Excellent TNB last night with Will Saletan and Adam Keiper. You can listen to the podcast version here.
But weirdly enough, the show was too long to do all at once. So I continued the conversation with Will this morning on the Secret show, which is here.
1. Retreat
A few weeks ago there was a debate about the wisdom of Ukraine holding out at Bakhmut.
The Ukrainian government made it clear that it was wholly committed to Bakhmut. The implicit rationale was that (a) the Ukrainians were attriting the Russians at a favorable rate; (b) national morale could not countenance a retreat; and (c) they believed there was a chance that they could hold it and that the meatgrinder would become too much for the Russians.
The concern among some Western analysts was that (a) the attrition rate had hit a point of diminishing returns and (b) Bakhmut was going to fall one way or the other, so better to get troops out while it was still possible.
This morning we have a report from the Russian Ministry of Defense that Ukraine launched a large-scale counteroffensive at Bakhmut yesterday. The Russians claim that all of the attacks were repelled and that Russian units in the Southern group then pulled back to more “favorable ground.”
Translation: The Russians retreated.
I don’t want to make too much of this—it’s one retreat following one counteroffensive in one battle. But it is evidence that the Ukrainian theory of Bakhmut is still viable and that the pro-Putin American ghouls—like Elon Musk pal David Sacks—who have been sadly celebrating the “fall” of Bakhmut since March were wrong.
Here’s what I do want to make a lot out of: Storm Shadow.1
No, not that Storm Shadow. This one:
It’s a British long-range, air-launched cruise missile and they are in Ukraine as we speak.
The Storm Shadow has a range of 155 miles—very close to the 185 mile range of the U.S. ATACMS. But it has a couple of tactical advantages over the ATACM:
What does this mean practically? It means that from the Ukrainian side of the Kherson River, they can now reach out and touch the Russians as far away as Sevastopol. As a buddy put it in an email, “Being able to hit any target anywhere in occupied Ukraine with a modern stealth forking cruise missile is a massive capability upgrade.”
Also important to note: We didn’t learn about this transfer until after the fact. Seems possible that other weapons have been transferred to the Ukrainians without fanfare in advance of an offensive, too.
Keep an eye on this.
2. Baseball
You sickos have even got my hero George Effin’ Will on your side about the pitch clock. So I give up. Fine. Enjoy the shorter games—because I guess you want to get done with the joy of baseball and back to the drudgery of life quicker?—and pray that nothing serious gets broken.
But also: Know that this isn’t the end. Baseball has been emboldened by the reception to the pitch clock. And they have a plan.
This Grant Brisbee piece in the Athletic is locked for subscribers, but it starts with something eerie: A photo someone sent to Brisbee in 2015. Here’s the picture:
Brisbee doesn’t know the picture’s origins. It looks like a shot of an iPad propped up on an airplane tray-table.
The provenance isn’t the point. The timing is. This thing is from 8 years ago. And nearly every rule change on the list has been accomplished. This is like finding a photo of a second gunman on the grassy knoll.
Only three items are left on the list: Shrinking the strike zone, resetting the lineup in the 9th, and a mercy rule.
Every one of those proposals is an affront to God and nature.
And yet none of them are any more arbitrary than starting extra innings with a runner on second.
These abominations are coming. As sure as the sun will rise in the East. And when they’re proposed and you object—a mercy rule for professionals FFS?—MLB will smile and say, “Oh, well now. People objected to the pitch clock and you all came to love it.”
Here is what you must remember: Every rule change a sport accepts makes the next rule change easier to jam through.
You pitch-clock lovers will have much to answer for.
3. It Was a Different Time
I had never heard about the Dodgers’ Sym-Phony before this week, when my father-in-law started talking about it.
It was a group of Brooklyn guys who showed up to every game and played music to add color—for instance, they’d play “Three Blind Mice” when the umpires got together on the field. It’s much more charming than it sounds. Which is why you have to watch this short documentary about the crew.
When people say “it was a different time,” that euphemism almost obscures the reality. Here are some things you see in the video:
A small man with a scratchy, high-pitched voice, chomping on a cigar while talking about how, when the Dodgers won the pennant, he spent $48 buying every member of the team a salami—and explaining that he brought this box of salami into the clubhouse locker room to hand out to the fellas.
A former player for the Giants talking about how, for games against the Dodgers, he’d take the subway to Ebbets Field and then have to walk two blocks to the stadium, during which fans would give him the business.
Video of umpires in jackets and ties and fans in sport coats and hats.
Tales about guys with names like Shorty Laurice, JoJo Delio, and Philly Caccavelli.
The past is a foreign country.
God bless Hannah Yoest for the art today. Give her a hand in the comments, please?
I've been expecting an imminent collapse of the Ukrainian positions around the western edge of Bakhmut for about the last month. The recent developments have surprised me on the upside. I expected that the need of Ukraine to conserve manpower would lead to an eventual pullout. I'm not so sure that's the case anymore, especially if they already have 9 brigades on standby for the upcoming offensive. Getting the Russians to back off of the southern and northern highways along the western edge of Bakhmut opens up the logistics that any remaining defenders would need to hold in place and continue to attrite Russian manpower. I think they may be able to hold there longer now. Unlike in Mariupol around the Azovstal plant, the Ukrainians don't have their backs against the ocean in Bakhmut, and with less pressure on the highway supply lines they've at a minimum bought themselves more time there. Again, incredible that they've managed to hold what's left of that terrain for as long as they have and I think they'll continue to hold out there as a means of keeping the Russian forces away from where they'll ultimately launch their counteroffensive--which I expect to target Melitipol and areas west of there to cut off Crimea and use it as a bargaining chip.
On Storm Shadow, this weapons system--assuming they'll get good quantities of them--will aid significantly in the counteroffensive they plan to launch, and I think it has a large role in why they're waiting a bit longer. It has to do with battlespace shaping around targeting logistics. In all of their best ground assaults and terrain growth, Ukraine has first knocked out logistical support for the Russian defenders they had to take on during assault. It's an attrition-first, surprise assault-second strategy and it has worked exceptionally well every time. They did this in Kharkiv and drove Russian forces out via assault. They did this in Kherson and didn't even need to fire shots to retake that ground because the Russian defenders were so depleted of ammunition, food, and fuel. I think we'll start seeing logistics strikes in advance of wherever they plan to launch this coming counteroffensive, and the Storm Shadow system will probably play a large role in that strategy. I'm hoping that the UK breaking the ice on long-range strike weapons gives the Biden admin less pause with respect to supplying the Ukrainians with ATACMS for the HIMARS system. Long-range strike weapons are one of those key elements of battlespace shaping that will determine how well the counteroffensive goes.
All signs in Ukraine have been encouraging this week, and I hope we continue to see more of that. Slava Ukraini!
Some say that the Bakhmut counterattack is part of the Ukrainian summer offensive.
Others say that the Bakhmut counterattack is exploiting the Russian withdrawal.
But deep down we all know that the Bakhmut counterattack is to boost Ukrainian support in Eurovision.