Bitcoin Forum
March 25, 2026, 09:14:21 PM *
News: Latest Bitcoin Core release: 30.2 [Torrent]
 
   Home   Help Search Login Register More  
Pages: « 1 ... 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 [443]
  Print  
Author Topic: Russian Invasion of Ukraine[In Progress]  (Read 93031 times)
Branko
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 3024
Merit: 329


View Profile
March 23, 2026, 01:12:43 PM
 #8841

Russian drone usage in march:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fA_QWcc5j8s
Lucius
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3920
Merit: 7276


🛡️Morior Invictus⚔️


View Profile WWW
March 23, 2026, 04:44:10 PM
 #8842

~snip~
True numbers are impossible to find, but Russian SFSR lost exponentially many more in WW2, so it's hilarious to watch "experts" to pretend to act surprised that Russia is willing to sacrifice so much when it's literally how Russia operates.


So it's so bad that you're comforting yourself that you lost more people in WWII than in the 4+ years since you invaded Ukraine? There's no point in publishing any numbers because you'll say that it's all just Western propaganda anyway, and that Russia lost maybe a few thousand people in what you call special military operations.

The fact is that your mad emperor is sending people to slaughter every day and every hour, and almost no one in a country of 150 million people is protesting against it.
---

Do you think they correctly modeled current situation (50% loss of Ukrainian population) in 4 years, when they encouraged Ukraine to go forward with this? Or do you think they were completely incompetent and honestly no one predicted that Russia was willing to take this into a war of attrition and bare such losses.

I think that figure is incorrect, because if we take into account those killed (soldiers and civilians) along with those who left the country, it is difficult for the total to be 20 million people. To me, this seems like bad propaganda from Russia, which has its people everywhere, especially within the EU and the UK.

Someone could have written that since 2014, Russia has lost, say, 50 million people, but such things cannot be verified in a country where there is fear of the government, or in a country that is exposed to aggression.

███████████████████████████
███████▄████████████▄██████
████████▄████████▄████████
███▀█████▀▄███▄▀█████▀███
█████▀█▀▄██▀▀▀██▄▀█▀█████
███████▄███████████▄███████
███████████████████████████
███████▀███████████▀███████
████▄██▄▀██▄▄▄██▀▄██▄████
████▄████▄▀███▀▄████▄████
██▄███▀▀█▀██████▀█▀███▄███
██▀█▀████████████████▀█▀███
███████████████████████████
.
.Duelbits PREDICT..
█████████████████████████
█████████████████████████
███████████▀▀░░░░▀▀██████
██████████░░▄████▄░░████
█████████░░████████░░████
█████████░░████████░░████
█████████▄▀██████▀▄████
████████▀▀░░░▀▀▀▀░░▄█████
██████▀░░░░██▄▄▄▄████████
████▀░░░░▄███████████████
█████▄▄█████████████████
█████████████████████████
█████████████████████████
.
.WHERE EVERYTHING IS A MARKET..
█████
██
██







██
██
██████
Will Bitcoin hit $200,000
before January 1st 2027?

    No @1.15         Yes @6.00    
█████
██
██







██
██
██████

  CHECK MORE > 
LTU_btc
Legendary
*
Online Online

Activity: 3738
Merit: 1526


Slava Ukraini!


View Profile WWW
March 23, 2026, 06:56:27 PM
 #8843

Everything is moving towards the point that the Ukrainian Armed Forces will soon be driven beyond the Dnieper.

Quote
Scott Ritter, a former US Marine Corps intelligence officer and military analyst, has repeatedly predicted that Ukrainian forces will be pushed back, in some scenarios describing them as being forced to cross the Dnieper River.

That's why the bridges across the Dnieper are not burned yet, so that they have the opportunity to escape.

It is also impossible to note the fact that only the most combat-ready units of the Ukrainian Armed Forces are destroyed, while the rest are simply pushed back.
LOL, soon Cheesy. When is that your soon? I looked at map in detail and I' wondering what makes you to think so. Because there is no big changes in front line and no indications that Russians may try to cross Dnipro river But what I should expect when you're using pedophile Scott Ritter as source.

I think that figure is incorrect, because if we take into account those killed (soldiers and civilians) along with those who left the country, it is difficult for the total to be 20 million people. To me, this seems like bad propaganda from Russia, which has its people everywhere, especially within the EU and the UK.

Someone could have written that since 2014, Russia has lost, say, 50 million people, but such things cannot be verified in a country where there is fear of the government, or in a country that is exposed to aggression.
DaRude is spreading random numbers as facts - lol, nothing new. Half of population or 20 millions, even Russian propaganda aren't going with such numbers Cheesy.

▄▄█████████████████▄▄
▄█████████████████████▄
███▀▀█████▀▀░░▀▀███████

██▄░░▀▀░░▄▄██▄░░█████
█████░░░████████░░█████
████▌░▄░░█████▀░░██████
███▌░▐█▌░░▀▀▀▀░░▄██████
███░░▌██░░▄░░▄█████████
███▌░▀▄▀░░█▄░░█████████
████▄░░░▄███▄░░▀▀█▀▀███
██████████████▄▄░░░▄███
▀█████████████████████▀
▀▀█████████████████▀▀
..Rainbet.com..
CRYPTO CASINO & SPORTSBOOK
|
█▄█▄█▄███████▄█▄█▄█
███████████████████
███████████████████
███████████████████
█████▀█▀▀▄▄▄▀██████
█████▀▄▀████░██████
█████░██░█▀▄███████
████▄▀▀▄▄▀███████
█████████▄▀▄██
█████████████████
███████████████████
██████████████████
███████████████████
 
 $20,000 
WEEKLY RAFFLE
|



█████████
█████████ ██
▄▄█░▄░▄█▄░▄░█▄▄
▀██░▐█████▌░██▀
▄█▄░▀▀▀▀▀░▄█▄
▀▀▀█▄▄░▄▄█▀▀▀
▀█▀░▀█▀
10K
WEEKLY
RACE
100K
MONTHLY
RACE
|

██









█████
███████
███████
█▄
██████
████▄▄
█████████████▄
███████████████▄
░▄████████████████▄
▄██████████████████▄
███████████████▀████
██████████▀██████████
██████████████████
░█████████████████▀
░░▀███████████████▀
████▀▀███
███████▀▀
████████████████████   ██
 
..►PLAY...
 
████████   ██████████████
Th
montaga
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 1317
Merit: 310


Freedom, Natural Law


View Profile
March 24, 2026, 05:49:59 AM
Last edit: March 24, 2026, 06:24:56 AM by montaga
 #8844

Russian drone usage in march:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fA_QWcc5j8s

Yes modern warfare is all about drones, including ground drones kaputing out of place persons. No people have been harmed.
https://youtu.be/CM4NlvZUNPU
Payphones are a great hit again, they do wonders. Internal dissident on the rise. Even India arrested 3 shadow fleet ships.
Ukraine has started with writing of the history and call Russians now Muscovy , Muscovites, the original name.
Muscovites used to be able to get Mastercard bank cards in Vietnam, no more.


It is claimed that Ukraine have established air superiority all the way to the sea.


2026 the year of the great awakening all around the world, 2027 the year US change from admiralty law to common law.

