Russia invades Ukraine - 6 - from 7 August 2024

And now, it’s time for a little, light entertainment.
And… let this be a lesson to the rest of you.

Russia set to ‘build fake London out of plywood then nuke it’ in warning to West

Published: 08/09/2024 - 11:58

Propagandists suggested migrants would build the mega-structures

Russia could be planning to build fake wooden versions of London and Washington in the Arctic before blowing them up with nuclear missiles as a warning to the West, a Russian propagandist has claimed.

The crackpot plan, which would see both city centres constructed from plywood, would act as a warning to the UK and US to stop arming Ukraine with long-range missiles and other armaments.

According to Russian propagandist Alexei Mikhailov, migrants would build the replica cities on the Russian archipelago of Novaya Zemlya which was previously been used by the Soviet Union for atomic testing.

The Head of the Bureau of Political-Military Analysis claimed on Kremlin-controlled Russian state TV that Britain, among other nations in the West, wants to “directly participate” in the Ukraine war.

Russia set to ‘build fake London out of plywood then nuke it’ in warning to WestReuters/Getty Images

"The Anglo-Saxons want a big continental war - they really do,” Mikhailov said.

“[We know about the] absolutely disgusting intentions of Britain to….directly participate in the military conflict with Russia by supplying, among other things, long-range precision weapons.”

Explaining more about the plan, Mikhailov said Russia would “build a replica of London on Novaya Zemlya [nuclear-testing island in the Arctic]…. And Washington, the centre….the White House, this central part. And we’re going to do an exercise.”

He added that the nuclear test would involve a Bulava missile launched from a submarine in the Atlantic.

The test would eviscerate the fake plywood cities with “more than 150 kilotons of TNT equivalent”, Mikhailov said.

“On YouTube let three billion users see what it looks like to destroy the capital of Britain and the United States, with just one warhead out of 10 that are part of each Bulava.

“There will be Buckingham Palace and Big Ben. It will all go up in blue flames and fly so beautifully that the world will be horrified.”

However, aiming to balance Mikhailov’s comments, another TV propagandist Vladimir Solovyov suggested Putin had no time to build the plywood mega-cities.

The comments come after Vladimir Putin unveiled a new “invincible” missile with an “almost unlimited range”.

The 71-year-old Russian premier claims the weapon - named Burevestnik, but dubbed SSC-X-9 Skyfall by Nato - can evade American missile defences.

However, analysts in the West have disputed Putin’s claims and questioned whether the rocket boasts any strategic value.

The “Skyfall” has a poor test record, with just two partial successes out of at least 13 known tests since 2016, according to the Nuclear Threat Initiative.

In 2019, a recovery of one of the missiles went wrong when the weapon exploded, leaving an unshielded nuclear reactor “smouldering” on the floor of the White Sea, in the Arctic, for an entire year.

Its record has attracted jibes from analysts abroad - Thomas Countryman from the Arms Control Association called it “a uniquely stupid weapon system” and “a flying Chernobyl that poses more threat to Russia than it does to other countries”.

In a vicious retaliatory move, the kids from the Broadford kindergarten made a fake Kremlin out of playdough and nuked it between the sandpit and climbing frame with a penny banger.

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Some of those oligarchs should just invite Putin to a tea party. Problem solved.

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The Mad Matters Tea party.
I like it.

Putin would just die to be there.

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Let’s see what the Ukrainian drones can do with this new challenge. There’s nothing quite as satisfying as a good Russian ‘turret toss’.

Uralvagonzavod handed over a new batch of T-90M tanks to the Russian Army

Russia’s Uralvagonzavod has shipped a new batch of T-90M Proryv tanks to the Russian army.

The machine-building corporation said that the tanks were equipped with electronic warfare equipment against drones.

The tanks are also equipped with Nakidka radar-absorbent material (RAM) camouflage.

The Nakidka camouflage system is a set of covers made of radio-absorbing material and sections to cover the combat vehicle.

The corporation classifies the number of transferred vehicles.

In the published video, Uralvagonzavod showed 7 T-90M Proryv tanks.

According to the corporation’s data, they intend to increase production of the vehicles.

The T-90M is a modernized version of the main Russian T-90 tank, which in turn is a modernization of the Soviet T-72 tank.

The T-90M has a newly designed turret, an updated fire control system and other subsystems. The tank is equipped with a modular propulsion system with a V-92S2F diesel engine with a capacity of 1130 hp.


