Chadstroma
Footballguy
My guess is that they are being cautious. Though these NATO trained brigades, even better trained and equipped than their 'legacy' units, are new and having learning curves. Certainly, even though the Ukrainians have been fighting for years (they were fighting long before the invasion) their military is still learning. This counter offensive is doing something that they have never done previously. Even their successful counter offensive last year was not nearly the same kind of operation. This is much larger against an entrenched defender with heavily prepared positions.I think that dam collapsing wrecked a lot of contingency plans the AFU had mapped out. The Russian use of helicopters should have been planned for. It feels like Ukraine is waiting for the Russians to make a deployment error before they pounce.Feels like they aren't making quite as much progress as you would expect but haven't committed much. So who knows. Almost like they felt like Russia would fold up, and they haven't really yet.
Some progress seems on taking down Russia helicopters which may help or keep them from being engaged. Apparently the Russia helicopters are the most western tech equip and they can't replace crap on them. Maybe.
Rather than throw all their new units into the grinder and hope, they have been doing limited maneuvers with only a portion of their new units. I think that this benefits them in probing and testing the Russian lines but perhaps more importantly providing them a learning curve that they can learn from their mistakes without crippling their ability to continue to launch a counter offensive.
It seems the Russians are able to use their attack helicopters to much more effect than they have been able to yet in the war as the Ukrainian forces push forward and come out of their anti-air umbrella. The helos can hover low over confidently friendly territory, pop up and see further than troops with a MANPAD can, hit and get low again. This is basically the tactics that our military has developed with our attack helicopters such as the Apache and Cobra. My amateur brain is having a hard time trying to figure out how the Ukrainians can counter it effectively when their air force is still unable to be in such contested areas without unacceptably high losses.
