A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Mar 3, 2023

Ukraine Captures Russian Medic Operating A Tank, Signalling Army Dysfunction

Russia's casualties are so severe that anyone capable of holding a rifle or running a tank is being forced to do so, no matter their other skills or training. JL 

Chris Panella and Jake Epstein report in Business Insider:

Ukrainian soldiers captured a Russian medic who had been forced to operate a tank in a recent battle. The medic had been reassigned to drive the tank during a three-week-long battle near Vuhledar. The Russian medic's reassignment to the tank highlights separate problems facing Moscow's military. It faces a lack of skilled troops to perform their duties, and oftentimes, it is sending inexperienced and unprepared soldiers to the front lines.

Ukrainian soldiers said they captured a Russian medic who had been forced to operate a tank in a recent battle, according to a new report.

The soldiers told The New York Times that the medic had been reassigned to drive the tank during a three-week-long battle near Vuhledar in southeastern Ukraine. Ukrainian officials said it was the biggest tank battle of the war so far and proved to be a decisive victory for Ukraine.

During the battle, Russian forces made similar mistakes to those seen during other moments of Moscow's one-year-long full-scale war, including advancing columns of tanks straight into Ukrainian ambushes and failing to capture territory, the report said.

Russia's tanks have suffered a severe beating in Ukraine, with US officials estimating that Moscow has likely lost half of its main battle tanks since late February 2022. According to Oryx, an open-source intelligence site, nearly 1,800 Russian tanks have been either destroyed, damaged, captured, or abandoned.  

 

Even Russian tank forces long considered to be elite — like the storied 1st Guards Tank Army — have repeatedly been beaten by the Ukrainians in battle and endured heavy casualties. 

Meanwhile, the Russian medic's reassignment to the tank highlights separate problems facing Moscow's military. It faces a lack of skilled troops to perform their duties, and oftentimes, it is sending inexperienced and unprepared soldiers to the front lines.

Senior US military officials said in January that Russia was pursuing an unsuccessful strategy of rushing ill-equipped and poorly trained troops to the front lines, where they can fill the gaps within decimated units. Russian forces have also been using prisoners and freshly mobilized to absorb heavy Ukrainian fire like sponges, according to a senior US military official

Ukrainian intelligence has also suggested that Russia's strategy appears to include drafting full-time college students into the military as part of a future mobilization effort, which will reportedly be carried out within the next few weeks.

 

Russia continues to face various setbacks over a year into the conflict that it started — dealing with unskilled troops, high casualties, and limited resources. Even with no clear end to the conflict in sight, senior Pentagon officials and top US generals have said that Russia has lost the war and will emerge from the conflict as a "shattered military power."

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