(Image by NEIVANMADE)
I was offline almost all day, so this will be a brief post. I will say that it sort of feels to me like we’re at something of a pause point, like when you know you have to sneeze, but it hasn’t happened yet. The new military aid packages have been announced, but they won’t even begin to ship for days or weeks. The Ukrainian Armed Forces are doing yeoman’s work under difficult conditions dealing with the meat grinders that Wagner and the Russian military have created at several points along the line of contact that snakes all the way around Russian occupied Ukraine by just wantonly throwing bodies into combat.
Estonian Prime Minister Kallas shared her understanding of the strategic problem set that is Russia:
There is war in #Ukraine because Russia started it, not because Ukraine is defending itself. Russia's goals haven't changed, it wants to continue its war of aggression.
This means we all need to do more. Give many more weapons to Ukraine, faster. We're in it for the long haul. pic.twitter.com/O2AKWLHqqd
— Kaja Kallas (@kajakallas) January 21, 2023
Here is President Zelenskyy’s address from earlier today. Video below, English transcript after the jump:
Ukrainians! Ukrainian women!
Today was a long day – operational decisions, international communication, and various issues that deserve attention and response.
But now I want to say only one thing.
I don’t want to talk for a long time.
Today, we said farewell to those whose lives were taken by the helicopter crash in Brovary.
Denys Monastyrsky, his colleagues from the ministry: Yevhen Yenin, Yuriy Lubkovych, Tetiana Shutiak, Mykhailo Pavlushko, Mykola Anatsky, Andriy Marynchenko… Guys from the crew: Oleksandr Vasylenko, Kostiantyn Kovalenko, Ivan Kasianov… A woman and a child who were just going to kindergarten in the morning… Mother Olena Ponomarenko and her daughter Milana Ponomarenko…
My condolences to all relatives and friends… It hurts to think about it, it hurts to say about it.
Denys was a professional, genuine person, exactly what the Minister of Internal Affairs should be. Every day we lose people, whom we will always remember and regret that they’re not coming back.
You cannot bring back Ukrainians, patriots, and people who are professional and simply loyal to themselves and the state.
I wish we could all feel that today. Feel how many lives, how many bright people have been taken by wartime. I would like us all to honor their memory today…
Great tribute to all those, whose lives were taken away by the war! Great tribute to all those, who gave their lives for Ukraine!
We are doing everything to remove this war from our land.
Glory to Ukraine!
Afterword to global indecision…
You'll help Ukraine with the necessary weapons anyway and realize that there is no other option to end the war except the defeat of🇷🇺
But today's indecision is killing more of our people. Every day of delay is the death of Ukrainians. Think faster— Михайло Подоляк (@Podolyak_M) January 21, 2023
Here is former NAVDEVGRU Squadron Leader Chuck Pfarrer’s most recent assessments of the situations in Kremenna and Bakhmut:
UPDATES COMING: 1600 UTC 21 JAN Late breaking information indicates that UKR forces are now in contact at Novomykhailivka, indicating another RU sally across the P-66 HWY. An updated TACMAP will be published this afternoon. Baby thanks to sources and contributors.
— Chuck Pfarrer | Indications & Warnings | (@ChuckPfarrer) January 21, 2023
BAKHMUT AXIS /0030 UTC 22 JAN/ A RU probe crossed the rail line N of Blahodatne and was broken up by UKR forces. Efforts by RU to cut the T-05-13 HWY continued at Krasna Hora and Pidhorodne. UKR defends H-32 at Ivanivske. pic.twitter.com/o8SxFsM6YZ
— Chuck Pfarrer | Indications & Warnings | (@ChuckPfarrer) January 22, 2023
Finland:
KIITOS HELSINKI! Finland will send a new 400 million euro military aid package to Ukraine. The total value of all defence assistance shipped from Finland to Ukraine is now 590 million euros. For operational security, Details are confidential for now. https://t.co/sIef83bau3 pic.twitter.com/HT9fuECoP4
— Chuck Pfarrer | Indications & Warnings | (@ChuckPfarrer) January 21, 2023
Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania:
We, 🇱🇻 🇪🇪 🇱🇹 Foreign Ministers, call on Germany to provide Leopard tanks to Ukraine now. This is needed to stop Russian aggression, help Ukraine and restore peace in Europe quickly. Germany as the leading European power has special responsibility in this regard.
— Edgars Rinkēvičs (@edgarsrinkevics) January 21, 2023
What's striking and revealing is that a decision not (yet?) to supply Ukraine with Leopards was made at the meeting where other headlines were: a new Russian large-scale offensive,short window of opportunity to boost 🇺🇦 and Ukraine's reportedly three-digit daily losses in Bakhmut
— Olga Tokariuk (@olgatokariuk) January 20, 2023
The decision not to give Ukraine tanks just as the war is entering its crucial phase, after Ukrainian forces were capable to inflict several crushing defeats on Russia, is incomprehensible. It's hard to see it as anything else than an attempt to prolong the war and help Russia
— Olga Tokariuk (@olgatokariuk) January 20, 2023
Ukraine is grateful for all the help. We are alive thanks to our partners. But what we hear when you say "no Leopards":
– UKR offense postponed, RU has more time to kill our people
– RU has time to bring 100 000 to the frontline
– When they come, UKR will need even more tanks.— Kostiantyn Korobov (@Korobov_K) January 20, 2023
Arming Ukraine in order to repel the Russian aggression is not some kind of decision-making exercise. Ukrainian blood is shed for real. This is the price of hesitation over Leopard deliveries. We need action, now.
— Zbigniew Rau (@RauZbigniew) January 20, 2023
Here’s a thread on tanks:
1/ While 🇩🇪 defence minister did not say no yesterday, rather not yet, I think the #Leopard Plan as we conceived it in September 4 @ecfr is dead.
Why? A longer thread.https://t.co/2798lmtF1x
— Gustav C. Gressel (@GresselGustav) January 21, 2023
2/ The #Leopard2 is arguably the most prolific tank in Europe. However surplus and reserve tanks make up only a small part of the force.
They could be used to start training and introduce the tank into 🇺🇦 services, but to achieve a real effect in a long war, more …3/ … deliveries over the long run would be necessary.
This is still possible as the Leoprd is still in production, theoretically 3 sites (🇩🇪🇬🇷🇪🇦) could produce it and there are 🇪🇺 funds for joint procurement, hence states could replace donated vehicles.
But will they?4/ 1️⃣ trust:
if you stard procuring new 2A7 to replace existing vehicles donated to 🇺🇦, you make a commitment to operate a 🇩🇪 tank for another 30 years.
