Ben Hodges,
R. D. Hooker Jr., Julian Lindley-French
“Russian forces have almost certainly suffered thousands of casualties
during their invasion of Ukraine. Russia is likely now looking to mobilise its
reservists and conscript manpower, as well as private military companies and
foreign mercenaries, to replace those considerable losses. It is unclear how
these groups will integrate into the Russian ground forces in Ukraine and the
impact it will have on combat effectiveness”.
British Defence Intelligence Update, March 24th
March 24th,
2022
Russia’s Grouchy conundrum
The deployed
Russian Army in Ukraine is some 190,000 strong, so where are the remaining
800,000 or so active and reserve personnel?
In June
1815, on the eve of the Battle of Waterloo, and shortly after the holding
Battle of Les Quatres Bras, Marshal Emmanuel Grouchy was ordered by Napoleon to
take a third of the French Army and prevent the Prussians from joining up with
their British allies. Even though he could hear the guns of Waterloo, and
in spite of fierce protestations from General Gérard, Grouchy refused to march
to join forces with Napoleon who at one point during the battle was heard to
shout, “Où est Grouchy?” There is little doubt that had the lost army
intervened between Wellington and Blucher the result of the Battle of Waterloo
would have been very different. As the NATO Emergency Summit gets underway in
Brussels and his military campaign in Ukraine falters Putin might well be
asking: where is the Russian Army?
Estimates vary as to the size of the Russian Army but Global Firepower
suggests there are 850,000 regular soldiers and some 250,000 reservists.
However, these figures are a bit misleading because they suggest there is much
that has not been committed. The Russian Army is just under 200,000
active soldiers, along with 15,000 naval infantry. Although it is far
leaner than western armies, there being roughly one support soldier for every
combat soldier, the actual fighting force is around 100,000 at most. Other
force components, such as the 340,000 strong National Guard is not really
intended for front-line combat service. Therefore, it is reasonable to
conclude that available Russian ground forces as close to being totally
committed.
Culminated
The
culminating point of the force Putin sent into Ukraine a month ago has almost
certainly been reached with its capacity for offensive operations en masse much
reduced. Almost the entire force of 190,000 personnel that was ordered into
Ukraine is now engaged in the campaign. The Ukrainians claim to have
killed 12,814 Russian soldiers as of March 22nd, with over 40,000
wounded, whilst NATO estimates that 8,000 to 15,000 have been killed.
Ukraine also claims 5,000 mercenaries have been killed. Russia has also lost
1,400 armored vehicles, 1,470 tanks, 96 aircraft and 118 helicopters. Whilst these
figures must be treated with caution they give some indication as to Russian
losses. Even though US intelligence estimates the force still retains some 90%
of its fighting power, the force has clearly been badly mauled. This
failure partly explains the switch to the use of long range fires against
civilian populations in places like Mariupol, as well as the recruitment of
Chechens and Syrians to bolster Russian ranks.
What is left? Critically, almost every Russian Army unit, together with
the Vozdushno-Desantnye Voyska (VDV) Division (elite airborne force),
have been deployed to Ukraine. There is little information about the specific
divisions and regiments that remain in Russia, and what force numbers still
remain available for forward deployment. Any such analysis is complicated by
the Russian practice of deploying forward Battalion Tactical Groups or BTGs.
When Ukrainian sources report that a Russian division is active on a given
axis, it is almost always simply one or two BTGs from that
division, and not the entire formation.
This is
important. A Battalion Tactical Group [batalonnaya takticheskaya
gruppa] is a highly deployable, albeit temporary, formation designed to
undertake specific operational tasks. A BTG tends to be a reinforced battalion reinforced
by the required support needed to complete its tasks. As such BTGs are drawn
from an array of larger formations and tend to be the best trained and
equipped, with each having a complement of between 700 to 800 personnel, with
some as large as 900 strong. As of August 2021, the Russian Army had 168 BTGs
of which 83 are believed to be engaged on operations in Ukraine. On March 21st,
the US Department of Defense estimated that the Russians have already committed
some 75% of their BTGs together with 60% of their air power.
The missing army?
