An episode of a Ukrainian FPV drone pursuing a Russian UAZ Patriot. The drone was pursuing the Russian vehicle, but then the operator decided to change the target and returned to a group of soldiers, where it was shot down with small arms fire.
Russian Su-34, Su-24M and Su-25SM aircraft began using OFZAB-500 high-explosive incendiary aviation bombs with UMPK modules in Ukraine. Some media reported on the OFZAB-1500 bomb, but they are not made in Russia and are not listed in catalogs. The OFZAB-500 aerial bomb was developed by the Bazalt State Research and Production Enterprise and was adopted by Russia in 2001. Due to the combined effects of fragmentation, high explosive and thermal fields, the bomb is particularly effective and affects everything within a radius of 290 meters, the temperature at the epicenter of the explosion is about 900 degrees. The bomb weighs 500 kg, is made of cast iron and has an incendiary mixture weighing 250 kg and 37.5 kg of explosives. The Russian OFZAB-500 aerial bomb is dropped at an altitude of 900 to 12,000 meters at an aircraft speed of 550 to 1,850 km/h. When equipped with a UMPK, the flight range of the OFZAB-500 bomb is about 60 km.
Ukraine has struck a weapons depot in Russia with ATACMS short-range ballistic missiles. Two days after approval came to use it, Ukraine has struck a Russian weapons depot with the short-range ballistic missile.
China has telecoms cables too, so it should consider that. In fact sabotaging the telecoms cables between Russia and China would seriously complicate Russia's economy.
Our priority should be to purchase our own weapons and not Russian or US/European.
We only import where our indigenous tech is wanting. That's it.
And btw, the post you quoted was simply from a bitter man who did not get what he wanted from Modi hence went rogue. So his tweet is kind of devoid of reality.
Combat use of Russian Kh-101 cruise missiles in Ukraine on November 17. The video shows Kh-101 cruise missile strikes on the Kremenchug hydroelectric power station, on the underwater part of the station and the consequences of the strike on the hydroelectric power station. At the end of the video there is an insert, strikes of Russian Kh-101 missiles on November 17, on the PS 330/110 electrical substation in the city of Rivne.
The Kh-101 missile has a range of up to 5,500 km, and a 400 kg warhead. Some versions of the Kh-101 missiles have an 800 kg warhead, the warhead of the missile was recently increased by reducing the fuel tank. The Kh-102 missile version can be equipped with a 250-kiloton nuclear warhead.
According to media reports, the damage to the Kremenchug hydroelectric power station in Ukraine is serious, including critical disruption of the hydro turbines, destruction of the shandor and local damage to the dam.
We're beginning to see the broad contours of the deal that can be expected. Namely:
> Russia keeps most of what it currently holds. Whether their annexation will be recognized or not remains to be seen.
> Crimea is off the table entirely (obviously).
> No NATO membership for Ukraine.
It's possible the Russians might accept the annexation not being legitimized in exchange for a binding guarantee that Ukraine will not become a NATO member, and possible restrictions on the type & number of weapons that can be sold to Ukraine from here on. They're also likely to press for lifting of all sanctions.
Vladimir Putin is open to discussing a Ukraine ceasefire deal with Donald Trump but rules out making any major territorial concessions and insists Kyiv abandon ambitions to join NATO, five sources with knowledge of Kremlin thinking told Reuters.
In the first detailed reporting of what President Putin would accept in any deal brokered by Trump, the five current and former Russian officials said the Kremlin could broadly agree to freeze the conflict along the front lines. There may be room for negotiation over the precise carve-up of the four eastern regions of Donetsk, Luhansk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, according to three of the people who all requested anonymity to discuss sensitive matters.
Russia may also be open to withdrawing from the relatively small patches of territory it holds in the Kharkiv and Mykolaiv regions, in the north and south of Ukraine, two of the officials said.
Putin said this month that any ceasefire deal should reflect the "realities" on the ground but that he feared a short-lived truce which would only allow the West to rearm Ukraine. "If there is no neutrality, it is difficult to imagine the existence of any good-neighbourly relations between Russia and Ukraine," Putin told the Valdai discussion group on Nov. 7. "Why? Because this would mean that Ukraine will be constantly used as a tool in the wrong hands and to the detriment of the interests of the Russian Federation."