War

OldMedUser

Well-Known Member
Sci-fi is a gateway entry to marijuana.
Could be some truth in that. I started with Tom Swift and the Flying Car when I was about 6 or 7 after reading Hardy Boys for a couple years. Still have a big box with all those books in it and some other 'boys books' my boys never wanted so may see if I can flog them online. That big Hardy Boys Detective Manual ought to be worth a fortune by now! :)

With my luck the books are all worm and mouse eaten by now so should check them out.

Smoked my first joint when I was 13 going to a free school in downtown Vancouver and hanging out with hippies around 16-20yo that were there. I got booted out of junior high my first year so had to take the Richmond Express bus from Richmond to the heart of downtown Vansterdam. A week after my first joint we all dropped a big horse cap of Purple Haze and went to Wreck Beach to run around naked and sunburn the hell out of my ass. :D

:peace:
 
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DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I think the EU can provide them with equipment and I'm sure the factories are working flat out to make more, something Russia can't do, if Ukraine retaliates on their grid with suicide drones. The EU countries cannot keep supplying equipment to Ukraine forever, so Russia needs to suffer the same on a larger scale, until they stop. The defenses will get better, but they are not fool proof and losses will be reduced, but continue to occur.

 

Budzbuddha

Well-Known Member
Giant RC sub surface “torpedo boat” with creamy nougat filling ( explosives ). Remote detonation or proximity charge.
No need to “ ram “ it per se but maybe sucker fish it to hull and detonate. Maybe more silent electric drives to deter sound - hydrophone detection.

Ukrainians are quite clever and are fully capable of thinking outside the box - I believe maybe something similar in use at vlads favorite bridge that got blowed up.

Captain Nemo had the right idea.

A48AE8E8-4C04-44C7-BBAB-D3DA3AE9538E.gif
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Giant RC sub surface “torpedo boat” with creamy nougat filling ( explosives ). Remote detonation or proximity charge.
No need to “ ram “ it per se but maybe sucker fish it to hull and detonate. Maybe more silent electric drives to deter sound - hydrophone detection.

Ukrainians are quite clever and are fully capable of thinking outside the box - I believe maybe something similar in use at vlads favorite bridge that got blowed up.

Captain Nemo had the right idea.

View attachment 5220263
I think something like their design, only have it carrying a torpedo underneath and have the ability to shoot it using the onboard camera, no need to ram then or take much surface fire from a mile out. A javelin mounted to the topside could fuck them up from 2 miles away on the run into the target.
 

Budzbuddha

Well-Known Member
More HiJinx from the Russian Front …..

The troops asked their superiors in Russia for more drones as Ukrainian forces increasingly and effectively relied on American HIMARS missile launchers the summer before their northern counter-offensive, according to Reuters.

"Quadcopters!!! Urgent!" one soldier wrote to his superior on July 19, according to Reuters. Quadcopter drones are not military-grade, which provided a sign of the troops' desperation prior to the Ukrainian counter-offensive. The drones are frequently used by Russia as they are low-cost, short-distance, rechargeable drones meant to launch small weapons. They're also used in part to offset the high costs of explosive, hi-tech surveillance drones like the Iranian kamikaze drones, according to the New York Times.

According to Reuters, the next day, the forces received four Mavic-3 quadcopter drones, but they couldn't be used immediately as needed. The soldiers, while under missile fire, had to install new software for the drones, and then train 15 soldiers on how to use them.

Other notes sourced by Reuters showed the soldiers pleading for munitions, with one soldier complaining that "the machine gun still won't work if it has no bullets inside."

2A3B0992-3EDD-4B04-8A2D-573FB17B755E.gif
 

BudmanTX

Well-Known Member
More HiJinx from the Russian Front …..

The troops asked their superiors in Russia for more drones as Ukrainian forces increasingly and effectively relied on American HIMARS missile launchers the summer before their northern counter-offensive, according to Reuters.

"Quadcopters!!! Urgent!" one soldier wrote to his superior on July 19, according to Reuters. Quadcopter drones are not military-grade, which provided a sign of the troops' desperation prior to the Ukrainian counter-offensive. The drones are frequently used by Russia as they are low-cost, short-distance, rechargeable drones meant to launch small weapons. They're also used in part to offset the high costs of explosive, hi-tech surveillance drones like the Iranian kamikaze drones, according to the New York Times.

According to Reuters, the next day, the forces received four Mavic-3 quadcopter drones, but they couldn't be used immediately as needed. The soldiers, while under missile fire, had to install new software for the drones, and then train 15 soldiers on how to use them.

Other notes sourced by Reuters showed the soldiers pleading for munitions, with one soldier complaining that "the machine gun still won't work if it has no bullets inside."

View attachment 5220280
Love the gif.....
 

