassins to hunt down Ukraine's enemies has drawn comparisons with Israel's Mossad. Budanov doesn't resist the analogy.

"If you're asking about Mossad as being famous (for) ... eliminating enemies of their state, then we were doing it and we will be doing it. We don't need to create anything because it already exists."

Budanov began his military career as a special forces operative and served in the east after Russia illegally annexed Crimea and its proxies took over Ukraine's eastern fringes. He was wounded three times.

Since he took charge of the spy service there have been numerous failed attempts on his life, including a botched car bombing in which the assailant was blown up.

"The only thing I can say is that they haven't stopped attempting it, but I will repeat – it's all in vain," he said.

In late May a Russian air strike hit his headquarters on Kyiv's Rybalskyi Peninsula, sparking Russian media reports that he had been gravely wounded. Budanov played down its significance.

"That wasn't their first attempt. But, as you can see, once again, we're here in the main quarters of this building. When you were outside, you could see people walking, and working. Everything is working as it should."

Reporting by Tom Balmforth Additional reporting by Sergiy Karazy Editing by Mike Collett-White and Peter Graff

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  #1034  
07-14-2023, 08:25 PM
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II

Source (behind a paywall): https://www.washingtonpost.com/world...luzhny-russia/

To defeat Russia, Ukraine’s top commander pushes to fight on his terms

By Isabelle Khurshudyan
July 14, 2023 at 12:25 p.m. EDT



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KYIV, Ukraine — A career military man, Gen. Valery Zaluzhny long ago confronted three questions: Am I ready to die? Am I ready to kill? Am I willing to send people to die and kill?

Now, Ukraine’s top commander in a war with a Russian force larger and better-equipped than his own is asking himself a new question: How can I reduce the loss of life? He starts each morning by learning how many soldiers were killed or wounded following his orders the day before. Sometimes he stumbles across a contact in his cellphone who is dead. He refuses to delete them.

Zaluzhny said he’s saving the grieving for later. Mourning now would distract him from his important work as the man Ukrainians trust to keep them safe and Western partners trust with billions in security assistance. Both expect him to re-create Ukraine’s earlier underdog success on the battlefield.

But if it were up to Zaluzhny alone, this is not how he would get the job done. He would fight with air superiority. He would fire back at least as many shells as the Russians are firing at his troops. And he would have cruise missiles that could match Moscow’s. Instead, modern fighter jets, such as the U.S.-made F-16, are not expected on the battlefield until next year. Ukraine’s ammunition supply is constrained, with the Russians often shooting three times as much in a day.

And Western allies, citing fears of escalating the war with Russia, have placed a condition on the longer-range missiles and other materiel they’ve so far provided: They can’t be used to strike Russian soil.

So, Zaluzhny said, he uses weapons made in Ukraine for the frequent strikes across the border that Kyiv never officially acknowledges as its own.

“To save my people, why do I have to ask someone for permission what to do on enemy territory?” Zaluzhny recently told The Washington Post in a rare interview. “For some reason, I have to think that I’m not allowed to do anything there. Why? Because [Russian President Vladimir] Putin will … use nuclear weapons? The kids who are dying don’t care.

“This is our problem, and it is up to us to decide how to kill this enemy. It is possible and necessary to kill on his territory in a war. If our partners are afraid to use their weapons, we will kill with our own. But only as much as is necessary.”

The challenges facing Zaluzhny and his forces are significant. Even after he orchestrated a series of military feats — a defensive stand that forced the Russians to retreat from around Kyiv and counteroffensives that expelled the invading troops from the northeast Kharkiv region and the southern regional capital of Kherson last year — large swaths of Ukraine’s east and south, about a fifth of the country, remain occupied.

Carrying out a counteroffensive to reclaim that territory, defeat Russia and minimize Ukraine’s casualties requires resources that Zaluzhny said he’s still lacking. Western officials have said Ukraine has enough to succeed, but Zaluzhny was sharply critical of counterparts who have argued that Kyiv doesn’t need F-16s. Their own militaries would never fight like this, he said in the interview.

Despite criticism that progress in the counteroffensive has been slow, Zaluzhny remains a popular if somewhat paradoxical figure in Ukraine. He has sought to be a driver of change in the military, eliminating legacies from the Soviet era and transforming it into a more Western, NATO-like force. Off the battlefield, the 50-year-old’s smiling face is painted on walls across the country, along with his hand in a peace sign. He has a Baby Yoda patch on his bulletproof vest and a patch with cartoon cats holding guns on the back of his helmet.

But behind the scenes, the worries and responsibility weigh on him.

“One question I get asked is, ‘How can you stand it?’” Zaluzhny said.

“I have to live with it,” he said. “Every day, it’s those who were killed. Every day, it’s the maimed, the missing. It’s tears.”

