International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi called on both Kyiv and Moscow to "exercise maximum restraint" in order to avoid a nuclear accident as fighting is reportedly ongoing in the region around the Kursk Nuclear Power Plant (KNPP).
Supercut of a bunch of #Ukraine FPV on Russian recon #UAV kills. Seems like a case where automated machine vision based terminal guidance could be pretty straightforward and effective
Also hope Ukraine is thinking about how they're going to counter this when the Russians inevitably follow suit
https://mil.in.ua/uk/news/morski-pihotyntsi-fpv-dronamy-zbyly-9-rozviduvalnyh-bpla-rf/
"Refugees evacuated from Kursk Oblast will be resettled in the Russian-occupied territories in Zaporizhzhia Oblast" - Oh, you lost your home in the war, how would you like to travel hundreds of miles (overland, because the airspace is all closed) to go live in another war zone?
Yevhen Balytskyi, a Russian proxy leader operating in occupied Zaporizhzhia Oblast, suggested equipping "sanatoriums and boarding houses on the shores of the Azov Sea, located from Berdiansk to Kyrylivka."
Back in mid July, Budanov made a strange statement about Russia planning a new attack "from the north" https://kyivindependent.com/russia-will-attack-ukraine-again-from-the-north-budanov-says/ (which Zelensky later sort of walked back https://kyivindependent.com/budanovs-russian-offensive-comments-a-little-misunderstood-zelensky-says/)
Was that a cover explanation so the Russians would believe troops moving to the Kursk border were due to Ukraine worrying about an attack, rather planning their own? 🤔
Military intelligence Chief Kyrylo Budanov refused to specify if he was talking about an offensive in the oblasts of Sumy or Chernihiv so as not to "provoke panic" but insisted indications were already present that a new attack was imminent.
Mark MacKinnon suggests Ukraine actually thought Russia was planning to attack from Kursk, and only decided on their own attack after they realized the Russian shelling was a diversion 🤨
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/world/article-ukraine-russia-kursk-incursion/ (paywalled, and it would be wrong to point out that a paywall was implemented by removing the content with JS so I definitely won't do that)
This just seems like an embarrassingly silly denial "Such an act can only be carried out with extensive technical and financial resources ... and who possessed all this at the time of the bombing? Only Russia"
Whether or not Ukraine did blow up Nordstream, the suggestion they *couldn't* have done it is just totally at odds with the many other successful, daring covert ops they've carried out with limited resources
Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak denied his country's involvement in explosions which damaged the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline and instead pointed the finger at Russia in comments to Reuters on Thursday.
"We haven’t seen a substantial move [of Russian troops] just yet, and we can’t tell whether that’s just because they’re only just getting started moving forces, or whether they just don’t have the forces to move"
Wild, uninformed prediction: Russia will try to retake Kursk territories with the minimum number of troops required, scavenged from the less hot parts of the front line, while maintaining tempo in Donetsk
Russia appears to have diverted several thousand troops from occupied territory inside Ukraine to counter a surprisingly successful Ukrainian offensive inside Russian borders in a move that potentially weakens Moscow’s war effort, two senior US officials told CNN.
Another is how close Ukraine's mobilization efforts are to producing significant numbers. There's been rumors of new brigades in the fall, and being able to shore up other parts of the front or rotate in less elite troops for defense could be make a big difference
(again, this is all wild, uninformed speculation, primarily posted so I can look back later and see how dumb it was)
A lot of people thought the Kursk operation was nuts, apparently including the commander of one of the brigades involved 😬 "On the evening of 28 July, soldiers from the 80th Brigade contacted Ukrainska Pravda with a rather sudden request for us to publish an appeal in support of their then commander, Colonel Emil Ishkulov, who was facing dismissal…"
The advance of the Armed Forces of Ukraine in Kursk Oblast has been making the headlines of the world's leading media for more than a week. No one seems to have expected such a step from Ukraine. Although the military goals of the large-scale operation are still hidden in the fog of war, its political achievements are already taking shape. While the Ukrainian army is taking control of Russian towns and villages, China is cautiously calling on "the parties to the conflict to refrain from escalation," and Western countries are pretending that nothing extraordinary is happening. Meanwhile, the Kremlin is frantically searching for a way to localize the situation without stopping its offensive in eastern Ukraine. Read the article by hromadske to learn how the Kursk operation threatens the stability of the Putin regime, whether it is possible to exchange territories with Russia, and how this offensive is changing the attitude of Kyiv’s partners to the war.
In the summer of 2023, an unlikely trend began dominating TikTok feeds in Nepal: dozens of videos showed Nepali men bragging about having joined the Russian army. According to these foreign fighters, the service conditions were comfortable, the work was safe, and the salaries were higher than anything on offer back in Nepal. To many young Nepali men sitting at home, moving to Russia seemed like a no-brainer; all they had to do was take out a loan to pay a middleman for a visa and a plane ticket. What they didn’t realize was that they were only seeing footage from training centers, where Nepali recruits spend a few weeks at most before being sent into the line of fire. Hundreds, and possibly thousands, of Nepali men have enlisted in the Russian army over the last two years, and at least dozens of them have been killed. Some of these men were the sole breadwinners for their wives and children. Irina Kravtsova, a special correspondent for Novaya Gazeta, traveled to Nepal to hear the stories of these men, the families they left behind, and the activist leading the fight for the government to intervene. Meduza shares an abridged translation of her report.
How did that work out?
