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#1142
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07-13-2023, 06:25 PM
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Mobilization, Protests & Sabotage Media III
According to Russian media reports, contract soldiers arrived at the military unit expecting to be sent to the frontlines in Ukraine soon. One of the soldiers provoked displeasure of the "elders" by leaving the camp to shop. First he was beaten up by members of a reconnaissance unit and military police. Later, they also attacked soldiers from the artillery battalion. As a result, a contract soldier from Siberia died. |
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#1143
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07-13-2023, 06:27 PM
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Mobilization, Protests & Sabotage Media III
Lets be realistic here...that guy's SMO washing-machine hunt is not over. At best he will get a week off and then he is sent back to the meat grinder. His life expectancy is still pretty low. re: I think in most of the world, people take their shoes off when entering a room. Its the US where its common to wear shoes in your home. Maybe im wrong here and its the other way around....who knows. |
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#1144
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07-13-2023, 06:59 PM
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Mobilization, Protests & Sabotage Media III
A man who calls himself a "Wagner field commander, call sign Berserk" recorded a video thanking supporters of the terrorist group and stating that "everything is just beginning for Wagner who is ready for global events and turmoil". He seems to be hinting at having a good rapport with a "unit that got stuck on the way to Rostov", which is likely to be the Akhmat unit.
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#1146
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07-13-2023, 09:11 PM
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Mobilization, Protests & Sabotage Media III
Meanwhile, Russia’s Chaotic Meltdown Over American Cluster Bombs Begins. Yesterday 7:49 pm Reuters Cluster munitions will be a “game-changer” for Ukrainian efforts to end the Russian invasion. At least, that’s what the Ukrainian Minister of Defense said on Tuesday. The news was not received as well in Russia. That same day, Russian Minister of Defence Sergei Shoigu threatened to use their own cluster munitions against Ukraine, claiming that they had refrained from using them so far. “Russia, realizing the threat that such ammunition poses to the civilian population, has refrained and is refraining from using them in a special operation” the minister said on Tuesday. “If the United States supplies cluster munitions to Ukraine, the Russian Armed Forces will be forced to use similar weapons against the Armed Forces of Ukraine as a response.” Shoigu was not telling the truth. Russia has actually been using cluster munitions since the very beginning of the conflict. Moscow has not held back on its conventional systems, from cluster munitions to thermobaric weapons. The threats do, however, show how seriously the Russian military is taking the prospect of a Ukrainian military with large stockpiles of cluster munitions—and for good reason. The Biden administration announced that it would send Ukraine dual-purpose improved conventional munition (DPICM) to help Ukraine’s artillery shortage on July 6. These cluster rounds are artillery shells made up of smaller bomblets that scatter across a wide area and detonate individually. Unlike prior U.S. announcements that it would send Ukraine HIMARs, Patriot missiles, and Abrams tanks, sending cluster munitions stirred up commentators and human rights activists like never before in this conflict. For them, the concern is less about escalating the conflict and more about the perceived danger to civilians and implications for international law. The arguments for sending cluster munitions are straightforward: the rounds spread bomblets over a wider area than a traditional artillery shell, so Ukrainian gunners need to use fewer rounds to achieve the same effect. Using fewer rounds to the same effect cuts down on demand for ammunition, which Ukraine is short on, and increases the longevity of the artillery pieces themselves, which need replacement and repairs after intense use. As Ukraine is in the middle of a counteroffensive, Kyiv is betting that these weapons will make the fight easier. The arguments against sending cluster munitions are more varied. Critics usually voice concerns that cluster munitions increase the amount of unexploded ordnance (UXO) in Ukrainian soil, question the legality of their use under international law, and claim their use will provoke a symmetrical Russian escalation. Unexploded ordnance (UXO) can be a problem for the Ukrainian military now and endanger civilians in the future. Because cluster munitions contain so many sub-munitions, malfunctions could leave intact explosives target areas for years, which could detonate if someone steps on them. Multiple U.S. soldiers have been killed or wounded by stepping on unexploded bomblets over the past decades. UXO, either from cluster or non-cluster munitions, can also threaten civilians for years to come. Proponents of using cluster munitions against Russia don’t dispute the risks of UXO—rather, they see pushing Russia off Ukrainian soil as an absolute priority to end the conflict. Because the main objection to clusters is the number of duds, the failure rate for submunitions is a serious point of contention. The U.S. claims it will only send munitions with a two percent dud rate or lower, meaning that significant use will leave numerous unexploded bomblets on the battlefield. Groups like the Red Cross claim that the rate is much higher in reality—well above 10 percent. Not all cluster munitions have the same failure rate. The dud rate in Ukraine will depend on how the submunitions are constructed and how long they’ve been in storage. UXO seems to be an explicit concern for the Biden administration. When announcing the transfer, Pentagon officials stated that they “would be carefully selecting rounds with lower dud rates, for which we have recent testing data.” To a certain extent, the die is cast. The U.S. already decided to send cluster munitions, and Ukrainians are set on using them to support their counteroffensive. Questions of UXO, friendly casualties and future harm to civilians will depend on how widely they are used, whether cluster manufacturers were honest about their dud rate, and how well Ukraine is able to disarm and remove the massive amount of unexploded ordinance littering the country’s north and east. Meanwhile, the Kremlin—unable to stymie the delivery of the munitions—has been left to respond using the usual playbook—with lies and showboating. “It should be noted that Russia is armed with cluster munitions, as they say, for all occasions. At the same time, they are much more effective than American ones, their range is wider and more diverse,” Shoigu said this week, adding that Russian forces are taking “additional measures of an organizational and technical nature to protect personnel and equipment from striking elements of cluster munitions.” |
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#1147
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07-13-2023, 10:39 PM
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Mobilization, Protests & Sabotage Media III
That meltdown is about a week or two in progress. I saw a report today that the UA military said they are in possession of them now but have not started using them.
__________________ 💜🧿See Human | Be Human🧿💜 (War Section Hashtags) |
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#1148
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07-14-2023, 01:53 AM
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Re: Russia/Ukraine War Mobilization, Protests & Sabotage Media III
I hope Ukraine understands the context. Their hero and national treasure Bandera, in some other nations (according to those countries’ false history) is not quite as cherished. So this is not an attack on their core identity and beliefs, but rather a probably mistaken hatred towards a strong and proud Ukrainian warrior who according to them, simply took out some of the trash. People really need to understand the context. It is easy to hate on Bandera and the Holocaust, but talk to some Ukrainians and just listen to their version of history and maybe then people understand what they believe
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