Ukraine - Russia Conflict

So you call your phone camera a seeker, eh? Yep, critical thinking skills indeed.

Should sum it up:
Are you being deliberately obtuse, or is this your natural state?

DSMAC uses either an IIR or radar seeker that images the target area so that a computer unit can compare it with a stored image of the target site. Or put another way, if a mobile phone was being used to automatically compare a visual input with stored target image data for the purpose of guided a missile or bomb, then yes, it would be a seeker.

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  1. Nose cap. Seals off forward end of radome and provides protection during reentry.
  2. Impact fuze. Used to detonate warhead in surface burst option.
  3. Stabilized antenna. Allows radar unit to transmit and receive radio frequency (RF) energy.
  4. Support structure. Conical aluminum assembly wrapped with an ablative heat shield.
  5. Radar unit. Provides target site information to PAC for comparison with stored target site information.
  6. Quick access splice segment. Eight splice segments allow mating the radar section to the warhead section.
  7. Impact fuze. Four fuzes used to detonate warhead in surface burst option.
  8. Radome. Reinforced glass/epoxy shell that covers radar unit antenna. It also acts as a heatshield.

Dude, seriously. You don't like the West but you like Russia because Britain used a boat to get to Asia and Russia invaded it by land. So is this a boat thing?
 
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A fragment of the battle of Russian special forces in Ukraine against a company of the 63rd brigade of the armed forces of Ukraine in the Nikolaev-Kherson direction has been published. In the video, you can see that one Ukrainian soldier surrenders and asks to stop shooting. As a result of the battle with the Russian special forces, ninety Ukrainian soldiers from the company of the 63rd brigade of the Armed Forces of Ukraine were killed, some of the results of the battle are shown at the end of the video.