#Cyber butthurt: How #Russian diplomats added #NAFO and InformNapalm to their “hacker list”
https://t.co/hvSQbZy3kS
On April 25, 2026, the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs distributed a statement from the Russian Embassy in #Norway with a commentary on cyber warfare for the Norwegian news outlet kode24. Russian diplomats issued a list of so-called “pro-Ukrainian hacker groups” that carried out attacks on Russian infrastructure in 2025...
Wow! @FoxNews made a story about "American AI crushing Iran's response time, including using AI for drone technology".
The truth is that the footage shows Ukrainian interceptor drones STING manufactured by Wild Hornets (@wilendhornets) company.
Fox News weren't even bothered by wheat fields. How did they occur in Iranian deserts? :)
Ukraine is helping the US counter the Iranian drone threat with hard-earned battlefield expertise.
Russia is feeding targeting information to endanger our people and interests.
Ukraine is a capable ally. Failing to recognize that is a strategic mistake we make at our peril.
Russian TV-expert Alexey Samoilov mocks Trump openly saying they used time between bombardments for their 'special military measures' (extra reconnaissance, targeting etc.) labelling them as "energy truce".
Additionally, Trump was called a "grandpa".
But why wouldn't they do that since Trump says "we'll take anything"?
679 Ukrainian girls and boys will never be able to play football — Russia killed them.
And it keeps killing more while moral degenerates suggest lifting bans, despite Russia’s failure to end its war.
Future generations will view this as a shame reminiscent of the 1936 Olympics.
Russia struck a bus carrying Ukrainian miners returning home after their shift, killing 12.
The first "Shahed" struck near the bus, causing the driver to lose control and crash into a fence. People began to climb out of the bus, and at that moment, the operator of the second "Shahed" aimed the drone directly at them.
Dear and most respected @NYPost, please kindly let your audience know about this story. Thank you.
Sources:
@NPU_GOV_UA (X)
https://t.co/fiAsvMdKS4 (Telegram)
A just peace for Ukraine cannot be negotiated on a deteriorating front.
As it stands, the current state of the battlefield will not lead to an end of Russia’s war - instead it prolongs it, spreads it, and makes it more expensive to contain.
I know Ukraine’s resilience is unquestionable, but the political-military decisions shaping its defense are undermining the very forces fighting to hold the line and straining the system to the point of risking significant consequence.
The West, especially the United States, has the influence and the responsibility to press for adjustments in leadership, strategy, and oversight that will strengthen, not weaken, Ukraine’s sovereignty.
And this is how responsible powers pursue peace - by preventing the kind of irrevocable losses that foreclose diplomatic options and embolden the aggressor.
It is foolish to believe Russian gains will create an off-ramp. This will only embolden Moscow and make any future settlement less stable and far more dangerous for America and our allies.
Personally, for President Trump, this war is now an unavoidable part of his legacy.
He has a narrow window to apply disciplined leverage, demand accountability, and help force the course corrections that make peace possible.
If he hesitates, the situation will only worsen and peace will slip further out of reach.
Widespread, systemic torture of Ukrainian POWs has been documented. Every instance is a stain on Russia and a violation of international law.
My brilliant friend @CaitlinDoornbos continues to highlight the atrocities being perpetrated and the resilience of the Ukrainian people.
President Trump gave Putin six months to get to the peace table.
Instead, Putin escalated, expanded, and attempted to make POTUS look weak.
Russian version of cooperation has been bombing civilian cities at massive scale and launching a new offensive to take more of Ukraine.
About a year ago I was invited to be a closed door speaker at a gathering of wealthy, highly educated people.
After I was done giving remarks, one of the attendees asked why they never saw images of the war in Ukraine. It wasn't meant to be snarky or mean. They were genuinely curious, and I was genuinely speechless.
For those who live this war, it seems unfathomable. For those very far away, it seems preposterous that a European capital could come under siege.
And yet, here we are again. Kyiv is burning and those who see, see. And those who don't, don't.