⚡️#Belarus may also be disconnected from #SWIFT
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) February 26, 2022
This could end up being a more immediate difference maker than disconnecting Russia itself.
⚡️#Belarus may also be disconnected from #SWIFT
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) February 26, 2022
As is said often on this board- the 48 hour rule. Well actually it might need to be the 48 weeks rule. Lots of propaganda out there.ATX_AG_08 said:Red Pear Realty said:The #Ukrainian army is ready to meet Kadyrov's thugs pic.twitter.com/SctOP0N9Lq
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) February 26, 2022
Im just flat out amazed by the Ukes winning mentality. Such bravery against an army that has been so feared historically. It's amazing.
Harder to make a conscripted 18 year old shoot people in cold blood if they don't look like his friends and family and don't speak the same language. That is what makes fighting Ukrainians different than Syrians, afghans, or Chechen. They are being told that these people are Russians who want to be part of Russia, so no surprise they are hesitant to shoot them for resisting.W said:
it is a strange war.
it appears that Russian units have been told to be nice or patient with civilians.
certainly not the way business was done in the past by the red army
Build It said:
You could be right, how many battle fronts can he be on? Will be interesting to see what happens in Crimea. Lots of nato ships nearby.
indeed. the middle east was easy for Putin. he could be as savage as he wanted because all he was trying to do was kill terrorists then leave. 'collateral damage' didnt matter to him or his people because he/they didnt gaf about the innocents that were killed because they were muslims. now he wants to control a nation of people who the citizens of Russia identify with...he cant just bomb them into the stone age and ruin their infrastructure.Quote:
it is a strange war.
Very much so: "When Putin took Crimea in 2014, he lost Ukraine." "After it declared independence in 1991, Ukraine was divided between an unabashedly pro-Russia segment of its population and a more nationalistic one. But by annexing Crimea and plunging eastern Ukraine into open conflict, Matthews writes, Putin has energized Ukrainian nationalism and fed a growing anti-Russia sentiment. And the math does not help. Putin took millions of pro-Russia Ukrainians in Crimea and Donbas out of the country's political calculus. (Those in Donbas don't vote in Ukrainian elections because the area is too unstable.) As a result, a Ukrainian politician estimated to me that the pro-Russia seats in Ukraine's parliament have shrunk from a plurality to barely 15 percent of the total."Ulrich said:
I think Putin may have misunderstood the polling. Maybe some identify with Russia, speak Russian, or even favor voluntarily joining Russia. That is NOT the same as favoring the armed invasion of their country and being absorbed at gunpoint. I suspect he turned a lot of Eastern Ukrainian pro-Russians against Russia.
Europeans have a history of NOT studying American History. We stopped frontal charges after Gettysburg and especially after Cold Harbor in 1863 and 1864 respectively.sanangelo said:
Before the siege of Vicksburg, circa 1863, Grant's army made a detour into Jackson to destroy the Confederate forces there and prevent them from coming up behind him while his forces were pointed west at Vicksburg. Do you think Putin read Shelby Foote? Or is he winging it at Kiev?
that's what I'm thinking too.TX04Aggie said:
I am beginning to wonder if a lot of these Russian trips didnt have a full understanding of what they were being sent in for. Part of the "patience" may be a wtf moment, they didnt tell us we were taking this place by force, and these people dont want us here…
txags92 said:Harder to make a conscripted 18 year old shoot people in cold blood if they don't look like his friends and family and don't speak the same language. That is what makes fighting Ukrainians different than Syrians, afghans, or Chechen. They are being told that these people are Russians who want to be part of Russia, so no surprise they are hesitant to shoot them for resisting.W said:
it is a strange war.
it appears that Russian units have been told to be nice or patient with civilians.
certainly not the way business was done in the past by the red army
Sentinel-1 SAR-imagery, at 1538z today, shows 5 x unknown ships off western Crimea.
— The Lookout (@The_Lookout_N) February 26, 2022
I assess these as probable Black Sea Fleet or FSB Coast Guard ships. pic.twitter.com/qur13F2FOM
Same pass Sevastopol.
— The Lookout (@The_Lookout_N) February 26, 2022
A self propelled crane is alongside a smaller warship, poss a Buyan-M.
