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Search resuls for: "92nd Mechanized Brigade"


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So soldiers are auctioning defunct weapons and war footage to raise money for supplies and weapons. Soldiers told the Times that several units fighting Russian forces in Ukraine have to buy their own weapons and supplies, usually relying on outside donations. Ruslan Zubariev, for example, made money off a viral video of him single-handedly killing a group of Russian soldiers with a rocket launcher. "We don't get that stuff issued to us," Zubariev told the Times. "Civilians don't realize that if they're tired and stop donating, it doesn't mean the war is over," Zubariev told the Times.
Persons: , Soldiers, Ruslan Zubariev, Zubariev Organizations: Service, New York Times, Times, 92nd Mechanized Brigade Locations: Russian, Ukraine, Kyiv
Watch: Biden Says 'God Save the Queen' After Gun Control Speech
  + stars: | 2023-06-17 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Watch: Russian Soldier Surrenders to Drone on Bakhmut BattlefieldRussian soldier Ruslan Anitin was one of the last fighters alive in his unit on the front lines of Bakhmut after Ukrainian drones dropped explosives on his comrades. Battlefield footage shows how he used hand signals to surrender to Ukrainian pilots as their drones guided him across enemy lines. Photo: Code 9.2 Unit of Ukraine’s 92nd Mechanized Brigade
Persons: Ruslan Anitin Organizations: 92nd Mechanized Brigade Locations: Russian, Bakhmut, Ukrainian
Watch: Russian Soldier Surrenders to Drone on Bakhmut Battlefield Russian soldier Ruslan Anitin was one of the last fighters alive in his unit on the front lines of Bakhmut after Ukrainian drones dropped explosives on his comrades. Battlefield footage shows how he used hand signals to surrender to Ukrainian pilots as their drones guided him across enemy lines. Photo: Code 9.2 Unit of Ukraine’s 92nd Mechanized Brigade
Persons: Ruslan Anitin Organizations: 92nd Mechanized Brigade Locations: Russian, Bakhmut, Ukrainian
CNN —Ukrainian forces spared the life of a Russian soldier when he surrendered to a drone on the battlefield just moments before its operators were about to open fire, a Ukrainian commander has confirmed to CNN. Following the surrender, reporters at the Wall Street Journal interviewed the Russian soldier at a detention facility in the Kharkiv region on May 19, under the supervision of a guard. The reporters also spoke with the Ukrainian drone pilot, according to the paper, who said he decided to spare his life after watching his pleas. “This is probably an unprecedented case when, through the coordinated work of the brigade and the aerial reconnaissance component, we managed to capture the occupier,” Ukrainian commander Fedorenko said. According to the Wall Street Journal, the Russian soldier and former prison marshal was working as a liquor-store manager before he was drafted in September last year.
Persons: Yuriy Fedorenko, Achilles ”, , ” Fedorenko, , Fedorenko, Russian Wagner Organizations: CNN, Wall Street, 92nd Brigade, Wall Street Journal Locations: Russian, Ukrainian, Bakhmut, Kharkiv, Luhansk, Donetsk, Ukraine
Dramatic video footage shows a Russian soldier's surrender to a Ukrainian drone, Ukraine said. The "I Want to Live" hotline, which claims to receive thousands of calls a month, is an official project of Ukraine allowing Russian soldiers to pre-arrange to surrender once on Ukrainian territory. In the footage, the soldier can be seen making various signals to the drone indicating he doesn't want to fight, Matvienko said. The drone drops him a package containing a note which, per Matvienko, tells him to surrender and to follow it. The encounter, Matvienko said, is one example of how "Ukrainian soldiers find such creative ways to defeat Russians on the battlefield."
An elite Russian brigade suffered so many losses in Ukraine that it will take years to rebuild. The 200th Separate Motor Rifle Brigade is one of many high-profile units that saw heavy depletion. But despite these advantages, the 200th suffered greatly in the months of combat that would follow. "Nothing of that brigade is left," Col. Pavlo Fedosenko, the commander of Ukraine's 92nd Mechanized Brigade, told The Post in a recent interview. That figure echoes a similar estimate from Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark Milley, the highest-ranking US general, who said last month that over 100,000 Russian soldiers had been "killed and wounded."
An Afghan soldier fighting for the Soviets sits on a Soviet-made T-64 tank near the Salang Pass on August 17, 1989. However, these systems were mostly exported, and it's unclear whether either is currently operational on Ukrainian tanks. Defending Ukraine, 2014-2015A Ukrainian tank in the eastern Ukrainian city of Slavyansk in July 2014. A burned Ukrainian tank in Uglegorsk, on the frontline near Debaltseve, in February 2015. A pro-Russian separatist stands guard near a T-64 tank in Donetsk in July 2014.
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