also seems easy to make them fly over Baltics regardless of whatever air defence there.
adamtheskill on
Nice. I guess it’s not super surprising when Russia has to defend absolutely massive areas of land. Also I would guess many commanders keep air defences close to their own positions cause they don’t want to become a statistic.
Opposite-Chemistry-0 on
Maybe their lack of manpower and equipment is even worse than we dare to hope. Maybe they need all hands on their conquered territories so the front won’t collapse.
Ofc striking refineries etc is not that easy, Ukraine just does stuff well. I bet orcs do have AA. But even still, we do see more drone sanctions on refineries now, and other long range strikes. Its almost daily. Ofc we see the most succesful ones, but still, more is more.
It is pretty peculiar those strikes hit Russia mainland so often. It really seems they have problems intercepting drones. Maybe it was a pucking bad idea to use those AA missiles to just bombard civilian targets eh.
Cruel idiots.
LateToTheParty013 on
drones change the entire war maths to a degree no one yet is able to counter it
ThunderousOrgasm on
An interesting consequence of them starting to hit Russia directly, has been senior Russian officials have moved a lot of the air defence assets to their own private homes. To protect their houses. So there are now huge gaps in the air defence across the entirety of Russia because of that selfishness and corruption.
It’s partly why Ukraine has suddenly started ramping up the attacks. There are literally hundreds of miles of gaps in the air defence network because of it. Ukraine can now fly drones to Moscow without it needing to be carefully planned out and timed.
It continues the tradition of Russias biggest enemy in the war being Russians themselves. That has been the thing causing the most weakness since the very start of the war, Russian corruption and their leaders incompetence.
Slick424 on
The Russians entered this war under the rather childish delusion that they were going to bomb everyone else, and nobody was going to bomb them.
Federal_Revenue_2158 on
We are seeing a shift here. Russia’s air defense is crumbling after years of destroying radars and launchers. All the while Ukraine produces not only more but also better drones and even missiles.
The attacks are going to become more frequent. harder and deeper.
Efficient_Resist_287 on
I think Russia did a great job with propaganda about its air defense in general. From the start of this conflict, the reality did not match the Kremlin past rhetoric.
When faced with a foe that won’t back down and is very astute to improvise and adapt to ever changing situation, Russia supposedly weapons advantage is weak. I am not saying Russia doesn’t have the means to obliterate Ukraine however is this power truly an advantage?
E_dog21 on
…barely an inconvenience?
endelehia on
Has been surprisingly easy, barely an inconvenience
WestcoastAlex on
well yah.
meanwhile the planet burns .. great tactic guys!
soon there wont be countries to fight over anymore, everyone will be ghasping for breath
orthoxerox on
Attacking any oil refineries is surprisingly easy. They are big, immobile, very flammable targets.
Sad-Push-3708 on
KEEP IT UP
yaderkuvboloto on
[ Removed by Reddit ]
Falkenmond79 on
I wish they would attack known Russian bot and troll farms. That would do so much for European unity and support for Ukraine. Also kill all internet in Russia. That would be awesome.
Ben_C17 on
The refineries Ukraine’s hitting aren’t just convenient targets they’re forcing a resource allocation problem Russia can’t solve. Most of these facilities handle both domestic product and export-grade refined fuel. Damage to one means Moscow has to choose: repair capacity for domestic supply (keep trucks and trains running) or restore export capability (keep revenue flowing). They can’t do both quickly.
We’ve been tracking the strike pattern on panopsik.com since February, and it’s clear Ukraine’s not just hitting what’s easy to reach. They’re targeting the facilities that feed both military logistics hubs and civilian infrastructure in the same pipeline network. The Ryazan and Nizhny Novgorod hits in particular those feed road fuel west toward the logistics routes into Ukraine, but they’re also the backup capacity when other refineries go offline for seasonal maintenance.
