Russia Invades Ukraine | PUNT ROAD END | Richmond Tigers Forum
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Russia Invades Ukraine

What a strange place - can you imagine having a private army of 25,000 soldiers, which reading the press today isn’t unusual, maybe a bit on the small side with other oligarchs have 50,000 strong armies. I googled ADF and they have 75,000 as a comparison.

Weird I reckon.
 
Well that was a fair anti climax. Leathery old tough guy Priggy has backed out before the vinegar stroke, shriveled up n limped off to Belarus.

Now that he's completely buggered off with his mercenaries for a bit off a holiday break it'll be interesting to see if the Ukeys fully launch that counter offensive that the meedjia's been spruiking about for a couple of weeks and how well, or poorly the Russkie regular army copes without the back up of Priggy's boys.
 
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Yevgeny Prigozhin dead in a plane crash. Nothing to see here?
 
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Yevgeny Prigozhin dead in a plane crash. Nothing to see here?
That's odd. I would have expected he went to hospital for routine treatment of minor health ailments, but the medication had adverse effects, making him have serious mental health symptoms and is found dead on the pavement outside the hospital, having jumped out of the non-opening window from one of the upper floors.
 
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That's odd. I would have expected he went to hospital for routine treatment of minor health ailments, but the medication had adverse effects, making him have serious mental health symptoms and is found dead on the pavement outside the hospital, having jumped out of the non-opening window from one of the upper floors.
Yep. I thought he was going to go on a toad licking tour of northern Russia, and then jump out of a non-opening window in some high-rise building...

The lack of comment on Wagner Group sitting in southern Belarus is also interesting.
 
Yep. I thought he was going to go on a toad licking tour of northern Russia, and then jump out of a non-opening window in some high-rise building...

The lack of comment on Wagner Group sitting in southern Belarus is also interesting.
Could also be a convenient way to “disappear “
 
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He was Putin down on the exact 2 month anniversary from his attempted mutiny. Same day as his biggest ally in the Armed Forces was sacked.
 
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Old mate Putinontheritz certainly doesn't tolerate anyone gettin up in his face. Musta been serious pissed off at Priggy though. Took out a bunch of others alongside of Priggy when the plane fell out of the sky. Could have been worse though I suppose, plane could also have landed on a bunch of pedestrians or something n made a hell of a mess.
Makes ya wonder as to just how stupid Priggy was. Did he really think him n old mate ritzy one were still gunna be forever besties n he could just hang around like nothing went dodgy a few months back. Bloke shoulda been hiding under a rock somewhere half a world away.
 
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What was Putin & his generals thinking that the Ukraine was easy pickings . Got it horribly wrong.

 
What was Putin & his generals thinking that the Ukraine was easy pickings . Got it horribly wrong.


Putin would've won the war in a week or two if it wasn't for Elon Musk.

It's well worth reading the whole article, I've copied a link to it.

"Walter Isaacson is a professor of history at Tulane University, former editor of Time magazine and author of several biographies. This op-ed is excerpted from his latest book, “Elon Musk.”

"An hour before Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022, it used a massive malware attack to disable the routers of the American satellite company Viasat that provided communications to the country. The command system of the Ukrainian military was crippled, making it almost impossible to mount a defense. Top Ukrainian officials frantically appealed to SpaceX founder Elon Musk for help, and the deputy prime minister, Mykhailo Fedorov, used Twitter to urge him to send Ukraine terminals so it could use the satellite system that the company had built. “We ask you to provide Ukraine with Starlink stations,” he wrote.


"Musk agreed. Two days later, 500 Starlink terminals arrived in Ukraine. “We have the U.S. military looking to help us with transport, State has offered humanitarian flights and some compensation,” Gwynne Shotwell, Musk’s president at SpaceX, emailed him. “Folks are rallying for sure!”

"Every day that week, Musk held regular meetings with the Starlink engineers. Unlike every other satellite service, they were able to find ways to defeat Russian jamming. By March 6, the company was providing voice connections for a Ukrainian special operations brigade. Starlink kits were also used to connect the Ukrainian military to the U.S. Joint Special Operations Command and to get Ukrainian television broadcasts back up.
Within days, 6,000 more terminals and dishes were shipped, and by July there were 15,000 Starlink terminals operating in Ukraine."

 
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Putin would've won the war in a week or two if it wasn't for Elon Musk.

It's well worth reading the whole article, I've copied a link to it.

"Walter Isaacson is a professor of history at Tulane University, former editor of Time magazine and author of several biographies. This op-ed is excerpted from his latest book, “Elon Musk.”

"An hour before Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022, it used a massive malware attack to disable the routers of the American satellite company Viasat that provided communications to the country. The command system of the Ukrainian military was crippled, making it almost impossible to mount a defense. Top Ukrainian officials frantically appealed to SpaceX founder Elon Musk for help, and the deputy prime minister, Mykhailo Fedorov, used Twitter to urge him to send Ukraine terminals so it could use the satellite system that the company had built. “We ask you to provide Ukraine with Starlink stations,” he wrote.


"Musk agreed. Two days later, 500 Starlink terminals arrived in Ukraine. “We have the U.S. military looking to help us with transport, State has offered humanitarian flights and some compensation,” Gwynne Shotwell, Musk’s president at SpaceX, emailed him. “Folks are rallying for sure!”

"Every day that week, Musk held regular meetings with the Starlink engineers. Unlike every other satellite service, they were able to find ways to defeat Russian jamming. By March 6, the company was providing voice connections for a Ukrainian special operations brigade. Starlink kits were also used to connect the Ukrainian military to the U.S. Joint Special Operations Command and to get Ukrainian television broadcasts back up.
Within days, 6,000 more terminals and dishes were shipped, and by July there were 15,000 Starlink terminals operating in Ukraine."

its a wake up call for all countries, if your communications gets taken out ...

add the way drones have been used have been used in Ukraine and the face of modern warfare has changed

I wonder when satellites will get used ?
 
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