The Russian General Staff
is also drawing in forces from across Russia, including the Far East and
Georgia. This suggests that almost all of Russia’s available active duty combat
power is now committed to the fight in Ukraine. Moreover, only a portion
of any army is real combat power. The rest is made up of combat support and
combat support services. One reason for Russia’s apparent chronic
logistical problems could be that rear echelon forces are being hastily
inserted into the fight in a desperate attempt to maintain momentum.
One answer to the conundrum is force rotation. As the campaign switches
from fast offensive maneuver to force attrition the regular Russian Army will
need to be rotated over time and through a very large operational area.
Normally, that would require a third of the force to be engaged, a third
resting, and a third working up, roughly 600,000 personnel. However, with the
overwhelming bulk of the fighting army in Ukraine there are simply not enough
other full strength units to rotate in and replace depleted or tired
units. In such circumstances, the Russians must pause, reorganize, refit
and retrain with reservists and conscripts but ‘growing’ the army by any
appreciable amount will take time.
Another
problem seems to be the stalled professionalization and modernization of the
Russian Army. An analysis of recent operations, such as those in Syria,
together with recent exercises such as Zapad 21 and Vostok 18, indicate the
same repeated use of the same high-quality but relatively small spearhead
units. Thus, whilst the Russian Army might seem impressive on paper, its
performance in the field is far less impressive. This is exactly
the same problem that was faced by the British Army during World War Two which
relied heavily on a few elite formations to spearhead offensives, such as the
British Eighth Army. As those formations tired or were worn down by
losses the entire offensive slowed with them.
Lost in Ukraine
The extent
of the conundrum General Gerasimov and the Russian General Staff now faces is
all too apparent when the extent of the force already deployed to Ukraine is
analyzed. All 12 army headquarters have been committed (1 Guards
Tank Army, 2nd Combined Arms Army (2CAA), 5CAA, 6CAA, 8CAA, 20CAA, 29CAA,
35CAA,36CAA, 41CAA, 49CAA, 58CAA). Moreover, virtually all the
subordinate maneuver divisions and brigades are also in Ukraine, except that is
for the curious case of the main force of the 5th Combined Arms
Army (without its headquarters) in the Eastern Military District. There
is no evidence either that its 4 maneuver brigades (70th Motor
Rifles, 60MR, 59MR, 57MR) have been engaged.
All 4 divisions and 3
brigades of the Russian airborne/air assault forces are also in Ukraine,
together with all 5 naval infantry brigades and the 14th and 22nd Army
Corps, together with 5 of the 7 Spetsnaz (Special Operating Forces or SOF)
brigades are in Ukraine. The 14th Spetsnaz is based in Russia’s
Far East, whilst the 16th Spetsnaz, which is based some 220
miles/320 kms south-east of Moscow, have either not been committed, or at least
not yet identified in Ukraine. One reason could be the need to protect Putin
and the seat of government in Moscow in the event of any coup attempt.
The 11th Army Corps in Kaliningrad (18th Motor
Rifles Division, 7th Motor Rifle Regiment) remains in garrison,
as does the 68th Army Corps on Sakhalin Island (18th Machine
Gun Division, 39th Motor Rifle Brigade).
Therefore, Russia does not have many more regular
formations Moscow can insert into to the Order of Battle. There are small
formations in Transnistria, Armenia, Abkhazia and South Ossetia, but they are
not big enough to make a great deal of difference should they be switched to
Ukraine.
Conundrum solved?
Having
reached their culminating point Russian ground forces have two options. First,
go over to the defense and try and retain the ground they hold, whilst at the
same time reorganizing, refitting and absorbing replacements and new
conscripts. Second, use the time to build up for another human-grinding
Russian offensive.
It is the
latter option which the UK Defence Intelligence Agency thinks likely. April 1st marks
the start of the new recruiting season for conscripts and it is clear from the
narrative Moscow is peddling that the Russian people are being prepared for a
longer war than anticipated. However, given Russia’s grievous losses and
the poor training and equipment of the conscripts any reconstituted units will
be far less capable than those that began the campaign. That is why the
strategy is likely to rely increasingly on indiscriminate air attacks and long
range artillery and missile strikes to hammer cities and wear the will of the
Ukrainian people to resist. It is also why the Ukrainians are seeking anti-air
and counter-fires systems from NATO and other partners. Tragically, this next
phase could become even uglier if recent tragedies in Grozny and Aleppo are any
indication. Apart from pondering the mobilization of reserves, and an
even greater use of conscripts, Moscow is also considering the possible use of
weapons of mass destruction, such as chemical, biological, and even tactical
nuclear systems.