𝙰 𝚙𝚞𝚛𝚎𝚕𝚢 𝚙𝚎𝚎𝚛-𝚝𝚘-𝚙𝚎𝚎𝚛 𝚟𝚎𝚛𝚜𝚒𝚘𝚗 𝚘𝚏 𝚎𝚕𝚎𝚌𝚝𝚛𝚘𝚗𝚒𝚌 𝚌𝚊𝚜𝚑 𝚠𝚘𝚞𝚕𝚍 𝚊𝚕𝚕𝚘𝚠 𝚘𝚗𝚕𝚒𝚗𝚎 𝚙𝚊𝚢𝚖𝚎𝚗𝚝𝚜 𝚝𝚘 𝚋𝚎 𝚜𝚎𝚗𝚝 𝚍𝚒𝚛𝚎𝚌𝚝𝚕𝚢 𝚏𝚛𝚘𝚖 𝚘𝚗𝚎 𝚙𝚊𝚛𝚝𝚢 𝚝𝚘 𝚊𝚗𝚘𝚝𝚑𝚎𝚛 𝚠𝚒𝚝𝚑𝚘𝚞𝚝 𝚐𝚘𝚒𝚗𝚐 𝚝𝚑𝚛𝚘𝚞𝚐𝚑 𝚊 𝚏𝚒𝚗𝚊𝚗𝚌𝚒𝚊𝚕 𝚒𝚗𝚜𝚝𝚒𝚝𝚞𝚝𝚒𝚘𝚗.
DaRude
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3301
Merit: 2187


In order to dump coins one must have coins


View Profile
March 24, 2026, 10:03:44 AM
 #8845

~snip~
True numbers are impossible to find, but Russian SFSR lost exponentially many more in WW2, so it's hilarious to watch "experts" to pretend to act surprised that Russia is willing to sacrifice so much when it's literally how Russia operates.


So it's so bad that you're comforting yourself that you lost more people in WWII than in the 4+ years since you invaded Ukraine? There's no point in publishing any numbers because you'll say that it's all just Western propaganda anyway, and that Russia lost maybe a few thousand people in what you call special military operations.

The fact is that your mad emperor is sending people to slaughter every day and every hour, and almost no one in a country of 150 million people is protesting against it.
---

Do you think they correctly modeled current situation (50% loss of Ukrainian population) in 4 years, when they encouraged Ukraine to go forward with this? Or do you think they were completely incompetent and honestly no one predicted that Russia was willing to take this into a war of attrition and bare such losses.

I think that figure is incorrect, because if we take into account those killed (soldiers and civilians) along with those who left the country, it is difficult for the total to be 20 million people. To me, this seems like bad propaganda from Russia, which has its people everywhere, especially within the EU and the UK.

Someone could have written that since 2014, Russia has lost, say, 50 million people, but such things cannot be verified in a country where there is fear of the government, or in a country that is exposed to aggression.

I'm not comforting anyone, just stating obvious facts and historic trends. If we saw French all of a sudden mobilizing, suffering huge losses and going into a war of attrition, think everyone acting surprised/shocked would be justifiable. Generals/politicians/media pushing Ukraine into a war of attrition against Russia, and then acting surprised that Russia is willing to bare such losses in a war that Russia sees as existential for itself, are either lying or completely incompetent. Do you think west's think tanks, ministries of foreign affairs, research institutes, intelligence agencies correctly modeled current scenario 4 years into this conflict?

Sure, everyone must exaggerate opponents losses and minimize their own, by definition. Hard to find true numbers, that's why I'm trying to at least gauge a ratio for losses and so far what i'm seeing is it's close to 1:1. Huge losses on both sides!

There are some protests but as you correctly noted no where near enough for a critical mass, despite others spreading hopium of some imminent political/financial collapse in Russia. Russian elites seem to correctly view loss of Ukraine as an existential threat for Russia, thus they view any means to prevent that as justifiable. Seems obvious, no?

Ok if you don't agree with that assessment, provide a counter one. What do you think is the current population loss in Ukraine since 2013?  

"Feeeeed me Roger!"  -Bcash
cornhodlr
Jr. Member
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 181
Merit: 3


View Profile
March 24, 2026, 01:34:11 PM
 #8846

It looks like the main loser in both the war in Ukraine and Iran is the dead civilian populations of have nots in these countries while the most vulnerable EU citizens get to enjoy an increasingly unbearable cost of living. The only ones to profit are the oligarchs,plutocrats and usual grifter brigade who remain far from the front profiteering and devising more hell for the citizens of the world.
Lucius
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3920
Merit: 7276


🛡️Morior Invictus⚔️


View Profile WWW
March 24, 2026, 05:09:52 PM
 #8847

I'm not comforting anyone, just stating obvious facts and historic trends. If we saw French all of a sudden mobilizing, suffering huge losses and going into a war of attrition, think everyone acting surprised/shocked would be justifiable. Generals/politicians/media pushing Ukraine into a war of attrition against Russia, and then acting surprised that Russia is willing to bare such losses in a war that Russia sees as existential for itself, are either lying or completely incompetent. Do you think west's think tanks, ministries of foreign affairs, research institutes, intelligence agencies correctly modeled current scenario 4 years into this conflict?

Can we agree that Russia attacked Ukraine back in 2014 and occupied part of its territory, and continued to try to occupy more territory from 2022 until today? Ukraine is only defending itself as every attacked country is defending itself, including Iran at the moment. The Russian narrative is that they are running a special military operation against the Nazis who run Ukraine with the help of other Nazis from most of the EU. Didn't this same Russia defeat the Nazis 80+ years ago?

Sure, everyone must exaggerate opponents losses and minimize their own, by definition. Hard to find true numbers, that's why I'm trying to at least gauge a ratio for losses and so far what i'm seeing is it's close to 1:1. Huge losses on both sides!

I would not agree (nor would anyone in the West) that the losses of military personnel (if that's what you mean) are equal on both sides - because the attacking side, as a rule, loses far more people than the defending one. Only Ukraine and Russia know the exact figures, but some international studies say that Ukraine lost around 140 000, while Russia lost over 300 000 soldiers.

The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) last month agreed, estimating that Russia had suffered 1.2 million casualties, including at least 325,000 deaths, from the beginning of the full-scale invasion on February 24, 2022 until December 2025. Ukraine estimated an additional 31,680 Russian casualties in January 2026. The CSIS estimated Ukraine had suffered up to 600,000 casualties, with as many as 140,000 deaths.

There are some protests but as you correctly noted no where near enough for a critical mass, despite others spreading hopium of some imminent political/financial collapse in Russia. Russian elites seem to correctly view loss of Ukraine as an existential threat for Russia, thus they view any means to prevent that as justifiable. Seems obvious, no?

Ok if you don't agree with that assessment, provide a counter one. What do you think is the current population loss in Ukraine since 2013?
 

There are no protests because apparently people from urban centers of Russia are not dying, but poor people from rural areas of Russia and convicts who are trying to survive 6 months at the front to get their freedom. I don't think elites are crucial, it's a matter of politics and obviously enough resources to wage this kind of war for years.

What we do know is that millions of Ukrainians (mostly women and children) have gone to Western Europe - estimates in the same article quoted above put the figure at around 5.9 million, but it should be noted that around 5 million people live or have lived in the occupied territories. The realistic figure is over 10 million if all those killed (civilians and soldiers) and those displaced are taken into account.

