Russia on brink of ... NOPE! Russia INVADES Ukraine!

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GodisanAtheist

Diamond Member
Nov 16, 2006
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And we're back in "wait for Trump to talk to Putin again and walk this whole thing back" territory. Again.

Putin and Trump probably laugh over cigars and wodka like "How many times can we pull the same trick on these dumbasses".

Ukraine and EU better be prepping hard for the next rug-pull. US/Trump/Putin playing rope-a-dope with the stalling tactics negotiations right now...
 

DZero

Golden Member
Jun 20, 2024
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And we're back in "wait for Trump to talk to Putin again and walk this whole thing back" territory. Again.

Putin and Trump probably laugh over cigars and wodka like "How many times can we pull the same trick on these dumbasses".

Ukraine and EU better be prepping hard for the next rug-pull. US/Trump/Putin playing rope-a-dope right now with the stalling tactics negotiations right now...
Indeed, but Xi is now worried since an alliance between US and Russia is bad news for EVERYONE who are not on their group. Even China would be affected.
 

zinfamous

No Lifer
Jul 12, 2006
111,729
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Indeed, but Xi is now worried since an alliance between US and Russia is bad news for EVERYONE who are not on their group. Even China would be affected.

Xi just throws Trump another parade, and they are once again best buds.

This fucking simp is so goddamn easy to manipulate. It's like the fucking rwords around here that voted for this child 3 times. just utter wastes of nutrients.
 

K1052

Elite Member
Aug 21, 2003
52,102
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The TLDR here is that the minerals agreement is very loose, involves no existing assets, and is kind of meaningless without further agreements. Seems like this satisfies Trump's desire to sign...something while preventing any meaningful concessions from Ukraine. It certainly is a giant climb down from Trump's original demands.


What are the terms of the US-Ukraine minerals deal?​

https://archive.is/y20gU
 

K1052

Elite Member
Aug 21, 2003
52,102
45,091
136
This is great news if true.


They certainly have had enough examples of UMPKs that crashed/failed to explode to study their GLONASS based guidance systems.
 
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[DHT]Osiris

Lifer
Dec 15, 2015
17,258
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Ukrainian lines are holding a lot longer these days, compared to 1 year ago.
I understand Russia needs to mobilize more men to replace the meat waves...
But glide bomb effectiveness falling off goes a lot way towards explaining it.
I'm not sure what's been happening specifically over the last few weeks but since the NK meat waves left, the manpower loss has dropped but the hardware kills have spiked dramatically, like 30-50% down on humans, 100-300% increases on mainly arty and vehicles, even tanks are spiking.

Pity it isn't translating directly to forward movement, at least not yet.
 

VRAMdemon

Diamond Member
Aug 16, 2012
7,741
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You better believe it.
Agent Krasnov has been loyal to Russia since 1987.

r/pics - A young Donald Trump in Moscow, 1987.

I don’t find the ‘Krasnov’ story plausible. (As of now). As far as Trump being an actual spy, or Russian "agent". I don't think so. It’s laughable to imagine anyone entrusting Trump with executing any kind of intelligence-gathering plan requiring a modicum of judgment, discretion, or confidentiality.

However, I have absolutely no problem saying Trump has been a Russian "asset" or “contact” since 1987. Trump is stupid, narcissistic, faithless, wealthy, involved in criminal enterprises. He’s a blackmail target who is flypaper for other blackmail targets. Assets aren’t always used for the big score. In fact, it’s rare AFAIK. Small bits of information, favors done, etc. is more the action. They don’t want the asset to become known by fucking up some big operation. It’s a long game they’re playing. He would be the gift that keeps on giving for any foreign intelligence service, but he’s absolutely not the brains of the operation.

My best guess is the Russians tried to recruit anyone they thought might be able to help them in some way. Having an American "businessman" (lol!) willing to voice a pro-Soviet business policy was good for the Soviet Union. They built a friendly relationship with Trump in the 1980s and that friendship became stronger when Russians started funneling money into his businesses in the 1990s. Trump was identified as a tool to launder money by corrupt Soviet officials, even before the fall of the Soviet Union. After his financial disasters, no bank would touch him, the foreign money began flowing in.

