Russian invasion of Ukraine | Fewer tweets, more discussion

Don't forget those 100k are only the newly formed and trained brigades. They have even bigger numbers deployed all around the front and they will take part in the counter offensive as well. If I remember correctly the Russian invasion force back in february 2022 was around 200-300k strong. I'm sure that Ukraine can field similar numbers in their counter attack. This upcoming battle will be brutal.
The invasion force was 200K but they've mobilized since then and last time I checked there are about 350K Russians in Ukraine now, including Wagner and newly mobilized.
 
The invasion force was 200K but they've mobilized since then and last time I checked there are about 350K Russians in Ukraine now, including Wagner and newly mobilized.

Yeah. And Russia can't keep all soldiers on the front lines. They need military presence in every town they take, especially bigger towns like Melitopol where the resistance is strong. If Ukraine can break Russian defense lines in some places, they will fall apart is my feeling. Especially because most of them have neither motivation, nor the training. We saw that already last year. As soon as Ukranian forces broke through, Russians started running.
It will be more difficult now of course, because Russians have several defensive lines now, but still. With the right tactic and equipment, everything is possible.
 
Yea, it's decent numbers and 100k properly trained and equipped Ukrainian soldiers are probably worth 2-3x the amount of Russian ones, at least in the Southern Ukraine where they will not have much experience. The biggest worry is that of course Russia had a lot of time to prepare and they probably mined the hell out of fields/roads.
They will need 2 or 3 times the amount of RA troops for the offensive, for sure. But no one knows how many troops UA possesses or is ready to deploy. People have to take account of their reserves getting used to defend those cities along with weapons/ammunitions. Do we know if any of the NATO-trained troops participated in defending those cities? If so, the availability of troops have a different outlook as well.
 
A Russian navy ship equiped for subsea operations was photographed in the area of the Nord Stream blasts 4 days before the explosions.

 
On Russian gas exports in 2023:

Evidence is piling up about the steady disintegration of Russia’s vital natural gas export industry since the country’s invasion of Ukraine.

Russian news reports estimate that Russia’s gas exports by pipeline could fall as much as 50 percent in volume this year from last year. And last year was an especially bad year.

The problems are not limited to gas delivered by pipeline. The European Union is threatening to curtail imports of liquefied natural gas from Russia, which were the solitary bright spot for the Russian industry last year.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/27/business/energy-environment/russias-gas-exports-2023.html
 
New wave of terrorist attacks all over Ukraine which will probably be followed with - "we're ready for negotiations, sadly Ukraine and the West are not".
 
New wave of terrorist attacks all over Ukraine which will probably be followed with - "we're ready for negotiations, sadly Ukraine and the West are not".


Air defense is getting better and better. But sadly one residential building was hit again.
 
Yea, it's decent numbers and 100k properly trained and equipped Ukrainian soldiers are probably worth 2-3x the amount of Russian ones, at least in the Southern Ukraine where they will not have much experience. The biggest worry is that of course Russia had a lot of time to prepare and they probably mined the hell out of fields/roads.

These are just the guys trained with outside help right?
Surprise!

Shocked I am, utterly shocked.
 
"U.S. Wires Ukraine With Radiation Sensors to Detect Nuclear Blasts"

The United States is wiring Ukraine with sensors that can detect‌‌ bursts of radiation from a nuclear weapon or a dirty bomb and can confirm the identity of the attacker. In part, the goal is to make sure that if Russia detonates a radioactive weapon on Ukrainian soil, its atomic signature and Moscow’s culpability could be verified.

The preparations, mentioned last month in a House hearing and detailed Wednesday by the National Nuclear Security Administration, a federal agency that is part of the Energy Department, seem to constitute the hardest evidence to date that Washington is taking concrete steps to prepare for the worst possible outcomes of the invasion of Ukraine, Europe’s second largest nation.

The Nuclear Emergency Support Team, or NEST, a shadowy unit of atomic experts run by the security agency, is working with Ukraine to deploy the radiation sensors, train personnel, monitor data and warn of deadly radiation.
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/28/science/ukraine-nuclear-radiation-sensors.html
 
22 and search still ongoing. Orcs boasting they hit all designated targets, and this happens while russia is chairing a UN security council.

A silver lining in all of this is it shows Putin's desperation and it makes him look doubly evil before the world when the story is amplified as it has.
 


