▶Latest >UAF captured areas in the north of Kherson oblast, including Vysokopilia, as well as Ozerne in Donetsk oblast >UAF commander: From Aug 31 to Sep 2, a pair of Bayraktar TB2s destroyed 8 T-72s, one 2S3 Akatsyia SPG, BMP and towed howitzers, 5 T-72s and one IFV were damaged >Ravil Maganov, chairman of the board of Russia's second largest oil company Lukoil, died after falling from a window >Strelkov: All 4 Kherson bridges aren't operational >UAF launched a counteroffensive in Kherson Oblast >Shoigu: Russia is slowing down the offensive on purpose to minimize civilian casualties >25 people died from Russian missile attack on Independence Day >Fires across eastern Ukraine including Mariupol and the ZNPP >Putin signs a decree to increase the Russian armed forces by 137,000 to 1.15 million >Germany to send IRIS-T air defense systems in the coming weeks >US to send $3 billion in aid to Ukraine (largest one yet) >Azov denies Vovk Natalya's ever served in the Azov regiment >FSB: Darya Dugina's car was blown up by Vovk Natalya, an Azov servicewoman, who fled to Estonia afterwards >Antonovsky bridge was hit again, casualties reported by TASS >Darya Dugina's car exploded in Moscow >Explosions around Belgorod and Sevastopol reported, AA activity around the Kerch bridge
>At 4 p.m. Moscow time, units of the Russian Airborne Forces launched a counterattack on their lost positions in Vysokopolye, intending to straighten out the situation on the front and level out the front line.
>At 7 p.m. Moscow time, Ukrainian journalist Anatoly Shariy's private channel posted a terse entry: "Vysokopolye has been taken. Vysokopolye has been surrendered." Shariy did not provide any other comments, but if we take into account the information about the beginning of the counterattack, it suggests the success of the counterattack.
>At the moment there is no information from our sources from this area: unfortunately, there are extremely big problems with communications near Andreevka, near Sukhi Stavk, near Olgin and Vysokopolye.
>In any case, for now we assume the best and believe that the counterattack was successful and that Russian Airborne Forces units managed to regain control of the central part of the settlement.
Seriously now what the fuck is wrong with this nigga v.ylilauta.org/71/68/7168ad9636f8c840.mp4 And how the FUCK do Russians and other vatniks just watch this video and go "Yeah, he's fine, nothing off there."
some fucking Russian zoomie roastie recently fucked a grave cross with her cunt. Of course she is a dumb fucking motherfucker of biblical proportions, but now want to fuck the Catalonia memeflag in the ass with my huge dong so hard that his curator would hear my huge balls slapping against his cheeks.
continuing on from before with Slovak. Logistics can not be done for Kherson in the long run. You need to supply food, ammo, reinforcements across a river with pontoon bridges and ferries being constantly struck by an enemy. Being assaulted takes a lot of supplies, and those are going thinner by the day. An RU assault towards Odessa is completely impossible, and if they can't even hold, they'll face a complete local collapse.
Gulaghomo is... LE BASED! It will save us from dystopia!
>In the Russian Federation, they began to use a system for recognizing faces and silhouettes of people and cars
>Now you can track the route of a person, identify people by their silhouettes with very high accuracy. A "smart" machine, when recognizing outwardly similar people, takes into account height and other signs, allows you to search for people by such attributes of appearance as glasses, a hat or a beard.
>Since all tracking technologies are based on a database, the Russian Ministry of Internal Affairs is creating a centralized bank of biometric data with fingerprints and facial images. The bank will collect information about both Russian citizens and foreigners. It is planned to be created within the next three years.
>It is known that access control systems with face recognition were purchased by the Moscow authorities. And Rostec offered the Russian regions to use this technology to combat the spread of the coronavirus.
>Today in Moscow, most cameras are installed at the entrances of residential buildings and office buildings, in schools, universities, and shopping centers.
No Crimean mobilization as many of them left before the inevitable destruction of the Kerch bridge.
Sebastian Brown
Yep, their position on the left bank is doomed without bridges. They simply can’t supply the amounts of ammunition needed for high intensity combat to a large number of troops, much less all the fuel and food and etc.
Hunter Allen
>I'm Kiketrick Lancaster >and right now, we are in ... err... Donetsk's people's republic >You are watching the ONLY independent journalist in the whole of Ukraine >Graham Shillips fuck off back to your Amsterdam brothel you failed RT journalist and sexpat >err.... >anyway, maam can you tell me what happened here? what are you doing in my house? >and which direction did the shelling come from? I don't know, I just want to stop >and there we have it, Ukraine is shelling civilian areas for the 6th gorillianth time >like, comment. subscribe and give me bitcoin is large quantities, the hostels in Georgia are quite expensive atm >thank you