Special report | Military logistics

Why logistics are too important to be left to the generals

Russia’s invasion shows how war can hinge on logistics

A destroyed Russian T-80 tank in the Donbas regoin, Ukraine
Once a tankImage: Getty Images

THE ISRAELI historian Martin van Creveld called armies “ambulant cities”. Keeping hundreds of thousands of armed men fuelled, fed and equipped is a Herculean effort. Sending them to war without regard for such things can go badly wrong. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 offers a cautionary tale. In the first days of the war Russian troops flooded south from Belarus with inadequate food, fuel or ammunition. Military convoys clogged up the roads to Kyiv—including a remarkable 60km (37 miles) traffic jam north of the capital. Ukrainian drones, special forces and artillery tormented the slow-moving invaders. Unarmoured fuel trucks and other logistics vehicles were especially juicy targets. In a battle south of Chernihiv, says a general, “They thought they had us surrounded…we just cut off all the logistics for them and that’s it.” The unit was destroyed with artillery.

This article appeared in the Special report section of the print edition under the headline “The sinews of war”

From the July 8th 2023 edition

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