Zelensky makes dramatic G-7 visit as Biden mobilizes allies over China

Yep, you are a fascist and on Ignore for a while. I suggest others consider the same. Do it long enough he will be fired from his Rus rodina masters.
Yep, you are the Fascist alright and now you'll have to read my replies with a flashlight in the dark and pretend you never saw them. Ooooo, it will be very difficult for you not to respond under those circumstances! I predict you are heading for an enormous ulcer. :auiqs.jpg:
 
The revolution against Putin has begun.


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Footage appears to show low-flying Russian Su-34s dropping bombs on anti-Putin militias and missing the target, says report​

Story by [email protected] (Isobel van Hagen) • 3h ago


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A Russian Su-34 jet is seen swooping low and dropping bombs over a border checkpoint in the Belograd region of Russia in May 2023. Twitter
A Russian Su-34 jet is seen swooping low and dropping bombs over a border checkpoint in the Belograd region of Russia in May 2023. Twitter© Provided by Business Insider
  • Footage appears to show Russian Su-34 jets bombing a checkpoint within their own borders.
  • The video shows two jets dropping high-level explosives from an "ultra-low altitude."
  • Anti-Putin Russian militias briefly occupied territory in Russia's Belgorod region earlier this week,
Aerial footage appears to show Russian Su-34 Fullback jets dropping bombs from a low level within the Russian Federation on the border of Ukraine earlier this week, says a report
At the Grayvoron border checkpoint, the video shows two Russian jets dropping high-level explosives from an "ultra-low altitude." The video appears to show the jets missing the target, a building at Russia's own checkpoint.
According to reporting and analysis by The War Zone journalists Thomas Newdick and Tyler Rogoway, the footage demonstrates "the difficulties of delivering unguided weaponry" at low altitudes, as well as "desperate measures" by the Russian military to thwart a border incursion by Ukrainian-backed Russian militias.
 
The revolution against Putin has begun.


Business Insider
Business Insider
Follow

Footage appears to show low-flying Russian Su-34s dropping bombs on anti-Putin militias and missing the target, says report​

Story by [email protected] (Isobel van Hagen) • 3h agoView attachment 789288

A Russian Su-34 jet is seen swooping low and dropping bombs over a border checkpoint in the Belograd region of Russia in May 2023. Twitter© Provided by Business Insider
  • Footage appears to show Russian Su-34 jets bombing a checkpoint within their own borders.
  • The video shows two jets dropping high-level explosives from an "ultra-low altitude."
  • Anti-Putin Russian militias briefly occupied territory in Russia's Belgorod region earlier this week,
Aerial footage appears to show Russian Su-34 Fullback jets dropping bombs from a low level within the Russian Federation on the border of Ukraine earlier this week, says a report
At the Grayvoron border checkpoint, the video shows two Russian jets dropping high-level explosives from an "ultra-low altitude." The video appears to show the jets missing the target, a building at Russia's own checkpoint.
According to reporting and analysis by The War Zone journalists Thomas Newdick and Tyler Rogoway, the footage demonstrates "the difficulties of delivering unguided weaponry" at low altitudes, as well as "desperate measures" by the Russian military to thwart a border incursion by Ukrainian-backed Russian militias.
Much ado about nothing. The wording in this report tells a story of the desperate MSM that is tasked with anti-Russian reporting so, having nothing to report, it made up this "desperate measures" BS rather than report nothing at all. Note also that it says, "earlier this week" (no date) and uses the phrase "appears to show" in two different instances. This is standard disinformation.
 
‘We are Russians just like you’: anti-Putin militias enter the spotlight

The paramilitaries who raided Belgorod include guerrillas with far-right connections, anti-Kremlin veterans and former members of Russia’s security services
Andrew Roth

Andrew Roth
Wed 24 May 2023 13.31 EDT


As Russian militias opposing the Kremlin readied a daring cross-border raid into the Belgorod region this week, a man with slicked-down hair, in full camouflage and holding an automatic rifle stared into a camera lens.
“We are Russians just like you,” the man said in the video, later posted online. “We are people just like you. We want our children to grow up in peace and be free people so they can travel, study and were just happy in a free country. But this has no place in modern Putin’s Russia, rotten through and through from corruption, lies, censorship, restrictions on freedoms and repression.”

