Teteriv

Russians are using age-old military tactic of flooding to combat Ukraine’s counteroffensive

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, June 15, 2023

Initially, there were questions on how the dam collapsed or who was to blame, but mounting evidence indicates that the dam was deliberately breached by Russia.

Key Points: 
  • Initially, there were questions on how the dam collapsed or who was to blame, but mounting evidence indicates that the dam was deliberately breached by Russia.
  • In my view, as a career U.S. special forces officer, the simplest answer is most often correct and provides the most likely explanation for the dam’s destruction.
  • It’s my belief that Russia deliberately destroyed the dam to defend against the Ukrainian counteroffensive that it believed was imminent.

An age-old military strategy

    • Quite to the contrary, it is an effective defensive technique that dates back hundreds, if not thousands, of years.
    • In another instance, the Chinese military breached levees along the Yellow River in 1938 to slow the Japanese advance.

How Ukraine has used the same tactic

    • The Ukranians also deliberately flooded the Zdvyzh and Teteriv rivers to make them unfordable and bolster their defense of Kyiv.
    • The destruction of the Irpin dam was fairly limited: 50 of the small village of Demydiv’s 750 homes were destroyed.
    • There is also a threat of floating landmines and an ongoing challenge to provide drinking water to thousands.

How the flooding supports Russia’s defense

    • In such a posture, the Russian defense has some advantages.
    • Defenders fight from fortified positions, whereas attackers must advance from exposed, vulnerable positions while overcoming obstacles, such as flooded streets.
    • The defender, by contrast, must spread its forces across the battlefield, if it cannot correctly anticipate the point of attack.

A natural defense

    • Nor in my view could they correctly anticipate the location of Ukraine’s main counteroffensive effort.
    • It also created a humanitarian crisis that Russia no doubt anticipated, and has further leveraged to its tactical advantage.
    • Sadly, the flooding of the Dnieper river will likely be more devastating and last much longer.