Russian T-90M Proryv tank during tests. September 2024.

The turret is welded multilayer with an ammunition compartment and air conditioning outside the combat compartment. The tank is equipped with splat armor and the Relict reactive armor.

Earlier it was reported that the Russian army had ordered the first batch of T-90M Proryv tanks, which would be equipped with the Arena-M active protection system.

The Arena-M system is designed to intercept missiles and other anti-tank munitions in the near area around the tank by physically destroying them with a counter-munition. It consists of radar stations that monitor the space around the tank.

https://mil.in.ua/en/news/uralvagonzavod-handed-over-a-new-batch-of-t-90m-tanks-to-the-russian-army/

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Trump ‘offended’ by Putin’s endorsement of Kamala Harris

Margarita Simonyan admits to RT’s covert projects


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Updated turret eh?
Maybe they have built in parachutes for softer landings

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Like most political decisions, it boils down to wealth. Purely, the creation of wealth or the non loss of wealth. Follow the money.

More countries are openly flaunting their ties with Putin. They say it’s just business.

Sep 9, 2024, 8:00 AM GMT+8

  • Russian President Vladimir Putin is meeting leaders from China, India, Vietnam, and Indonesia amid heavy sanctions.
  • Russia seeks to end diplomatic isolation by engaging with “swing nations” beyond autocratic allies.
  • Despite sanctions, Russia remains a key global economy and energy supplier.

Russian President Vladimir Putin is having a very social year as his country continues to wage war in Ukraine.

So far, Putin has met top leaders from Asian countries including China, India, Vietnam, and Indonesia. That’s plenty of publicity for a heavily sanctioned individual from a country facing sweeping trade restrictions.

And there’s a strategic reason for all those meetings, Sean McFate, an adjunct professor at the Syracuse University Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, told Business Insider.

Russia is trying to emerge from diplomatic isolation and is looking to forge strategic relationships beyond autocratic partners like China, North Korea, and Iran, McFate said.

“Putin is eyeing strategic swing nations like India, which opposes China and trades with Russia,” he added. “That gives Russia some advantage over China, as their relationship has chilled somewhat.”

On Wednesday, Putin rubbed shoulders with Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim in Russia. The two countries were set to discuss a range of issues, including trade and investment.

This meeting came on the heels of Putin’s trip to Mongolia, where he met President Ukhnaagiin Khürelsükh.

Mongolia, as a member of the International Criminal Court, should have arrested Putin, who has an ICC arrest warrant against him.

But the East Asian nation said it couldn’t throw Putin in jail because it depends on Russia — an oil and gas giant — for its energy security.

“This supply is critical to ensure our existence and that of our people,” a Mongolian government spokesperson told Politico.

Mongolia’s explanation underscores the scale of Russia’s economy. It’s the 11th largest in the world and has an annual GDP of about $2 trillion, according to the World Bank.

While Russia’s economy pales in comparison to the US’ $27.4 trillion GDP, Russia is still an important partner for many developing economies.

In particular, Russia accounts for about one-tenth of the world’s oil production, making it an important resource supplier.

Before its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Russia’s single largest trading partner was the European Union.

In the last two years, Russia has managed to pivot to supplying China and India, as well as nearly anyone who wants to buy discounted energy, be it Sri Lanka when it was in an economic meltdown just two years ago or Turkey — a NATO member and aspiring EU member.

While some countries, like China and Vietnam, have historical ties with Russia, others, like India and Sri Lanka, have also cited economic self-interest for their ongoing relationship with Russia — particularly if they’re in difficult conditions themselves. Most, if not all of them, have also taken a neutral position on the war in Ukraine.

Serik Zhumangarin, Kazakhstan’s deputy prime minister, told Bloomberg last month that the country would no longer “blindly follow the sanctions” if the restrictions impact the country’s key companies. Russia was Kazakhstan’s largest trade partner before the war started.

He told the media outlet that some of the sanctions against Moscow had hurt Kazakhstan more than Russia, and the West has done nothing to compensate the Central Asian nation.

Using the economy to explain cozy diplomatic relationships with Russia appears to be gaining favor now that the Ukraine war is in its 31st month.

After all, Russia is a large and globally integrated economy that even the European Union is still trying to decouple from.

Even China, which in 2022 declared its friendship with Russia as a partnership with “no limits,” now appears to be more keen on presenting the relationship in more pragmatic, businesslike terms.

