Footage of a Ukrainian FPV drone striking a Russian T-72 tank. The drone was armed with an RPG-7 grenade, the attack took place in the Maryinka area. Despite the impact, the tank continued to carry out its combat mission, the crew was saved by the dynamic protection installed on the tank.

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A Russian T-64 tank breaks through a minefield in Ukraine. Footage has been published of a Russian T-64 tank overcoming a minefield of American mines of the M70 and M73 types, both types of mines are now used by the Ukrainian army. Mines are produced in anti-personnel and anti-tank versions and do not differ from each other outwardly. Mines are installed by the RAAMS remote mining system at a distance of up to 24 km, they are delivered by 155 mm M741 / M718 shells, each contains 9 mines. The first part of the video shows the found remains of these mines in Ukraine, the second part is the direct overcoming of the minefield by the tank.

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Published footage of a massive bombing strike by Russian aircraft in Ukraine. There are no details of the bombing strike when it was carried out. According to preliminary data, the air strike was carried out in the area of the Oskol river bank in the Kupyansk direction.

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Footage of an attempt by a Ukrainian T-64BV tank to attack a stronghold of the Russian army. For some unknown reason, the T-64 tank, without support, went to attack the stronghold alone. The tank received two ATGM hits and was destroyed.

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The disguised radar 79K6 "Pelican" of the Ukrainian army came under attack from the Russian kamikaze drone "Lancet". Radar 79K6 "Pelikan" was put into service in 2007, the detection range of radar targets is up to 400 km, at an altitude of 100 meters up to 40 km. The number of tracked targets is more than 300. The deployment time of the Pelican radar is 30 minutes.

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Polish voluntary combat paramedics in Bakhmut.

I don’t know why this video is not loading. Remove the xxx before the https:
Xxxhttps://twitter.com/damianduda17/status/1648639591476281344?s=61&t=kKpA1yYF7O3cXFK4tUgpBA

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Here, they move to pick up injured Ukrainian soldiers:
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A medical point in Bakhmut:
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They decided to shorten their leave upon hearing about high casualties amongst Ukrainian special forces in Bakhmut:

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This soldier was lucky, as a shrapnel pierced his helmet, just injuring his ear:
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Burying civilian casualties in Bakhmut:
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Ruh roh. .


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But let's all be cautious

Edited the link ..

Twitter is awful now, my usual feeds are almost hidden
 
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Someone should tell the lady that the general consensus in Finland has been that we don't want the areas back even if it was given for free. Nobody needs that kind of a hole to sink money in.
 
By way of EU you have been doing just that out east and all over the third world, future EU places such as friendly yet still commie Vietnam I suppose..if Ukraine can be saved why not a few finnish counties.
 
Someone should tell the lady that the general consensus in Finland has been that we don't want the areas back even if it was given for free. Nobody needs that kind of a hole to sink money in.
These 'transferred' areas, could be begging their old owners and neighbours to take them back. The issue for the countries being asked, is the alternative, if they say no, is probably mass migration.

EU really needs to be planning for aid and energy back into Russia or whatever is left after the civil war.
 
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So what's everyone's take on what happen next?
I'm expecting a Russian withdrawal of professional troops, leaving mobiks to stand and die, or surrender. And I'm hoping for a good performance from the Ukr forces. I'm also expecting a few surprises from the Ukr side, as well. I'm expecting a very poor performance from the Russian side. They couldn't organise an invasion of their choosing, they wont cope with say 10 different attacks across the front.

And I am then expecting a civil war of some sort in Russia, with the Asian countries splitting off, into basically Chinese sponsorship.
 
So what's everyone's take on what happen next?
I'm expecting a Russian withdrawal of professional troops, leaving mobiks to stand and die, or surrender. And I'm hoping for a good performance from the Ukr forces. I'm also expecting a few surprises from the Ukr side, as well. I'm expecting a very poor performance from the Russian side. They couldn't organise an invasion of their choosing, they wont cope with say 10 different attacks across the front.

And I am then expecting a civil war of some sort in Russia, with the Asian countries splitting off, into basically Chinese sponsorship.
Ukraine will make a counter offensive, but the success would probably be mediocre. Ukraine will gain territory back, but it will pay for it. Russia is down but not out, they too are inflicting casualties against the Ukrainians.

China will try to bring a new deal on the table and with their push some South American countries will back it up. A total victory will be a devastating blow into their spheres of influence. "Russia got destroyed and the US didnt even send its army, just some of its weapons." So it will push for negotiations to save some of its influence.
 
So what's everyone's take on what happen next?
I'm expecting a Russian withdrawal of professional troops, leaving mobiks to stand and die, or surrender. And I'm hoping for a good performance from the Ukr forces. I'm also expecting a few surprises from the Ukr side, as well. I'm expecting a very poor performance from the Russian side. They couldn't organise an invasion of their choosing, they wont cope with say 10 different attacks across the front.

And I am then expecting a civil war of some sort in Russia, with the Asian countries splitting off, into basically Chinese sponsorship.
Hard to say. The pessimist in me says that it will grind down into a theater wide trench war and artillery lobbing for a good while and when all parties get tired of it, there will be some sort of a sour deal that nobody is happy with.

But there are many variables and I would like to be wrong. I can't see Russia doing anything decisive anymore unless the West decides to cut down help for one reason or another. I don't think anything dramatic will happen in Russia for now either, unless the counter offensive cuts through the lines and keeps its momentum.
 
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is this like one of those conversations you used to have in college, after smoking a bunch of weed?
 
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