███████████████████████████
███████▄████████████▄██████
████████▄████████▄████████
███▀█████▀▄███▄▀█████▀███
█████▀█▀▄██▀▀▀██▄▀█▀█████
███████▄███████████▄███████
███████████████████████████
███████▀███████████▀███████
████▄██▄▀██▄▄▄██▀▄██▄████
████▄████▄▀███▀▄████▄████
██▄███▀▀█▀██████▀█▀███▄███
██▀█▀████████████████▀█▀███
███████████████████████████
.
.Duelbits PREDICT..
█████████████████████████
█████████████████████████
███████████▀▀░░░░▀▀██████
██████████░░▄████▄░░████
█████████░░████████░░████
█████████░░████████░░████
█████████▄▀██████▀▄████
████████▀▀░░░▀▀▀▀░░▄█████
██████▀░░░░██▄▄▄▄████████
████▀░░░░▄███████████████
█████▄▄█████████████████
█████████████████████████
█████████████████████████
.
.WHERE EVERYTHING IS A MARKET..
█████
██
██







██
██
██████
Will Bitcoin hit $200,000
before January 1st 2027?

    No @1.15         Yes @6.00    
█████
██
██







██
██
██████

  CHECK MORE > 
BADecker
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 4466
Merit: 1418


View Profile
March 24, 2026, 08:46:11 PM
 #8848

^^^ Right!

Zelensky is like a chopped off head of a snake. Europe keeps the snake's body wiggling a little for its own purposes. At the rate of decline of the popularity of the warmonger leaders of the West, Russia will take all of Ukraine long before anybody will be able to effectively resist them.


Cool

Covid is snake venom. Dr. Bryan Ardis https://thedrardisshow.com/ - Search on 'Bryan Ardis' at these links https://www.bitchute.com/, https://www.brighteon.com/, https://rumble.com/, https://banned.video/.
DaRude
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3301
Merit: 2187


In order to dump coins one must have coins


View Profile
March 24, 2026, 10:44:27 PM
 #8849

I'm not comforting anyone, just stating obvious facts and historic trends. If we saw French all of a sudden mobilizing, suffering huge losses and going into a war of attrition, think everyone acting surprised/shocked would be justifiable. Generals/politicians/media pushing Ukraine into a war of attrition against Russia, and then acting surprised that Russia is willing to bare such losses in a war that Russia sees as existential for itself, are either lying or completely incompetent. Do you think west's think tanks, ministries of foreign affairs, research institutes, intelligence agencies correctly modeled current scenario 4 years into this conflict?

Can we agree that Russia attacked Ukraine back in 2014 and occupied part of its territory, and continued to try to occupy more territory from 2022 until today? Ukraine is only defending itself as every attacked country is defending itself, including Iran at the moment. The Russian narrative is that they are running a special military operation against the Nazis who run Ukraine with the help of other Nazis from most of the EU. Didn't this same Russia defeat the Nazis 80+ years ago?

Sure, everyone must exaggerate opponents losses and minimize their own, by definition. Hard to find true numbers, that's why I'm trying to at least gauge a ratio for losses and so far what i'm seeing is it's close to 1:1. Huge losses on both sides!

I would not agree (nor would anyone in the West) that the losses of military personnel (if that's what you mean) are equal on both sides - because the attacking side, as a rule, loses far more people than the defending one. Only Ukraine and Russia know the exact figures, but some international studies say that Ukraine lost around 140 000, while Russia lost over 300 000 soldiers.

The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) last month agreed, estimating that Russia had suffered 1.2 million casualties, including at least 325,000 deaths, from the beginning of the full-scale invasion on February 24, 2022 until December 2025. Ukraine estimated an additional 31,680 Russian casualties in January 2026. The CSIS estimated Ukraine had suffered up to 600,000 casualties, with as many as 140,000 deaths.

There are some protests but as you correctly noted no where near enough for a critical mass, despite others spreading hopium of some imminent political/financial collapse in Russia. Russian elites seem to correctly view loss of Ukraine as an existential threat for Russia, thus they view any means to prevent that as justifiable. Seems obvious, no?

Ok if you don't agree with that assessment, provide a counter one. What do you think is the current population loss in Ukraine since 2013?
 

There are no protests because apparently people from urban centers of Russia are not dying, but poor people from rural areas of Russia and convicts who are trying to survive 6 months at the front to get their freedom. I don't think elites are crucial, it's a matter of politics and obviously enough resources to wage this kind of war for years.

What we do know is that millions of Ukrainians (mostly women and children) have gone to Western Europe - estimates in the same article quoted above put the figure at around 5.9 million, but it should be noted that around 5 million people live or have lived in the occupied territories. The realistic figure is over 10 million if all those killed (civilians and soldiers) and those displaced are taken into account.

Sure, after US sponsored/supported a coup detat and removed a democratically elected president of Ukraine in 2013 Russia then used it's military hard power to protect its interests in Ukraine.

Would you agree that Ukraine is fully depended on the west for military, finances, politically and now to even keep its lights on (electricity)? Ukraine essentially became a puppet state, how many hours do you think Ukraine can last without any support from the EU?

Just because something was defeated doesn't mean it can't come back. But sure, Russia is using a very loose definition of Nazism in it's official justification for it's actions in Ukraine. But this it's still exponentially better than US now claiming self defense in Iran.

True, typically attacking side looses more people, and Russia did until it switched to a war of attrition. Even before the overwhelming casualties were caused by artillery and not small arms fire. And i believe everyone agrees that Russia launched many more artillery shells at Ukraine than Ukraine at Russia. Now we're in a drone warfare, where both sides seem to be launching about equal amounts of drones at each other. On top of that, Ukraine is using a tactic of active defense, where Ukraine doesn't just defend but also goes on offensive while also retreating some units. Zaluzhnyi and Zelenskiy are still blaming each other for the failed 2023 Ukrainian counteroffensive, and whatever offensive Ukraine is on now doesn't seem to be working much either.

So we have CSIS, a US based think tank headquartered in Washington DC and sponsored in part by US government and US defense contractors, putting Russian casualties at 2:1 to Ukraine. Fine, let's pretend that it's the most objective source of information and we all believe it, how long do you think Ukraine will be able to keep that up considering Russian population being over 4:1 to Ukraine? And Ukraine already lost almost 25% of it's population according to your numbers?

And how many millions of Ukrainian refugees are in Russia? And finally, how do you feel about people in the west continuing to encourage Ukrainians to fight to the last Ukrainian, seeing the current dynamics? 

"Feeeeed me Roger!"  -Bcash
montaga
Sr. Member
****
Offline Offline

Activity: 1317
Merit: 310


Freedom, Natural Law


View Profile
Today at 05:37:41 AM
Last edit: Today at 06:38:32 AM by montaga
 #8850

.......... Russia will take all of Ukraine long before anybody will be able to effectively resist them.



Yes it will take exactly 3 days. So far the 3 days happened 486 times and counting.

Primorsk Port, 60% of all Russian export still burning 3 days later and fire can be seen from Finland.
https://x.com/i/status/2036509648228917335

Russian Passport has now also died.  🇷🇺 All 100 offices in Moscow to get new passport are "fully booked". Not even possible to make appointment.
Escape made impossible.
Soon Russians over 60 will have to ask for permission to receive calls from abroad.
Bummer, what will Putin do when his stooge Trump calls, will he break the law?

Rights are the greatest unfreedom. The more rights anyone has, the less free they are”

More on Muscovy and Muscovites past https://x.com/i/status/2036677457810719018

Late news:
Boomba, Russia is willing to start trading with the U.S in Dollars again and says they'll stop using B.R.I.C.S currency, China is freaking out
Hungary now cut from sensitive briefings in Brussels because Orbán fed intel to Moscow, mole seat now vacant at the table.