After recent escapades there will be much greater reluctance to do so.
In an existential security crisis, 🇩🇪 acted irrationally5/ Public mood in many countries shift against 🇩🇪 and it will be a hard time to convince taxpayers to put down ~€8 million each for new 🇩🇪 vehicles.2️⃣ coordination:
Yes, 🐆2 is in production, mut that production is stretched to 3 years per tank to maintain production …6/ … at minimal orders. To shorten delivery times and decrease costs, larger “en bulk” orders would be necessary.
Such en bulk orders would need to be coordinated amongst user nations, if there were a clear plan for deliveries and replacement.7/ Somebody needs to do that and it is pretty clear that @Bundeskanzler is both unwilling and incapable to do so, even if he finally would allow countries to donate tanks.
Will other leaders coordinate procurement for a defence good not manufactured in their country? I doubt.8/ 3️⃣ time:
Allthough this is a long war, unlikely to end in 2023, 🇪🇺 politicians are very reluctant to commit to measuures that take more than a few months to implement.
I remember the debate about Marder IFV, where rennovating older phased out vehicles that would …9/ … have taken till 2023 was seen as useless, because “the war will have ended then” (🤪🤡 I told you then it won’t).
Refurbishing a some of old surplus Leopard 2A4 will take equal time, meaning politicians will not even try because they think it won’t pay off.10/ and then of course miss these vehicles later.
Still, there will be Leopards in 🇺🇦, but their effect on the war will not be that big.For some time, 🇺🇲 will work around that problem, searching for T72 and ammo in the rest of the world as long as they find them.
11/ Then proceeding to deliver M1 #Abrahams.
This takes more time and greater costs than Leopards, but is still feasable. A lot of the arguments against Abrahams are not all too convincing, especially if you regard this as a long war.12/ But beware of a new burden sharing debate.
MBT could well be provided by 🇪🇺.
🇺🇲 is hard pressed to deliver #ATACMSforUkraine, #F16 etc.
Republicans will say 🇪🇺 again consumes security at 🇺🇲 expense, and Biden will have few convincing arguments against.13/ This of course will fall on all our heads, not just Olaf’s. But … I can’t change that now.
And another one:
Woke up this morning to find a thread from someone claiming I posted things that are "100% untrue" about the "M1."
I hesitate to respond to @secretsqrl123 – especially since he posted an insulting tweet (violating my rule #1) – but providing tank insight is important to me. 1/20 https://t.co/qQoE8sIMz1
— MarkHertling (@MarkHertling) January 21, 2023
“David” is a “former ADA 16/14R & 96B/P (an air defense soldier & intel analyst w/ airborne experience). He is a “master driver & a 22 yr combat vet.” To which I say “thanks for ur service.”Don’t know how much tank experience he has, but he gets some things right in his 🧵2/
He also gets things wrong.Since he gives his creds, here are mine:
-37 years in armor.
-served on M60, M60A1, M60A2,M1, M1A1, M1A2
-tank platoon leader, company commander (x2), cav sqdn S3 (in combat), cav squadron Cdr at Armor School (teaching M1 Tank Commanders Course) 3/-Squadron commander, ran the M1 tank commander’s course (while also providing tanks to all leaders who trained at Ft Knox).
-Our squadron trained all soldier/NCOs/Officers (LTs-LTCs) who had never been on an M1/M1A1 tank before while maintaining 120 M1/M1A1/M1A2 tanks. 4/-tank brigade commander, with the mission to deploy to Korea (helped me understand the challenges of moving tanks & establishing logistics flow across oceans).
-Commander Ops Groups at the National Training Center (helped me see how diff units employ tanks on a “battlefield”). 5/-Asst Div Commander/Support for a Tank Division in Combat (learned how tough to supply a division w/ tanks when supply lines were long & cut by the enemy).
-Tank Division Commander in combat.
-Commander US Army, Europe, where we partnered w/ & trained Ukraine’s army.6/Here’s what I learned about tanks:
-The M1-series, in my view, is the best in the world.
-Training of tank crews/units is critical, and can’t be hand-waved (if you do w/ an M1, you’ll be ineffective while breaking lots of stuff).
-Everyone is an M1 expert, until they break it.7/-There’s a reason tankers are called “DATs” (dumb-ass-tankers). It’s because they break things in their tanks & then rely on maintainers/master gunners/loggies to fix it.
-Older tanks break more often (the M1 was fielded in the 1980’s)
8/-Having fired T-72s, Chieftains, Challengers, Leo IIs & Abrams, the M1 requires the most turret training.-Same true for the engine. The pack “blows” when drivers aren’t trained. A FUPP (the combined engine/trans) is expensive (about $1.5 million) & then must be replaced. 9/
*Some* M1 repairs require part replacements (requiring many high tech spare parts to be in a PLL).Other replacements require pulling things (like FUPPs, sights, etc) to a log center/depot w/ new one being sent forward.
It’s a 500 mile supply line from Poland to the Donbas. 10/
Having serviced 250 tanks in 1st Armored when I was ADC-S, you don’t just “put parts on an DHL/C17 or a MI-17 and hop to the front lines.”(I’m also curious about the “warehouses” David names in “Pirmasens,” “Hohenfels” (the correct spellings) that can turn these parts?…11/
…that’s because US Army, Europe hasn’t had permanently stationed tanks since 2013, and the ones there are part of the rotational unit).While we’re on that point, I’m wondering where the 300 Abrams tanks would immediately that David would deliver to Ukraine? 12/
Here are some of David’s other assertions:
-UA got experience with T64s, so it’ll be easy to switch to M1A1s. (I vehemently disagree).
-“the M1 is one of the easiest tanks in the world to keep running with a motivated crew.” (you need crew + an entire support system)….13/-the “motor” is a “jet engine” & can be fixed by Ukrainian jet experts in Ukraine or General Dynamic techs in Poland (first, it’s a *turbine engine* & fixing it requires knowing it, which takes training & certification).(BTW, it’s a *multi-fuel turbine engine*) 14/
-“if the Iraqi’s, Saudi’s, Egypt troops can use the M1, the UKR will have no issues.”Iraqis paid billions for M1s w/ a permanent GD maintenance contract & a 5-year training period.
Saudis bought M1A2s w/ a 7 year training program, with maintenance contract still in place.15/
David points out “there are politics and costs involved in this decision.”To which I respond “yeah, no kidding.”
That’s sometimes, unfortunately, what happens when you’re in an alliance.
