Borrowing Tactics From The U.S. Army, The Ukrainian Marine Corps Is Thundering Through Russian Lines In Fast-Moving Columns

Jun 13, 2023

A 35th Marine Brigade tank.
35TH MARINE BRIGADE PHOTO

Ukrainian forces are advancing along three or four axes in southern Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia and Donetsk Oblasts. On the axis running along the Mokri Yaly River, the Ukrainians aren’t just advancing. They’re thundering.

Rolling fast along the unpaved road threading north to south from the town of Velyka Novosilka toward Makarivka, 10 miles away, the Ukrainian navy’s 35th Marine Brigade has borrowed a tactic from the U.S. Army.

In April 2003, early in the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, a battalion from the U.S. Army’s 3rd Infantry Divison combined 29 M-1 tanks, 14 M-2 fighting vehicles and several M-113 armored personnel carriers into an urban assault task force—and rolled straight into Baghdad days ahead of a planned multi-brigade coalition attack on the city.

Col. Eric Schwartz, who led the so-called “thunder run,” reasoned that a small, fast-moving armored force would confuse and demoralize Baghdad’s Iraqi defenders—and perhaps preempt a slow, bloody, block-by-block slog across the city.

Schwartz was right. His battalion thunder run on April 5 breached Baghdad and killed potentially hundreds of Iraqi troops and paramilitaries at the cost of a single American killed-in-action. A bigger thunder run two days later was costlier for the Americans, but ended with U.S. forces securing a major lodgement in downtown Baghdad, greatly accelerating the city’s fall.

Twenty years later, the Ukrainian 35th Marine Brigade is more than a week into its own prolonged thunder run along the Mokri Yaly River. In eight or nine days of hard fighting, the 2,000-person brigade has liberated several villages—most recently Makarivka, on Monday.

Speed and shock are key. The 35th Marine Brigade is fairly lightly equipped for a Ukrainian brigade, with dozens of ex-British Mastiff and ex-Turkish Kirpi armored trucks and around 10 gas-turbine T-80BV tanks. It’s how the brigade is using those vehicles that’s key to the unit’s swift advance.

With a T-80 near the front, a column of Mastiffs rolls down the dirt road that runs parallel to the Mokri Yaly River. The tank blasts, at close range, any Russian positions its three-person crew detects on either side of the road.

If the tank has to stop to fire its 125-millimeter main gun, it does so only briefly. The tank maintains the column’s momentum, leaving the 10-person Mastiffs with their .50-caliber machine guns to kill or scatter any startled Russians who survive the tank fire. Infantry then dismount and secure the area.

“They didn’t expect such speed from us, going on Mastiffs,” one marine noted after the 35th rolled into Makarivka. This is exactly how the Americans operated during the first thunder run in 2003.

“The night prior, Schwartz gave specific orders to his men to maintain a 15-kilometer-per-hour pace with a vehicle interval of 50 meters,” U.S. Marine Corps major Jonathan Peterson noted in a 2017 thesis. That’s nine miles per hour for a column of dozens of vehicles, each 150 feet apart.

“The drivers were told to maintain this strict spacing and speed in order to prevent the enemy from being able to fire into the tank’s vulnerable rear exhaust grills,” Peterson added. “All the vehicle gunners and commanders were responsible for destroying enemy targets in their view and then pass targets off from the lead vehicles to the rear vehicles. It would be a column of fire penetrating the enemy defenses in a 360-degree battle.”

That thunder runs are back, 20 years later, speaks to the Ukrainian armed forces’ ability to learn from the past and adapt old tactics to a new war—and to the Russian armed forces’ inability to do the same.

But it’s worth noting that a thunder run only works in certain conditions. The 35th Marine Brigade is attacking along one of the more lightly-fortified axes. If the marines encountered minefields, they apparently were nothing like the dense minefields that thwarted a Thursday attack by the Ukrainian army’s 33rd Mechanized and 47th Assault Brigades just south of Mala Tokmachka, 40 miles west of Makarivka.