Knowing what we know about Trump now, being a Russian asset, he likely never had any idea he was being used. In his mind it was probably something like “My Russian friends are very nice to me because they like how smart I am and all the things that I know”. It's obviously so easy to manipulate this guy - a little flattery, access to hot underwear models. Also known as the honey pot ploy.

The Russians just got extremely lucky with Trump as I don’t think they ever expected him to rise to such political prominence.
 

Jaskalas

Lifer
Jun 23, 2004
35,497
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I don’t find the ‘Krasnov’ story plausible. (As of now). As far as Trump being an actual spy, or Russian "agent". I don't think so. It’s laughable to imagine anyone entrusting Trump with executing any kind of intelligence-gathering plan requiring a modicum of judgment, discretion, or confidentiality.

However, I have absolutely no problem saying Trump has been a Russian "asset" or “contact” since 1987.
Agent or Asset, Trump openly flouts his love for Russia.

‘I know some Russian oligarchs that are very nice people’
 
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Feb 12, 2025
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I'm not sure what's been happening specifically over the last few weeks but since the NK meat waves left, the manpower loss has dropped but the hardware kills have spiked dramatically, like 30-50% down on humans, 100-300% increases on mainly arty and vehicles, even tanks are spiking.

Pity it isn't translating directly to forward movement, at least not yet.
There is information from Ukrainian intelligence that NK has sent another 3,000 of its troops and it is expected that they will be deployed in the Kursk direction.

As for the increased losses in vehicles, it seems that the Russians have run low on manpower (for now) and are simply trying to throw everything they have at our positions to maintain the pace of their offensive—a typical tactic for them.
 

Westview

Junior Member
Feb 25, 2025
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These drones are badass



Ukraine pumping out kamikaze drones for as little as $300 – and they can destroy tanks: ‘This is modern warfare’

KYIV — They’re small, but mighty — and deadly, too.

The Ukrainian Armed Forces’ reliance on cheaper, more compact drones has altered the look of warfare for good, operators and experts tell The Post.

Instead of the hulking craft used by nations like the US — which cost hundreds of millions of dollars — many of Ukraine’s aerial attacks against Russian forces are conducted with simple kamikaze drones worth between $300 and $1,000.

If flown by an experienced pilot, a 6.5-pound drone found in any hobby shop can carry enough explosives to take out an armored vehicle, Andrii Fedorov, the co-founder and CEO of Ukraine-based Nomad Drones, told The Post on Wednesday.

“If you hit it smartly in the vulnerable parts of a tank, you can even destroy a tank,” Fedorov said. “So basically, you can cause far more damage for a low cost.”

“I think it changes pretty much everything,” he added of the kamikaze drones. “This is modern warfare.”

Drones are common in armed conflicts. The US has notably used them to conduct airstrikes against terror suspects in places like Iraq, Pakistan, Somalia and Syria.

Since the last American forces left Afghanistan in August 2021, the US has relied heavily on drones to conduct so-called “over the horizon” operations, so named because they are done without putting troops on the ground nearby.

What sets Ukraine’s drone operations apart is the type of craft — typically measuring between eight and 12 inches — that can be used and the frequency with which they can be manufactured.

Nomad alone builds “thousands” of drones per month with a workforce of roughly 60 employees, according to Fedorov, who declined to give exact production figures, citing operational security.
 

trenchfoot

Lifer
Aug 5, 2000
15,667
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How Trump gets away with the bullcrap he's upchucking on an hourly basis is way beyond my level of understanding. He is a known serial liar, the lies he comes up with are blatantly false yet our media outlets simply ignore his tall tales or at the most make obtuse references to his fabrications.

It's as if these supposed sources of reliable news coverage are afraid of pissing him off and having his stooges over at Justice spool up the dreaded "Investigations" that Trump will surely attack them with as a means to shut off any criticism of his charming magnetism and genius.

How Rachel Maddow can keep up with her withering criticisms of Trump and his flunkies daily doses of disinformation and outright lies being broadcast and printed for public consumption is to me a fluke more than what should be what every source of honest news reporting aspire to.