16/I’ll add one last important point:@SecDef has repeatedly said the *GOAL* is to provide UKR with equipment that they can immediately put to use & which they can easily sustain.
UKR’s army is getting LOTS of different equipment from many different nations. Here are some: 17/
Brad’s, Strykers, M777, HIMARS, MRAPs, HMMWVs, Gephards, Patriots, AMX10s, M106’s, NASAMs, HAWK, Caesers…etc, etc, etc.UKR Army Commanders who I talk with want tanks, but have admitted they struggle w logistics, repair parts getting to the right places, and resupply. 18/
So reducing the burden must be a key consideration…and in my professional opinion, the Abrams would cause more of a burden due to training & resupply to a force that’s in a tough fight.Also in my view, LEO II’s would mean less of a burden.
19/But the decision involves politics, and funding, and decisions.So, no @secretsqrl123, I won’t “debate” you on these issues.
I would recommend in the future you not insult people w/o knowing their background and goals. 20/20
For full disclosure: I know LTG (ret) Hertling.
That’s enough for tonight.
Still no new Patron tweets or videos. I’m sure its because he and his human are busy doing their day jobs. So here’s some Ukrainian Army cats and dogs material to hold you till we get Patron updates.
Selfie .#uaarmy #Ukraine️ #RussiaisATerroistState #RussiaUkraineWar #CatsOfTwitter #CatsOnTwitter #Bakhmut #Donetsk
#NewYork #Kyiv #StandWithUkraine pic.twitter.com/RibG4oaNOj— UkrARMY cats & dogs (@UAarmy_animals) January 21, 2023
Friends.#uaarmy #Ukraine️ #RussiaisATerroistState #RussiaUkraineWar #CatsOfTwitter #CatsOnTwitter #Bakhmut #Donetsk
#NewYork #Kyiv #StandWithUkraine pic.twitter.com/QReubHSNuT— UkrARMY cats & dogs (@UAarmy_animals) January 21, 2023
It’s love. #uaarmy #Ukraine️ #RussiaisATerroistState #RussiaUkraineWar #CatsOfTwitter #CatsOnTwitter #Bakhmut #Donetsk
#NewYork #Kyiv #StandWithUkraine pic.twitter.com/lzLtHpK1iB— UkrARMY cats & dogs (@UAarmy_animals) January 21, 2023
Open thread!
Omnes Omnibus
I would trust Hertling’s technical opinion over that of any internet randos. It also fits my (far, far, far … far more limited) experience with the logistics of keeping a heavy unit functioning.
Ohio Mom
I wish there was an animated map of the battle lines, showing how they have moved over time (I tried googling without success).
I can’t tell the big picture over time from the little maps here because I don’t know enough (any) Ukrainian geography.
Freemark
Thanks again Adam for the great info. Without you, Kos, and Mark over at the GOS, my knowledge of what’s going on in Ukraine would be so much worse. The MSM barely seems bother with the war, other than occasional good articles.
It seems to me that if most of the European countries decide to give Leopards to UKR Germany is not in a good position to prevent it. If those countries do it en mass. Germany loves money like any good capitalist country and I doubt they would threaten to not build or maintain German made military goods for the rest of Europe which would be the main available retaliatory ability.
Adam L Silverman
@Ohio Mom: Here you go:
https://newsmap.pl/2022-russian-invasion-of-ukraine-interactive-map/
Adam L Silverman
@Freemark: You’re most welcome.
Another Scott
@Ohio Mom:
Wikipedia has a large animated .gif showing movement from February 24 – early December.
ISW makes detailed maps every day, and one can zoom in to the street level, but I haven’t seen an animated version from them.
HTH a little.
Cheers,
Scott.
Chetan Murthy
Oooh lookee: https://euromaidanpress.com/2023/01/21/us-amb-to-osce-expects-us-support-to-transfer-allied-f-16-fighters-to-ukraine/
Adam L Silverman
@Omnes Omnibus: And now another point of view:
Chetan Murthy
@Adam L Silverman: I remember when Gen. Hodges said similar things, Gen. Hertling responded with “Hodges is light infantry; I was a tanker”. Apparently McCaffrey (from his wikipedia bio: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barry_McCaffrey ) was (airborne) infantry.
Seems like Hertling’s opinion (on the maintenance burden) would still be dispositive
ETA: and maybe it’s worth adding that Hertling’s statement goes against interest, in the sense that he’s badmouthing the platform he fought on, the platform that was basically his bread-and-butter for a long while.
Shantanu Saha
Here’s my wholly unsupported opinion about why the US thinks that it’s better to send Leopard 2s to Ukraine than M1 Abrams, because most of the arguments about the Abrams being a logistically complex tank to support can be said about the Leo as well.
1) The primary power plant of the Leopard 2 is a diesel engine rather than a a gas turbine, so presumably Ukraine, whose army must have a lot of diesel techs because of all the old Soviet armor in its inventory, would be easier to train to repair the engine/power train to support. In other respects, it seems that the tanks should be similar in complexity.
2) Since so many European countries (and Canada) have Leopards while the only Ukraine supporters operating the Abrams are the US and Australia, there would be much better opportunity for Europeans to get more involved in supporting Ukraine through training and logistical support if the Leos were sent.
Adam L Silverman
@Chetan Murthy: He is a tanker and the others aren’t.
Omnes Omnibus
@Adam L Silverman: McCaffrey’s a grunt. An unbelievably brave grunt, but a grunt nonetheless. I trust Hertling more on tank logistics.
Adam L Silverman
@Omnes Omnibus: I figured. I do as well.
Ohio Mom
Adam and Another Scott, Thank you both!
I found the Wikipedia .gif the most helpful for my purposes. It confirmed my memory that Ukraine succeeded on their north border in pushing the Russians out, and also confirmed my current frustration that the eastern border is pretty much a stalemate.
If every map Adam posts looks very much like the one the day before, it is because it is.
Omnes Omnibus
@Adam L Silverman: Also, one of the primary advantages of the Abrams over the Leopard from a soldier’s POV is that the exhaust from turbine engine of the Abrams is so hot that it can heat up multiple cans of Beefaroni in a few seconds. Those of us who had simple diesels and turbo-diesels could only do one can at a time using the one of the internal heaters.
Another Scott
@Chetan Murthy: With all of the anti-aircraft systems being supplied to Ukraine, supplying modern fighter/bombers would be a logical next step.
Gressel’s thread is a good one. Supply lines and production of specialized parts and complex systems cannot be started instantly, or even quickly. Especially coming out of a once – in – 100 – years pandemic. Ramping up Leopard production is going to be expensive, especially if Germany isn’t assured that the higher rate of production will be sustained. And why would other NATO countries want to risk being at the mercy of the glacial bureaucracy at the BAAINBw?