𝙰 𝚙𝚞𝚛𝚎𝚕𝚢 𝚙𝚎𝚎𝚛-𝚝𝚘-𝚙𝚎𝚎𝚛 𝚟𝚎𝚛𝚜𝚒𝚘𝚗 𝚘𝚏 𝚎𝚕𝚎𝚌𝚝𝚛𝚘𝚗𝚒𝚌 𝚌𝚊𝚜𝚑 𝚠𝚘𝚞𝚕𝚍 𝚊𝚕𝚕𝚘𝚠 𝚘𝚗𝚕𝚒𝚗𝚎 𝚙𝚊𝚢𝚖𝚎𝚗𝚝𝚜 𝚝𝚘 𝚋𝚎 𝚜𝚎𝚗𝚝 𝚍𝚒𝚛𝚎𝚌𝚝𝚕𝚢 𝚏𝚛𝚘𝚖 𝚘𝚗𝚎 𝚙𝚊𝚛𝚝𝚢 𝚝𝚘 𝚊𝚗𝚘𝚝𝚑𝚎𝚛 𝚠𝚒𝚝𝚑𝚘𝚞𝚝 𝚐𝚘𝚒𝚗𝚐 𝚝𝚑𝚛𝚘𝚞𝚐𝚑 𝚊 𝚏𝚒𝚗𝚊𝚗𝚌𝚒𝚊𝚕 𝚒𝚗𝚜𝚝𝚒𝚝𝚞𝚝𝚒𝚘𝚗.
BADecker
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 4466
Merit: 1418


View Profile
Today at 06:31:24 AM
 #8851

.......... Russia will take all of Ukraine long before anybody will be able to effectively resist them.



Yes it will take exactly 3 days. So far the 3 days happened 486 times and counting.

Primorsk Port, 60% of all Russian export still burning 3 days later and fire can be seen from Finland.
https://x.com/i/status/2036509648228917335

Russian Passport has now also died.  🇷🇺 All 100 offices in Moscow to get new passport are "fully booked". Not even possible to make appointment.
Escape made impossible.
Soon Russians over 60 will have to ask for permission to receive calls from abroad.
Bummer, what will Putin do when his stooge Trump calls, will he break the law?


Rights are the greatest unfreedom. The more rights anyone has, the less free they are”

More on Muscovy and Muscovites past https://x.com/i/status/2036677457810719018


So you think it will take exactly 3 days, right? I think that nobody knows what the final result will be.

It seems that Russia is taking a beating from the EU. From the EU, because Ukraine on its own doesn't have any strength left. It also seems that the beating hasn't stopped Russia's conquering of Ukraine. But Ukraine's subsistence doesn't have much to do with Ukraine's ability to resist. The war is between the West and Russia.

As far as what is going on in Iran, nobody is sure if the US will have better final results than Russia. But whatever happens there, will affect how Russia acts in Ukraine to some extent.

Putin and others in Russia had long hoped that Ukraine would let Russia have its own land back peacefully, so that there would be little loss of life. But Zelensky doesn't seem to care about life, one way or the other... as long as he makes his money.


Cool

Covid is snake venom. Dr. Bryan Ardis https://thedrardisshow.com/ - Search on 'Bryan Ardis' at these links https://www.bitchute.com/, https://www.brighteon.com/, https://rumble.com/, https://banned.video/.
DaRude
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3301
Merit: 2187


In order to dump coins one must have coins


View Profile
Today at 07:20:06 AM
 #8852

...
I think that figure is incorrect, because if we take into account those killed (soldiers and civilians) along with those who left the country, it is difficult for the total to be 20 million people. To me, this seems like bad propaganda from Russia, which has its people everywhere, especially within the EU and the UK.

Someone could have written that since 2014, Russia has lost, say, 50 million people, but such things cannot be verified in a country where there is fear of the government, or in a country that is exposed to aggression.
DaRude is spreading random numbers as facts - lol, nothing new. Half of population or 20 millions, even Russian propaganda aren't going with such numbers Cheesy.

Unlike you, i cite my sources and this one is from The New Statesman (https://www.newstatesman.com/international-content/2026/03/the-new-world-war) if you have an issues with them spreading random numbers you can contact the editor Will Lloyd or escalate to his executive editor or contact their fact checking department. Good luck trying to discredit The New Statesman

"Feeeeed me Roger!"  -Bcash
BADecker
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 4466
Merit: 1418


View Profile
Today at 12:26:15 PM
 #8853

...
I think that figure is incorrect, because if we take into account those killed (soldiers and civilians) along with those who left the country, it is difficult for the total to be 20 million people. To me, this seems like bad propaganda from Russia, which has its people everywhere, especially within the EU and the UK.

Someone could have written that since 2014, Russia has lost, say, 50 million people, but such things cannot be verified in a country where there is fear of the government, or in a country that is exposed to aggression.
DaRude is spreading random numbers as facts - lol, nothing new. Half of population or 20 millions, even Russian propaganda aren't going with such numbers Cheesy.

Unlike you, i cite my sources and this one is from The New Statesman (https://www.newstatesman.com/international-content/2026/03/the-new-world-war) if you have an issues with them spreading random numbers you can contact the editor Will Lloyd or escalate to his executive editor or contact their fact checking department. Good luck trying to discredit The New Statesman

When I click on DaRude's link, above, I get a website that shows only a small part of the article. The website wants me to sign up to see the rest of the article.  So here is what I did.

- I copied the wording "Mykhed, dressed" from the article website.
- Then I depressed the Control button on the keyboard and clicked the letter "u." This opened the source page of the website.
- Then I enlarged the source page so I could read it better.
- Then I searched on the words I had copied, "Mykhed, dressed."
- Then I scrolled down and finished reading the article with the website 'html' programming language around the wording... in the source page.

That way I didn't have to sign up for the website. If they see what I did, they might change the website. So, look soon if you want to see it before they change it.


Cool


EDIT: Looks like Russia has added jet engines to some of their drones.

Covid is snake venom. Dr. Bryan Ardis https://thedrardisshow.com/ - Search on 'Bryan Ardis' at these links https://www.bitchute.com/, https://www.brighteon.com/, https://rumble.com/, https://banned.video/.
Lucius
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3920
Merit: 7276


🛡️Morior Invictus⚔️


View Profile WWW
Today at 03:24:24 PM
 #8854

~snip~
So we have CSIS, a US based think tank headquartered in Washington DC and sponsored in part by US government and US defense contractors, putting Russian casualties at 2:1 to Ukraine. Fine, let's pretend that it's the most objective source of information and we all believe it, how long do you think Ukraine will be able to keep that up considering Russian population being over 4:1 to Ukraine? And Ukraine already lost almost 25% of it's population according to your numbers?

And how many millions of Ukrainian refugees are in Russia? And finally, how do you feel about people in the west continuing to encourage Ukrainians to fight to the last Ukrainian, seeing the current dynamics? 

Russians only trust Russian sources, right? That's why I wrote that there's no point in citing any sources (unless they're Russian). Even if we agree that the side that attacks loses a lot more soldiers than the side that defends, you will still claim that the losses on both sides are equal, but I didn't even expect otherwise.

It is completely pointless to compare the populations of Ukraine and Russia in this context, because Russians generally have to be "motivated" to go to war, while most Ukrainians defend their country and are paid around $500 per month. Therefore, in my opinion, every Ukrainian with a rifle in his hand is worth at least 5 poorly motivated Russians who go to war because they are paid for it, and in addition they loot everything they can get their hands on.

