Counteroffensive of Ukraine
Waiting for the mud season to end
Yesterday, March 31, 2023 | 20:24
The people of Ukraine are expecting their army to launch a counter-offensive once morest the Russian attackers in the spring. When, that also depends on the weather. An ex-soldier in the US provides forecasts.
In the background, dishes rattle during a video call with weather expert David Helms in the USA. The US Air Force veteran is sitting at home in the US state of Virginia and the main question right now is: “When does the mud season end” – in Ukraine?
His thoughts are on the weather, which the soldiers in the trenches at the front also have to contend with. The “spring mud season” started earlier this year, writes David Helms in an analysis for Deutsche Welle, “following the months of March and February were regarding two degrees Celsius warmer than in winter. So we have already seen some drying on a modest scale, mostly in the south, less so in the north and east.”
The retired meteorologist analyzes the weather in the midst of war and posts his forecasts on social media using the hashtag “#NAFOWeather”.
This makes him one of many volunteers tweeting worldwide who are supporting Ukraine’s fight once morest the Russian attackers in the digital world. “For me, these are just people who are interested in Ukraine and support them wherever they can.”
Like him, David Helms from Virginia. For example, he writes when there will be “optimal opportunities for optical satellite reconnaissance,” says Helms. Other activists then use donations to order satellite images from private providers such as Maxar and make them available to the Ukrainian commanders at the front. When the sky is clear for the best photo from space.
Advertisement
Forecast for the end of the mud season
These weeks, David Helms’ forecasts have a special meaning: Anyone who can determine the regionally different end of the mud season in Ukraine is approaching the answer to the question of when Ukraine can switch to a counter-offensive in order to further land occupied by the Russian armed forces to free.
In his daily video messages, the Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyj announces this, as does his Defense Minister, who is thanking him via video for the Leopard 2 main battle tanks or the Challenger 2 from Great Britain or the German Marder infantry fighting vehicle.
In Ukraine, the “mud season”, the so-called “rasputitsa”, makes fields and unpaved roads impassable for a month in autumn due to rain and in spring also due to melting snow. Tanks, troop carriers and artillery pieces then get stuck in the soft morass.
“Between the amount of moisture and the volume in the top 20 centimeters of the soil, the soil strength decreases with increasing moisture.” It is an exponential development. “It changes very quickly at certain points as humidity increases,” says Helms.
“All winter moisture accumulated in the form of snow and the surface of the soil was mostly frozen, although due to climate change the top layer of soil thawed intermittently this winter.”
The phenomenon has to do with the geography in many areas of Eastern Europe: flat land as far as the eye can see and the nature of the soil. In Ukraine, it is the black earth that makes the south of the country one of the most fertile regions in the world.
Which vehicles are eligible?
The former military meteorologist Helms has also worked for the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), where he dealt with the hydrological consequences of climate change – i.e. the change in the composition of soil. Just like in Ukraine.
“The mud season associated with military vehicles depends not only on the strength of the ground, but also on the types of vehicles intended for an offensive operation,” Helms told Deutsche Welle.
To put it simply, how heavy tanks and armored personnel carriers are and how many people they transport determines whether they might get stuck in the Ukrainian mud or not.
Helms has now made a commitment for the front in Ukraine: “The climatology of soil moisture and the climatology of soil moisture loss will increase significantly from May 1 and beyond,” Helms writes in the analysis for Deutsche Welle. The soil in southern Ukraine will dry out as early as mid-April.
In the Donetsk region (oblast) two weeks later and from mid-May also in the Russian-occupied Luhansk Oblast further north.
This is significant: the Ukrainian army might start a counter-offensive in the south towards the Russian-held city of Melitopol, while Russian tanks are still stuck in the mud in eastern Ukraine.
Author: Frank Hofmann