An interview with some analyst guy on DW (IIRC) said that Scholz was very concerned about the “optics” of German tanks being used on russian forces. Too many historical overtones that aren’t there the same way when German artillery, etc., is used (because the pictures would be very different). And sure, it would be a big, big change for Germany. But reality has to win over optics…
Slava Ukraini!!
Cheers,
Scott.
Chetan Murthy
http://windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2023/01/russian-identity-fragmenting-because.html
Another Scott
@Shantanu Saha: The analyst interview on DW (I think) that I mentioned above (and am kicking myself that I cannot quickly find again) said that the Leopard 2 has about 1/2 the fuel consumption of the M1A Abrams. Logistically, that’s a big difference, given the huge size of Ukraine and the difficult supply routes.
But it just makes it harder, not impossible, given enough money, time, and effort.
The question remains, how much to push on Germany for Leopard 2s; how much effort to expend to get supply lines for US M1A tanks; and how much effort to simply say, Bradleys and Strykers and French AMX-10 RC not-tanks are good enough right now, especially when combined with F-16s…
The west and NATO can work around obstacles to help Ukraine – there’s never only one way to get the job done (and the easy, cheap, obvious, fast way almost never exists).
Cheers,
Scott.
Jay
Jay
Chetan Murthy
@Another Scott: IIRC Soviet T-80 lineage tanks (which also have turbine engines) were notoriously fuel-hungry, too.
Jay
Chetan Murthy
@Jay: Surely there’s a Milton-Bradley tie-in with the exhibit?
Chetan Murthy
@Jay: It’s not a nice thing to say, but when I watched that vid, I laughed. Seeing bad things happen to Russian occupiers doesn’t elicit any sympathetic reaction from me. Not anymore.
Greg
As a complete amateur, I know that the Bradley killed more tanks in Iraq than the M1. Their TOWs reach out further than tank rounds. Better optics than the Russians. The main gun won’t penetrate a tank, but can’t the UA use Brads as tank killers? How much do the Brads need the protection of the M1’s? Aren’t the tanks there to kill other tanks so that the infantry is protected from the tanks?
I do think that we should be training UA on the M1, and other US systems. At some point they are going to operate them. Might as well get them started.
Jay
Chetan Murthy
@Greg: I have read that the problem with using the Bradley as a tank-killer, is that while the TOW is in-flight, the Bradly must remain immobile (b/c TOW is wire-guided). And the target can fire at the Bradley during that interval. So ideally you want tanks along with Bradleys, so the tanks can shoot at the enemy tanks, keep ’em occupied.
Jay
Jay
@Chetan Murthy:
the 25mm took out more than a few T-72’s in Iraq.
Even if you don’t get a kill or mobility kill, you can rip up sensors, optics and sights that leave a tank blind.
Another Scott
This seems to be a decent, balanced summary of the tanks issues – Sydney J. Freedberg, Jr at BreakingDefense:
(Emphasis added.)
It’s a short read and worth a click.
There are many, many moving parts in these decisions.
Cheers,
Scott.
Another Scott
@Jay: She will not be denied!
Cheers,
Scott.
Jay
Adam L Silverman
@Omnes Omnibus: The wonders of modern technology.
Jay
Another Scott
@Jay: Thanks for the pointer.
Cheers,
Scott.
Adam L Silverman
@Another Scott: F 16s would make a huge difference. Warthogs would as well!
kalakal
@Omnes Omnibus:
Pah! Challengers have tea making facilities inside
Kent
Honest to God, the Ukrainian army is without a doubt the most experienced and competent army on the planet when it comes to taking on Russian forces on the plains of Europe.
Why don’t we let THEM decide what arms will best suit their needs.
Another Scott
@Adam L Silverman: I’m surprised to see that A-10s are still deployed – it looks like some were in Iceland and North Macedonia, and Guam, recently.
The Secretary apparently isn’t a fan of sending them to Ukraine:
A-10s are great in a permissive air environment, but ensuring that these days is very difficult. It looks like the recent upgrades to the “C” model make it more survivable, but I still wouldn’t want to be in one in Ukraine given the circumstances.
Time marches on.
That said, the US needs something for reliable, effective, and affordable close air support. Maybe drones will take up that role in coming years, but the transition is probably going to be difficult…
My $0.02. Thanks.
Cheers,
Scott.
Rocks
@Chetan Murthy: Barry McCaffrey was the commanding general of the 24th Mechanized Infantry Division during Desert Storm. The 24th had a combination of M1 tanks and Bradleys. They were the westernmost heavy division in the entire allied attack, and they moved further than any other heavy division, while inflicting huge casualties on the Iraqi army and slamming the door on the retreating Iraqis. I would absolutely trust whatever McCaffrey has to say about heavy combined arms operations.
Freemark
@Adam L Silverman: From what I understand both Egypt and the Saudis have 5 to 7 year maintenance and training contracts that rely heavily on foreign contractors for both training and maintenance. That also they had multi-year buildups to get to the point they were operationally useful.
According to Hertling the training required just to operate the M1 is significantly higher than for the Leopard II or Challenger II. And that the M1 also requires significantly more maintenance including more replacement parts on a per mile/hour basis. You also have the fact that currently there is no significant supply/training/maintenance hub in Europe for the M1. Poland may become that but definitely not yet. Whereas the Leopards have that in numerous European countries.
What it comes down to is that the Leopards could be used in 2023. The M1s best time line without a Herculean and very expensive effort would be 2024 at best. And that would probably require US contractors be allowed to work in Ukraine.
Chetan Murthy
@Freemark:
Perhaps worth remembering that this also is the American Way of War. Remember in AFG, where we stood up the AFG army, but it basically only worked as long as our contractors did all the maintenance and other work ? So when we pulled our contractors out, everything stopped working, and the army fell apart. Sure, it fell apart for other reasons too (like morale, will to fight, belief in the government). But it was *widely reported* that everything we taught them was predicated on contractors running maintenance, logistics, other things.
Unless we’re ready to send in contractors to UA, that’s going to be a problem for the M1, right?
Freemark
@Another Scott: The Air Force has been using that excuse from before the A-10 was ever deployed and there is some truth to it. But the Ukrainians are using SU-25s successfully. If they can do that they can use A-10s and they would do better.
I do think A-10s being shot down, and some almost certainly would be, could have political blowback here. The Repubs would certainly use that to talk about wasting money among other things.
Freemark
@Chetan Murthy: Yes. I think I basically said that so I agree with you.
Chetan Murthy
@Freemark: I looked: https://eurasiantimes.com/deathbed-for-sukhoi-jets-with-over-3-dozen-shot-down-ukraine/
Chetan Murthy
@Freemark: Yes, I was just bringing up that history, as added support. To put it perhaps somewhat uncharitably (and I’d be happy to be corrected):
It shows that at some level, we don’t know how to train our clients/allies in how to maintain our high-tech arms; instead, we just send contractors to do the work.
There are sound commercial and political reasons for doing things this way, of course, so I’m not saying that it’s a bad thing (for us). Just that, well, it is what it is.
Of course, my conclusion might be incorrect.
Another Scott
@Freemark: Egypt is a different case. Egypt has had a factory to manufacture the M1 since 1992. It looks like production has had fits and starts, but apparently, as of December 2021, they had plans to upgrade their fleet to M1A2s and will resume production in Egypt.
KSA and just about everywhere else (except the US) is different with respect to the Abrams, I think.
To be clear, I don’t doubt that there are more severe logistics issues with the M1Ax than with the Leopard 2. And I’m sure that’s a big reason why Germany is under such pressure to let the Leopards loose in Ukraine.
But W’s preparation for the Iraq invasion (and hoping to go through Turkey and being told NO) and the resulting heartburn should have been tattooed on planners that multiple plans are always needed. I hope planning has been underway and in-place at the Pentagon to reduce those bottlenecks if the decision is made to send them because the Leopards won’t be going…
Cheers,
Scott.
patrick II
@Adam L Silverman:
Once the F-16s are there for air cover it seems the Warthogs would become more feasible.
Chetan Murthy
@Another Scott: From your link:
Do we know how much actual “help” GD provides to the Egyptians ?
ETA: But also, that Egypt can manufacture them isn’t really the issue, is it? I’m sure given 10yr, UA could be making M1 tanks. The issue is how *long* it takes to get from zero knowledge, to being able to maintain and operate M1 tanks.
Freemark
@Chetan Murthy: Supposedly Ukraine has 67 SU-25s in use. If they ‘only’ lost 15 to this point that’s good. It does show they could probably operate the A-10 appropriately. And if we supplied US munitions, which I assume we would, they can stand off a good distance more than the SU-25s Ukraine is currently using. Plus the A-10 is significantly more survivable from small arms fire and manpads. But still some would get shot down and it would be much more significant ,propaganda wise, than the US supplied M777s and M113s that have been shown destroyed up to now.
Another Scott
@Chetan Murthy: Once a factory is in a country, it’s really, really hard to keep all the knowledge internal, isn’t it?? What keeps GD and the US in the loop there is licenses and all the restrictions in the paperwork, and their need to stay on our good side for future access to technology, financing, and all the rest.
If Egypt has a factory to make the things, they certainly know how to train the techs to fix them and don’t need beltway bandits to do it for them.
I don’t doubt that KSA and several of the rest maybe more interested in paying contractors for the care and feeding of their tanks than having their princes learn the skills. Egypt doesn’t strike me that way, at all.
Yes, I agree with you and many others, and have said from the beginning (I think), that supply chain issues (and all that entails (human, logistic, parts availability, funding, and all the rest)) are a big problem for the M1 in Ukraine. (But a problem that can be solved given time and money.)
FWIW.
Cheers,
Scott.
Freemark
@Chetan Murthy: I know with the Saudis they don’t want to or have the citizens who want to maintain equipment. I feel the Poles won’t have the same problem. Neither will the Ukrainians eventually. But that is certainly a long term view.
patrick II
@Freemark:
If the Ukrainians can’t use SU-25’s becuase they are vulnerable to MANPADS and they can’t use A-10’s for similar reasons — is an argument that leaves them without any close air support. That is not a good argument. Particularly since, as you say, the Warthogs were specifically built to be more survivable in that environment. The combination of some F-16’s from Netherlands and some A-10s seems like a good combination.
Sister Golden Bear
@Adam L Silverman: Could you elaborate about why Warthogs would make a difference? From what I’ve heard, today’s MANPADS have made it too dangerous for Warthogs. But I’m assuming you know something I don’t.
patrick II
I have a question, and as is readily clear, I have no experience compared to many here. The question is when I have advocated for A-10s in earlier threads I have been told that they need air superiority and for the Air Force to control the skies before they can be effective since they can’t match up with fighters. But I have also read that there are few, if any, dogfights anymore and the winner is the one with better radar and air-to-air missiles. So, if an A-10 has good radar and some stingers, wouldn’t they at least not be totally incapable in the face of a Russian SU?
Chetan Murthy
@patrick II: I wondered: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairchild_Republic_A-10_Thunderbolt_II#:~:text=A%2D10s%20usually%20fly%20with,defense%20under%20the%20other%20wing.
Don’t know whether that’s sufficient or not. Perhaps it depends on the range of the missiles (the sidewinder is apparently short-range).
Omnes Omnibus
@kalakal: I suppose you could heat the Beefaroni in the hot water.
Chetan Murthy
oy https://www.ft.com/content/f8ba6d3d-0688-4b0e-b3e9-99d83953999e
Omnes Omnibus
@Rocks: Using them In combined arms operations, sure. But McCaffrey didn’t live maintenance schedules, fixing track vehicles in the mud in freezing cold weather, and all that shit that an tanker or SP redleg would have done for a full career. Hertling did.
patrick II
@Chetan Murthy:
Thank you. I read your link, and while the sidewinder does seem to have limited range,
One of the things that surprised me about this war is that Russian air didn’t control the skies from the beginning. I have seen videos about their wonderful new fighters and I have evidently been propagandized since it now seems they really can’t keep enough of them in the air to make a difference.
So, it seems the A-10 would not be up against the latest and greatest and might do better than some speculate, especially if the Netherlands and perhaps others send in some F-16s.
As for their susceptibility to MANPADS, they would do better than the SU-25s Ukraine is using now, and since they are going to fly those missions regardless, I am pretty sure they would prefer the A-10.
Freemark
@Chetan Murthy: I believe, as I think you do, that the argument against sending A-10s is a bad argument. The fact that they are vulnerable to MANPADS is true. But that is true of any CAS aircraft including SU-25s, and all helicopters. Yet the Ukrainians still flew 22 air strike missions yesterday. The A-10 is much better at protecting its pilot, it has significantly more effective ordinance and targeting, and has better countermeasures. If Ukraine deployed it like it is its current fleet there is almost no way this would not be an improvement for them. Some would certainly get shot down because it is a high-risk environment.