The majority of Europeans will support Ukraine as long as necessary, in any way - because we consider Ukraine to be part of the EU (still unofficially). I survived a similar war that your Serb brothers started, they didn't give us even a 1% chance of success, but David defeated Goliath again. I think most Ukrainians live by the old saying "better a grave than a slave".

███████████████████████████
███████▄████████████▄██████
████████▄████████▄████████
███▀█████▀▄███▄▀█████▀███
█████▀█▀▄██▀▀▀██▄▀█▀█████
███████▄███████████▄███████
███████████████████████████
███████▀███████████▀███████
████▄██▄▀██▄▄▄██▀▄██▄████
████▄████▄▀███▀▄████▄████
██▄███▀▀█▀██████▀█▀███▄███
██▀█▀████████████████▀█▀███
███████████████████████████
.
.Duelbits PREDICT..
█████████████████████████
█████████████████████████
███████████▀▀░░░░▀▀██████
██████████░░▄████▄░░████
█████████░░████████░░████
█████████░░████████░░████
█████████▄▀██████▀▄████
████████▀▀░░░▀▀▀▀░░▄█████
██████▀░░░░██▄▄▄▄████████
████▀░░░░▄███████████████
█████▄▄█████████████████
█████████████████████████
█████████████████████████
.
.WHERE EVERYTHING IS A MARKET..
█████
██
██







██
██
██████
Will Bitcoin hit $200,000
before January 1st 2027?

    No @1.15         Yes @6.00    
█████
██
██







██
██
██████

  CHECK MORE > 
LTU_btc
Legendary
*
Online Online

Activity: 3738
Merit: 1526


Slava Ukraini!


View Profile WWW
Today at 06:18:46 PM
 #8855

Unlike you, i cite my sources and this one is from The New Statesman (https://www.newstatesman.com/international-content/2026/03/the-new-world-war) if you have an issues with them spreading random numbers you can contact the editor Will Lloyd or escalate to his executive editor or contact their fact checking department. Good luck trying to discredit The New Statesman
I don't know what's exactly written in this article because it's under paywall. But from your quote it looks that their source is unknown Brittish offiacial in Ukraine. So, I would say this is ''Trust me bro'' level of source.
It's first time when I hear such numbers. 20 millions, where are these people are gone. According to public data there is between 5 and 6 millions Ukrainian refugees in Russia and estimated 1.5 milliion in Europe. Where is rest 12-13 millions? Killed in war. Even Russian is their wildest dreamsaren't telling such numbers.
What is actual population of Ukraine. It's very difficult to tell it under war conditions. But if you exclude occupied regions, these numbers still won't go below 30 millions.

▄▄█████████████████▄▄
▄█████████████████████▄
███▀▀█████▀▀░░▀▀███████

██▄░░▀▀░░▄▄██▄░░█████
█████░░░████████░░█████
████▌░▄░░█████▀░░██████
███▌░▐█▌░░▀▀▀▀░░▄██████
███░░▌██░░▄░░▄█████████
███▌░▀▄▀░░█▄░░█████████
████▄░░░▄███▄░░▀▀█▀▀███
██████████████▄▄░░░▄███
▀█████████████████████▀
▀▀█████████████████▀▀
..Rainbet.com..
CRYPTO CASINO & SPORTSBOOK
|
█▄█▄█▄███████▄█▄█▄█
███████████████████
███████████████████
███████████████████
█████▀█▀▀▄▄▄▀██████
█████▀▄▀████░██████
█████░██░█▀▄███████
████▄▀▀▄▄▀███████
█████████▄▀▄██
█████████████████
███████████████████
██████████████████
███████████████████
 
 $20,000 
WEEKLY RAFFLE
|



█████████
█████████ ██
▄▄█░▄░▄█▄░▄░█▄▄
▀██░▐█████▌░██▀
▄█▄░▀▀▀▀▀░▄█▄
▀▀▀█▄▄░▄▄█▀▀▀
▀█▀░▀█▀
10K
WEEKLY
RACE
100K
MONTHLY
RACE
|

██









█████
███████
███████
█▄
██████
████▄▄
█████████████▄
███████████████▄
░▄████████████████▄
▄██████████████████▄
███████████████▀████
██████████▀██████████
██████████████████
░█████████████████▀
░░▀███████████████▀
████▀▀███
███████▀▀
████████████████████   ██
 
..►PLAY...
 
████████   ██████████████
Th
DaRude
Legendary
*
Offline Offline

Activity: 3301
Merit: 2187


In order to dump coins one must have coins


View Profile
Today at 07:56:50 PM
 #8856

~snip~
So we have CSIS, a US based think tank headquartered in Washington DC and sponsored in part by US government and US defense contractors, putting Russian casualties at 2:1 to Ukraine. Fine, let's pretend that it's the most objective source of information and we all believe it, how long do you think Ukraine will be able to keep that up considering Russian population being over 4:1 to Ukraine? And Ukraine already lost almost 25% of it's population according to your numbers?

And how many millions of Ukrainian refugees are in Russia? And finally, how do you feel about people in the west continuing to encourage Ukrainians to fight to the last Ukrainian, seeing the current dynamics?  

Russians only trust Russian sources, right? That's why I wrote that there's no point in citing any sources (unless they're Russian). Even if we agree that the side that attacks loses a lot more soldiers than the side that defends, you will still claim that the losses on both sides are equal, but I didn't even expect otherwise.

It is completely pointless to compare the populations of Ukraine and Russia in this context, because Russians generally have to be "motivated" to go to war, while most Ukrainians defend their country and are paid around $500 per month. Therefore, in my opinion, every Ukrainian with a rifle in his hand is worth at least 5 poorly motivated Russians who go to war because they are paid for it, and in addition they loot everything they can get their hands on.

The majority of Europeans will support Ukraine as long as necessary, in any way - because we consider Ukraine to be part of the EU (still unofficially). I survived a similar war that your Serb brothers started, they didn't give us even a 1% chance of success, but David defeated Goliath again. I think most Ukrainians live by the old saying "better a grave than a slave".

Sources are sources, you just have to know their bias and adjust for that.

Sure, we can have different opinions but the difference seems to be between 1:1 what i claim and 2:1 what you claim. Even the best case still doesn't look good for Ukraine.

Right, just like every motivated Afghani, Iraqi, Libyan, Iranian... was worth 10 US soldiers just because they were motivated to protect their land right, solid logic! There's is your opinion and then there's what's really happening in the world. It's been years since Ukrainians were volunteering for military, Ukraine long had to resort to busification to find souls for the front lines, unsurprisingly "busified" soldiers are not very motivated and just ran away the first chance they get. Look up how much Russian soldiers get paid before talking about looting. And stop spreading fake news!

January 16, 2026 Inside Ukraine's AWOL and military desertion crisis. The spike in AWOL and desertion comes as Ukraine faces a deepening infantry shortage on the front line, allowing Russian troops to probe and advance in thinly manned sectors.

March 25, 2026-As Russia's full-scale war against Ukraine enters its fifth year, manpower continues to be the most pressing issue for Kyiv.

While Russia continues to be able to recruit tens of thousands of soldiers voluntarily through lucrative sign-up bonuses, Ukraine's ongoing forced mobilization — a necessity in an existential war — has put increased pressure on state and society internally.

Falling motivation among draftees, exacerbated by shortcomings in the mobilization and training process, as well as in the units themselves, has led to surging AWOL and desertion rates over 2025, according to figures published by the Prosecutor General's Office.

In the changing environment of the drone-saturated battlefield, soldiers serving in the infantry — almost all forcefully mobilized at this stage of the war — are often forced to spend months at a time on combat positions, as rotations are made impossible both by Russian drone control logistics routes, and by the lack of infantrymen ready to replace them.

And this is from The Kyiv Independent! So adjust for their bias to you'll get the real idea of what's happening! Who could've thought that retreating for over 4 years wouldn't motivate soldiers  Roll Eyes



Unlike you, i cite my sources and this one is from The New Statesman (https://www.newstatesman.com/international-content/2026/03/the-new-world-war) if you have an issues with them spreading random numbers you can contact the editor Will Lloyd or escalate to his executive editor or contact their fact checking department. Good luck trying to discredit The New Statesman
I don't know what's exactly written in this article because it's under paywall. But from your quote it looks that their source is unknown Brittish offiacial in Ukraine. So, I would say this is ''Trust me bro'' level of source.
It's first time when I hear such numbers. 20 millions, where are these people are gone. According to public data there is between 5 and 6 millions Ukrainian refugees in Russia and estimated 1.5 milliion in Europe. Where is rest 12-13 millions? Killed in war. Even Russian is their wildest dreamsaren't telling such numbers.
What is actual population of Ukraine. It's very difficult to tell it under war conditions. But if you exclude occupied regions, these numbers still won't go below 30 millions.


The new world war
Why the battle for Iran and Ukraine is coming for us all
By Will Lloyd

“You are talking about this like it’s over,” the author Oleksandr Mykhed said when we met in central Kyiv last month. In a more bookish era Mykhed would be a famous man. His The Language of War (2024) is a landmark of conflict literature, an extended scream of pain, a rare war book written from the perspective of a soldier defending their homeland from invasion. I had asked him about the future of Ukraine, Europe and the West. About peace. He hated the question. The future was no more than a “luxury”, something “impatient” Westerners imagined while Ukrainians were raped, kidnapped, bombed, burned and droned.

Mykhed, dressed head-to-toe in clerical black, was scowling over his coffee, dead tired. Everyone was dead tired in Kyiv this winter. We were a short walk from the Maidan, ground zero of the revolution, where today a section of the square pays tribute to the soldiers killed fighting the invasion. The images of the young men’s faces, the miniature Ukrainian flags, the insignia and laminated love letters – they were all covered by blue snow and hard frost, their faces hard to see, buried for a second time.

“Our Western partners are gung-ho, saying ‘woo-hoo, keep on going’,” Mykhed told me. “But we are not OK.” He likened the war to a chronic illness. This war entered your bones, like arthritis. I could hear the Ukrainians around me creaking. But that didn’t mean the war was nearly over, or that a peace deal would be struck. Arthritis isn’t fatal. The war was in the bones of this country, and in those that refused to flee, men like Mykhed. Ukraine was a militarised society, a laboratory for some of the most sophisticated weaponry in human history, funded by allies abroad; a garrison state, “a big Israel” where every activity pulled towards survival.

Mykhed wanted to know if Europeans understood this. Ukrainians would survive, he argued. They always did. But would Europeans when the war came for them? Everything we thought we knew about the world order has been violently upended. Now the war was spreading, germ-like, warping those it touched.

What had begun as a street protest against a corrupt government on the Maidan in 2013 had taken Ukraine, and eventually Europe, into a new security reality. A war waged with circuits made in China, drones designed by Iranians and mercenaries drawn from Colombia and Cameroon, North Korea and Tajikistan. The war was fought in Ukraine, but likely to be decided by drab industrial parks in Shenzhen and production lines in Massachusetts and anonymous offices in Düsseldorf.

I came to the war late, first visiting at the end of 2024, with the advent of the second Donald Trump presidency. I wrote stories about smuggling and alarming demographic decline, about volunteers who exclaimed they would fight for the next thousand years if they had to. I witnessed Europe’s early hope and energy begin to curdle and move elsewhere: to Gaza and Greenland, Venezuela and now Iran. The world was a mess, expensive munitions for advanced air defence platforms were running low and needed everywhere from Kyiv to Tel Aviv to Abu Dhabi; Ukraine was not a front-page story any more. There was no romance to be found in the front line in the east, where men hunted each other with FPV drones across ruined forests and shattered villages. The same image, the same blood, the same nation. Shrug. A terrible thing was happening somewhere far away. This war, as grotesque and strange as a Max Ernst canvas, was becoming normal even as it transformed the rest of the world in ways it barely understood.

As the fourth anniversary of the invasion approached last month, Zelensky inflated his rhetoric. He used the same formulation I had heard countless times from Ukrainians every time I visited. This was not a conflict between Ukraine and Russia any longer, if it had ever been that to begin with. These were, Zelensky told the BBC in February, the first years of the Third World War.

“People think this is the third act,” Mykhed told me as we sat in a café, in ice-bound Kyiv. “But you should think of this as the first act.”

Ukraine awakened extraordinary hopes in a generation of European leaders. As Russian rockets fell across Ukraine on 24 February 2022, signalling the start of the invasion, Volodymyr Zelensky was told by his allies in the West he had hours to escape. But Zelensky did not move, and all those predictions of collapse were swiftly, surprisingly, bloodily falsified.

Historians will recognise that as the moment when the energy appeared; everything started to move. The German chancellor struck a term on 27 February: Zeitenwende. Literally the moment when “times turn”. This shocking, euphoric energy was propelling us from one period of history into another.

In the early weeks of the war, so many British citizens drove vans full of aid to the Polish border that Ben Wallace, then the defence secretary, had to ask with some tact that people send money instead. A few hundred miles away, near the village of Liubymivka, in the Kherson Oblast – this is a story Ukrainians still laugh about today – local Gypsies purloined an abandoned Russian tank, one of many left rotting around Ukraine by Vladimir Putin’s hapless armies. The Gypsies have stolen a tank: the phrase became the punchline of patriotic memes, a tagline for cash-in retail goods. Clips of born-in-the-USSR Russian incompetence electrified social networks. This was warfare as knockabout viral entertainment: ubiquitous images of death, spun for a laugh and viewed from a safe distance. No war ever seemed to cost so little.

As the spring of 2022 saw the Russian blitzkrieg falter, this utterly harmonious communal energy spread across the West. One voice spoke from podiums in the White House and Berlaymont and No 10 Downing Street. The voice said that we would not allow the encroachment of the Russian world beyond its borders.

The crusading energy generated a new, brief faith in ourselves, even in Boris Johnson. Our capabilities, our diplomacy, our technology, our sanctions packages, our intelligence services, our rules-based liberal order. You were either with us inside the Swift international payments system or with them inside the Russkiy Mir. “A battle between democracy and autocracy,” said the then US president, an ailing but seemingly decent man. A wall of money, military hardware and intelligence support moved towards eastern Europe.

We didn’t even have to fight. The Ukrainians would do that for us. Ukrainians funded by Western treasure and armed with Western technology. “We Ukrainians have ended up in a time and place where the planet’s future literally depends on us,” wrote the author-turned-soldier Artem Chapeye in early 2022. “We’re the guardians of the fucking galaxy.” Has a heavier burden been placed on a people in our lifetimes?

On 29 March 2022 the Kremlin announced that Russian troops were “repositioning” from the north of Ukraine to Donbas. As they withdrew from Kyiv, Cherniv, Kharkiv and Sumy atrocities were uncovered. Hundreds of dead civilians shot by Russian troops in the Kyiv commuter town of Bucha, with many showing signs of torture and rape. Other once-anonymous towns soon became similarly infamous: Bakhmut, Sievierodonetsk, Maryinka, Rubizhne, Volnovakha, Lyman, Izyum. Ukraine, unlike Iraq and Afghanistan, Syria and Libya, was a good war, a morally clean war, giving a precious gift to Europe’s leaders they could not get from governing their own countries: meaning, valour, solemnity, glory.