Just last month, China framed Vice Premier Li Qiang’s visit to Russia as one that seeks “complementary advantages and huge potential for practical cooperation” between Moscow and Beijing.

Russia is wooing the Global South

Partnering with Russia on economic terms is unlikely to alarm the US and Europe, even if there are concerns and strong criticism.

“Russia’s foreign policy blitz is unlikely to be a threat to the EU and NATO,” Syracuse University’s McFate said.

That’s because Moscow is not making military alliances with partner countries to attack Europe, which views Russia as its top threat, he said. For the US, Russia is a distant second after China.

Even so, there still may be changes afoot.

Moscow is pushing a narrative of the Global South as a force in shaping an alternative world order, with the emerging nations of BRICS — anchored by Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa — forming an economic bloc.

Russia is the BRICS chair this year, and Putin has invited Mongolia to join the group’s summit in October. Malaysia applied to join the group, and Indonesia is also considering an invitation to join the bloc. Turkey has also said it’s interested in joining the group.

“Indonesia, Malaysia, and Mongolia are an interesting test of those nations’ ‘neutrality’ toward China, the US, international law (e.g., ICC), and the authority of the United Nations system,” McFate said.

Russia’s push for a multipolar world order resonates with countries who desire a more equitable international order. And Moscow has shown it does have influence over lower- and middle-income countries, as evidenced by the non-participation or low-level participation of some Asian countries in June’s Ukraine peace summit in Switzerland, Derek Grossman, a senior defense analyst at RAND, a think tank, wrote in a July commentary for Foreign Policy.

“While Russia’s sway is not at the level of China’s or the United States’, it is certainly enough to promote its anti-Western interests and disrupt the already precarious regional order,” wrote Grossman.

Countries around the world are weighing the dynamics.

**“**Regional allies will watch with interest to see if great powers can be played off each other,” McFate said.

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Boooooo!

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I know right.
The Orc swine are trying hard to spoil @Captain_Jack and my pleasure in the big kaboom and huge turret toss.

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Alternative is to aim the drone at the external ammo supply I guess.

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Losing Lada could be classed as an improvement

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Inside Pokrovsk, the vital Ukrainian town in Russia’s sights

17 minutes ago


As invading Russian forces near Pokrovsk, Maria and her cats have finally decided to leave

Fleeing the town she has lived in most of her life, Maria Honcharenko is taking just one small bag, and her two tiny kittens.

After stubbornly staying on in the east Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk, the 69-year-old is now heeding advice and preparing to leave.

“My heart stops when I hear a bang,” she tells me, crying. She’s holding an old push-button phone where emergency contacts are saved.

The front line is less than 8km (4.9 miles) from Pokrovsk. Serhiy Dobryak, the head of the city’s military administration, says that Russians target the city not just with ballistic missiles and multiple rocket launchers - they also now strike with guided bombs and even artillery, as the city is now within the range of those weapons too.

“Look what Russians did to us. I worked here for 30 years and now I am leaving everything behind,” she says, breaking down in tears.

Volunteers help Ms Honcharenko to get on an evacuation bus. Trains no longer run here.


Watch

Inside Pokrovsk, the vital Ukrainian town in Russia’s sights

17 minutes ago

Abdujalil Abdurasulov

BBC News, in Pokrovsk

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BBC Maria Honcharenko sits on a bus with her cats sitting in a cat carrier on a seat next to herBBC

As invading Russian forces near Pokrovsk, Maria and her cats have finally decided to leave

Fleeing the town she has lived in most of her life, Maria Honcharenko is taking just one small bag, and her two tiny kittens.

After stubbornly staying on in the east Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk, the 69-year-old is now heeding advice and preparing to leave.

“My heart stops when I hear a bang,” she tells me, crying. She’s holding an old push-button phone where emergency contacts are saved.

The front line is less than 8km (4.9 miles) from Pokrovsk. Serhiy Dobryak, the head of the city’s military administration, says that Russians target the city not just with ballistic missiles and multiple rocket launchers - they also now strike with guided bombs and even artillery, as the city is now within the range of those weapons too.

“Look what Russians did to us. I worked here for 30 years and now I am leaving everything behind,” she says, breaking down in tears.

Volunteers help Ms Honcharenko to get on an evacuation bus. Trains no longer run here.

Map showing Pokrovsk

Pokrovsk is a key transportation hub. If it falls, then Russian forces will cut off one of the main supply routes in the region. This will likely force Ukraine to retreat from Chasiv Yar and the front line will move closer to Kramatorsk.

