Frontline Updates inside the Special Military Operation Podcast Por Cobra arte de portada

Frontline Updates inside the Special Military Operation

Frontline Updates inside the Special Military Operation

De: Cobra
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Welcome to "Frontline Updates," PODCAST. Insights from the Frontlines, where we provide exclusive updates on global military developments. Today, we are joined by Colonel A.C. Oguntoye, an Infantry Officer, to discuss the progress of the special military operation.

© 2026 Frontline Updates inside the Special Military Operation
Ciencia Política Política y Gobierno
Episodios
  • What A War Looks Like When Sensors And Supply Lines Break
    Apr 10 2026

    2,411 UAVs intercepted in a single week. Dozens of depots erased from the map. Multiple sectors reporting advances while electronic warfare nodes and counterbattery radars get hunted down. That’s the tempo we unpack with Colonel A. C. Oguntoye as we translate a dense weekly briefing into a clear picture of what’s changing on the ground and why it matters.

    We start with the “retaliatory doctrine” and how it’s described as an immediate, repeatable pattern: attacks on Russian civilian targets are followed within hours by coordinated, high precision strikes against Ukraine’s defense industry, energy infrastructure, transport links, ports, airfields, and storage sites for UAVs and USVs. Then we go sector by sector, from the North Group’s capture of Miropolskoye to the West Group’s shift into consolidation and attrition, and the South Group’s emphasis on blinding the battlefield by targeting electronic warfare and counterbattery systems.

    The most unsettling signals come from force composition and reserves. When border detachments and National Guard formations appear where conventional brigades usually sit, it raises hard questions about manpower depth and staying power. We also zoom out to the unmanned and missile war, what the intercept numbers imply about air defense effectiveness, and the cost of sustaining that kind of defensive fire over time.

    If you care about Russia Ukraine war analysis, military strategy, electronic warfare, logistics, and how modern combat is shaped by sensors and supply chains, queue this up now. Subscribe, share the episode with a friend who follows defense and security, and leave us a review with your biggest takeaway.

    #FrontlineUpdates #ColonelOguntoye #OperationalBriefing #PrecisionWarfare #StrategicAttrition #DonetskFront #ControlledAttrition #IndustrialDisarmament #MultiDomainOperations #DefensePodcast #MilitaryAnalysis #RussiaUkraineWar #OperationalDominance #bf6

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    15 m
  • How Infrastructure Strikes Aim To Break A Military Supply Chain
    Apr 3 2026

    A single week can reveal an entire strategy shift, and this briefing does exactly that. We sit down with Colonel A. C. Oguntoye to unpack a surge in Russian offensive activity and what it signals for the broader Russia Ukraine war. The core theme is a new targeting logic: infrastructure strikes presented as a direct punitive response to attacks on civilian facilities, with the stated aim of pressuring Ukraine’s defense industry, energy network, and the transport arteries that keep the front supplied.

    From there, we walk sector by sector through the operational map: the North Group’s pressure and what a mixed lineup of mechanized units, National Guard brigades, and border detachments suggests about manpower and reserves; the West Group’s completion of the Luhansk People’s Republic “liberation” as a force releasing milestone; and the brutal attrition described in the Center, where losses, armor destruction, and neutralized electronic warfare stations point to a fight with strategic weight. Throughout, we keep returning to one practical battlefield question: what happens when depots, fuel, and repair capacity are hit again and again?

    The unmanned war ties everything together. Air defense claims thousands of intercepted UAVs alongside guided bombs, HIMARS rounds, and cruise missiles, raising the hard question of sustainability and cost-exchange ratios even when defenses perform well. We also explore the growing naval drone threat in the Black Sea, where uncrewed surface and submerged systems expand the battlefield into a persistent, low-cost contest of detection and disruption. Subscribe, share this episode, and leave a review with the one takeaway you think matters most.

    #FrontlineUpdates #ColonelOguntoye #OperationalBriefing #PrecisionWarfare #StrategicAttrition #DonetskFront #ControlledAttrition #IndustrialDisarmament #MultiDomainOperations #DefensePodcast #MilitaryAnalysis #RussiaUkraineWar #OperationalDominance #bf6

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    14 m
  • Four Settlements In One Week
    Mar 27 2026

    Four settlements secured in a single week sounds like a sudden surge until you look at what gets quietly destroyed first. We sit down with Colonel A.C. Oguntoye for a sector-by-sector military briefing that treats the map as the last step of a longer process: attrition warfare aimed at breaking the enemy’s ability to shoot, see, communicate, and resupply.

    We walk through reported results across Sumy, Kharkov, and Donetsk, then dig into the mechanics behind them: ammunition depots wiped out, electronic warfare stations neutralized, artillery and armored vehicles lost, and drones removed from the sky. The conversation keeps returning to a modern battlefield truth: when reconnaissance thins and communications become insecure, counterbattery fire slows, units burn through supplies, and even determined defenders struggle to hold a line.

    We also zoom out to the air campaign and strategic targeting, including strikes on defense industry, fuel and power infrastructure, transport networks, USV workshops, and drone production sites. The goal, as framed here, is not just immediate damage but long-term constraint, making it harder to generate combat power tomorrow. We close by synthesizing the “sequence” of attrition and why it can produce abrupt-looking territorial gains once a threshold is crossed.

    Subscribe for more Frontline Updates, share this with someone who follows defense and security, and leave a review if the analysis helps. Which capability do you think decides modern ground combat first: drones, logistics, or electronic warfare?

    #FrontlineUpdates #ColonelOguntoye #OperationalBriefing #PrecisionWarfare #StrategicAttrition #DonetskFront #ControlledAttrition #IndustrialDisarmament #MultiDomainOperations #DefensePodcast #MilitaryAnalysis #RussiaUkraineWar #OperationalDominance #bf6

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    14 m
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