Top Russian General Killed
-
MOAG
-
@Doctor-Phibes one article said that he weighs 280 lb.
I think they got the first digit wrong.
-
Well, it ain't like he's packin' a rifle and running around. He'll be fine. But he'll be easy to pick out of a crowd.
-
They dropped him on Mariupol this morning.
-
Word has it they whacked another one along with several colonels:
One of the colonels being Kens.
-
@Renauda said in Top Russian General Killed:
Yes, I think the invocation of the words of Gen. Jackson is more than appropriate in this instance. Kherson could very prove to be the Kremlin’s Fredericksburg.
Question is what happens after that.
-
@Aqua-Letifer said in Top Russian General Killed:
@Renauda said in Top Russian General Killed:
Yes, I think the invocation of the words of Gen. Jackson is more than appropriate in this instance. Kherson could very prove to be the Kremlin’s Fredericksburg.
Question is what happens after that.
Don’t know but I do not believe Putin has a Grant in waiting. It seems he hasn’t even got a McClellan or a Burnside.
-
The chief of missile troops and artillery of the 35th combined army of the Russian armed forces
Totikov and another soldier, the head of the automobile service of guards military unit No. 74268, captain Oleg Lebedev, were reportedly buried in Russia’s city of Ryazan on Sept. 25.
According to Ukrainian journalist Yuriy Butusov, the Russian army colonel was killed in a HIMARS MLRS strike on the headquarters of the Russian invaders in the town of Izyum in Kharkiv Oblast, just ahead of the counter-offensive of the Armed Forces of Ukraine near Balakliya.
“It was the headquarters of the 35th combined army that was responsible for commanding the troops in this area – the breakthrough occurred in their area,” the journalist said in a Telegram messenger post on Sept. 26.
“And now, as we can see, there are reasons to say that the Russian command suffered significant losses in this area. The chief of missile troops and artillery is one of the key elements in modern warfare. Now it is clear that the defeat of the Russians was largely connected with the loss of control and the accurate determination by Ukrainian intelligence of the location of Russian headquarters and their precise defeat.”
-
Putin mobilisation chief found dead in ‘suspicious’ circumstances
ONE of Vladimir Putin’s mobilisation chiefs has been found dead in “suspicious” circumstances prompting a murder investigation.
The body of Lt-Col Roman Malyk, 49, was discovered near the fence of his home as the Russian tyrant announced his chaotic mobilisation was being called off.
Last month, Putin ordered the mobilisation of 300,000 extra soldiers to the frontline as his disastrous war continues to falter with Moscow losing ground on the battlefield.
Police investigating the death of Malyk have opened a murder probe but have not ruled out suicide.
Some reports said Putin's enlistment chief died from hanging.
His “suspicious” death comes after a spate of attacks on mobilisation offices across Russia.
Putin has said the mobilisation will end in two weeks after 220,000 men have been enlisted, still 80,000 short of the target set at its beginning.
As many as 70 offices have been hit with Molotov cocktails as anger grows over enlistment.
There is rising fury over mobilisation officials forcibly recruiting men with little or no training in apparent violation of the rules, amid heavy military losses for Russia.
Armed conscript-snatching teams of enlistment officers backed by police have been operating in Russian cities, grabbing men on underground trains, on the street, and in offices.