For Ukraine, this would effectively mean the loss of almost the entire Donetsk region, which the Kremlin has fought to capture since the beginning of their invasion.

The Ukrainian military admits that its incursion into Russia’s Kursk region failed to force Moscow to divert its troops from eastern Ukraine.

And some observers argue that this move, which certainly helped to boost morale among the soldiers, left the strategic supply route vulnerable to Russian attacks.

On Sunday, Russia claimed to have taken control of the village of Novohrodivka, just 10km from Pokrovsk. Kyiv has not commented but sources told the BBC that Ukrainian forces have retreated from there.

The space on the evacuation bus quickly fills up. A woman with a five-year old daughter climbs on board.

This is their second evacuation. The first time it was in 2022 when they fled from a border town after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

This city is clearly Moscow’s top priority. According to Serhiy Dobryak, the head of Pokrovsk’s military administration, the ratio of forces fighting in that direction is 10 to one in Russia’s favour.


Ukrainian units defending the area drape their brigade flags and crosses over road signs

During its latest attack, Russia hit a substation in Pokrovsk, leaving half the city without power. The strikes also disrupted water supplies.

The city is quickly becoming deserted. Just two months ago, 48,000 people were still living here. Today half of them have already left.

The bustling downtown with shops and supermarkets is eerily quiet. Banks, supermarkets and most cafes are closed. The hospital has been evacuated.

Outside the city, excavators are digging new trenches in the fields.

However, Oleksandr Syrskyi, Ukraine’s commander-in-chief says that the army has managed to stop the Russian advancement towards Pokrovsk.

Lt Col Oleh Dehtyarenko, a battalion commander of the 110th brigade, told the BBC that the front line on the northern flank of Russia’s assault on Pokrovsk had indeed been stabilised. However, Russian attacks are mostly focused on the southern flank, he says, where heavy battles are continuing.

One of the areas on that flank that Russians are trying to seize is Selidove, a small town south-east of Pokrovsk.

The BBC visited an artillery position of the 15th Brigade of the National Guard that defend this town. Relentless Russian attacks give them no respite.

“Prepare for action!” the unit commander Dmytro orders after receiving coordinates of a new target.

All crew members rush to an old American M-101 howitzer. This type of gun was used in World War Two. Now Ukrainians fire it to stop Russian attacks.


Dmytro, 15th Brigade National Guard commander, says they must fire hundreds of rounds a day here to hold off the Russians

The commander shouts “Fire!” and pulls the rope. The explosion is deafening. The gun is covered with smoke.

The fighting in his sector is very intense, says 31-year-old Dmytro.

“The enemy attacks in groups of up to 15 people, sometimes up to 60,” he said. “We fire up to 200 rounds a day [to repel them].”

This is a big change to last winter when big guns stayed silent for most of the day.

But the more they shell the Russian positions, the greater the risk of return fire. So, after each series of rounds, they head to a dugout to wait out Russia’s counter barrage.

And when they hear a loud thud in the distance, they go quiet. “A glide bomb,” one of the soldiers mutters. It’s this weapon that they fear the most. It has a devastating effect and the gunners have nowhere to hide from it.

Dmytro gives an evasive answer when asked whether it would be more useful to use Ukrainian forces involved in the Kursk operation to defend the Donbas region instead. “Commanders have a better view to make strategic decisions,” he said.


If Pokrovsk falls, Ukraine will lose a vital transporation hub in the east

The front line here can move quickly. Sometimes it can be a total surprise for Ukrainian forces.

Last month, a group of seven soldiers of the 68th Brigade started their shift at the forward position in the village of Komyshivka, 15km west of Selidove. Their task was to stop any attempts of Russian forces to break through. The next day, however, they were encircled by the Russian forces.

Thanks to extremely brave drivers and the negligence of Russian soldiers, they were evacuated three days later.

Back in Pokrovsk, the evacuation bus with Ms Honcharenko on board is full. They have to take a new route as the bridge on the way out of town is damaged by the Russian strikes. As the bus starts moving, people wave through the windows and wipe their tears away.

For Maria Honcharenko, this is a scary journey full of uncertainties. But she knows one thing – it will be safer in her new home than remaining at the front line.

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Russian losses per 09/09/24 reported by the Ukrainian general staff.

+1150 men
+3 tanks
+9 AFVs
+26 artillery pieces
+33 UAVs

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