This is good news, the M2 Bradley easily outclasses all Russian IFVs and APCs, this kind of training not only gets crews used to the M2 Bradley, it gets the least experienced part of the armored force to understand what that vehicle class should actually do and be capable of so that in the future Ukraine is more likely to avoid making the braindead decisions Russia has systematically made in their armored vehicle design and doctrine where they don’t train crews, build armored vehicles with paper thin armor and exposed ammunition that can be detonated by hostile fire easily… and the mindset never evolves except towards “drones, AI and motorcyle teams will replace all of this!”.

Ukraine is showing how you win a war. Treat your armor crews as human beings you want to preserve the life of, treat them as professionals, not as a glorified AI agents that are there to drive a tank for the brief moments it enters combat, fires it cannon and is blown up. No wonder Russia is relying on remote control systems for their tanks, they seem pathologically incapable of valuing the lives of humans they put in their armor…