- Joined
- Jul 18, 2017
I don't think so. Belarus was the Kuwait for Russias invasion here. It was to serve as a jumping off point and supply hub, but not a participant. Russia needed Belarus if it wanted to hit Kiev in the first week.Definitely, this entire war will be studied for generations. This is the first conventional war fought between two comparable, modern forces on a total war scale. Considering the last one somewhat comparable was Korea there will be a lot of knowledge gained by both sides.
One thing I've wondered about in hindsight is if the plan was for Belarus to enter the war at the same time, invading alongside the Russian forces from its territory.
The problem is they didn't bother to read a map. The only direct route between Kiev and Belarus was right through the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone.
Needless to say, this is not a very well maintained or large road.
So the Belarus launched forces got bogged down in the largest extant wilderness left on the European continent while another offensive raced from a thousand Kilometers from Russia proper to hit Kiev from the East.
In the interim the entire Northern front got stuck in a traffic jam, and the two weeks it took to sort everything out were fatal because Ukraine was given time to mobilize the capital region territorial guards, along with the absolute elite of the Ukrainian Army, the Presidential guards regiment and the Kiev military command. Once Russia had finally gotten its shit together it ran smack into a buzz saw, and without any railroads in the area had no way to feed or arm its forces.
It wasn't that they didn't have the manpower and equipment for a siege. They didn't have the food, fuel or ammo for a siege. So after 4 weeks of fighting they had no choice but to retreat.