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Ukraine Still Using Decoys to Make Russia Waste Their Munitions — and it’s still hilarious
The Russians may have invented “maskirovka,” but the Ukrainians are fast learners.
In the military, маскировка (something masked) has a broad meaning including strategic, operational, physical, and tactical deception.
In the U.S., we call it CC&D (camouflage, concealment, and deception), or more recently D&D (denial and deception).
It could be as simple as guys in ski masks and uniforms with no insignia, or as complicated as hidden weapons transfers and hiding WMDs from UN weapons inspectors.
Indeed, the simplest form of maskirovka originated in Ukraine: The balaclava, commonly known as the ski mask, was named for a Ukrainian town of that name during a Crimean War battle there in 1854. British troops wore the headgear to keep warm.
Today, the balaclava has spread beyond Eastern Europe to police, SWAT, special forces, and terrorist organizations around the world as a means to conceal one’s identity.
But now, Ukraine is using another inexpensive deception tactic that is forcing Russia to expend its limited supply of precision munitions.
Russia’s supply of precision cruise missiles and drones, like the Lancet kamikaze drone, are dwindling — and…