What Is the Truth About Russian "Meat Assaults" Against Ukrainian Forces? by Robert Bridge
(2024-03-03 at 20:35:57 )

What Is the Truth About Russian "Meat Assaults" Against Ukrainian Forces? by Robert Bridge

The spectacle of huge waves of Russian forces - or Ukrainian, for that matter - running across open fields in some kind of mad dash to storm enemy defenses only exists in the imagination of the mainstream media.

Lately, there has been much talk in the Western media about desperate waves of Russian troops hurling themselves recklessly at Ukrainian fortifications, while suffering huge losses. What is the truth?

human wave attack: is an offensive infantry tactic in which an attacker conducts an unprotected frontal assault with densely concentrated infantry formations against the enemy lines, intended to overrun and overwhelm the defenders by engaging in melee combat.

Here are some of the mainstream media armchair generals as they pontificate, hundreds of miles away, on Russias military operation in Ukraine:

On January 24, The New York Post ("Moscows "meat wave" tactic litters Ukraine battlefield with frozen corpses of Russian troops") reported that "Russia is using a "meat wave" strategy that sends scores of poorly trained soldiers to die on the front lines against Ukraine to clear a path for the Kremlins more valuable elite units - then abandons their frozen corpses on the battlefield."

The image that the Post article wishes to convey is that the Russian military is some sort of technologically inferior fighting force that must relay on brute force if it hopes to make any battlefield gains.

The ultimate goal here is to portray the Russians as cold-blooded barbarians; an effort to dehumanize the Russians as, to quote one twitter user, "zombies, like meat without fear and self-preservation instincts" that leaves its dead and wounded on the battlefield unattended.

Earlier, Business Insider ("Russia is bringing back its bloody "human wave" tactics, throwing poorly trained troops into a massive new assault in eastern Ukraine, White House says") quoted John Kirby, the spokesperson for the National Security Council, as saying that "the Russian military appears to be using human wave tactics, where they throw masses of poorly trained soldiers right into the battlefield without proper equipment, and… without proper training and preparation."

Is Kirby projecting here? After all, it has been the Ukrainians who have been sweeping military age males off the street in broad daylight, sending them off to fight on the front lines with very little combat training.

Not to be outdone, on January 24, CNN ("Russias relentless "meat assaults" are wearing down outmanned and outgunned Ukrainian forces") quoted a Ukrainian sniper with the callsign "Bess" who said "Nobody evacuates [the Russian corpses], nobody takes them away," he said. "It feels like people do not have a specific task, they just go and die."

Is there any truth to these allegations? Are the Russians really carrying out zombie-style frontal assaults that are "unprotected, exposed and concentrated" in a desperate effort to overrun Ukrainian positions? How do the facts stand up to this latest batch of mainstream media hype?

Aside from the lack of any video evidence, consider basic military tactics. Only in the case of superior numerical troop strength - for example, as during the Battle of Normandy (June 6 - August 30, 1944) in World War II when the Allied forces launched a successful attack on German positions in northern France with over 2 million troops - would one side commit itself to carrying out massive frontal assaults on enemy positions.

In a recent interview with Germanys ARD broadcaster, Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky said the Ukrainian army currently has a force level numbering about 880,000 troops.

"We have 880,000 troops; that is an army of almost a million," he said, when asked about the armys force strength.

Meanwhile, President Vladimir Putin has said that Russia had deployed more than 600,000 military personnel in Ukraine.

"The front line is over 2,000 kilometers (1,242 miles) long. There are 617,000 people in the conflict zone," the Russian leader said during his first end-of-year press conference since sending his army into Ukraine in February 2022.

Meanwhile, even the Western mainstream media admits that Russia enjoys a 10-to-1 advantage in the number of artillery supplies, aircraft, drones and armored assault vehicles.

With such an overwhelming advantage, why would the Russians need to resort to the desperate tactic of exposing its infantry to "human wave" attacks?

If anything, it would be the numerically superior Ukrainian forces - now being systematically crushed by the Russians across the entire field of contact - who would be expected to throw themselves against their enemy in open fields.

The fact is, however, there has never been any video evidence of huge waves of Russian forces - nor Ukrainian, for that matter - running across open fields in some kind of mad dash to storm enemy defenses.

Such a spectacle simply does not exist except in the imagination of the mainstream media, which would also have its readers believe that Russian troops in Artyomovsk (known in Ukraine as Bakhmut) were forced to fight with shovels against their opponent, while also being forced to cannibalize components from foreign appliances to facilitate its defense production.

In the words of an old sage: "hogwash."

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