RUSSIANS PANIC, MAJOR COUNTER ATTACKS! Ukraine War News & Combat Review



This stream is dedicated to researching and reporting accurate and relevant events centered around the war in Ukraine on May โ€ฆ

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20 thoughts on “RUSSIANS PANIC, MAJOR COUNTER ATTACKS! Ukraine War News & Combat Review”

  1. Let's also remember that Russia used wmd in UK when they used novichick. So they are lucky they didn't get an article 5 used against them then and yes that would of been full force of nato with all it's modern new weapons rather than just Ukraine with some old nato weapons. So these commie barstweards dont scare us

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  2. When it comes to Trump, you are a complete fool. Trump has said that he threatened Russia with nukes over Ukraine. You may not believe it, but it seems completely in line with Trump's way of acting. That is why Russia did not attack while Trump was in office. Trump saying he would negotiate with Putin to end the war does not mean Putin gets what he wants.

    Biden's threat against Putin is that he will continue to send weapons to Ukraine until they win. That threat just keeps the war going, because Russia has already accepted that it is going to happen. Also, Putin knows there are limits to how long that can go on for. It actually forces Putin to keep on fighting hoping that the support will change. It also keeps the support for Putin in Russia.

    What can Trump say to bring peace? Trump has a 1000 times better position than Biden does. He could continue doing exactly what Biden is doing. He could threaten to attack Russia or even nuke Russia if peace is not agreed to. He can also offer some face-saving message to Putin (ending some or all of the sanctions, agreeing to not allow Ukraine into NATO for x number of years), saying that the goal is to save lives is 100% true. Your view that the war should continue until one side wins and the other loses is the best option ignores the lives of those actually doing the fighting. Everyone that thinks this war is the best way to get rid of Putin is mistaken. Having peace where Putin gained almost nothing is the way to get rid of him. Imagine how things will change when all those Russian soldiers go home and tell what happened. Putin can't win that information war. It is also the best way to ensure that Russia does not even have a worse leader.

    Those people clapping for Trump understand the situation far better than you do.

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  3. The way Andrew pronounces "Prigozhin" makes it sound like some sort of morning after pill & makes me laugh every time. This combined with his on-point sarcasm does wonders to relieve the tension over the counter-offensive.
    ๐Ÿ’™๐Ÿ’›

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  4. Also, to AM – in your intro when it gets to when is President Zelenskyy is watching the UA๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆflag being raised (in Kherson, I think) & then again, after the ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ is up – at both points there is an insert of brief high-pitched crowd noise that wasnโ€™t originally in the intro & it doesnโ€™t add anything, it actually detracts & distracts from the pride, serenity, & joy of seeing President Zelenskyy watch the raising of UAโ€™s ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆ over a previously Russian-occupied UA city, that has just been liberated๐Ÿ—ฝ by the ๐Ÿ’™awesome defenders๐Ÿ’› of Ukraine ๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ฆโ€ผ๏ธ

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  5. Simonyan reference "spires". Is about the novichok poisoning in Salisbury. UK. Famous for its cathedral spire. I thought they denied it though it was pretty well proven. Ummm. Oh forgot for a moment….whatever they say, it is a lie. She is falling appart, like her army and her country.

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  6. There are a lot of dedicated people at the VA who are 100% there to serve. I chose to become a psychologist and specialize in PTSD after seeing and living 3-generations of servicemen (yes, just men) in my family. I took great pride in being able to do what I could to give back to the Veterans. There are too many walking wounded, whose lives are lost after the PTSD from war. I was there when Obama was a young Senator who made a promise to help the vets in Illinois, after being able to advocate directly to Obama on behalf of some vets, he followed through, and kept that promise. When he took office he immediately increased the number of psychologists in the VA system, and pushed millions of $$ toward PTSD services!! The VA I was in went from 7 Psychologists to 33. That's identifying the problem, finding a solution, and then keeping a promise by following through with the resources!! From 7 to 33, that's a huge move in the right direction! However now there's talk from "Trump's party" to slash that again. Sure! Can't wait for that! Let's all live, drink, and die like the Russians while a Putin Whannabee and his Oligarchs get rich!

