

The internals defenitively look better and you removed Belarus, so that’s good.
Did you intend to leave out the words? Without them the big yellow outer circle seems off/unnecessary.
The internals defenitively look better and you removed Belarus, so that’s good.
Did you intend to leave out the words? Without them the big yellow outer circle seems off/unnecessary.
My understanding is it’s “normal” conscription, but 10k more than last year.
I believe Russian officers have been “pressuring” conscipts to sign full military enlistments before their conscription year is up and that’s part of how they have been keeping up with their losses, without sending “conscripts” to war.
The spiral was created after the rocket’s first-stage booster, which blasted it off the ground, separated and the upper stage took over, he said.
As the booster fell back to Earth, it vented leftover fuel, which froze into reflective crystals.
“These crystals caught the sunlight, creating the bright spiral pattern in the sky,” O’Donoghue said.
“The spiral shape happened because the tumbling rocket was spinning as it released the fuel.”
Source:
https://www.rfi.fr/en/international-news/20250325-spacex-rocket-fuel-makes-stunning-swirl-in-european-sky
I think the video is from Ukraine looking at the Ukrainian sky.
I made a comment a few days ago about Russian artillery loses being over 94% of there prewar stockpile. I don’t belive NK has sent more than a few hundred (500 maybe), so I think you’re right and Russians are able to repair a non-negligible amount of the systems.
Thanks for your thoughts on the subject.
I want to know where they are getting them from. Based on the number lost they should be scraping the bottom of the barrel already, not increasing usage.
Maybe the “destroyed” artillery is salvageable if you combine a few “destroyed” artilleries together. They are behind the front line so they could be able to recover most of them and try and repair them.
Any thoughts?
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