Poor guy @2:08 died because of bad timing. Also insane luck by the Russian @2:22. The helmet saved his life there, so not all Russian helmets are trash.
Also nice to see, that Ukraine forces chose to retreat because they couldn't take that bunker without losses. You probably never will see something like this from Russia, because they don't care about their own.
Amazing footage as always by the K2 battalion. I guess in part 4, they will capture the bunker.
 
From the prior footage with the drone grenades managing to get right in the bunker they probably thought it would be an easier take. I suspect they return with a few rpg's...
 
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Poor guy @2:08 died because of bad timing. Also insane luck by the Russian @2:22. The helmet saved his life there, so not all Russian helmets are trash.
Also nice to see, that Ukraine forces chose to retreat because they couldn't take that bunker without losses. You probably never will see something like this from Russia, because they don't care about their own.
Amazing footage as always by the K2 battalion. I guess in part 4, they will capture the bunker.

If the helmet saved him it was a fluke as most helmets can't stop high velocity 7.62 or 5.56 rounds.
 
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Poor guy @2:08 died because of bad timing. Also insane luck by the Russian @2:22. The helmet saved his life there, so not all Russian helmets are trash.
Also nice to see, that Ukraine forces chose to retreat because they couldn't take that bunker without losses. You probably never will see something like this from Russia, because they don't care about their own.
Amazing footage as always by the K2 battalion. I guess in part 4, they will capture the bunker.

True, but honestly their plan was really poorly thought through. Get communication with the drone pilot, tell him to inform you once russians are pinned down in the bunker, advance in the trench and throw every grenade you have through the door that seems a couple of meters away from the S shape it forms. They retreated 5mn too late.
 
True, but honestly their plan was really poorly thought through. Get communication with the drone pilot, tell him to inform you once russians are pinned down in the bunker, advance in the trench and throw every grenade you have through the door that seems a couple of meters away from the S shape it forms. They retreated 5mn too late.
It was so unnecessary that that guy lost his life that way, sadly. He was not really keen on covering himself well from the start. I thought they would take that. Showed how brutal the trench battle was and the quality of the troops fighting there in some sense.
 
It was so unnecessary that that guy lost his life that way, sadly. He was not really keen on covering himself well from the start. I thought they would take that. Showed how brutal the trench battle was and the quality of the troops fighting there in some sense.

Yeah, it's pretty sad to see that honestly. They're flying small common drones so the pilot can't be that far, even a regular walkie talkie would do the trick. We're in 2023 and these guys tried to attack a bunker with a couple of grenades by trying to shoot through the embrasure. That's just a terrible idea. Poor lads.
 
Yeah, it's pretty sad to see that honestly. They're flying small common drones so the pilot can't be that far, even a regular walkie talkie would do the trick. We're in 2023 and these guys tried to attack a bunker with a couple of grenades by trying to shoot through the embrasure. That's just a terrible idea. Poor lads.
It made you think about all this 1:6 ratio nonsense going around with highly trained UA troops having big advantage in the field. I wish they were trained and equipped to the point that those ratios were actually true in close combats, and it would demoralize RA faster.
 
It made you think about all this 1:6 ratio nonsense going around with highly trained UA troops having big advantage in the field. I wish they were trained and equipped to the point that those ratios were actually true in close combats, and it would demoralize RA faster.

There's a real possibility russian troops are far worse. I mean their exit from the bunker is pretty laughable as well.
 


Either the Kuznetsov is in Sevastopol or a fuel storage was hit by the Ukrainians.


I think this sort of thing will increase as the Ukrainians begin to soften up Crimea for an eventual takeover at some undefined later date.
 
I think this sort of thing will increase as the Ukrainians begin to soften up Crimea for an eventual takeover at some undefined later date.

Supposedly drones over Belgorod as well. If Ukraine can degrade Russia's supplies in those areas, they'll have to shift supplies from the areas Ukraine can't hit like Rostov to Crimea and Belgorod.

Closer video:

 
It made you think about all this 1:6 ratio nonsense going around with highly trained UA troops having big advantage in the field. I wish they were trained and equipped to the point that those ratios were actually true in close combats, and it would demoralize RA faster.

Well in that particular position, the ratio so far is even much worse for the Russians. Part 1: 10 Russians liquidated, part 2: 7 hits. In part 3, one Ukranian soldier dies. Even if those 7 hits in part 2 resulted in 3-4 deaths, you have a 14:1 ratio so far and we haven't seen part 4 yet.
 
This system, by the looks of it a S-300, should receive a medal at this point :D
 
This system, by the looks of it a S-300, should receive a medal at this point :D

Looks like the back of a command post vehicle for a S-300 battery.

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