02 June 2025

Ukraine's Stunning Drone Attack Deep In Russia

After more than a year of planning, Ukraine was able to plant drones on Russian soil, just miles away from military bases. Then in a coordinated operation on Sunday, Ukrainian drones attacked five different regions in Russia. Some were launched from containers attached to semis, their flights captured on videos verified by The New York Times. Plumes of smoke billowed above one base. At another, strategic bombers were hit.

Although the full extent of the damage is unknown, the attack, known as Operation Spider’s Web, showed how Ukraine is adapting and evolving in the face of a larger military with deeper resources. Using drones, Kyiv has been able to push Russia out of much of the Black Sea, limit its gains on the front lines despite Ukraine’s own troop shortages, and hamper Russia’s ability to amass large concentrations of forces for major offensives. . . .

Ukraine said that 117 drones were used in the attacks and that 41 Russian aircraft were destroyed or damaged.

Russian military bloggers played down the damage; the Russian Ministry of Defense said that Ukraine had attacked airfields in the Murmansk, Irkutsk, Ivanovo, Ryazan and Amur regions, and that Moscow had thwarted attacks at three of the bases.

The New York Times verified videos that showed successful strikes at Olenya Air Base in the Murmansk region and Belaya Air Base in the Irkutsk region, and damage to at least five aircraft, four of them strategic bombers.

From the New York Times

If Ukraine's claims are true, and it has a much better track record than Russia for being truthful in its military claims, then Ukraine destroyed roughly a third of the Russian strategic bomber force in a single day, at locations far from the front lines.

This particular assault underlines why supporting Ukraine is beneficial, more generally, to almost everyone outside Russia, because it degrades Russia's military capabilities. And, for the most part, Russia lacks the military industrial base to promptly replace military aircraft and other major military systems that it loses. Ukraine, with strong European backing, doesn't have the same problem.

Every Russian strategic bomber, tank, and artillery piece destroyed is one less that is available to strike any other country with. Every Russian military officer killed reduces the expertise of Russia's military leadership and strangles the pipeline of qualified soldiers who can be promoted to more senior positions.

Losses to Russia's strategic bomber force, in particular, make its nuclear capabilities weaker.

It will be interesting to see, when the Ukraine War is over, how Russia decides to rebuild its military that has already lost somewhere between two-thirds and three-quarters of the major military systems in its Army, has suffered serious losses in its Air Force (although much smaller on a percentage basis), and has even suffered surprising large naval defeats at the hands of an opponent without a navy. Russia has lost more tanks and ground troops than it had in active duty service when the latest round of the war began in February of 2022.

In the bigger picture, this strike also illustrates the principle of modern warfare that there are no firm front lines. Russian artillery crews are trying to avoid that duty because they know they are targets that are being reliably destroyed. Bit by bit, Russia's oil and gas infrastructure is taking a beating from Ukrainian attacks. Ukraine's long range threats are likely to improve with a recently approved infusion of German medium range guided missiles that can strike much further than artillery rounds.

Ukrainians, who were part of the same country as Russia a generation ago, are particularly well suited to infiltrating Russia.

01 June 2025

Some Fantasy Maps


 Venus with as much water as Earth.

Los Angeles and Orange County if the ice sheets all melted.

Ancient India


Adam's Bridge Between India and Sri Lanka Before 1480.


An alternative map of Europe shows post-World War II without Germany. It was never realized, however, plans existed to eradicate Germany from Europe, like Theodore N. Kaufman, who was an advocate of the territorial dismemberment of Germany and the sterilization of the Germans. His book "Germany Must Perish!" was published in 1941.


Alternative Europe in the 1960s if the Axis would've won the Second World War


The state boundary of the states of the United States of America when measured at natural geographical points



The Moon compared to North America.


The Last Glacial Maximum


This map represents what North America looked like 77 million years ago compared to its present shape (the black lines mark the outline of the continent as we know it today). At that time, Canada's Atlantic provinces were part of a large landmass known as Appalachia, while the west coast had not yet been integrated into the continent. All this is a consequence of the movement of tectonic plates. During the Cretaceous Period, the two main landmasses were Laramidia and Appalachia, separated by the Western Interior Sea. The existence of these regions has been confirmed by fossil analysis, which shows distinct species in each. The separation of the continents is explained by tectonic activity, and marine sediments confirm the presence of the sea that divided the two landmasses. Geological maps are created by combining fossil remains, analysis of geological formations, and simulations that allow us to reconstruct the tectonic movements and arrangement of the continents at that time.


If the Mediterranean and Black Seas were in North America.


A mish mash map.


Map of Doggerland at its near maximum extent c. 10,000 years Before Present (~8,000 BCE) (top left) and its subsequent disintegration by 7,000 BP (~5,000 BCE)