The anti A-10 people always seem to assume that Ukraine will deploy them recklessly behind enemy lines where they would be significantly more vulnerable and would have much lower survivability. Yet their use of their current planes show them to be quite adept at knowing their limits and how to limit vulnerabilities. I don’t think the Ukrainians would be any more reckless with the A-10 than their SU-25s.
Omnes Omnibus
@Freemark: I suspect that a lot of the anti-A-10 talk is from the people who have been arguing for yearsthat it should be mothballed. If it goes to Ukraine and does what it does without problems, it kills their argument that it is obsolete.
Carlo Graziani
@Freemark: Yeah, this.
People like McCaffrey making the “If Egypt can operate M1s, so can Ukraine” argument omit the time factor. Naturally, in peacetime, with a few years of lead time, and without the frenzy of a shooting war and the harrowing priority choices that such a war forces on a nation, Ukraine could certainly adopt M1s as their MBTs.
But changing or adopting major weapons systems and all their infrastructure in the middle of a fight to the death with Russia is dangerous in the best of circumstances, because the resulting redirection of manpower and resources is disruptive of the war effort in the short term. There has to be a reasoned cost-benefit analysis that shows that the benefits outweigh the costs, and a risk analysis that demonstrates that the risks are bounded and the downsides are known and can be mitigated.
These are the kinds of decisions that if badly made can make the war situation much worse, by causing fleeting opportunities to be missed, to near-infinite later regret. The freedom to seize and keep the initiative is far more determinative of success in war than is the possession of the best weapons.
This is the reason that Hertling is so much more credible than McCaffrey on the tank issue, irrespective of their relative military credentials. Hertling has actually done the cost-benefit analysis, and he’s shown his work. McCaffrey has not.
Chetan Murthy
@patrick II: Mmm … not so much, I fear: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YYDnspMWdaM
This is an interview with Justin Bronk of RUSI. TL;DR he argues that Russia controls the airspace over RU-occupied territory, but not over UA-controlled territory. And that RU has enough fighters that are better than anything that UA has, that they can fly CAP over their occupied lands, and shoot over into UA–controlled airspace with missiles and kill UA planes. So those UA planes have to be very careful approaching the line of control.
He has argued that this is part of why we need to get UA better fighters — so that they can actually take the fight to these RU air superiority fighters and control the airspace over the line of control (where ground combat is occurring).
Chetan Murthy
@Freemark:
Where those air strikes flown in SU-25s ? Or other planes that are more survivable ? I actually kind of think that A-10s aren’t a good choice, until F-16s arrive, and this is due to Bronk’s arguments.
patrick II
@Chetan Murthy:
Thanks again. You’ll educate me yet.
And regardless, as others say above, if the A-10 is better and more survivable in a ground support role than the aircraft Ukraine uses now, then they should be made available because they are going to be flying those missions either way and I’d just as soon give them their best chance.
Freemark
@Omnes Omnibus: A lot of their arguments literally go back to before the A-10 was even manufactured and have been proven wrong numerous times. It reminds me of Republican arguments like Trickle-Down. Yes argument has been proven wrong numerous times BUT THIS TIME it will work!
One of the arguments that gets me is that they say that ‘the SU-25 is surviving is because it’s faster and more maneuverable than the A-10.’ Which is true at 1000 ft, but at 50-100 ft off the ground it actually isn’t. Which is how they are flown in this environment.
Chetan Murthy
@patrick II: I think it was in that interview (but I might have seen it elsewhere) that he talked about UA pilots having to fly nap-of-the-earth to avoid getting shot by RU missiles from those RU fighters. They’d fly nap-of-the-earth to their targets, pop up to do the deed, then fly back nap-of-the-earth again.
He seemed pretty clear that UA planes were overmatched by the best RU fighters, and it was mostly just skill that kept them from all getting shot out of the sky.
Chetan Murthy
@patrick II: Well, and then there’s the videos that people have put out debunking whther the “gun that goes brrrt” is actually very good. As in: apparently in AFG, US ground troops really hated it, b/c it was too inaccurate and produced too much friendly fire. And apparently a lot of A-10 tank kills were via missiles. I forget all the details, but there are a number of videos that adduce all sorts of facts.
I’m not an expert, so I just follow along. Could be totally mistaken.
Your best argument is that UA is going to fly these missions anyway. But then the question is, how long does it take to get a SU-25 pilot trained-up in an A-10, so that he’s as skilled in that A-10, as he was in that Frogfoot, right? B/c otherwise, putting him in that A-10 is shortening his life. Which brings us back to Bronk and “send them Western fighters”.
Carlo Graziani
@Chetan Murthy: I think that the truth is that nobody knows what would happen with wings of A-10s at the disposal of the UAF. Many wrong things have been forecast in this war, and a very large fraction of those concern the air war.
Obviously tactics would evolve, given that the platform has never been used in these operational conditions. What might be discovered concerning its usefulness even in MANPADS-saturated environments is unknowable now, even to the air war experts, because the balance of threats and opportunities is totally new.
Really, the question is whether sustaining the A-10 platform would detract from, say, F-16 support, assuming that that is a real possibility. If the capability to in-train and support both platforms exists, my guess is that the UAF could probably find tactics that make the A-10’s combat usefulness outweigh the inevitable attrition rate that the aircraft squadrons would incur.
Another Scott
More on tanks from Wikipedia :
So, they have spent the last 8 years talking about maybe making a new, more advanced tank. The article gives a Keystone Kops flavored view (they’re apparently still deciding which countries will be part of the program)…
I wonder if that thinking is still part of the reluctance to send the Leopard 2s.
Cheers,
Scott.
Freemark
@Chetan Murthy: Most strikes that are CAS appear to be SU-25s whereas the strikes on radar and command installations are probably SU-27 or Mig-29. The Ukrainians appear to fly their SU-25s fairly heavily along the front lines. They do not fly them much behind enemy lines.
I am not an expert but I have researched on the internet…lol. But from the research I’ve done the F-16 is not nearly as good as the A-10 for CAS. It is more ‘survivable’ but mainly because it does a lot less and is significantly less capable in that role. It stays much farther away from the ground and moves faster so MANPADS are much less of a threat but its usefulness for ground support is also much less.
The F-16 would be a good replacement for the Mig-29s and the SU-27s though and should be more survivable from long-range air defenses. and Russian fighters.
patrick II
@Chetan Murthy:
That Bronk interview was pretty depressing.