‘No longer a Soviet army’
Seven months before columns of Russian tanks streaked across Ukraine’s northern, southern and eastern borders, Zaluzhny was considering a transition to civilian life.

But the military was all he’d ever known; he was born while his father was stationed at a garrison in the country’s north, and he later attended a military academy. When President Volodymyr Zelensky called and offered Zaluzhny the top post in Ukraine’s armed forces, Zaluzhny quickly ditched the idea of retirement.

Among the first things he did was renovate his new office. Zaluzhny had always dreaded visiting previous commanders there. Each time reminded him of the thing he despised most about the Soviet army legacy — “that any commander who took his position was in fact a feudal lord over his subordinates,” he said. It represented exactly what he wanted to change about Ukraine’s military.

“These walls were soaked in this,” Zaluzhny said. “When you came in here, you immediately understood that it was a mistake to be born, it was a mistake to come here.”

In a General Staff headquarters building built in the 19th century, Zaluzhny’s office now stands apart — simple and modern with a large bookshelf where Zaluzhny stashes his collection, including Chinese President Xi Jinping’s “The Governance of China.”

The change wasn’t for aesthetics, but rather for the place, and the person in it, to feel more accessible. Rather than rule with an iron fist, Zaluzhny said, he frequently asks for input — and not just from his own circle of generals. Even now, soldiers on the front line can often directly reach out to Zaluzhny through social media.

Zaluzhny’s attempt at culture change can be seen on the battlefield, too. Years of training and deepening ties with NATO forces have made Ukraine’s forces more nimble than Russia’s in this war. Lower-level commanders on the ground often feel empowered to make decisions quickly rather than run each call up the chain of command — a Soviet mind-set.

“The assumption that this would be a war between a big Soviet army and a small Soviet army was wrong in many countries,” Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov said. “That’s why they told us that Kyiv would fall in three days and Ukraine in three weeks. But this is no longer a Soviet army.”

After Reznikov learned that Russia had launched a full-scale attack on Feb. 24, 2022, he arrived at Zaluzhny’s office to find the general standing over large maps and answering multiple phones. Zaluzhny was receiving information from the battlefield and then responding with curt orders, Reznikov said. But Zaluzhny would also add a small term of endearment each time, calling his subordinate a “beauty” or telling him “good job.”

“This is humanity,” Reznikov said. “The guy is in a general’s uniform, but his humanity is what makes him special.”

The military still demands strict order and discipline, Zaluzhny said. He can be stern and demanding, but “I do not mock people, I do not oppress them, I do not humiliate them.”

The turn away from the Ukrainian military’s Soviet legacy is far from complete. More offices must be changed, Zaluzhny said. And more change will come with the new generation — soldiers Zaluzhny proudly described as knowing English and being well-read. “It’s a pity we’re losing them,” he said.

After fighting an internal Soviet ideological enemy, he now faces an external one that lauds the very heritage Zaluzhny wanted eradicated. But he still has respect for his adversary’s doctrine. He eagerly read everything Gen. Valery Gerasimov, Russia’s military chief, has ever written, describing it as “very, very interesting” and lamenting that he hasn’t published anything lately.

“He is an enemy — an enemy who is very smart,” Zaluzhny said. “Smart and therefore devious. He is still strong. So you have to respect him as such and look for ways to kill him. Because that is the only way to win.”

Beyond victory
Years before Zaluzhny could start shaping Ukraine’s military into his vision, a few hours in a jail cell motivated him to learn more about the world order.

It was 2019, and Zaluzhny, as one of Ukraine’s top commanders directing Kyiv’s forces against Russian proxies in eastern Ukraine, traveled to Brussels for a meeting with NATO counterparts.

As soon as he stepped off the plane, he said, he was surrounded by law enforcement. With their guns pointed at him, he was instructed to lie facedown on the floor and was handcuffed. Zaluzhny said he had just enough roaming minutes on his phone to call Ukraine’s ambassador to NATO, who eventually helped secure his release.

Russian authorities had placed Zaluzhny’s name on the Interpol wanted list without his knowing — a regular practice that has led to other Ukrainian commanders being briefly imprisoned. He was angry at himself for not knowing his legal rights in such a situation.

“I was in a bad mood, but then I realized that hypothetically I was a war criminal and most likely would remain one,” Zaluzhny said. “So I decided I should study international relations and international law.”

The episode inspired him to pursue a master’s degree, which he received in December 2020. He puts it to use in his current job, which calls on him not only to be a military strategist but also to regularly confront geopolitical considerations, such as allies’ fear of crossing Russian red lines by providing weapons such as longer-range missiles or modern fighter jets.

Zaluzhny, however, isn’t shy about his intent to reclaim Crimea, the peninsula Russia illegally annexed in 2014, even as some Western officials privately worry about what Putin’s response would be if Ukrainian troops ever reached the territory. “As soon as I have the means, I’ll do something. I don’t give a damn — nobody will stop me,” Zaluzhny said.

