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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1434321)1/19/2024 12:07:07 PM
From: Mongo21162 Recommendations

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pocotrader
rdkflorida2

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That is a real RIGHT WING CHRISTIAN problem right there!!! The worst people on Earth



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1434321)1/19/2024 3:07:15 PM
From: Brumar891 Recommendation

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pocotrader

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I have never claimed to be a preacher.

Ditto for your other lies. You are true servant of your T*rd Lord, Widdle Donnie Trumpelshinskin.



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1434321)1/19/2024 3:13:17 PM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

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Land Shark
pocotrader
rdkflorida2

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Russian Black Sea Fleet's Woes Worsen as Ship 'Sunk' by Ukraine Drones

newsweek.com

Ukraine HAMMER Bomb Boost From NATO Ally Spooks Russia—'Biggest Threat'

News that Ukraine could soon receive hundreds of AASM high-precision air-dropped bombs from NATO member France has spooked Russians because of their military capabilities.

On Thursday, French Defense Minister Sebastien Lecornu told radio network France Inter that his country will be supplying Ukraine with 50 of the AASM, or Highly Agile Modular Munition Extended Range (HAMMER), weapons per month until the end of the year, according to Ukrainian news outlet European Pravda.

The munitions have been adapted to be deployed from Ukrainian Soviet-era combat aircraft, he said.

"We managed to adapt them for use with Soviet model aircraft...we will supply 50 of them per month, starting in January, throughout 2024," Lecornu said.

The AASM was developed for use as a precision stand-off weapon, and is able to be launched from low altitude, over rough terrain. The weapons have a maximum range of more than 50 kilometers with a high altitude launch and 15 kilometers with a low altitude launch, according to military history website WeaponSystems.

Ukrainian outlet Defense Express noted that the AASM is "an ordinary bomb with a special attachment kit that increases the range and precision of strike."

The Huffington Post on Thursday also cited an unnamed source as saying that France would be providing Ukraine with the weapons against Russia, which launched its invasion on February 24, 2022.

Newsweek has reached out to the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry by email for comment.

Responding to the news, the pro-war Russian Military Informant Telegram channel described the AASM as the "biggest threat."

"The degree of operational readiness of this weapon is unknown, but the possibility of its testing by the Ukrainian Armed Forces for testing in real combat cannot be ruled out," the Telegram channel wrote on Thursday.

Lecornu was also quoted as saying that beginning next month, France will ramp up its delivery of artillery shells from 2,000 per month to up to 3,000 per month. France will also deliver to Ukraine six Caesar howitzers, the defense minister said.

"There are 49 Caesar howitzers in Ukraine so far that led to tactical success," he said. "We aimed to produce 78 Caesar howitzers in 2024, encouraging Europeans and our allies to join financing."

Olena Shuliak, the head of the Servant of the People political party, Ukraine, thanked Lecornu in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

"Thank you...this help will find the best possible use for the fight for the freedom of Europe!" she wrote.

newsweek.com



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1434321)1/19/2024 3:13:53 PM
From: Brumar892 Recommendations

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pocotrader
rdkflorida2

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Russians 'Testing Their Luck' With Replacement A-50 Over Sea of Azov: Kyiv

Russians are "testing their luck" by flying a replacement A-50 spy plane over the Sea of Azov, days after Ukraine claimed to have shot one down, Ukraine's Air Force spokesperson said on Friday.

Spokesperson Yurii Ihnat said on national television that a Russian Beriev A-50—nicknamed the "Bumblebee" and given the NATO reporting name "Mainstay"—was detected over the Sea of Azov on Friday morning, according to Ukrainian outlet Ukrainska Pravda.

It comes after Ukrainian Army Commander in Chief Valery Zaluzhny said the Ukrainian Air Force shot down the long-range radar detection and control airplane, as well as an IL-22 command plane over the Sea of Azov on the evening of January 14.

"Just a moment ago, the map was empty, and now there are five to six aerial targets, including the infamous A-50, testing their luck in the Azov Sea waters," said Ihnat.

"Yesterday, we discussed what would happen after the destruction of the A-50: another one would take its place. This is unsurprising, as Russia has more of these aircraft," he said. "So there's the A-50, a fighter jet closer to Rostov, and tactical-level drones monitoring the front line."
............
The British defense ministry said in an intelligence update on the war in Ukraine on Friday that the A-50 "almost certainly exploded and subsequently crashed into the Sea of Azov" on January 14, noting that the aircraft is a key enabler for Russian operations over Ukraine providing airborne early warning of threats as well as command and control functionality.

The update said that by January 17, the Russian Air Force appeared to have begun operating another A-50, "but this time over land within Russian territory near the Krasnodar region, farther eastwards from Ukraine."

"Despite no official position from Russia on the loss of the MAINSTAY, this activity likely demonstrates a tacit Russian acknowledgement of a successful targeting operation by the Ukrainians against a high value air asset," the ministry added. "If the loss of the MAINSTAY was an accident, then such a decision is unlikely to have been required."

In the aftermath of the incident, Russian military bloggers sought to shift the blame on Moscow's own air defenses.

The Rybar Telegram channel, which has links to Russia's Defense Ministry, said the aircraft could have been struck in "friendly fire" from Russian air defense.

Pro-war Telegram channel Fighterbomber, which is believed to be affiliated with the Russian Air Force, said "[Ukraine has] nothing to do with the loss of the A-50 aircraft."

"And I really hope that this time the commission for the analysis of the disaster will not blame the pilots for weather reports...but the direct culprits of the tragedy," the channel added. "In the [war], unfortunately, the worst and most potent threat for the Aerospace Forces has become our air defense...something needs to be done about this."

Russia's air force was believed to have 15 A-50s before the full-scale invasion of Ukraine, per figures from the World Directory of Modern Military Aircraft database. One was reportedly badly damaged by a drone in February 2023, in an attack claimed by Belarusian anti-government partisans.

newsweek.com



To: Broken_Clock who wrote (1434321)1/19/2024 3:14:44 PM
From: Brumar893 Recommendations

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Land Shark
pocotrader
rdkflorida2

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A Ukrainian drone attack on an oil depot inside Russia causes a massive blaze, officials say.



Ukrainian drone attack on oil depot in Russia causes a massive blaze, officials say