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  7. Yes, there are many ways people end up with PTSD, but the type of symptoms, the depth, there are differences between PTSD caused by the trauma of war and those of Civilian PTSD. That doesn't mean civilians who haven't experienced war don't have significant life disruption due to the symptoms and effects of trauma, however, living in the war conditions experienced in Ukraine are significantly different and the outcome will be also. Interestingly, not everyone who goes through a traumatic event or even war, comes back with PTSD. Alcohol and drug use can contribute to a worse outcome for survivors, so there goes the next gen or two of Russia!

    I've never been in a war, but I have PTSD from other life events. But not everyone experiences a situation in the same way. A friend and I lived in Grand Forks, ND during the "500 yr flood" in 1997. We worked side-by-side for a week, the entire last 3 days we only had a total of maybe 7 hrs of sleep, we just kept moving along with everyone else out there, piling sandbags onto the dyke. I don't recall stopping to eat or drink, although I remember people brought food. Days just blended into days, for me anyway. I remember thinking "We're building this dike into the river! We need to straighten it out! But we kept backing up further into the river, the water was up to my ankles, how is this going to hold?? We worked by the lights from the news trucks: CBS, NBC, CNN, I remember seeing them in the parking lot kiddy korner from us. Then nothing. There seemed to be a sudden strange silence, and we were told the East Grand Forks' dike broke. I remember turning around and seeing the lights shut down across the river. I remember not know what to do. Someone said go home, so my friend and I set out walking across town, from the far North end to the South end. I remember being in awe, just taking everything in as we walked through the streets, water underneath our feet, watching the river pour over the top of the bridge and pouring down into the town. Seeing a businessman trying to salvage some of his restaurant equipment, he declined any extra help, so we kept walking. There were hardly any lights left, none on the other side of the river, just the block next to us. We walked all the way home, put on miles in those 3 days, but never felt any pain. I remember feeling like my ears were plugged, everything was muffled. My friend called me about an hr after I laid down to nap, 3am. We were evacuating further S the next morning, I just wanted a rest. She told me to turn on the TV and told me the street that was shown flooding on the screen was the street I pulled off to go into our back alley to my driveway. The river had run through over 1/2 the town by the time it made it there. A group of us put our pre-packed bags in our vehicles and drove to the furthest South end of town. That had never flooded, so we settled in. Daylight came and my sandbagging friend knocked on the apt door were our 4-plex had set up. We walked to the end of the hallway and from the 3rd floor window we watched helicopters flying over the town. I had no idea what was going on. I saw some stuff in the air, saw the helicopters, hmmm, still felt like my ears were plugged. We had to completely leave town at 8:30 that night, driving carefully under water-filled underpasses. Drove almost to Canada to cross the border to Minnesota. It took us 4 hrs to do a 90-min drive because the Interstate was completely under, as were many of the back roads we had to weave through to find our way.
    I watched tv the next day as they showed helicopters picking up tubs of river water and dumping it on the buildings downtown. Downtown Grand Forks was burning?? It didn't make sense. Then one of my friends said "That was yesterday. That's what we were watching from the window yesterday. Hm. Interesting. I didn't think anything of it. I just knew I only packed clothes for building dikes, no spring clothes…hm I didn't think that through. 3 sets of sweats and 1 wet pair of tennis shoes.. wet?Oh! It only took me 20+ yrs to realize we weren't building the dike into the river, the river was rising up to us! lol We all made it back over the next 4-6 months. My sandbagging friend was traumatized. She had nightmares of helicopters, she would wake up screaming, she thought she was drowning, she had extreme hypervigilant ressponse to any sound resembling the sound of the chopping of a helicopter, she ducked, covered her head and did a squeel-scream. I couldn't believe how two people could spend a week together in the same place, doing the same thing, the last 72-hrs with little sleep, standing next to each other in the same river, throwing the same sandbag, walking miles through the same flooded streets to get to our homes, standing next to each other watching smoke bellowing into the air as the city downtown was burning, helocopters dumping pails of water on the fire-and planes dropping/spraying sand on the still partially iced-up river to make sure everything kept flowing and no chuncks were going to take out the one remaining bridge that wasn't yet under water, but whose pilings were being washed away.
    I still experience the sensation of plugged ears, living in my own quiet, fuzzy little world, whenever I talk about it, or those of us who were in it talk about it. My friend still ducks her head when she hears a helicopter. Two people, exact proximity, same situation, two completly different experiences.

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