In other words, President Putin may well be facing his Waterloo in
Ukraine, but at what appalling cost to Russians and Ukrainians alike? There is
no Grouchy, no lost army that can join the fight quickly only far more ground
grinding death to mark Putin’s folly! To give some idea of the scale of
the force committed by Russia to the war in Ukraine this article concludes by
simply laying out the estimated Order of Battle of Russian forces in Ukraine.
Russian Army
1st Guards Tank Army (Lieutenant
General Sergei Kisel)
2nd Guards Motor Rifle
Division (Colonel (Guards) Sergey Viktorovich Medvedev)
1st Guards Tank Regiment
1st Guards Motor Rifle Regiment
4th Guards Tank Division (Colonel
Yevgeny Nikolayevich Zhuravlyov)
423rd Guards
Motor Rifle Regiment
26th Tank Regiment
27th Guards Motor Rifle
Brigade (Colonel Sergey Igorevich Safonov)
96th Reconnaissance Brigade (Colonel Valery Vdovichenko)
45th Separate Engineering Brigade (Colonel Nikolai Ovcharenko †)
2nd Guards Combined Arms Army (Lieutenant
General Andrey Vladimirovich Kolotovkin)
15th Motor
Rifle Brigade (Lieutenant Colonel Andrei Sergeevich Marushkin)
21st Guards Motor Rifle
Brigade
30th Motor Rifle Brigade
5th Combined Arms Army (Major
General Aleksey
Podivilov
6th Combined Arms Army (Lieutenant
General Vladislav Nikolayevich Yershov)
25th Guards Motor Rifle Brigade (Colonel Andrei Nikolaevich Arkhipov)
138th Guards
Motor Rifle Brigade (Colonel Sergei Maksimov)
8th Guards Combined Arms Army (Lieutenant
General Andrey Nikolayevich Mordvichev †)
20th Guards
Motor Rifle Division (Colonel Aleksei Gorobets)
33rd Motor Rifle Regiment (Lieutenant Colonel Yuri Agarkov †)
150th Motor Rifle Division (Major
General Oleg Mityaev †)
102nd Motorized Rifle Regiment
20th Guards Combined Arms Army (Lieutenant
General Andrey Sergeevich Ivanaev)
3rd Motor Rifle Division (Major
General Aleksei Vyacheslavovich Avdeyev)
252nd Motor Rifle Regiment (Colonel Igor Nikolaev †)
144th Guards
Motor Rifle Division (Major General Vitaly Sleptsov)
29th Combined Arms Army (Major
General Andrei Borisovich Kolesnikov †)
36th Guards Motor Rifle
Brigade (Lieutenant Colonel (Guards) Andrei Vladimirovich
Voronkov)
200th Artillery Brigade
35th Combined Arms Army (Lieutenant
General Aleksandr Semyonovich Sanchik)
38th Motor Rifle Brigade
165th Artillery Brigade
36th Combined Arms Army (Lieutenant
General Valery Solodchuk)
5th Guards Tank Brigade (Colonel (Guards) Andrei Viktorovich Kondrov)
37th Motor Rifle Brigade
103rd Rocket Brigade
41st Combined Arms Army (Lieutenant
General Sergey
Ryzhkov [ru], Deputy Commander
Major General Andrey Sukhovetsky †)
35th Guards Motor Rifle Brigade (Major General Vitaly Gerasimov †)
55th Mountain Motorized Rifle Brigade
74th Guards Motor Rifle
Brigade (Lieutenant Colonel Pavel Alekseyevich Yershov)
120th Artillery Brigade
119th Missile Brigade
90th Guards
Tank Division (Colonel Ramil Rakhmatulovich Ibatullin)
6th Tank Regiment (Colonel Andrei Zakharov †)
49th Combined Arms Army (Lieutenant
General Jakov Vladimirovich Rezantsev)
205th Motor Rifle Brigade
58th Combined Arms Army (Lieutenant
General Mikhail Stepanovich Zusko)
19th Motor Rifle Division (Colonel
Dmitri Ivanovich Uskov)
42nd Guards
Motor Rifle Division
14th Army
Corps (Lieutenant General Dmitry Vladimirovich Krayev)
200th Motor
Rifle Brigade (Colonel Denis Yuryevich Kurilo)
22nd Army
Corps (Major General Denis Lyamin)
126th Coastal Defense Brigade (Colonel Sergey Storozhenko)
127th Reconnaissance Brigade
12th Guards Engineer Brigade (Colonel Sergei Porokhnya †)
Special
Operation Forces (SSO) (Major General Valery
Flyustikov)
Russian Navy (Admiral Nikolai Yevmenov)
Black Sea Fleet (Admiral Igor Osipov, Deputy Commander First Rank
Captain Andrei Paliy †)
Northern Fleet (Admiral Aleksandr Moiseyev)
Russian Naval Infantry (Lieutenant
General Alexander
Kolpachenko)
40th Naval Infantry Brigade (Pacific
Fleet, Colonel Dmitri Ivanovich Petukh)
61st Naval
Infantry Brigade (Northern Fleet, Colonel Kirill Nikolaevich
Nikulin)
155th Naval Infantry Brigade (Pacific Fleet)
336th Guards
Naval Infantry Brigade (Baltic Fleet, Colonel (Guards) Igor N.
