The Ukraine war thread
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wrote on 2 Apr 2024, 14:58 last edited by
@Renauda said in The Ukraine war thread:
Ukrainian civilians in cities and towns will pay dearly for this.
That seems to be the only thing Russia can do competently.
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wrote on 2 Apr 2024, 15:14 last edited by Renauda 4 Feb 2024, 15:14
That and feed its soldiers into the meat grinder.
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wrote on 2 Apr 2024, 22:31 last edited by Renauda 4 Feb 2024, 22:34
@George-K said in The Ukraine war thread:
Gotta wonder how it evaded Russian radar for 800 miles.
Interesting:
Ukrainians just might have hit something more than a routine weapons factory. Could have a negative effect on the Kremlin in a large predominantly Muslim region.
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wrote on 8 Apr 2024, 13:38 last edited by
This article sums up my views on Ukraine pretty well.
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This article sums up my views on Ukraine pretty well.
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wrote on 8 Apr 2024, 15:49 last edited by Renauda 4 Aug 2024, 15:50
Meanwhile inside Russia, the normalization of
devianceviolence continues to grow: -
wrote on 8 Apr 2024, 16:35 last edited by
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wrote on 8 Apr 2024, 18:31 last edited by
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wrote on 8 Apr 2024, 18:33 last edited by
At least it wasn’t a boat.
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wrote on 8 Apr 2024, 18:45 last edited by Renauda 4 Aug 2024, 22:14
More on bridge collapse:
According to independent Russian media outlet Meduza, Russian authorities announced plans to carry out repairs of the bridge’s road surface in 2018 and planned to spend around nine million rubles ($97,000) on the job.
https://kyivindependent.com/bridge-collapses-in-russias-smolensk-region-killing-1-injuring-5/
Perhaps the budget for repairs was diverted or stolen by management. After all, it is Russia where these incidents are taking place.
Curious coincidence though that someone managed to catch it on video at the very moment the bridge catastrophically failed. Those bridges over railroad yards are commonplace in Russian cities. Wonder what made that particular bridge so special around that particular time?
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wrote on 8 Apr 2024, 21:59 last edited by
@Jolly said in The Ukraine war thread:
I'd concentrate on the refineries. Oil and gas are Russia's economic lifeblood.
Maybe not that much:
However, Vakulenko noted that this may not impact the state budget because Russia can compensate for decreases in refined petroleum product exports by increasing its export of crude oil. Additionally, the companies that own the refineries continue to pay an oil extraction tax despite the attacks.
“Some people think that by attacking oil refineries, the related export revenue disappears, but that is not true. It just turns into revenue from crude oil export,” Vakulenko told The Moscow Times.
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wrote on 11 Apr 2024, 20:40 last edited by
Coffee time. An interview with Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges. The general pulls no punches. A wake up call to Americans:
Link to video -
wrote on 14 Apr 2024, 17:04 last edited by Renauda
Russian use of the double tap strikes. Essentially strike your civilian target , wait long enough for first responders to arrive on the scene and organise then strike the target one or two times more. Excellent way to win the hearts and minds of good people:
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Russian use of the double tap strikes. Essentially strike your civilian target , wait long enough for first responders to arrive on the scene and organise then strike the target one or two times more. Excellent way to win the hearts and minds of good people:
wrote on 14 Apr 2024, 17:48 last edited by@Renauda said in The Ukraine war thread:
the double tap strikes
Didn't the Germans use a similar tactic in London?
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wrote on 14 Apr 2024, 18:05 last edited by Renauda
Not sure or better, not sure they could even if they wanted. True enough though that Gerry would send multiple waves of bombers on target areas during the course of many blitz missions. Still nothing compared to a double tap precision weapon strike on a specific targets of today. Aerial bombing was just not that accurate or precise in WWII. Stuka diver bombers had some degree of accuracy (depending on the skill of the pilot) but were limited by their speed, range and were totally defenceless to Hurricanes and Spits.
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wrote on 18 Apr 2024, 15:26 last edited by Renauda
So this is where it stands:
"We know that many countries are sitting on large piles of Patriot systems, maybe not wanting to deliver it directly," Rutte said after arriving at the two-day summit of EU leaders in Brussels.
"We can buy it from them, we can deliver it to Ukraine, we have the money available. It's crucial."
https://kyivindependent.com/dutch-pm-offers-to-buy-patriot-systems-from-allies-for-ukraine/
The Danish Defense Ministry announced on April 16 a new 2.2 billion kroner ($313 million) military aid package for Ukraine. The package includes 200 million Danish kroner ($28.5 million) earmarked for purchases from Ukraine's defense industry.
"This is the first and so far unprecedented decision to purchase military products from Ukrainian manufacturers at the expense of another country," the Strategic Industries Ministry said in a statement.
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wrote on 18 Apr 2024, 15:39 last edited by
Not sure I understand how this helps Ukraine. Are they producing surplus of some weaponry?
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wrote on 18 Apr 2024, 17:12 last edited by Renauda
I think that the Danes are purchasing from the Ukrainian supplier on behalf of the government in Kyiv. There’s no money in the coffers to pay for these weapons to keep the manufacturers in business.