IgorGirkin (Twitter)
RT @Tatarigami_UA: Overnight, Ukraine carried out a series of missile strikes on Khalino Airbase in Kursk Oblast, reportedly using ATACMS missiles. Here’s what we can anticipate based on previous data gathered by Frontelligence Insight:
🧵Thread
RT @Tatarigami_UA: Overnight, Ukraine carried out a series of missile strikes on Khalino Airbase in Kursk Oblast, reportedly using ATACMS missiles. Here’s what we can anticipate based on previous data gathered by Frontelligence Insight:
🧵Thread
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Rob Lee (Twitter)
Video of a M577 command post carrier being used to transport Ukrainian infantry in Kursk oblast. The footage also shows a Bushmaster MRAP.
t.me/NMFTE/12847
Video of a M577 command post carrier being used to transport Ukrainian infantry in Kursk oblast. The footage also shows a Bushmaster MRAP.
t.me/NMFTE/12847
The Lookout (Twitter)
RT @Tatarigami_UA: Overnight, Ukraine carried out a series of missile strikes on Khalino Airbase in Kursk Oblast, reportedly using ATACMS missiles. Here’s what we can anticipate based on previous data gathered by Frontelligence Insight:
🧵Thread
RT @Tatarigami_UA: Overnight, Ukraine carried out a series of missile strikes on Khalino Airbase in Kursk Oblast, reportedly using ATACMS missiles. Here’s what we can anticipate based on previous data gathered by Frontelligence Insight:
🧵Thread
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Rob Lee (Twitter)
Video of loitering munition and FPV strikes by Ukrainian SBU Alpha on a Russian T-90M tank, Tor-M2, BTR-82, BMP-3, and other vehicles.
t.me/SBUkr/13471 https://twitter.com/RALee85/status/1855284028250742938#m
Video of loitering munition and FPV strikes by Ukrainian SBU Alpha on a Russian T-90M tank, Tor-M2, BTR-82, BMP-3, and other vehicles.
t.me/SBUkr/13471 https://twitter.com/RALee85/status/1855284028250742938#m
Ukraine Battle Map (Twitter)
@Maks_NAFO_FELLA: Dismissing Zaluzhnyi was a terrible idea. With no weapons shipment from the US, Ukrainian Forces were able to hold down the frontline for 5-6 months.
Once Zaluzhnyi was removed, the next week they lost Avdiivka, and have been losing significant amount of land in Donetsk nonstop.
@Maks_NAFO_FELLA: Dismissing Zaluzhnyi was a terrible idea. With no weapons shipment from the US, Ukrainian Forces were able to hold down the frontline for 5-6 months.
Once Zaluzhnyi was removed, the next week they lost Avdiivka, and have been losing significant amount of land in Donetsk nonstop.
IgorGirkin (Twitter)
RT @RALee85: Photos of a Ukrainian FrankenSam Buk-M1 TELAR equipped with RIM-7 Sea Sparrow missiles.
tiktok.com/t/ZP8LvfsBG/
t.me/TyskNIP/13924
RT @RALee85: Photos of a Ukrainian FrankenSam Buk-M1 TELAR equipped with RIM-7 Sea Sparrow missiles.
tiktok.com/t/ZP8LvfsBG/
t.me/TyskNIP/13924
Necro Mancer (Twitter)
RT @solonko1648: Одна з причин того чому ми зараз в цій точці - це як раз те, що перевагу віддають лояльності перед професійністю. Краще мати біля себе незручного ефективного професіонала, ніж подовжувача рук. Хоча кому як звісно
RT @solonko1648: Одна з причин того чому ми зараз в цій точці - це як раз те, що перевагу віддають лояльності перед професійністю. Краще мати біля себе незручного ефективного професіонала, ніж подовжувача рук. Хоча кому як звісно
💯1
Rob Lee (Twitter)
"Russian police raided the dormitory of the Tchaikovsky Moscow State Conservatory and issued military summonses to multiple students late last week, the Telegram channel “Ostorozhno, Moskva” reported on Sunday.
A 26-year-old student named Daniil told the channel that the police detained him in his dorm room early Friday morning."
https://meduza.io/en/news/2024/11/25/russian-police-reportedly-raid-moscow-conservatory-dorm-and-issue-military-summons-to-students
"Russian police raided the dormitory of the Tchaikovsky Moscow State Conservatory and issued military summonses to multiple students late last week, the Telegram channel “Ostorozhno, Moskva” reported on Sunday.
A 26-year-old student named Daniil told the channel that the police detained him in his dorm room early Friday morning."
https://meduza.io/en/news/2024/11/25/russian-police-reportedly-raid-moscow-conservatory-dorm-and-issue-military-summons-to-students
Colby Badhwar 🇨🇦🇬🇧 (Twitter)
RT @the_engi_nerd: I will be writing up a longer piece on my thoughts on all the F-35 related drama currently happening on this site. But some thoughts:
People not read into the program can't know the full requirements story. We can know some of the functional requirements and the constraints governing those requirements, but we can't know the operational requirements.
I'm in a unique position because not only have I read the actual F-35 Operational Requirements Document, it was once my job to determine exactly how well the F-35's systems performed. Not whether or not they met the requirement -- how well they actually performed.
I don't think there's anyone on the planet who has examined more F-35 flight test data than I have.
Unfortunately, I can't tell you much about any of that. What I can say is that the jet's mission systems far out-perform the functional requirements levied upon them.
The biggest objections about the jet come on what you might call the mission engineering side of things. As a text I rather adore would say, mission engineering is concerned with whether the needs of the end user are satisfied. Sure, the jet does so many things rather well, but it's not meeting availability goals and has suffered over 12 years of schedule delays. So it's not enough to do the things really well, you have to be available to do it and you have to be cheap enough to operate.
Clearly there's grounds for discussion here, but I flat out reject 'jack of all trades, master of none' when it comes to this jet. It's actually the master of quite a lot! I know quite a few pilots of the F-35 and of other platforms -- and all the guys flying other fighter types would want to go to war in an F-35. I personally would only feel like I had a reasonable chance of survival in an F-35.
More to come on this later, I have a day job to do.
RT @the_engi_nerd: I will be writing up a longer piece on my thoughts on all the F-35 related drama currently happening on this site. But some thoughts:
People not read into the program can't know the full requirements story. We can know some of the functional requirements and the constraints governing those requirements, but we can't know the operational requirements.
I'm in a unique position because not only have I read the actual F-35 Operational Requirements Document, it was once my job to determine exactly how well the F-35's systems performed. Not whether or not they met the requirement -- how well they actually performed.
I don't think there's anyone on the planet who has examined more F-35 flight test data than I have.
Unfortunately, I can't tell you much about any of that. What I can say is that the jet's mission systems far out-perform the functional requirements levied upon them.
The biggest objections about the jet come on what you might call the mission engineering side of things. As a text I rather adore would say, mission engineering is concerned with whether the needs of the end user are satisfied. Sure, the jet does so many things rather well, but it's not meeting availability goals and has suffered over 12 years of schedule delays. So it's not enough to do the things really well, you have to be available to do it and you have to be cheap enough to operate.
Clearly there's grounds for discussion here, but I flat out reject 'jack of all trades, master of none' when it comes to this jet. It's actually the master of quite a lot! I know quite a few pilots of the F-35 and of other platforms -- and all the guys flying other fighter types would want to go to war in an F-35. I personally would only feel like I had a reasonable chance of survival in an F-35.
More to come on this later, I have a day job to do.