The „surprisingly easy“ part isn’t just weak air defense. It’s that Soviet-era refineries were never designed to operate under air attack from the west. No hardening, no redundancy, everything optimized for peacetime throughput. The architecture assumes the threat comes from NATO bombers you’d see on radar, not a dozen cheap drones you might miss until impact.
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also seems easy to make them fly over Baltics regardless of whatever air defence there.
Nice. I guess it’s not super surprising when Russia has to defend absolutely massive areas of land. Also I would guess many commanders keep air defences close to their own positions cause they don’t want to become a statistic.
Maybe their lack of manpower and equipment is even worse than we dare to hope. Maybe they need all hands on their conquered territories so the front won’t collapse.
Ofc striking refineries etc is not that easy, Ukraine just does stuff well. I bet orcs do have AA. But even still, we do see more drone sanctions on refineries now, and other long range strikes. Its almost daily. Ofc we see the most succesful ones, but still, more is more.
It is pretty peculiar those strikes hit Russia mainland so often. It really seems they have problems intercepting drones. Maybe it was a pucking bad idea to use those AA missiles to just bombard civilian targets eh.
Cruel idiots.
drones change the entire war maths to a degree no one yet is able to counter it
An interesting consequence of them starting to hit Russia directly, has been senior Russian officials have moved a lot of the air defence assets to their own private homes. To protect their houses. So there are now huge gaps in the air defence across the entirety of Russia because of that selfishness and corruption.
It’s partly why Ukraine has suddenly started ramping up the attacks. There are literally hundreds of miles of gaps in the air defence network because of it. Ukraine can now fly drones to Moscow without it needing to be carefully planned out and timed.
It continues the tradition of Russias biggest enemy in the war being Russians themselves. That has been the thing causing the most weakness since the very start of the war, Russian corruption and their leaders incompetence.
The Russians entered this war under the rather childish delusion that they were going to bomb everyone else, and nobody was going to bomb them.
We are seeing a shift here. Russia’s air defense is crumbling after years of destroying radars and launchers. All the while Ukraine produces not only more but also better drones and even missiles.
The attacks are going to become more frequent. harder and deeper.
I think Russia did a great job with propaganda about its air defense in general. From the start of this conflict, the reality did not match the Kremlin past rhetoric.
When faced with a foe that won’t back down and is very astute to improvise and adapt to ever changing situation, Russia supposedly weapons advantage is weak. I am not saying Russia doesn’t have the means to obliterate Ukraine however is this power truly an advantage?
…barely an inconvenience?
Has been surprisingly easy, barely an inconvenience
well yah.
meanwhile the planet burns .. great tactic guys!
soon there wont be countries to fight over anymore, everyone will be ghasping for breath
Attacking any oil refineries is surprisingly easy. They are big, immobile, very flammable targets.
KEEP IT UP
[ Removed by Reddit ]
I wish they would attack known Russian bot and troll farms. That would do so much for European unity and support for Ukraine. Also kill all internet in Russia. That would be awesome.
The refineries Ukraine’s hitting aren’t just convenient targets they’re forcing a resource allocation problem Russia can’t solve. Most of these facilities handle both domestic product and export-grade refined fuel. Damage to one means Moscow has to choose: repair capacity for domestic supply (keep trucks and trains running) or restore export capability (keep revenue flowing). They can’t do both quickly.
We’ve been tracking the strike pattern on panopsik.com since February, and it’s clear Ukraine’s not just hitting what’s easy to reach. They’re targeting the facilities that feed both military logistics hubs and civilian infrastructure in the same pipeline network. The Ryazan and Nizhny Novgorod hits in particular those feed road fuel west toward the logistics routes into Ukraine, but they’re also the backup capacity when other refineries go offline for seasonal maintenance.
The „surprisingly easy“ part isn’t just weak air defense. It’s that Soviet-era refineries were never designed to operate under air attack from the west. No hardening, no redundancy, everything optimized for peacetime throughput. The architecture assumes the threat comes from NATO bombers you’d see on radar, not a dozen cheap drones you might miss until impact.