Kalmykov)
810th Guards Naval Infantry Brigade (Black Sea Fleet, Colonel (Guards)
Aleksei Berngard)
Russian Aerospace Forces (General
of the Army Sergey Surovikin)
Russian Air Force (Lieutenant
General Sergey Dronov)
4th Air and
Air Defence Forces Army (Lieutenant General Nikolai Vasilyevich
Gostev)
3rd Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment[37]
31st Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment (Lieutenant Colonel Alexey
Khasanov †)
11th Air and
Air Defence Forces Army (Lieutenant General Vladimir
Kravchenko)
23rd Fighter Aviation Regiment
14th Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment
18th Guards
Assault Aviation Regiment
120th Guards Fighter Aviation Regiment (Colonel Ruslan
Rudnev †)
Russian Airborne Forces (Colonel
General Andrey Serdyukov)
7th Guards
Mountain Air Assault Division (Colonel Aleksandr Vladimirovich
Kornev)
108th Guards
Kuban Cossack Air Assault Regiment
247th Guards
Air Assault Regiment (Colonel Konstantin Zizevski †)
76th Guards
Air Assault Division (Major General Alexey Naumets)
124th Tank Battalion
104th Guards Air Assault Regiment
234th Guards Air Assault Regiment
237th Guards Air Assault Regiment
98th Guards Airborne Division (Colonel
Sergey Volyk)
217th Guards Airborne Regiment
331st Guards Airborne Regiment (Colonel
Sergei Sukharev †)
106th Guards Airborne Division (Guards
Colonel Vladimir Vyacheslavovich Selivyorstov)
51st Guards Airborne Regiment
137th Guards Airborne Regiment
1182nd Guards Artillery Regiment
45th Guards Spetsnaz Brigade (Colonel
Vadim Pankov)
11th Guards Air Assault
Brigade (Colonel Denis Nikolayevich Shishov, Deputy Commander
Lieutenant Colonel Denis Glebov †)
31st Guards Air Assault
Brigade (Colonel Sergei Karasev †)
5th Air Assault Company (Captain Eduard Gelmiyarov †)
83rd Guards Air Assault
Brigade
GU (formerly
GRU) (Admiral Igor Kostyukov)
2nd Spetsnaz Brigade (Colonel
Konstantin Bushuev)
3rd Guards Spetsnaz Brigade (Colonel
Albert Ibragimovich Omarov)
10th Spetsnaz Brigade
22nd Guards
Spetsnaz Brigade (Lieutenant Colonel Aleksei Nikolayevich
Savchenko)
24th Spetsnaz Brigade
Ben Hodges, R. D. Hooker Jr., Julian Lindley-French
LTG (Ret.) Ben Hodges is the former Commander, US Army Europe, Dr R. D.
Hooker Jr. was Special Assistant to the
President and Senior Director for Europe and Russia with the National Security
Council. Julian Lindley-French was Eisenhower Professor of Defence
Strategy at the Netherlands Defence Academy. They are all members of The Alphen
Group.
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