We should just give them a fleet of A10 Warthogs. The war would be over in a week.
We should just give them a fleet of A10 Warthogs. The war would be over in a week.
Pakis needed the money.
Criminals can't get a break.
was it your point about Russia will never invade, or Kherson won't be liberated?
I'm confused.
Yeah that one. Suka blyat.
LOL hater Suka blyat.
LOL suka blyat.
Tick tock, suka blyat.
Watched that. It is an expensive way to clear a minefield.
The fact your country is in a war would tend to sharpen the mind of any trainee.
Crimea beach party, Summer of 23
They have long since burned out their barrels. Accuracy degrades a lot after the barrel exceeds its useful life. Yet another sustainment problem for the fascist occupiers.
soooo Russia stole some fur coats, gave it to some gullible relatives of dead conscripts for a photo op to spur recruitment, then took the coats back?
:LOL
Bend over, I'll ing give you a fleet of Warhogs.
Must be a training thing.
Don't they know smoking inside is dangerous to their health?
Training started.
Ukrainians are clever and russians are dumb !
Russian tanks keep running into Ukrainian mines outside Vuhledar. Either the Russians are getting sloppy, or the Ukrainians have tweaked their minelaying tactics.
More likely, both.
Indeed, there are indications the Ukrainians have adopted a clever new method of laying mines. Ukrainian gunners wait until Russian troops clear a path through an old minefield—then toss fresh mines onto that same path right as the Russians are crossing.
This tactic appears to be on display around Vuhledar—a town with a pre-war population of just 14,000 that lies a couple of miles north of Russian-held Pavlivka, 25 miles southwest of Donetsk in eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region.
The pattern is familiar. Armored vehicles roll in neat lines across the fields and forests between Russian-occupied Pavlivka and Vuhledar. The lead tank hits a mine and explodes. The rest of the column falls into disarray. Some vehicles try to go around the wrecked lead vehicle, only themselves to run into mines. Even retreat is dangerous: there might be mines behind the column, too.
Specifically, two types of mines. 1)The Soviet TM-62 and the American Remote Anti-Armor Mine system. The 21-pound TM-62 is your traditional mine: a big metal disk, packed with explosives and fitted with one of several fuze types. The pressure fuze might be the most popular. Engineers bury TM-62s by hand or speed up the operation by deploying a GMZ minelaying vehicle.
2)The Remote Anti-Armor Mine system is a pack of four-pound mines stacked nine apiece in a hollow 155-millimeter artillery s . A few well-aimed volleys can scatter scores of the tiny mines—each with a magnetic fuze—across a wide area. The United States late last year donated to Ukraine 6,000 RAAM s s.
https://www.forbes.com/ukraines-new-anti-tank-tactic
https://news.yahoo.com/exclusive-ex-...220728915.htmlExclusive: Ex-Russian military bomber engineer seeks asylum at U.S. border, offers military secrets
...
The man and his family arrived in an armored SUV and asked to be admitted into the U.S. because he feared persecution for participating in anti-Putin protests in support of Alexei Navalny, an imprisoned Russian dissident. He then told CBP officials that he had information wanted by the U.S. government.
He said he was a civil engineer and that “his past employment had included working ... from 2018 to 2021 in the making of a particular type of military airplane at the Tupolev aircraft production facility in the city of Kazan in west-central Russia,” according to a Jan. 11 unclassified CBP report obtained by Yahoo News.
“He described the aircraft type as ‘an attack jet’ and said it ‘was called White Swan-TU160, the largest military aircraft.’”
...
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)