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Tuuktuuk Tuukka R @sopuli.xyz
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The reaction of the Ukrainian ambassador to the US during the argument between Zelensky and Trump.
  • Every day the Russia is not stopped makes a nuclear war more probable. This has been said since 2022, and it remains true.

  • The reaction of the Ukrainian ambassador to the US during the argument between Zelensky and Trump.
  • That's precisely what was said in the comment you replied to.

  • North Korea has sent more troops to Russia, reports citing Seoul's spy agency say
  • The number of soldiers sent this time was estimated by the South Korean intelligence service to be between 1000 and 3000 soldiers. It doesn't make a dent to DPRK's military, and it also doesn't affect the war against humanity very much, because the Russia loses that many soldiers per day or two.

  • On February 28, Ukrainian forces destroyed a Russian thermobaric ammunition depot in occupied Donetsk and struck three other targets, including the Ilsk Oil Refinery.
  • They've got tens and tens of this size, but not hundreds and hundreds.

    One such explosion destroys typically ammunition worth a couple of weeks of use. It does hurt the Russian military quite nicely, but it's not something that alone could end the war. It's one of the many things that, when all done, will together win Ukraine the war.

    It forces the Russia to send more meatwaves, which is a good thing: their ability to recruit soldiers has not been able to increase from the level of 25 000 to 35 000 per month, so if mire than 1000 soldiers.are removed from their army per month, their army shrinks.

  • Ukraine hits key Russian military sites in Crimea, Krasnodar Krai, General Staff says
  • People are telling you that sources that don't have a track record of lying are typically good sources. Beyond that, you can use the FIRMS map for reviewing if an attack has really taken place. It's a system for detecting forest fires by satellites, but it also detects any other bigger fires. You can use it for example to see where the actual front lines are because where a lot of artillery shells explode, there's a "forest fire" on the map. It might not show everything because if there happen to be clouds overneath, the satellites will not recognise the fire. So, it might give you false negatives, but usually not false positives.

  • Reporter: "Do you still think Mr. Zelenskyy is a dictator?" — Trump: "Did I say that? I can't believe I said that."
  • I don't think this one was dementia. Qt least not primarily. He's used to gaslighting in his personal life, and here he's simply gaslighting the whole world on television. If there's some dementia to this, then that is not to understand that you cannot gaslight a million people at once, because the point of gaslighting is to make its victim think they are going crazy and imagining things.

    Though... Can it be that for the MAGA audience this gaslighting does work and they really will believe Trump has never called Zelenskyj a dictator?

  • "A woman is like a child": MAGA quickly turns its sights on stripping Republican women of power
  • "When they came for me, there was nobody left to help."

  • Why Putin is finally negotiating
  • People keep repeating that we were promised the sanctions would have an almost immediate effect. Could someone tell me where that promise was made?

    I don't think that was ever promised, really.

  • Russian soldier complains his unit had to buy a donkey with their own money due to lack of equipment.
  • From a farmer who had a donkey? Those are animals that exist. I don't really know why people have donkeys, but for a reason or another, they do. And are able to sell them.

    Maybe someone has them just as a hobby, like other people have horses? Not a common thing, that's for sure, but a phenomenon that can exist.

    Also, you can see the donkey on the video, so I'd say it does exist.

  • SBU: Russians lost 50% of 120-mm mortar shell reserves after strike on Toropets arsenal last fall
  • According to this, the French intelligence assumes the Russian artillery shell production to be 3,7 million per year. That translates to quite precisely 10 000 shells per day. Here's the image that shows the numbers:

  • The total combat losses of the enemy from 24.02.22 to 26.02.25
  • There's indeed been a campaign for destroying the Russian logistics. A lot of trucks have been targeted in the last week or so.

  • Tesla sales crash 45% in Europe as rivals surge, Musk’s politics spark backlash
  • Where does Musk's money actually come from? How big part of it comes from Tesla? How much from SpaceX and how much from Starlink? What else do Musk's companies do?

    I'm just wondering: How long will he still be the richest person on Earth? And once he's not, what will Trump think of him?

  • More video of Russians doing parkour training.
  • This looks like an exercise you'll be doing for the rest of your life. Jump left, jump front, jump right, dive down. Until the end of your days about 25 seconds later.

    But, maybe it helps the soldiers feel safe, so they are less likely to revolt before it's too late?

  • Wounded, recovered and back to war. Ukrainian soldiers are returning to battle after amputation
  • Hm... A brigade consists of 3000 to 7000 soldiers. And the article says "many" have one or several amputees. That would mean something between 1 in 7000 and 5 in 3000. Yeah, that's in the ballpark of a tenth of a percent or a hundredth of a percent. True, not terribly significant. Though, many of them are probably good trainers!

  • Signal's CEO: Then We're Leaving Sweden | Sweden Herald
  • I use Signal because my workplace decided to default to it.

  • Wounded, recovered and back to war. Ukrainian soldiers are returning to battle after amputation
  • It's a very different thing to give the amputee crutches and to give them high-quality prosthetics. The Ukrainians you refer to as "cripples" aren't really cripples, because they can move almost normally. Also, they are used very differently: Russian troops need to advance on foot, Ukrainian troops need to arrive to a location in a vehicle and stay to defend it.

    I wouldn't say the two cases are very similar at all.

  • The text of the Minerals Deal between Ukraine and USA

    www.eurointegration.com.ua The full text of the Ukraine-US Minerals Agreement

    European Pravda publishes the final text of the “Minerals Deal,” an intergovernmental arrangement that Ukraine and the United States are set to sign this week...

    The full text of the Ukraine-US Minerals Agreement

    The text manages to be quite surprising to me.