Personal theory: This could indicate reloading of SS-N-30 / Kalibr LACMs. pic.twitter.com/T9P6dvuCzk
SPSAg05 said:txags92 said:Harder to make a conscripted 18 year old shoot people in cold blood if they don't look like his friends and family and don't speak the same language. That is what makes fighting Ukrainians different than Syrians, afghans, or Chechen. They are being told that these people are Russians who want to be part of Russia, so no surprise they are hesitant to shoot them for resisting.W said:
it is a strange war.
it appears that Russian units have been told to be nice or patient with civilians.
certainly not the way business was done in the past by the red army
This is why, while my heart is with Ukraine and her people, I also feel for these Russian soldiers who are killing and being killed through simply following orders while their hearts (at least to some percentage) almost assuredly disagree with what they're being ordered to do.
This might sound dumb, archaic, shallow and pedantic [/griffin], but what about going to the Kyiv Kinko's and putting together a good ol' leaflet air drop campaign saying, "This is bulls***. You know that it's bulls***. We don't want to kill you and you don't want to kill us. Here's how you can throw down your arms and be assured that you'll be appreciated and well taken care of."?
I feel like if a bigger country invades your country without provocation, you get to spread whatever propaganda you want to rally people against the motherfuckers. https://t.co/g2vuF72UhM
— jimtreacher.substack.com (@jtLOL) February 26, 2022
SPSAg05 said:
I know the rules of the thread and don't want to derail it, but I promise this will just take a sec….
Is it "Ukraine," or "The Ukraine"? Please settle this for me…it's driving me nuts.
Ukraine.SPSAg05 said:
I know the rules of the thread and don't want to derail it, but I promise this will just take a sec….
Is it "Ukraine," or "The Ukraine"? Please settle this for me…it's driving me nuts.
It's Ukraine. Russians call it The Ukraine because they still consider it a region of Russia.SPSAg05 said:
I know the rules of the thread and don't want to derail it, but I promise this will just take a sec….
Is it "Ukraine," or "The Ukraine"? Please settle this for me…it's driving me nuts.
By the way, guys, we do a liveblog of Russian attacks and engagements every day. I'm currently updating today's. https://t.co/8q73H7OFKN
— Igor Kossov (@IgorKossov) February 26, 2022
What you're seeing:
— Blueelectron (in solidarity with 🇺🇦) (@Blueelectron4) February 26, 2022
- stinger flies in from behind the su-25 and explodes right in front of the canopy
- su-25 is terrified and shoots every flare/chaff countermeasure he has
- su-25 doesn't crash in video
Unclear how badly pilot is wounded or if the plane later crashes.
TOS-1A thermobaric MLRS in Tokmak https://t.co/023aVCZsCN
— Michael Kofman (@KofmanMichael) February 26, 2022
Spaceship said:
My brother-in-law and his family are in Melitopol which is in southeastern Ukraine. They were under Russian control by lunch time yesterday. They lost power and phone service overnight, but its restored now. There has been street combat in the city and he said quite a few Russian soldiers have been killed. He said the Russians really aren't engaging with the locals and seems they've been directed not to harm locals.
His business windows were blown out and they are boarding them up now with plywood to prevent theft. Yesterday he sent his son to the grocery store and waited in line for hours for one bag of food. They have the option to go to Poland (they are US-duel citizens), but are waiting for things to calm down before they try to cross the entire country to head west. His church has opened up, and is full of women and children being housed and fed.
They have friends all over Europe and have been contacted by people all over the world inviting them to come shelter with them if/when they need. Americans have been sending them money as well, but right now they can't get that through the banking system.
Just some interesting notes from a local perspective. We're praying for their safety and protection.
Oh those exposed flanks of BTGs and those juicy fuel and ammunition trucks. Might be that Russia is overextending quite a bit and taking huge risks. https://t.co/7OZJniGufc
— RED2-1 (@Red_2_1) February 26, 2022
Both their condition is stable (not critical) two articles about it here (in danish) https://t.co/kA3ZiuG5jV https://t.co/kA3ZiuG5jV
— anders hansen (@hejtas) February 26, 2022
nhamp07 said: