GRAD fire from Russia?

Russian response to Ukrainian cross-border shelling

 * The Vineyard of the Saker: Does the shelling of the Russian border posts really matter? – The Saker, July 5, 2014
 * ''What is the point of ignoring these "provocations" when there is an obvious response which nobody could dispute and which would be absolutely legal in terms of international (and Russian) law: fire back to *protect the Russian servicemen and civilians". This is really not that hard at all.  Install a few batteries of Uragan MLRS in the right spots, set up a few counter-battery radars, place a few fire controllers along the border and wait for the Ukies to make yet another "mistake".  And then turn the offending unit into dust with a single well-placed strike.  Finally, announce that you will be doing just that every time the Ukies make that "mistake" again.
 * ''Again, that would be absolutely legal in terms of international law, that could not be construed as a Russian "escalation" or "provocation" and it could even serve as a very nice protection to any NDF unit near the Russian border.
 * ''Right now, all the Russian passivity is achieving is further exiting the Ukie arrogance and total sense of impunity.


 * Moscow protests shooting at Russian border guards from Ukrainian side – RT, 12 July 2014

GRAD fire from Russia?
It is difficult to say which side of the border the GRAD fire is coming from. I have seen two analysis on the web.


 * Alex Bukovsky: MRLS GRAD filmed from Gukovo, Russia
 * Ukraine@war: Russians caught firing GRAD from Russian soil unto Ukrainian territory
 * (Delusional pro-NATO blogger who sees Polite People and their tanks everywhere. Very good and quick in geolocationg and finding tank videos.)

The distance from the pool where the cameras are to the Ukraine border is 4350 m. Ukraine@war puts the GRAD position only 1.5 km away – without doing any analysis. Alex Bukovsky estimates them to be 5 km away.

It is possible to estimate the exact distance. First you need to calculate the camera angle when zoomed in to the tele position. In the first video you see two utility poles on the other side of the pond. The distance between the poles is 54.5 meters; the distance to them is 205 meters. If we know the physical size of any object or event in the background we can calculate the distance.

From Ghouta CW massacre research I remember that the burn time of a 122 mm GRAD rocket is about two seconds. Wikipedia says its speed ("muzzle velocity") is 690 m/s. One could thus estimate that the streaks of light coming from the rockets are about 1 km long. To get an better estimate one would have to compare this to other GRAD footage. The visible streaks of light seem to be less wide then the distance between the poles, putting the the event 4 km away. However, the flight times of the fireballs seem to be less then 2 second, meaning that the streaks are less then 1 km and the firing nearer. To get an exact figure one needs to plot the fireballs frame by frame and calculate the exact speed.

More sources

 * Hail in Gukovo – Colonel Cassad, 16 July 2014
 * http://pressimus.com/Interpreter_Mag/press/3372
 * http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2014/07/16/russia_is_firing_missiles_at_ukraine_grad_rockets_us_sanctions

Comments
Even if the GRADs were fired form the Russian side of the border it does not tell us who was firing or whose GRADs they were. There is no border fence and hardly any demarcation on the border. (Why would there be? In fact, there is no natural border or anything between Lviv and Moscow where one could say Ukraine ends and Russia starts.)

President Putin asked the Russian people to help the people of Novorossiya. I am sure the people at the border are doing all they can to help. -- Petri Krohn (talk) 10:49, 17 July 2014 (UTC)