Russian Bike Assaults Tend To Get The Riders Killed—Especially When They Try Jumping
By: bitcoin ethereum news|2025/05/16 07:45:05
0
Share
A Russian bike troop misses a jump. Ukrainian defense ministry capture As the Russian military loses more armored vehicles in Ukraine than it can immediately replace, and sends more troops into battle on motorcycles, there are tragic consequences for the riders. Not only are bike troops totally exposed to Ukrainian drones, artillery and mines—they may also be tempted to try feats of motorcycle aerobatics that would be difficult in peacetime, and are nearly impossible on the battlefield. As a Ukrainian drone observed on or just before Thursday, a Russian bike soldier raced, in broad daylight, across the no-man’s-land somewhere along the 700-mile front line of Russia’s 39-month wider war on Ukraine. His luck held, at first. No mines or shells exploded. No first-person-view drones swooped down. But then he neared the simplest possible defense: a hole in the ground. Specifically, a long anti-tank ditch seemingly around 20 feet across and 20 feet deep. Apparently confident in his bike-handling, the rider accelerated up the loose dirt piled up on the edge of the trench, clearly aiming to jump the trench. He fell short—and died, or was badly injured, in the resulting crash. Stunt riders such as the late Evel Knievel routinely jump their motorcycles hundreds of feet. But they usually do so after careful planning—and rarely on loose dirt ramps. In theory, leaping a 20-foot gap from a 45-degree ramp should be straightforward if the bike is traveling 20 miles per hour or so. But the “ramp” in this case was a haphazardly piled berm meant to impede armored vehicles—not boost a speeding biker. Jumping from sand or loose dirt requires careful handling, as bikes tend to nose up on that kind of surface. Mastering the handling “this takes many years of riding to get nailed,” one biker explained on a popular motorcyclists’ forum. The Russian bike troopers’ tragic crash made him just another statistic. Most recent Russian bike assaults have ended disastrously for the riders. On April 17, an unprecedented 150 Russian motorcyclists—reinforced by additional troops riding on all-terrain vehicles—attacked positions held by the Ukrainian 14th Chervona Kalyna Brigade around Myrolyubivka, a few miles east of Pokrovsk in eastern Ukraine. The bike assault ended in disaster for the Russians. The 14th Chervona Kalyna Brigade “delivered a decisive blow against waves of Russian equipment and manpower,” the Center for Strategic Communication and Information Security of Ukraine reported. “Despite the scale of the assault, Ukrainian troops held their ground and repelled the entire attack with discipline and precision.” The Ukrainian brigade claimed heavy Russian losses, including at least 240 troops killed or wounded and 96 motorcycles knocked out. But the bike assaults occasionally work—and, to the Kremlin, an occasional success justifies frequent failure. It’s standard practice, as the wider war grinds into its fourth year, for Russian regiments to send under-trained, unprotected troops on “reconnaissance-by-force” missions in the early hours of a planned offensive—often on motorcycles, all-terrain vehicles or even electric scooters. “These are ordered to advance towards where they assess Ukrainian positions to be, conducting reconnaissance by drawing fire,” Nick Reynolds and Jack Watling explained in a recent study for the Royal United Services Institute in London. “If the group encounters resistance, Russian commanders assess where they believe the best lines of approach are, and in particular, where the boundaries between defensive units lie,” Reynolds and Watling added. “If Ukrainian positions are positively identified, sections are persistently sent forward.” Last week, the Russian 39th Motor Rifle Brigade found an under-manned weak spot in the Ukrainian trench outside the village of Malynivka, just outside Pokrovsk. Drones knocked out counterattacking Ukrainian armored vehicles, and Russian infantry captured that segment of the trench. Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidaxe/2025/05/15/russian-bike-assaults-tend-to-get-the-riders-killed-especially-when-they-try-jumping/
You may also like

BitsLab Deep Production: Nanobot User Security Practice Guide
BitsLab releases AI Agent Security Guidelines: Through a three-pronged strategy of "User Review + Agent Awareness + Script Hard Interception," a zero-trust security defense line is established to prevent prompt injection and sensitive data leakage risks.

What are the common traits of people who founded a $5 Billion+ company before the age of 23?
Trauma, Neurodiversity, Cross-Domain Skills. These characteristics, which may appear as "flaws" on a traditional resume, could instead be the most important signals

Why Hasn't $160 Billion Stripe Gone Public?
The Rise of Private Placements, with Companies like Stripe Rewriting Fundraising Logic.

