A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Oct 28, 2023

Ukraine's 110th Brigade May Not Be Elite, But Has Stopped Russians At Avdiivka

Against a larger, better equipped Russian offensive - and with no expectation of reinforcement - Ukraine's 110th Mechanized Brigade has stopped the Russian offensive at Avdiivka, slaughtering them in such numbers that Russian units being ordered to that sector are mutinying. 

The 110th is neither particularly well-equipped or experienced, but it, like so many other Ukrainian units, has performed in an exemplary fashion when it most needed to do so. JL  

David Axe reports in Forbes:

The 2,000-person 110th neither is Ukraine’s most experienced brigade nor its best-equipped. But it has the hardest and most important job in Ukraine’s war effort: holding Avdiivka without requiring Kyiv to draw down its forces elsewhere—and potentially halt its counteroffensive in southern and eastern Ukraine. “Ukrainian officials have identified the Avdiivka push as a Russian fixing operation, and are unlikely to unduly commit Ukrainian manpower to this axis.” Manning trenches, firing anti-tank missiles and operating drones to drop bombs and call in artillery from the 55th Artillery Brigade, the 110th Brigade destroyed 200 Russian vehicles and killed 800 Russians in the first 13 days of fighting. “There are no words to describe the heroism of the soldiers of the 110t

On Oct. 10, a trio of Russian brigades attacked toward Avdiivka, a key Ukrainian strongpoint just northwest of Donetsk in eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region.

The attack, which was preceded by a heavy artillery bombardment, was an obvious fixing operation—an effort to draw in Ukrainian brigades from across the 600-mile front of Russia’s 21-month wider war on Ukraine and pin them in place ... so they can’t fight elsewhere.

It hasn’t worked. “Ukrainian officials have already identified the Avdiivka push as a Russian fixing operation, and they are unlikely to unduly commit Ukrainian manpower to this axis,” the Institute for the Study of War in Washington, D.C. noted just a day into the Russian assault.

Indeed, the only major reinforcements that we can confirm Kyiv has redeployed to Avdiivka include a battalion or two from the veteran 47th Mechanized Brigade, which until recently was leading the Ukrainian assault toward Russian-occupied Melitopol in southern Ukraine.

That meant the Ukrainian brigades already in Avdiivka have had to hold the line against back-to-back attacks by a bigger Russian force. One of those brigades is the 110th Mechanized, which garrisons northern Avdiivka.

The 2,000-person 110th neither is Ukraine’s most experienced brigade nor its best-equipped. But right now, it has arguably the hardest and most important job in Ukraine’s war effort: holding Avdiivka without requiring Kyiv to draw down its forces elsewhere—and potentially halt its four-month counteroffensive in southern and eastern Ukraine.

“There are no words to describe the heroism of the soldiers of the 110th Mechanized Brigade,” Ukrainian journalist Yuriy Butusov wrote.

Manning trenches, firing anti-tank and anti-aircraft missiles and operating drones around the clock to drop bombs and call in artillery from the nearby 55th Artillery Brigade, the 110th Brigade destroyed 200 Russian vehicles and killed 800 Russians in the first 13 days of fighting, according to Butusov.

“Phenomenal numbers,” the journalist wrote. “Hundreds of corpses are lying on the plantations and fields.”

The 110th’s ambivalent armament makes its feat even more impressive. Its vehicles—a combination of Soviet, Czech and Dutch models—are pretty old, on average. It operates thinly-protected, ex-Dutch YPR-765 armored personnel carriers, equally light BMP-1 infantry fighting vehicles it inherited from the Soviet army plus artillery—DANA mobile howitzers and RM-70 rocket-launchers—from the Czech Republic’s surplus stocks.

The brigade has made creative use of its middling vehicles, however. A video a 110th trooper shot in March depicts the brigade’s YPR’s performing a seemingly odd dance—advancing then reversing then advancing again while attacking across a muddy field, firing their heavy machine guns at nearby Russian positions.

The YPRs’ dance may have complicated enemy targeting, potentially protecting the thinly-armored APCs from return fire.

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