Yet that was not how it looked in Kyiv this winter, where the congealed violence of four years of war had transformed the country into something many in Europe no longer want to think about: a war of extermination fought between two militarised societies barely two days’ drive from Dover.

“You begin to perceive war more professionally, as a type of activity,” Brigadier General Andrii Biletskyi told the flagship ICTV news show Facts on 6 February as I watched from my room in Kharkiv. Biletskyi is the commander of the 40,000-strong 3rd Separate Assault Brigade, a powerful volunteer formation that he claims has the lowest number of soldiers going absent without official leave in Ukraine. “At first war is a challenge, it’s a battle, it’s an emotion… but people can’t burn all the time, endlessly.”

The energy was gone in the West, but it had left Ukraine transformed. The national flag was, wherever I went, joined by the red-and-black flag of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army. Ukraine was a society that experienced a revolution and then rapidly militarised itself, closer to France in the 1790s or the USSR in the 1930s than anything in Western Europe. (Crucially though, Ukraine remained a democracy.) The most radical Ukrainians were always the happiest Ukrainians. Nataliya Zubar is a nationalist I met in Kharkiv, an organiser and an activist whose grandfather secretly spoke Ukrainian to her in the dark winters of the USSR, telling her this war would come one day. Now, it was everything to her, wish-fulfilment on a barely believable scale. To see Ukrainians, armed, dangerous, radicalised – truly, this was her dream come true. “We are building the Ukrainian nation,” she said. The power in the café we were sitting in came and went. “When this war is over Putin will have some place as a hero, as someone who united this nation. I’m sure I’m not the only one who has told you that.”

Volodymyr Matsokin wakes up every morning at 5.30am. The deputy mayor of Izyum helps his wife turn on the heating in their home, then begins his daily rounds. He’s responsible for healthcare in the city. Check the hospitals, check the pregnant women, check the elderly, the sick, the parents with suffering children. The heating went down across the town yesterday. There is a kind of tiredness you see in Ukrainians like Matsokin, a special kind of tiredness that makes people turn grey. “The day never ends,” he said in his office, a spartan room decorated with a single portrait of the writer Taras Shevchenko in a brick municipal building flecked with shell damage, on 3 February. He likens himself to a “firefighter”. Matsokin said his town was “invincible”. But the fires around Izyum never go out.

Izyum, a city on the Siverskyi Donets River in Kharkiv Oblast, used to be home to 45,000 people. It’s close to Donbas to the east. Further north is Kharkiv, further south the strategically vital fortress towns of Sloviansk and Kramatorsk, much desired by the Kremlin. Izyum, Matsokin said, has lost about half its population since 2022. The city was occupied by the Russians between April and September that year, after they had destroyed an estimated 80 per cent of its buildings during bitter fighting at the start of the war. After the invaders were forced out that autumn a mass grave was discovered on the forested outskirts of the city.

“There are not enough fingers on my hands to count the number of people who were tortured or killed”, Matsokin, a bald, squat, spectacled man in his fifties, said flatly. Ukrainian investigators eventually uncovered 447 bodies.

Since 2022 the city’s population has stabilised at around 27,000, including 2,000 children. A lot of life, particularly schooling and healthcare, goes on underground, as it does elsewhere in eastern and southern Ukraine. New apartment blocks are being constructed, slowly. The streets in Izyum are webbed with anti-drone shields made from donated European fisherman’s plastic nets. These were being stretched out and strung around tall metal poles all over Kharkiv Oblast in February. I never knew whether these made much of a difference with drones, but they did catch birds, crows usually, which froze and hung like dead flies above the roads.

In 2022 Izyum had fallen to the Russians. Some in the city, assuming the conquest was permanent, switched their allegiances. Halyna Ivanova, the director of the local history museum, has been collecting evidence of the occupation since 2022. She could “forgive but not forget” what happened in those months. Occupation bent people you thought you understood into new shapes. “My best friend wouldn’t share half a loaf of bread with me,” Ivanova sighed. “Whereas one of my neighbours, an alcoholic who I didn’t know very well, used to give me food.”

A short, phlegmatic woman with a black bowl cut, Ivanova was particularly proud of one room. Her “museum of occupation” collected everything the Russians left behind. There, hanging from the ceiling, was half a Shahed-136 wing, from the same simple Iranian-made drone currently throwing the global economy into disarray and menacing the British in Cyprus. Below the drone were remains of cluster munitions, military uniforms and helmets, ration packs and brands of cigarettes that Ivanova, in her sixties, hadn’t seen since the fall of the USSR. She pointed to a box of ammunition with labels written in Mandarin.

Ivanova passed me a wooden crutch the invaders had left behind. It looked like it was made around the same time Tolstoy was reporting on the Crimean War. The Russians had invaded carrying antiques and maps of eastern Ukraine from the 1980s. Their rations were minimal, their uniforms were cheap, and the soldiers in them were rustics from Dagestan, Buryatia, Volgograd and Bashkortostan. Poor men out for a pay cheque and violent sprees. Ivanova showed me a crudely fashioned wooden medal – a joke? – awarded, according to its Cyrillic inscription, “for all this shit”.

In that exhibit, in the stories of occupation Ivanova relayed to me over many hours by the tiny heater in her office, you could feel that Russia’s war was a despairing howl against decline driven by the logic of rape and plunder.

Soon spring thaws would turn the ice around Izyum to mud. The Russians call the mud rasputitsa; it would help them, just as the winter helped them. It was Mykhed who pointed this out to me, the pagan belief the Russians had in snow and frost and mud to save their misfiring armies. In a few weeks’ time the ice would melt, the rains would start and the dust and the mud would coat the remains of women and men and the wreckage of the drones and missiles that killed them in Kharkiv Oblast. A thousand miles south, meanwhile, the drones would begin to land in the Gulf; an Arab spring offering diplomatic opportunities – and dangers – for Zelensky’s war-ravaged Ukraine of a kind not yet perceivable.

One freezing morning in early February, as the air around the city briefly rang with the sorties of war planes, we took a trip to a wooded training ground near the front line. The man escorting us there was a communications officer in the 3rd Separate Assault Brigade, call sign “Disney”. He wasn’t a natural soldier. As we drove deeper into the forest, Disney occasionally broke up his long, chatty answers on the role of the United States in this conflict and the demanding technical knowledge now required of his colleagues in an age of rampant drone warfare to admit, quite simply, that he missed driving his car around Kyiv at night, drinking coffee and chatting up girls.

It was -21C when we left the vehicle in a clearing surrounded by pine trees. A couple of pick-up trucks were already parked nearby. Eight soldiers of the 3rd’s Unmanned Ground Vehicle (UGV) Company were there, preparing to test their new kit. Icicles hung off their facial hair. One of the men, irritated, scratched at his eye: the lids had been frosted shut.

The 3rd wanted to show us their latest toy: a remote-controlled box the size of a large fridge, a vehicle they used for evacuating casualties, for delivering pizza to the men bored in their foxholes and for gunning down Russians with 12.7mm machine guns. What the 3rd are doing with the UGVs was groundbreaking, Disney claimed. There was no rulebook, no real record of using these machines in combat, no accepted tactical doctrine for their deployment. Their caterpillar tracks crunched in the distance. “We are making history here,” Disney chuckled, shifting his weight from foot to foot, a cigarette in the corner of his mouth, half-soldier, half-salesman.

