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Стриминг твитов о российско-украинской войне в ТГ; иногда сообщения также постятся и редактируются вручную
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Rob Lee (Twitter)

"Of the original US plan, Yaroslav, in eastern Ukraine, says it 'sucks... no one will support it' while an army medic with the call sign Shtutser dismissed it as an 'absolutely disgraceful draft of a peace plan, unworthy of our attention'.

But one soldier with the call sign Snake told us 'it's time to agree at least on something'...

'Let them take it,' Snake told the BBC. 'There's practically no one left in the cities and villages... We're not fighting for the people but for the land, while losing more people.'

Andrii, an officer in Ukraine's general staff, says that what is being proposed for Luhansk and Donetsk is 'painful and difficult' but he suggests the country may have no other choice.

Ukraine has been defending the region since 2014, when Russia annexed Crimea and its proxy forces seized parts of the Donbas. 'We may not want to give it up, but we won't be able to hold it by military force and resources,' Andrii says...

Matros, who has been...

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Necro Mancer (Twitter)

Филатов плачется за френдлифаер
t.me/filatovcorr/6270 #всрф #дроноцид
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The Lookout (Twitter)

RT @RALee85: "Of the original US plan, Yaroslav, in eastern Ukraine, says it 'sucks... no one will support it' while an army medic with the call sign Shtutser dismissed it as an 'absolutely disgraceful draft of a peace plan, unworthy of our attention'.

But one soldier with the call sign Snake told us 'it's time to agree at least on something'...

'Let them take it,' Snake told the BBC. 'There's practically no one left in the cities and villages... We're not fighting for the people but for the land, while losing more people.'

Andrii, an officer in Ukraine's general staff, says that what is being proposed for Luhansk and Donetsk is 'painful and difficult' but he suggests the country may have no other choice.

Ukraine has been defending the region since 2014, when Russia annexed Crimea and its proxy forces seized parts of the Donbas. 'We may not want to give it up, but we won't be able to hold it by military force and resources,' Andrii says...

Matros,...

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Ukraine Battle Map (Twitter)

@JohnPlayerSpezi @PhilipIngMBE: That was a handful of outlets and journalists who aren’t the most experienced at analyzing war. At the time Russia’s total missile stockpile was a couple hundred missiles because they used a significant amount of missiles in the first 2-3 months of the invasion. In 9 months, Russia launched 830 Iskander-M ballistic missiles, most were used in the first 3 months of the invasion. That’s over 100 ballistic missiles per month, Russia sues no where near that now. Russia launched over 3,000 cruise missiles and ballistic missiles in the first 9 months of the invasion. That’s 340 missiles per month, or over 500 some months, a rate Russia never sustained consistently later in the war.

Russia would’ve needed the largest advanced cruise and ballistic missile stockpile at the world to continue sustaining that, and it makes sense why for multiple months later they fired no cruise or ballistic missiles while their production ramped up and they saved up for attacks.

Russia then scaled up production. You can run out of money today, and go work and save up the next two years, and you will have a lot more money.

People think of running out or being low on weapons is irreversible but that’s not how it works in warfare. I did a chart showing how many missiles Russia was estimated to have, and that number never went below 0, because once they got close, they’d fire less. At once point in 2023 they didn’t fire any cruise missiles for 2-3 months after launching a several hundreds at Ukraine in the winter of 2022-2023. Then once their stockpile increased, they’d fire more.

Running low on cruise and ballistic missiles earlier in the war, didn’t mean Russia couldn’t increase its production rate of missiles later in the war, and it’s what they did. It’s understandable, Russia wasn’t planning on a multi-year war in early 2022, and as a result needed to increase production not just of missiles but of most other types of equipment and ammunition.
The Lookout (Twitter)

.@Black_BirdGroup and @J_JHelin with an article on the US peace initiative well worth reading.

Morals or ideas of justice don't influence the outcome of the war, hard power and the balance in the war will, regardless of how much one despises this.

Link in the next post.
The Lookout (Twitter)

@KohseSoren @Black_BirdGroup @J_JHelin: Regardless of how the current round ends, I would treat it as a pause, rather than the final end of it all.

Still, I find it very hard to envisage an outcome truly beneficial to Ukraine without a major shift in the European approach, even then it's not given, and I don't see any indications of such a shift coming.
Dan (Twitter)

@giK1893: 11. Robotyne 20th Oct.
I ran out of time to cover all media from this attack. Catching up now:
🇺🇦118th Mech Bde strikes on the 1st BTR-82AT in tweet 10.
I spliced in a later clip of it after its wrecked.
From 2:09 another BTR-82AT at 47.502843, 35.887700. https://twitter.com/klinger66/status/1980682782801293417#m
Necro Mancer (Twitter)

#Красноперекопск (в/о), Крым, 22/11/25: визит вежливости на завод "БРОМ"
t.me/robert_magyar/1620 t.me/dosye_shpiona/711
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Status-6 (Twitter)

A video compilation showing Ukrainian FPV interceptor drones engaging Russian Italmas and Shahed/Geran-type strike drones.

According to Ukraine's Come Back Alive foundation, to date, at least 1350 Russian Shahed-type OWA-UAVs and decoy UAVs have been intercepted with interceptor drones that were delivered to the Ukrainian military by the organization.

t.me/savelifeua/4070
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