All the AI News You Need to Know is Here, Lyrical Officially Launches AI News Feed
Users can access key information in real time without switching pages

Bitwise: Why Bitcoin Is Destined to Impact a Million Dollars?
When people talk about Bitcoin, they often overlook one key thing.

Amid Geopolitical Turmoil, Tokenized Gold Emerges Alongside Round-the-Clock On-Chain Markets
When the stock market is closed, the on-chain becomes the sole trading and pricing outlet.

Who Longs War on Polymarket?
The Rug Pull War rages on, with the potential to earn up to 4x gains on your bet

4 AI Trading Strategy Lessons from WEEX Hackathon Finalist
Finalist Bambi shares how AI tools helped turn real trading experience into an automated strategy, why survival-first risk control shaped the system’s design, and how the approach will evolve ahead of WEEX AI Trading Hackathon Season 2.

Hong Kong Crypto Ecosystem 2.0: Stablecoins, RWA, and the New Battleground for Financial Institutions
Hong Kong is no longer just a bystander in the cryptocurrency industry, but may become the core hub of the compliant cryptocurrency market in the Chinese-speaking world and even the entire Asia-Pacific region.

Polymarket Arbitrage Bible: The Real Gap is in the Mathematical Infrastructure
While retail investors are still engaged in simple probability addition, top quantitative teams are systematically harvesting millions of dollars in arbitrage profits on Polymarket using hardcore mathematical infrastructure such as integer programming and Bregman projections.

Crypto Barbarians Jupiter Series: Still Owes the Market an Answer
This entrepreneurial team from Singapore and Malaysia has indeed demonstrated its product execution capabilities to the market over the past three years, but they have also fully arbitraged every regulatory gray area with their business logic.

Bank Card Payment vs. Stablecoin Payment: Which is More Suitable for AI Agents?
Using bank cards to serve humanity and relying on stablecoins for high-frequency micro-trading with machines: Setting aside camp biases, a mixed payment architecture is the ultimate goal of AI entities in business.

Zuck is really out of touch! He actually acquired a dated Lobster-based social platform?
The asset pool Meta can now touch is not on the same level as it was in 2012

Key Market Information Discrepancy on March 11th - A Must-See! | Alpha Morning Report
1. Top News: Iran Reportedly Plants Mines in the Strait of Hormuz, Trump Warns of "Unprecedented" Military Strike
2. Token Unlock: $IO

How to Deal with Trump? Accept this "Art of the Deal Playbook"
The U.S. macro research firm The Kobeissi Letter deconstructs its "10-Step Conflict Pattern": Verbal Pressure, Friday Night Raid, Market Triple Bottom Exploration, Conditional Downgrade... concluding with a single "trade" paper.

AI Computing Power Arms Race Intensifies: This Startup Aims to Mine Bitcoin in Space
The next battleground for AI computing power is extending into space, gradually becoming a new frontier in commercial storytelling.

Claude Code launches the /btw feature, Musk X Money set to launch soon, what's the English community talking about today?
What have foreigners been most interested in over the past 24 hours?

Polymarket Arbitrage Bible: The Real Edge is in the Math Infrastructure
Predictive Market-Making Quantitative Arbitrage Logic.
BitsLab Deep Production: Nanobot User Security Practice Guide
BitsLab releases AI Agent Security Guidelines: Through a three-pronged strategy of "User Review + Agent Awareness + Script Hard Interception," a zero-trust security defense line is established to prevent prompt injection and sensitive data leakage risks.
What are the common traits of people who founded a $5 Billion+ company before the age of 23?
Trauma, Neurodiversity, Cross-Domain Skills. These characteristics, which may appear as "flaws" on a traditional resume, could instead be the most important signals
Why Hasn't $160 Billion Stripe Gone Public?
The Rise of Private Placements, with Companies like Stripe Rewriting Fundraising Logic.
All the AI News You Need to Know is Here, Lyrical Officially Launches AI News Feed
Users can access key information in real time without switching pages
Bitwise: Why Bitcoin Is Destined to Impact a Million Dollars?
When people talk about Bitcoin, they often overlook one key thing.
Amid Geopolitical Turmoil, Tokenized Gold Emerges Alongside Round-the-Clock On-Chain Markets
When the stock market is closed, the on-chain becomes the sole trading and pricing outlet.