(these were undoubtedly not expected to survive a direct hit, it's possible they did save some aircraft from shrapnel damage)
🇷🇺Marinovka Air Base🇷🇺 ... and the 'AFTER' image (30cm from 22 Aug 2024 07:58 UTC) Still analyzing but given the interest, I shared what I thought were the areas that got hit Once again, less about airframes. Good amount of destruction around the hangars and just north of there
Missed it at the time, but CNN reported back in April the long range strikes are using machine vision for terminal guidance "Accuracy under jamming is enabled through the use of [AI]. Each aircraft has a terminal computer with satellite and terrain data … They have this thing called ‘machine vision,’ which is a form of AI. Basically you take a model and you have it on a chip and you train this model to identify geography and the target it is navigating to"
Predictably, Russia has opened cases against journalists who reported from Ukraine-occupied Kursk. While Russia will have a hard time bringing them to trial, it could be a real risk if they end up in Russia-friendly countries. Also TBD if Russia goes after their employers or other employees operating in Russia
A lot of #Ukraine strikes on Russian fuel depots seem pretty low impact: A few tanks burn down, but facility is likely back in operation within days (unlike refinery equipment, which can be down for months). Not so for this depot in Proletarsk, Rostov Oblast, which has been cooking off for 5 days
Fighterbomer claims that all flyable aircraft took off from Marinovka before the strike🤨 If true, interesting the Russians know there are ~dozens of drones headed toward a given air base, with enough advance warning to scramble the entire fleet, and are still unable to shoot them all down
Давайте проведём разбор полётов. Так как тут впервые прилетело по аэродрому с какими-никакими, но укрытиями можно сделать некоторые рабочие выводы. Сразу подскажу, что все самолёты способные взлететь-улетели до атаки. Разумеется возникает вопрос, почему так много нелетающих бортов на аэродроме полка который совсем недавно перевооружен на нулячие Су-34? Ответ понятен - нет запчастей, нет двигателей, нет блоков. Почему их нет - вопрос не по окладу. Ну и не факт, что на этом аэродроме базировался только один полк. Эта цифра нынче плавающая. Далее. Лёгкие укрытия не обладают противоосколочной защитой, поэтому эту защиту им надо добавлять. Всеми имеющимися способами. Мешки, блоки, кучи земли, ящики с землёй - миллион способов. Кто должен это был сделать, и были ли эти возможности на аэродроме - я хз. И вообще, должен ли? В принципе сами по себе укрытия на аэродроме это уже что-то невероятное. Тут ангары от спонсора. Подарок. Самая большая проблема, что укрытия стоят скучено. Подобные укрытия практически на всех аэродромах стоят скучено, ибо как я выше говорил, они не предназначены для защиты от атак с воздуха, или земли. Они предназначены для защиты авиатехники и личного состава от плохой погоды и маскировки авиатехники. Причём с маскировкой они справились на все сто, даже после поражения, как это и ожидалось. Пока не появились фото считай из ангаров, степень и количество пораженной авиатехники по одним лишь спутникам оценить было невозможно. Даже сейчас это затруднительно. Скученно они стоят потому что ангар надо ставить там, где уже есть к нему рулежные дорожки. Или делать их персонально к каждому ангару. Это разные деньги. И разные навыки и специализация. И если ангарами помогли, то дорожками к ним нет. Поэтому поставили их на открытой стоянке, ибо больше было негде. Без ангаров, самолёты стояли бы на ней точно так же, только открыто и конечно ущерб был бы кратно больший. Ну и судя по фото, в одном из ангаров (стоящих скучено) хранились боеприпасы. Кучей. И именно в этот ангар хохлы (случайно или целенаправленно) и били. И попали. После детонации боеприпасов, претензии к лёгким укрытиям снимаются полностью и у обывателя возникает вопрос, хули они там лежали? БК номер один всегда лежит у самолётов с целью скорейшей подвески их на самолёт. Цеплять УМПК на бомбы тоже где-то надо. Разумеется такое место штатно на аэродроме не предусмотрено. Разумеется вооруженников прикручивающих УМПК на бомбы тоже надо спрятать от непогоды, разведки и прочего вместе собственно с их бомбами и комплектами УМПК. И желательно недалеко от самолётов. Ибо БК номер один для всех фронтовых бомберов это УМПК. Какие выводы мы должны сделать? Да все те же самые. Не считать хохлов тупыми. Не думать, что они будут атаковать числом дронов равным количеству зенитных ракет. Прилагать все имеющиеся средства по рассредоточению самолётов (даже неисправных) и укрытий по аэродрому. Выносить склады и места подготовки УМПК в обвалованные укрытия. Ну и самое главное помимо нормального прикрытия аэродромов системами ПВО и РЭБ, необходимо изыскать ресурсы для обеспечения аэродромов внештатной строительной техникой, стройматериалами и рабочей силой. МО сделать это по бюрократическим причинам не в состоянии. Ну или это причины которые в сфере компетенции тщ майоров. Да, ОБС подсказывают что наметившийся прогресс по централизованному строительству укрытий пошёл по пизде. ВКС не осилило, ВСК не умеет, технологии утеряны. Желающих присесть подрядчиков за 50% отката пока найти не могут. Доклад закончил! (Все вышенаписанное является фантазиями автора и к нашей прекрасной действительности отношения не имеет)
In addition to Marinovka and the Proletarsk depot, #Ukraine also recently destroyed Conro Trader, one of the last railcar-capable ferries serving Crimea, reportedly with a Neptune missile
@simonbp It's looking a bit worse for wear, but some of the other 3 or so hit previoiusly are claimed to be under repair