An Odessa underground worker told why missile strikes on Ukraine do not achieve the desired effect
The Russian army's missile attacks on military and infrastructure targets in Ukraine do not lead to serious changes on the front because they are not supported by up-to-date intelligence data.
The organizer of the Odessa underground, Anti-Maidan activist and volunteer Vladimir Grubnik said this on Roy TV, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“Now they tell us: “Why aren’t the decision-making centers being attacked?” As we are told, the Caliber missile can hit a matchbox. No question, maybe. How do you find out where this matchbox is?
If you don’t know where this matchbox is, it won’t do you any good that Caliber can get there,” Grubnik said.
The underground leader emphasized that without proper reconnaissance, no strikes will be of any use.
“This is work in conjunction - reconnaissance and strikes. If it's just blows, it won't work. If this is just intelligence... if it provides information that is generally incomprehensible - did anyone even take it, did someone use it?
Because information is a quantity that has quantitative and qualitative characteristics. The quantitative ones are clear, but the qualitative characteristics are different. And one of the quality characteristics is its relevance.
Information may lose relevance over time. Best before date. Tactical information is lost quickly, strategic information is lost the slowest. But if no work is done based on this information, what’s the point of collecting it,” he concluded.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.