    There was talk about USA wanting a share of Ukraine's mineral wealth, but this agreement looks more like an agreement about funding of Ukraine's reconstruction. It says that half of all income that Ukraine will free from the Russia will have to be put in this fund, but if the fund will be used for reconstructing Ukraine, how does this benefit USA?

    Maybe it can be used for building mines for American companies, for them to use for free? Or maybe the fund can be liquidated and the money shared between Ukraine and USA?

    But, my untrained eye cannot really recognize whatever shenanigans there might be hidden in the text.

    5
    Wounded, recovered and back to war. Ukrainian soldiers are returning to battle after amputation
  • This is actually very important news that is contrary to what I have thought! The Russia mostly is not able to give prostethic legs to its wounded soldiers, Ukraine is. That changes the military loss ratios dramatically!

    The ratio of total military losses between Ukraine and the Russia has been around 1:2½, while the ratio between populations is 1:3½. However, the ratio between dead is 1:4½. Anything where the ratio is smaller than the population ratio is favouring Ukraine. Now, if a sizable amount of the non-dead military losses in Ukraine are able to return to duty, then a large share of those are not military losses at all! That would mean that even in the number of military losses including the wounded Ukraine is doing better than the Russia. What share of the "irrecoverable" wounds are losses of limbs? Does anyone know?

  • Ukraine’s Top Military Leadership: We Are Starting to Win, Russia Is Starting to Lose
  • For the Russia it's about 1:2½, and getting worse, for Ukraine it is currently around 1:4 or 1:5.

  • Ukraine’s Top Military Leadership: We Are Starting to Win, Russia Is Starting to Lose
  • In casualties as in military losses Ukraine is doing quite badly: Ukraine has lost some 300 000 as dead and wounded, while the Russia has lost around 800 000 as dead and wounded. The population difference is 1:3½, and the difference in total military losses is 1:2½. That means, Ukraine is losing a slightly larger share of its population as military casualties than the Russia is.

    However... Neither side is going to run out of population anytime soon. Ukrainian soldiers go to the front, eventually maybe get wounded and return home one leg poorer. Their children will not have to live with their father, only without an organic right leg of the father. And for the Russian side, the deaths are a much bigger proportion of the population. There the ratio is around 1:4½, and that one favours Ukraine.

    If a person is measuring ground gained in this war, he does not understand the war very much at all. Neither side is trying to gain ground. Both sides are trying to incur as much losses to the enemy as possible. The Russia because they need to keep the gore to the maximum in order to convince the west to stop supporting Ukraine, and Ukraine, because if the Russia's losses drop under 1000 per month, they will be able to start training their soldiers, which will make a huge difference in their dangerousness. The Russia knows very well that it will never take over Ukraine with the current speed of advancing. Remember, in year 2024 the Russia was gaining ground faster than expected. And in year 2024 they managed to gain 0.7 % of Ukraine's total territory. Less, if you take the Kursk province's happenings into account. 0.7 % is strategically meaninglessly little.

    Artillery shell production is currently about twice as high in the Russia as it's in the west. But when you take into account that to hit a specific target, the very inaccurate Russian artillery needs to shoot about ten times as many rounds as western artillery, the numbers start looking different: For military use, you either should divide the Russia's artillery shell numbers by ten, or alternatively multiply ours by ten. Depth of reserves... Well, here we come back to casualties and motivations.

    • As said, the population ratio is 1:3½.
    • The total military casualty ratio is 1:2½, favouring the Russia.
    • The military death ratio is 1:4½, favouring Ukraine.

    Russian soldiers are in it for the money. The Russia will have useful amounts of money to give to the soldiers for another six to fifteen months, about. After that the motive is gone. Typically, it is easier for the defending party to find soldiers for a war than it is for the aggressor. This is the case in this war as well. This means, when interpreting the casualty ratios, you need to add a multiplier for taking into account that the defender can tap into a larger share of the population than the aggressor can.

    Remember, Ukrainians are sending to the front less than a fifth of what they could, if we compare with Finland. Finland has a population of 5,6 million and we have about one million soldiers ready to serve within some months of the begin of a hypothetical war. Each one of them has received a top-class military training and each one has a specific place in a specific unit in the army should a war break. Ukraine has about the same size army as that, even though they have over 40 million people. The unwillingness to join the front is a surprising feature, at least from a Finnish perspective, but also a result of a lack of motivation. If the scales were to tip in the favour of the Russia, Ukrainians would get scared and more would be ready to help their country. When looking at the very large difficulties Ukraine has with conscription, you need to take this into account. The problem is of a type that solves itself. It's extremely unfair towards the soldiers at the front that they never get relieved. And idiotic that people don't want to join the army because soldiers never get relieved from the front ... because there are not enough people ready to go to the front. And, from my experience living in Ukraine, I would say that this won't change. They will remain understaffed as long as the war will go on, but always precisely at the limit where they can still keep scraping on.

    Ukraine's army won't be disappearing anytime soon, the west is effortlessly able to pay all of Ukraine's budget indefinitely if it so wishes and the Russia is not able to gain any ground. The Russia's goals are to cause Ukraine to collapse economically or its army to collapse from lack of manpower, and neither of those can happen. At the same time, the Russian economy, and therefore military, have at max one year time left. After that they will have nothing to use for stopping Ukraine from reclaiming its territories.

    EDIT: I want to add: While the Ukrainians' readiness to defend their country is lower than Finns', that's mostly because Finland has an exceptionally high readiness for that. If you compare with Germany or France, the Ukrainians look extremely willing to go to the front. What I wanted to say is that although their willingness is very high, there is still a lot of place for improvement!