March 5th, 2025 Next Report March 21st, 2025
Ground Ops
Overall, weather continues to be warm and mud season will be in full vigor by the end of the week. Obviously, both sides are in the mud, but given the current lay-down of forces and the number of spots along the line where Ukrainian lines of communication are strung out along dirt roads and across manicured farm-land, mud season will probably be more difficult for the Ukrainian troops than the Russians.
Normal combat operation continued along the entire front but there were no significant changes in the front line. Russian forces continue to probe and strike along the length of the line. Expect continued efforts north of the Donets to push west, to reach the Oskil and cross it, though this will be difficult as the thaw continues and the river and its tributaries rise.
The Russians will try to establish complete control over Toretsk in the next week, clearing out the Ukrainian elements in and just south of the town, and poor logistics support (a result of the mud) may assist them in this. Expect continued hard fighting around Pokrovsk, but over the next two weeks the Russians should be able to straighten the line west of Kurakhove (eliminating any small, potential Ukrainian salients), and continue to push north-west from the general Velyka Novosilke area and across the Ukrainian defensive line that runs west from the vicinity of Vesele, on the Mokri Yali river.
Russian forces will continue to probe north near Kamyansk, and raid across the Dnepr.
Politics and Diplomacy
President Trump ordered a suspension of aid to Ukraine on the 3rd, and, as noted yesterday, US transshipment facilities in Poland were already idle by yesterday afternoon. In addition, Director of the CIA Ratcliffe noted that the suspension included intelligence support. Last night, during his address to Congress, Trump noted that he had received a letter from President Zelenskyy stating his willingness to negotiate, and to sign the minerals agreement. Presumably once the agreement on minerals is signed the suspicion will be lifted. Of note, US Secretary of the Treasury Bessent commented earlier today that the agreement is not “on the table at present.”
Losing US intelligence support would negatively impact both warning of Russian activity as well as the ability to target assets deep inside Russia; getting the intelligence support back will be necessary to maintain the air defense effort.
There are multiple reports from various anonymous officials as to how much Ukraine has on hand, and it appears that for some items - 155MM howitzer ammunition for example, there is sufficient ammunition on hand to last for several months at least, and perhaps into summer.
For some other assets particularly the more capable systems, those numbers may not be as rosy. Patriot missiles in particular are a worry (the number transferred has never been released) but obviously, if the Ukrainian Air Force (which operates the air defense units) were to run out of Patriot missiles, then all Russian ballistic missiles would arrive “unscathed,” and the ability to defeat other systems, while not eliminated would be negatively impacted.
Further, the early warning that allows defensive systems to come on line in timely fashion would be degraded, thereby also negatively affecting the probability of successfully defeating various cruise missiles.
Thoughts
I would imagine that within the next day or two the agreement will be signed, US and Ukrainian offices will agree on some process to address the negotiations, and the weapons and intelligence support will resume.
As National Security Advisor Walz commented: ”I think if we can nail down these negotiations and move towards these negotiations, and in fact, put some confidence-building measures on the table, then the president will take a hard look at lifting this pause.”
There has been commentary that the Ukrainian front is not in any danger of collapse. Technically that is correct. But armies don’t fracture based on loss of ammunition, they fracture based on loss of will.
The fear is that a sustained suspension would cause a precipitous drop in moral and a desire to simply quit the battlefield. While not common, these events can very rapidly spread and a small loss of will can, if left unchecked, cause and army to disintegrate; that is the real fear.
As for Europe, despite the EU meetings and the talk about an EU defense plus-up of 800 billion Euros ($850 billion) over 4 years, there is little likelihood that the EU would be able to sustain Ukraine on its own.
Much of the 800 billion Euros will need to be used to simply return current forces to an operational status, and there are other issues, such as comprehensive command and control, the necessary intelligence architecture, sustained heavy logistics, etc., that the EU does not have and could not buy in the necessary depth with the money that will be available.
In short, this can only be done with US support. (It is worth noting that the US intelligence support, for which there is no transfer of payments - it’s essentially free - would cost a mountain of money to recreate.)
At the same time, Ukraine currently has an army with not quite 50 brigades. That army is not adequate to the task of pushing the Russian forces back. In fact, that army is slowly losing ground to the Russian army, which has more than 100 brigades (and regiments - roughly the same amount of combat power) committed to the Ukrainian war. To expand the Ukrainian army to the necessary size to defeat the Russians and drive them out would require nearly doubling the size of the army, which would mean not simply another 40 or 50 brigades - the teeth - but also the huge support elements - the tail, which in this case would be on the order of 500,000 - 600,000. And this huge force needs to be trained and equipped.
The training alone would take more than a year. And in the meantime the army needs to hold ground. Ukraine perhaps could have done this if the effort to create this army was begun in 2022. But that opportunity is gone. This is what President Trump meant when he said they have no cards to play.
v/r pete