This cost-effective capacity to build, operate and kill with drones has become a hallmark of the Ukrainian resistance since 2022. Small teams of engineers working at speed have changed the face of warfare. Ukrainians had worked out how to fight a larger enemy with less manpower in appalling demographic circumstances while millions fled the country. Drones were the weapons for a century in which fewer and fewer countries had a fertility rate above replacement level.

Such advanced drone warfare is seen as Ukraine’s gift to the West. “For us, this is like oil,” Zelensky told reporters on 15 March. “The production of modern drones and Ukraine’s relevant expertise is today’s Ukrainian oil.” That was the offer Zelensky made to the Gulf as the Iran war began last month. You only had to talk to the soldiers in the 3rd about their experiences training with Nato armies – the Nato guys had no idea what they were doing any more – to realise how far four years of conflict had pushed the Ukrainians in fighting terms. They were in 1918; the rest of us were in 1913.

The machines were less interesting than the men who made them function. While the average age of a Ukrainian soldier is reportedly 43, the volunteers in the 3rd skewed much younger, usually around the twenties. They were vividly unlike their grandfathers, farmers who grumblingly acquiesced to the Soviet imperium, more familiar with tractor engines than automatic rifles and FPV drones. In the space of a single generation the Ukrainian male had transformed. He no longer resembled a peasant farmer but a cossack.

The men in the 3rd styled themselves as such: long, whiskery moustaches and closely shaven heads save for the long locks of black hair left to dangle at the back. They were ultra-nationalists too, a fact testified by the Scandinavian runes they tattooed around their arms and up their necks. Russian propaganda calls these men Nazis. They do, of course, dispute that. They – these warriors, engineers, mechanics, software developers, drone operators – are easily among the most admired men in Ukraine, educated and transformed by revolution and war. What was the future balance of power like in a continent where 40,000 men like this existed, trained and armed to kill with advanced weaponry? What happened if their hopes were disappointed after the war?

The 3rd has its roots in the Azov Battalion, a volunteer unit of radical ultra-nationalists formed by Biletskyi and others when the war in the east with Russian-backed separatists began in 2014. Biletskyi, who has been a politician before, likely has a political future ahead of him should the war ever finish. The 3rd’s distinctive orange-and-black marketing is a feature of every city and town in Ukraine I have reported from in the last three years. In Izyum this took the form of banners that starkly called for “REVENGE”. Often, the fiery posters and banners featured Biletskyi, whose ferociously blank expression now loomed over buildings across the country.

Combining logistics, technology, public relations, and ideological partisanship, the 3rd can look to an outsider less like a formation in a national armed unit than a paramilitary force. When I interviewed Biletskyi’s men, they spoke of him using his full name and title whatever the context of the conversation. Our Brigadier General Andrii Biletskyi says. Our Brigadier General Andrii Biletskyi taught us. Our Brigadier General Andrii Biletskyi is a student of history. I thought little of this before a Ukrainian friend mentioned how unsettled it made them feel. It was strange to use the full name, they said, as if they were back at a political meeting in the days of the USSR.

“There is a dark side to war, and anyone who says otherwise is lying,” Biletskyi declared in 2018, speaking at the launch of a Ukrainian translation of a work by the German conservative writer and war veteran Ernst Jünger. “Why was Jünger read with enthusiasm? Because there is another truth of war; when from nothing complete powerlessness, chaos, new truths, new forms, new orders are born.”

There were new forms all around us in the forest. Cossacks who had stepped out of the pages of a Ukrainian fairy tale were tinkering with advanced robots belonging to steampunk fantasies. As these hardened ultra-nationalists shared cigarettes with each other, I was struck by the irony that they were not just defending their homes but all of liberal Europe. And, perhaps, soon, much of the rest of the Allied-American world.

When the war began in February 2022, I started to note down the ways British officials described it in private. Back then the war in Ukraine was what it remains: a war for independence; a liberation struggle; an anti-colonial defence of freedom and nation. But such struggles, waged in defence of a homeland, transform the homeland in the process.

Before I returned in February a British official told me that Ukraine’s population, which had been estimated at just over 40 million in 2014, had shrunk to something like 20 million by 2025, significantly less than most estimates in the public domain. What would be left after this war, if it ever ended?

Not everything made exact sense in Ukraine this winter. One afternoon my friend took me to the outskirts of Kharkiv: I had to meet a guy there. He was in his sixties and he lived alone in a 16-storey Soviet apartment block. The top of the building had been chewed up by a Russian missile in 2022. Snow filled the empty floors. The building smelled of rotten concrete. The man’s only company was a dog outside chained to a crate and the circling crows in the grey sky.

This man, the Robinson Crusoe of the block, had no electricity and no heating. He cooked with a camp stove, collected food from a local charity and smelled unwashed, sour. I felt very sorry for him. He was trying to exist. What else could he do? He took me to a window, with panoramic views of the edge of the city, out into the flat, frozen white countryside. His bottom lip trembled while he spoke. He was tense, on the edge of something bad, trying not to cry.

Over the edge of the horizon was the front line. The teams of men coldly eyeing their live feeds in bunkers, busily assassinating each other with drones, then posting the results online. The netting hung with dead birds all along the roads. The schools where children learned underground, as if they were surviving a nuclear winter. The old men and women who froze in their apartments and had to be cut out from them once their neighbours realised what had happened. The war had pulled the US and Europe apart, invented a whole new machinery of death, underlined our dependence on brutal petro-states, flooded this corner of eastern Europe with several generations’ worth of weapons. It had killed and radicalised and burned and exposed whatever it touched. It was hard to express any of this in words. I stared out of the window with the old, broken man, watching the snow fall.

Donald Trump and Benjamin Netanyahu launched their war on Iran a few days after I returned from Kyiv. Turkey, the keystone that sits directly between Ukraine and Iran, may yet be pulled into it. The vengeful Iranian Shaheds, so familiar to Ukrainians after four years of nightly terror, now rained down all over the Gulf. There were rumours that they were being mass-produced in China. Taken aback by the violent efficiency of the Iranian counterattack, Trump was demanding a Western armada enter the Gulf. War was spreading. Act I.

The damage to energy storage, terminals, refineries and pipelines around the region threatened to plunge the world into another recession, toppling governments, immiserating millions. They would learn what it felt like to be Ukrainian. They may come to understand that the Ukrainian experience is the key to global security now. The world would transform again, and not necessarily to our advantage in sleepy, barely defended Britain. I began to fear that we would not understand the new reality until it was crashing down towards us from a hostile sky.

Slowly, I came to believe in what Mykhed had told me in Kyiv. “People think this is the third act,” he’d said. Whatever this war was – a war for independence, a proxy war fought between empires, a third world war – it was nowhere near over. It was spreading uncontrollably, violently, like a germ. I think about Mykhed’s words all the time now. “Are you ready to be in the first act?” That is now the question for Europe and its fearful, cocooned leaders looking out of their windows as the street lamps begin to flicker across the continent.
Additional reporting by Viktoria Sybir and Viacheslav Ratynskyi

There are many more Ukrainians in EU than 1,5mil! Check your sources! Account for population on the territories now under Russia's control! And don't forget about low fertility rates during the war and excess deaths, substance abuses, suicides etc etc etc...

"Feeeeed me Roger!"  -Bcash
Pages: « 1 ... 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 [443]
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.19 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!