The figurative Western handcuffs on his military operations have prompted Zaluzhny to think more about Ukraine’s future — beyond this counteroffensive and this war — and how to make the country so strong that no one will dare attack it again. To accomplish that means producing weapons for defense rather than being reliant on others to provide them.

He lamented that Ukraine is dependent on other countries for ammunition as partners struggle to meet the demand. The more Ukraine can fire, pinning down Russian forces, the fewer casualties it will suffer, Zaluzhny said. But what happens if the precious resource becomes scarcer the longer the war lasts?

“I’ve been asking myself that since last March — and not just myself; I ask it everywhere I can ask it,” Zaluzhny said.

His vision for a formidable Ukraine is why he struggles to consider his own future after the war. Maybe he’ll take some time off. “But as my wife says: ‘Okay, three days. What’s next?’” he said with a laugh. He might write a book, he said. He’d like to travel, though his Brussels airport experience left him wary.

But Zaluzhny expects that even after the war, he’ll be busy. His concept of victory is more than just Ukraine restoring its full territorial integrity.

“Victory will be when we will have an army — maybe even a not-insignificant one — that will guarantee the safety of children who are now riding in baby carriages, so that they grow up knowing that this won’t happen again,” Zaluzhny said. “And that’s a tremendous amount of work. It has to start now.”

Kostiantyn Khudov, Serhiy Morgunov and Kamila Hrabchuk contributed to this report.




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  #1035  
07-14-2023, 10:03 PM
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II

"In the Bakhmut region near the Siverskyi Donets-Donbass canal, between the settlements of Klishchivka and Kurdyumivka, Ukrainian units are being led to confidently advance, pushing out the Russian invaders and securing new positions ."

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"In the South, near the village of Robotino , where the heaviest battles are currently taking place, Ukrainian soldiers are slowly turning the situation around step by step, penetrating the defenses of the Russians and entrenching themselves in new positions won from the enemy.

The map of this section of the front has already been changing for several days."

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  #1036  
07-15-2023, 02:28 AM
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II

"I highly recommend reading a good article about the state of Russian field artillery (self-propelled).

It is especially interesting to look at this through the prism of the effective counter-battery work of the Armed Forces, which we observe every day.

You can compare how the Russian bases and arsenals were lowered with preserved self-propelled guns. First of all, we are talking about the same 2С5 "Hyacinth-S" , which have been in negative territory at an alarming rate for the last month. And how the Russians are now trying to compensate for the deficit of the once main firepower - "Msta-S" (which is really not bad).

It should be taken into account that, on average, every 4-5 cars can be taken out of conservation and restored. Others go as donors, or in general for scrap (actually for metal). For example, as with "Peonies", when several dozen were first removed from storage, and then returned to the base again, but without barrels.

Therefore, when you see hundreds of units of Russian "conservation" on satellite images, know that the lion's share cannot physically be used as intended.

Made a video from satellite images of Russian storage bases for 2021 and as of May 2023. For comparison."
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  #1037  
07-15-2023, 04:01 AM
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II

"American tanks Abrams M1A1 FEP with Mine Clearing Roller System (anti-mine trawl) on a training ground in Germany. It is at these that Ukrainian tankers undergo training.

The M1A1 FEP was created specifically for the US Marine Corps. The M1A1 FEP differs from the base version (M1A1) in that it has improved booking, upgraded opto-electronic systems and more advanced battlefield and fire control systems.

Be that as it may, it is clear that the Americans are studying the experience of Ukrainians using Western equipment and adapting to the conditions of total mining of the territory. The same trawl volume indicator."

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  #1038  
07-15-2023, 02:20 PM
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II

One of the Biber bridge building tanks from Germany that is based off the Leopard 1 tank.
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II

"Russian officers are unhappy with Gerasimov and Shoigu - British intelligence

British intelligence has reacted to the dismissal in Russia of Major General Ivan Popov, commander of the 58th Army, who allegedly reported to the command on the difficult situation in Zaporizhzhia region.

In the leaked video, intended for his subordinates, Popov sharply criticized the leadership of the Russian Defense Ministry, saying that it "attacked us from the rear, brutally decapitated the army at the most difficult and tense moment."

The ministry adds that his statements largely echo the complaints of Wagner group leader Yevgeny Prigozhin before his mutiny"
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"Interesting infographic

Attitudes towards the Russian Federation in different countries of the world - Pew Research Center"
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Re: Whiskey's Briefing Room II

"South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol arrived in Ukraine on an unannounced visit - Yonhap."
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"President of South Korea and Prosecutor General Andriy Kostin visit Bucha

President and his wife saw the sites of crimes committed by the Russian military during the occupation of Bucha in March 2022"
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"Yoon Suk Yeol supported the Ukrainian "peace formula" and announced the allocation of $150 million."
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