Skillcraft

Well-Known Member
I read through only about 10 pages of this thread but I like what I am reading. I side with Ukraine in their fight against the Russian tyrant. I am going to take the time to read the thread all the way through before I make any other comments. But I do think President Biden is doing the right thing by sending arms to Ukraine. I honestly just wish we as a nation would do more to help them. Just my 2 cents.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

How Ukraine successfully repels Russian missile strikes and Iranian kamikaze drone attacks

57,370 views Oct 31, 2022 Over the past week, the Ukrainian army has shot down more than 40 Iranian kamikaze drones, a significant number of Russian missiles, and six helicopters. The result is hundreds of saved lives, dozens of surviving infrastructure facilities, said President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy. In total, Ukraine shot down more than 300 Iranian kamikaze drones - the first deliveries for Russia are already running out, the Armed Forces of Ukraine emphasize. Ukraine repels enemy attacks - partners activate air defense supplies. Details in the next story
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Maybe Vlad stopped mobilization because he had to, he has nothing to arm them with, few bullets for them to shoot and can't clothe, feed, train, or house them. He's fucked, the conscripts he sent are getting chewed up 5 times faster than the half ass trained ones who've already been fed into the meat grinder. Collapse on some fronts can't be far away as the Ukrainians keep the pressure on and hammer them with precise artillery fire. The Russians in Ukraine are in for one Helluva winter and they aren't ready for it.
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Russian reservist troops sent to fight in Ukraine have arrived at the front lines with "barely usable" rifles, Britain's defense ministry said Monday, a move likely to produce new logistical strains for Moscow's military leadership.

Thousands of newly mobilized reservists have been deployed to the battlefield over the last few weeks, Britain's defense ministry shared in an intelligence update. Facing mounting setbacks in his war efforts, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced the partial military mobilization of hundreds of thousands of his country's reservists in September.

British intelligence said in many cases these reservists have arrived in Ukraine "poorly equipped," and Russian officers grew concerned because some individuals were even sent without weapons.

Citing open source imagery, however, Britain's defense ministry said that mobilized reservists who did show up with rifles were often issued with AKM assault rifles. Designed by former Soviet general Mikhail Kalashnikov in 1959, this weapon was built to replace the AK-47 — which was introduced shortly after the end of World War II — and was later replaced by the AK-74 during the 1970s.

Britain's defense ministry said many of the AKM rifles given to Russian reservists are "likely in barely usable condition following poor storage."

These weapons also differ from newer rifles assigned to Putin's regular combat units, like the AK-12 or AK-74M, in that they use different types of ammunition. AKMs use 7.62mm ammunition, whereas the AK-12 and AK-74M use 5.45mm ammunition.

"The integration of reservists with contract soldiers and combat veterans in Ukraine will mean Russian logisticians will have to push two types of small arms ammunition to front line positions, rather than one," Britain's defense ministry said, adding that it will "likely further complicate Russia's already strained logistics systems."

Logistical and supply headaches — as well as Russia's faltering performance in Ukraine — have increasingly sowed tension throughout Moscow's military leadership. In September, Putin even fired one general for these issues.

Relying on old and outdated equipment is also not a new aspect of Putin's unprovoked war in Ukraine. Beyond the newly mobilized reservists, Russian forces — like conscripts — have had to use decades-old rifles that exited production long ago. In losing their more modern equipment, Russian troops have even been forced to pull obsolete heavy weapons — like Soviet-era tanks — from storage.

Monday's intelligence update came as Russian forces fired a barrage of missiles at Ukraine's critical infrastructure, Ukrainian officials said, triggering water and electricity shortages. The country's defense ministry shared that it managed to successfully down dozens of missiles.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I think giving the Ukrainians the money to make their own drones from a copy of another proven design so they can retaliate in kind would be a plan. Attack the Russian power grid with drones and turn their lights out. Ukraine's air defenses are rapidly improving with allied help and the number of expensive missiles getting through will be reduced further.


Ukrainians are staying in Kyiv despite Putin's warning. Here's why

92,118 views Nov 1, 2022 Russia launched a barrage of missile strikes at Ukrainian cities as it ramped up its attacks on infrastructure facilities across the country. Despite the attacks and Putin's warning of more airstrikes, Ukrainians who spoke with CNN's Nic Robertson say they plan on staying and are "ready for this."
 
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DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Retired US general breaks down striking video of Russian soldiers under attack

323,523 views Nov 1, 2022 Retired Army Lt. Gen. Mark Hertling reacts to a video that appears to show Russian forces under Ukrainian fire. CNN cannot independently verify the video.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Losing their religion, state-imposed religions don't fair very well in the modern secular world, the state churches of Europe led to widespread atheism, but the religious freedom in America led to mass lunacy! Perhaps Iran is undergoing a similar process with its centralized state version of Islam. This sure ain't Russia, large families lead to younger populations and there is a large youth demographic in Iran and I'm not sure how much they control the internet, which has been around 30 years and they probably had it for the last 10 to 20 years. This discontent has been brewing for a while and the killing of a young woman was the spark that lite the fuel.

I think it might be one of those urban rural divides, religion is the cause here, in south and central America it about economic policy and indigenous rural people versus urban more European identifying people. In America the urban rural divide is mostly about made up culture wars and the domestic for-profit domestic disinformation system feeding them spin and pure bullshit.


Iran protests rage on in defiance of crackdown • FRANCE 24 English

11,073 views Nov 1, 2022 Iranians staged new protest actions to denounce the country's theocratic regime in defiance of a crackdown that is now seeing those arrested put on trial and facing the death penalty. Iran has for the past six weeks been rocked by protests of a scale and nature unprecedented since the 1979 Islamic revolution, sparked by the death in September of Mahsa Amini who had been arrested by the Tehran morality police.
 
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