And about your reference to AFG, Ukraine is a different battlefield environment than fighting close-quarter guerillas, and closer to the environment the A-10 was designed for.
@Freemark:
I think Mr. Murthy and Bronk and you all agree that the Ukraine should be given some F-16s. After listening to the Bronk interview, I would say it is more urgent than I had realized.
And, while you point out the general positive effect of the F-16, Chetan have have been emphasizing having better air cover for the A-10. So there a many reasons for F-16s. If you have the time, listen to the Bronk interview Chetan references above. High density information that is worth the time.
Chetan Murthy
crrrrikey
Chairman of Scholz’ party.
Chetan Murthy
Crikey, what bullshit: https://www.nzz.ch/international/kampfpanzer-leopard-2-us-ruestungsinteressen-lassen-scholz-zoegern-ld.1722377
It’s as if it’d be better for Ukraine to lose, than for the US to win. And as if Ukraine winning with Leopards wouldn’t cement Leopards’ value in the eyes of European customers. Just madness.
Chetan Murthy
this is excellent: https://www.zeit.de/kultur/2022-02/peter-pomerantsev-german-russian-relations-ukraine-conflict/komplettansicht
Peter Pomerantsev writing about Germany’s inability to see Russia for what it is at this moment, and its roots in history.
Ksmiami
@Chetan Murthy: Germany fucking sucks and is completely compromised and the faster everyone ignores them and moves on to help Ukraine , the better.
Chetan Murthy
Phillips P. O’Brien on Ramstein: https://phillipspobrien.substack.com/p/weekend-update-12?utm_source=twitter&utm_campaign=auto_share&r=1tgexa
TL;DR he thinks things went well for Ukraine, and many are missing that forest for the (ahem) German trees.
Another Scott
@Chetan Murthy: i think that is a good take. Even Scholz said today that Germany will support Ukraine as long as it takes.
Thanks.
Cheers,
Scott.
Chetan Murthy
@Another Scott: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/jan/22/navalny-deputy-maria-pevchikh-putin-opposition-corruption-foundation
I forget who it was here, who said that Navalny isn’t the hero we think of him as. He’s also got that Russian Imperialist Power Vertical training or genetics or just plain folklore.
Chetan Murthy
@Another Scott: I forget whether it was in O’Brien’s piece or somewhere else that I read it this AM, but Scholz was quoted as saying “Russia must not win; Ukraine must not lose”. And many people pointed out that Scholz never says “Ukraine must *win*”. That public opinion in Germany is very divided on even whether Crimea is Ukraine — whether it would be legitimate (I’m appalled) for Ukraine to retake Crimea by arms.
It’s …. troubling. Strong signs that Germany (hence, Scholz and the SPD) is setting up conditions for the postwar, when they plan to do business with Russia again.
That Pomerantsev article went into some of this.
Omnes Omnibus
A take on the German military.
Chetan Murthy
@Ksmiami: This was …. funny
If all Olaf understands is the language of money, maybe the rest of NATO should speak to him in that language.
davecb
@Chetan Murthy:
“Civilians talk about battles: generals talk about logistics”.
It would be very much to the US’s advantage to publicly offer M1 Abrams to any country that was cut off from getting new Leopards because they had donated their old Leopards to Ukraine. That would put Germany at both a moral and financial disadvantage.
Proper generalship
Geminid
@davecb: Poland’s already buying the South Korean K-2 tank now instead the Leopard. They’ve ordered 1000 “Black Panthers.” Also 600 K-9 155mm self-propelled howitzers.
Chetan Murthy
@davecb: The nzz.ch article I linked-to above argues the opposite case: that the *reason* Germany is reluctant to authorize transfers of Leopards from (e.g.) Poland is that the US can then backfill with M1 tanks. And Germany can’t build replacement Leopards fast enough, so the US will get those replacement orders, shutting Germany out from future orders completely. It mentions that between casting the armor, and finishing the tank, is 2yr time — it’s that slow. They’re no longer making them in an industrial manner, but “manufactory” manner. I take that to mean that they’re making each tank in some sort of artisanal way.
This logic is of course barking mad, and to the extent that this is really how they think, all that can be done is to route around them.
Chetan Murthy
@Geminid: the nzz.ch article talks about this, too. Very … “aggrieved” that Germany wasn’t considered in the tender process. Somewhere in there is mentioned that Germany simply couldn’t deliver tanks fast enough — that’s part of why Poland went with South Korea.
Barking mad, these Germans. Not all of them, but these particular ones.
Carlo Graziani
@Chetan Murthy: I forget the origin of this sentiment, but it seems apt: “Germany is a trade federation that also issues passports.”
Chetan Murthy
@Carlo Graziani: It’s all pretty troubling.
This one is from the former President of Estonia — so one would think he knows the truth.
Jay
I have mentioned this before, but the key advantage modern Western fighter aircraft would bring to Ukraine is the ability to engage the RUASF aircraft on equal footing.
Right now,
-the RUSAF aircraft’s main BVR AARAM has a 150nm range, the Ukrainian’s, 100 nm.
-the RUASF can “paint” a target for the missile from AWACs, fighter aircraft, other fighter aircraft, ground based Air Control or ground based Air Defense, the “painting” is only required for a few seconds to achieve missile lock. Ukrainian fighter aircraft have to “paint” and hold “paint” from missile lock to target destruction. This “illuminates” the Ukrainian fighter aircraft to any radar or EW suite with in range for the course of the engagement.
The key things modern Western fighter aircraft would bring are;
Current Ukrainian tactics are;
Both sides, when flying ground attack missions, no matter the air asset, fly nape of the earth attack runs. While MANPADs are a threat, higher altitudes are more dangerous to to the large density of ground based air defenses. The RUSAF also sends MIG escorts along with the SU-25’s due to Ukrainian Airforce CAP’s.
BTW, so far, there are a couple of Companies in the eastern EU that are receiving vehicles from Ukraine that are damaged, need major repairs and service, or require upgrades. With some logistics and training, this would be another option to support Freeing the Leopards.
Chetan Murthy
@Jay: [by way of saying that you’re speaking what is at some level well-substantiated conclusions] The interview with Justin Bronk says many of the same things about fighter planes.
Jay
@Chetan Murthy:
you might like this,
https://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/the-bad-news-bundeswehr-an-examination-of-the-truly-dire-state-of-germany-s-military-a-df92eaaf-e3f9-464d-99a3-ef0c27dcc797
Omnes Omnibus
@Jay:
Ahem.
