average joe wrote: ↑Tue May 31, 2022 7:26 am
How much of the heavier equipment sent to Ukraine actually make it to the front?
A lot of it is actually getting to the front surprisingly fast. I've seen some video of the US M777 towed and also of the French self-propelled artillery in the field already.
The bottleneck seems to be training the Ukrainian servicemen in their use; pulling guys from the field, the reserves and the TDF, sending them to Europe, cramming knowledge and training into their heads for 3-4 weeks, and sending to the front with their new toys.
Also the logistics and support vehicles than accompany them all need to be coordinated and the artillery units need to be integrated into the Ukrainian custom designed fire control center. It seems the limited number of systems that have already been deployed to the front are being manned by servicemen that have gone to joint NATO training missions prior to the war so have some familiarity with the systems, but there aren't that many of them to pull from.
Unfortunately it isn't a turn key situation with many of these systems that are getting donated. If they aren't from old Soviet supplies that the Ukrainians can easily incorporate into their fighting force, there is a bit of a learning curve and lag before they can be safely and effectively deployed.
Meanwhile the infantry just need to hold out...poor buggers.