While Western discussions have focused on sending sophisticated weapons to Kiev, Hal Brands, a Henry Kissinger Distinguished Professor at Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies, argues that what Ukraine needs the most, besides air-defense systems, is artillery ammunition. He describes the current conflict as an artillery-centric one: if Kiev cant find enough artillery pieces and ammunition, especially 155mm shells, it will be at a dire firepower deficit along the conflicts front lines.
Already on March 29, Earle Mack, former US ambassador to Finland, writing in a piece for The Hill, described the current confrontation as proxy attrition warfare, that is one which seeks military victory by wearing down the enemy. He worried that Ukraine seemed bound to tire out first. Things have not gotten much better for Kiev, so far.
A July 23 New York Times story, by former Marine infantryman Thomas Gibbons-Neff, based on dozens of visits to the front line quotes a Ukrainian commander: were trading our people for their people and they have more people and equipment. According to the story, Ukraine has made marginal progress in its ability to coordinate directly between its troops closest to Russian forces on the so-called zero line and those assaulting forward. Moreover, the countrys artillery is in short supply, and a mixture of munitions sent from different countries is employed. The thing is that accuracy varies greatly between them and the Ukrainians need to use more ammunition. In addition, according to the same news report, some of the older shells and rockets sent from abroad are damaging their equipment and injuring soldiers.
Poster Comment:
Actually worse than that. Russia fires ten shells for every Ukrainian artillery shell.The Ukrainians have to maintain separate supply lines for every different piece of NATO equipment.
Ukraine is running out of able bodied men. They fill up a battalion with injured men and send them in lightly armed ahead of a mechanized unit that is low on ammunition. One man was captured with his unit after their rear command refused to send transport for the wounded.
They are sending 16 year-old boys and men in their 60s to the front. Also epileptics, men with spinal injuries and others who have no business in uniform.