Chetan Murthy
Boy howdy. I wonder what’s the betting line on the SPD-led coalition falling apart. Both the Free Democrats and the Greens seem to understand the importance of making this happen, and the SPD …. is painting itself as appeasers.
“If Poland delivers its Leopard tanks to Ukraine, Germany will not oppose it”.
Chetan Murthy
Via dKos, more thuds and screams from the Topkapi Palace: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2023/01/22/us-reads-riot-act-germany-refusal-send-leopard-tanks-ukraine/
Lots more at the link. Paywall was obstreperous; I got around it by hitting the URL, then rapidly doing a CTRL-P (“print preview”) and reading the generated PDF.
Omnes Omnibus
@Chetan Murthy: Topkapi Palace?
Another Scott
John Deere and Caterpillar and similar corps should be setting up factories in Ukraine.
(Stripping hashtag links)
(via Oryx)
Cheers,
Scott.
Chetan Murthy
@Omnes Omnibus: Oh, sorry, the Topkapi Palace was an Ottoman Palace where the Ottoman sultans lived, the Seraglio was there, and in legend, when succession battles occurred, a lot of the action would take place there — you know, one son having all his half-brothers murdered, etc. Hence, “screams and thuds from the Topkapi Palace” as a wry shorthand for “sub rosa bureaucratic infighting”. I first encountered the phrase at Delong’s place, back in the day: https://www.bradford-delong.com/2006/04/more_thuds_and_.html .
Chetan Murthy
@Another Scott: Holy cow, if that’s recent, that’s one *warm* winter in UA. I wonder where (generally speaking) that is. It’s dated 22 Jan, maybe it was taken in late fall and only now released ?
Another Scott
@Chetan Murthy: It looks like the high temperatures in Bakhmut now are around 35F degrees, maybe down to 20F at night. Not cold enough to be driving heavy things in thick wet loamy soil. (It’s easy to see from that picture why Ukraine is a breadbasket for the world.)
Slava Ukraini!!
Cheers,
Scott.
J R in WV
I couldn’t finish reading the DER SPIEGEL report on the readiness of the German military. But the essence of the report can be spelled out in just a few words:
There is no There There in the German military.
From the Air Force and Navy to the traditional Army, nothing is combat ready. Nothing.
Chetan Murthy
I feel like we’re in Plato’s Cave ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allegory_of_the_cave ) trying to figure out what the shadows on the wall signify:
Omnes Omnibus
@Chetan Murthy: If you want a more apt comparison, consider Kremlinology.
Chetan Murthy
More jokes: http://windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2023/01/finding-another-putin-palace-no-big.html
Chetan Murthy
@Omnes Omnibus: Of course! That’s the most historically-recent analogy, too!
Chetan Murthy
@Omnes Omnibus: I finally read the Spiegel piece. It seems to me that there was one name that veritably shrieked thru it, by omission. That of Scholz, of course. The Cossacks Work For The Czar.
Ah, well.
Omnes Omnibus
@Chetan Murthy: To me, it indicates a problem that has been developing for quite a while. Scholz is not the only one to blame. It looks like the whole German political establishment decided that they would do the absolute minimum to meet NATO and other international commitments but that anything beyond that was unnecessary. Events have caught them out.
Chetan Murthy
@Omnes Omnibus: Oh for certain you’re right about this. But every leader has a responsibility to change the direction of a bad policy, or to own that bad policy. That’s what being a leader *means*. Instead, I feel like this piece lays the blame at (a) predecessors (bad, bad, *bad* predecessors!) and (b) underlings (Lambrecht). That’s a *convenient* way of exculpating the leader.
Another Scott
@Chetan Murthy: Sholz has only been in office about 13 months or so (since December 8, 2021).
Inflation was above 5% in Germany in January and February before the reinvasion, and has just started coming down from 10% recently. Inflation is toxic in Germany. Politicians in a strong unified government would have trouble under those circumstances – leaders of a 3-way coalition with very different party views would have a hugely difficult time.
I’m not making excuses, just saying that it’s not easy for him and the German government.
And that’s before one gets to the cultural earthquake of arguing that German tanks should be running around in a non-NATO country in a hot war against russia.
I suspect Sholz, and Macron (he said that he’s not “vetoing” sending French tanks, but …), and the US, and the rest will figure out a way forward. But it will take some time because there are lots of moving parts and lots of governments and publics with very different views have to get on board. The public arguments is probably part of the process of bringing the public on board.
We’ll see!
Slava Ukraini!!
Cheers,
Scott.
Chetan Murthy
@Another Scott:
From the leopard wikipedia article:
They’re quite happy to sell them to non-NATO countries. So maybe it’s the “customer uses them in self-defense against Russia” ? Yeah, that seems like a really great bit of fine print in the contract: “you can’t actually use these to defend yourself, nosirreee”.
Chetan Murthy
@Another Scott: Germany sells Leopards to non-NATO countries no problemo. LIke Indonesia. So maybe the problem is if a non-NATO country uses them in self-defense against Russia? Boy howdy some fine print in that contract!
Another Scott
@Chetan Murthy: We seem to be talking past each other, and reading the news out of Germany differently.
My reading is that Germany is going to agree to send Leopard 2 tanks to Ukraine in the near future (say, before March 1, maybe substantially before). Scholz wants other NATO countries to provide him and Germany enough political cover, and his new defense minister wants to know the status of Leopard 2 tanks and the supply chains in Germany before speaking up on the details on what they’ll be providing and permitting.
(Poland and the Baltic States screaming at him is part of the process, in my view, but it’s not enough. Scholz will be asked how many tanks? Scholz will be asked about supply chains for training and spare parts and all the rest. If they start up production lines for Leopard 2 parts, what are they going to do about the newer tank that they’ve been talking about since 2014?)
Don’t forget that up until 2014, Germany’s political consensus was that it was important to work with VVP’s russia, to try to draw it into Europe (and to provide Germany with cheap oil and gas inputs for their high-wage, export-driven economy). 2014 was a wake-up call, and 2022 was a political earthquake. Political and governmental systems built on shrinking defense budgets and shrinking military inventories cannot turn on a time.
It’s not at all the same, but remember the timeline after the Challenger explosion. It was 2 years, 8 months, before the next mission flew (in the richest country in the world, in peacetime, without a 100-year pandemic, etc.). When problems arise in big systems (and wars are big systems), it can take a seemingly inexplicably long time to respond and get on a new track.
[eta:] I also think that the cultural changes (the reticence to actually overtly participate in another shooting war against russia) are delaying the process, but will be overcome.
My $0.02.
Cheers,
Scott.