@EuromaidanPress Sadly it’s more likely to prevent desertions from
Mobilised units.
Ukrainian training for drone warfare is basically - here’s a moving target. Shoot it a few times.
Training in Ukraine is still rushed and lacks quality. The need for troops on the frontline is an issue
@Gerashchenko_en@igorsushko It will take 50 years for Russia population to recover from the losses… if it can recover. Birth rates are down. Death rates are up.
They have no modern troops, what you see in Ukraine is mobiks fighting mobiks. Conscripted men with a few weeks training.
@8amBanza@secretsqrl123@MalcolmNance Even in world war 2 the deployments were about 2-3 months, with some early/ later war deployments lasting 6 months to support specific campaigns .
11 months at sea is a long time for thousands of sailors who have not seen families, children, loved ones, friends etc
@Inventingfanneh@FTusa284 The majority of Ukraines professional army is sadly dead. What you have is mobilised men with 6 week training at a max who rely on the support of drone systems to keep them alive:
Sadly the NATO style warfare of movement is impossible to instil when the war doesn’t pause.
I have nearly two decades in the U.S. Army and three and a half years as a volunteer combat advisor in Ukraine. I hear directly from Ukrainian instructors and front-line soldiers the same stories: Russian units going into assaults with only one magazine, missing helmets and body armor, vehicles abandoned without drivers, and soldiers who simply refuse to fight. These firsthand accounts prove that the Russian army is not just under pressure; it is collapsing from the inside.
The Russian land forces are breaking down completely. Mass shootings inside barracks, troops looting their own dead for gear, and the use of World War II era ammunition all reveal a force in total disarray. When an army cannot equip, feed, or command its men, it has already lost.
The Russian noncommissioned officer corps barely exists, and junior officers are inexperienced and poorly trained. Without that leadership core, units lose organization, discipline, and morale.
Logistics are a nightmare, with vehicles out of service, ammunition stockpiles running low, and medical and communication equipment in short supply. Even elite formations are now a shadow of what they once were, forced to rely on untrained conscripts and prison recruits just to fill the ranks.
After nearly two years of devastating losses, Russia’s manpower crisis is impossible to ignore. Recruits are unmotivated, poorly equipped, and sent into battle with little preparation, while the few remaining professionals are exhausted and demoralized. What remains of the Russian army is running on borrowed time, stretched thin and held together only by fear and propaganda.
Ukraine, on the other hand, continues to adapt, innovate, and fight with purpose. The contrast could not be clearer.
Russia’s army is dying from within, and Ukraine’s strength, unity, and determination will carry it through to victory.
Slava Ukraini 🇺🇦
SitRep - 12/10/25 - Ukrainian advances in Zaporizhzia and Zelensky spoke to Trump
An overview of the daily events in Russia's invasion of Ukraine. The AFU cleared villages in Zaporizhzia region and Zelensky spoke to Trump about AD and Tomahawks..
REPOSt=appreciated
1/X
@muddbear2012@joejusticewv@JamesGunn Have you tried driving a truck -40mph over snow and ice and mountains?
He would be flying too low and you would also, you would have to mess with the frame rate so it becomes a janky sped up scene.