Mines aren’t the only danger as the 35th Marine Brigade continues thundering south. Inasmuch as a thunder run depends on momentum for its shock effect, and depends on that shock effect for its ability to scatter enemy forces, even a few vehicle losses can grind a run to a catastrophic halt.

That almost happened to the Americans in 2003. During the first thunder run, an Iraqi rocket immobilized one of the M-1 tanks. The task force wasted half an hour trying to get the tank moving again, during which time morale balanced on a razor’s edge. “The psychology of losing an armored vehicle is large,” one officer commented.

Schwartz ultimately ordered the column to abandon the tank and keep moving. The decision may have saved the thunder run from stalling out. The Ukrainians likewise might have to make a similar decision, if they haven’t already done so. It’s worth leaving behind a few tanks or trucks if that’s the price of forward momentum.

Considering how quickly the 35th Marine Brigade is moving, the Mokri Yaly River axis might be one of the more lucrative sectors of the southern front for Ukrainian forces. Especially if the army brigades can’t get past Mala Tokmachka.

It’s no secret that Kyiv is holding in reserve half a dozen or more brigades, waiting to deploy them wherever the lead brigades open the widest gaps in Russian defenses. The longer the 35th Marine Brigade prolongs its thunder run, the more likely Ukrainian commanders are to send additional brigades rolling along the same axis.

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David Axe

9 comments

  1. Good job! This is a mini blitzkrieg.

    “Considering how quickly the 35th Marine Brigade is moving, the Mokri Yaly River axis might be one of the more lucrative sectors of the southern front for Ukrainian forces. Especially if the army brigades can’t get past Mala Tokmachka.”

    I hope that the decision on where to strike heavily will be a fast as the 35th MB. Could be decisive in reaching Berdyansk or even Mariupol.

    • Right! That’s the way to use Nato-tanks, with high mobility, fighting pockets of resistance while moving. That offers a high chance of shaking the whole front up, by getting into the back of russian units, threatening to cut them off. That’s very encouraging, I hope this breakthrough will go all the way to Crimea. Everything will depend now on bolstering the flanks and reinforcing the drive with as many offensive units as possible, artillery, air support, drone reconaissance and supplies. This is teamwork and requires coordinated efforts. If all goes well, this can be a major step towards liberation of occupied Ukraine from the russian thugs. Here’s crossing fingers for the brave ukrainian fighters!

  2. What this guy forgets, is that before the Thunder Runs the main bombing campaign of the US and their allies began on Baghdad. Its forces launched approximately 1700 air sorties (504 using cruise missiles). Ukraine doesn’t have that luxury, because we don’t need them according to the ice cream expert.

    • Let’s hope these probing attacks continue and develop into a full and unstoppable onslaught.
      God willing, the counteroffensive will achieve all or most of its objectives with minimal losses for the defenders and catastrophic orc losses.
      What I worry about then is manpower. To retake and hold these vast swathes of land requires many specialist skills and massive personnel resources. Which is why the allies should fund the provision of many more foreign legionaires. I suggested Peshmerga forces, but there are other options.
      For Ukraine’s offensive actions to continue smoothly, many more troops will be required to hold the retaken ground.
      Also, there needs to be a credible deterrent to force putler to scrap his genocide/ecocide plans at the ZNPP and the Titan Plant.

      • Clearly, the AFU needs to find a way into the enemy-held hinterland, to avoid the massive losses that penetrating the defensive lines will mean. Once enough forces can rush through, the rest of the orc defenses are useless.

    • Yes, this is something everyone seems to forget. The allies always use MASSIVE air attacks before sending in even a single foot soldier, yet Ukraine doesn’t need it. Every time I think about this shit, I could vomit.

      • The air environment is not permissive. From the looks of things, air defense artillery and MANPADS have ended close air support. They are simply too good given the equipment the Ukrainians have.

        • This can be alleviated by a combined air force effort with the right types of aircraft and tactics. But, there is more to air power than close air support. It can wreak havoc in the rear areas, which is every bit as important.

  3. Ukraine needs minesweepers and more bridges as well as radar that can check activities on orc bases in RuSSia close to the border.

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