That man was Maximillian Andronnikov, the self-proclaimed commander of the Freedom of Russia Legion, a paramilitary group that, until this week, was chided for its outsized internet and media activity. Under the nickname “Caesar” he has also served as a media spokesperson for the group, which has sought to largely act in the shadows and keep its membership a secret.

But with the raids into southern Russia this week, the spotlight has been turned on both the Freedom of Russia Legion and the Russian Volunteer Corps, another group composed of Russians who now say they are fighting against Putin.
Profiles have shown that a number of the Russian guerrillas are veterans of anti-Kremlin groups and many, particularly in the Russian Volunteer Corps, have connections with Russian far-right organisations. In a photo taken last month, Andronnikov stands next to Denis Nikitin, a white nationalist prominent in the MMA fighting scene who heads the Russian Volunteer Corps.
Andronnikov himself was previously a member of the Russian Imperial Movement (RIM), an ultranationalist group that is publicly opposed to Vladimir Putin but has also fielded pro-Russian fighters in the war since 2014.
Agentstvo, an independent Russian news agency, earlier this year published a 2011 photograph showing Andronnikov at a Russian march with Denis Gariev, the head of RIM’s paramilitary arm. A member of RIM who knows Andronnikov said that he left the group before the war in Ukraine began in 2014.
Andronnikov, who was born in Sochi and later lived in St Petersburg, was also called as a witness in a 2012 case about an alleged military coup being planned by several men in the Urals city of Ekaterinburg. Andronnikov, who was then the head of a St Petersburg “military-patriotic club”, was not charged in the case.
The plot was linked to Vladimir Kvachkov, a retired colonel and hardliner. He was jailed after members of his group, the People’s Front for Liberation of Russia, were accused of training with crossbows in a plot to overthrow the government.
Andronnikov was working as an archery trainer in 2022 when the war began and quickly left for Ukraine, fighting on Kyiv’s side since and saying earlier this year that his ultimate goal was to remove Putin from power. Prior to the raid, he said he had been fighting near the city of Bakhmut.
“I am a good Russian, and on the other side are bad Russians,” he said in another interview earlier this year. “And I kill them every day.”
The militias also include defected members of the Russian security services. Ilya Bogdanov, a former FSB officer, left Russia for Ukraine in 2014 and barely escaped from a Russian secret services kidnapping attempt in 2019. Video published from the raids this week showed Bogdanov hijacking a Russian BTR-82A armoured personnel carrier during the fighting.

Putin’s threat hangs over tiny Moldova, but its people filled me with hope
Nathalie Tocci
Nathalie Tocci
Read more

About 10 fighters from the Freedom of Russia Legion and another 30 from the Russian Volunteer Corps fanned out in a field on Wednesday for a press event that also served as a victory lap after the raids, which marked the first sustained fighting on Russian territory since the beginning of the war.
 
‘We are Russians just like you’: anti-Putin militias enter the spotlight

The paramilitaries who raided Belgorod include guerrillas with far-right connections, anti-Kremlin veterans and former members of Russia’s security services
Andrew Roth

Andrew Roth
Wed 24 May 2023 13.31 EDT


As Russian militias opposing the Kremlin readied a daring cross-border raid into the Belgorod region this week, a man with slicked-down hair, in full camouflage and holding an automatic rifle stared into a camera lens.
“We are Russians just like you,” the man said in the video, later posted online. “We are people just like you. We want our children to grow up in peace and be free people so they can travel, study and were just happy in a free country. But this has no place in modern Putin’s Russia, rotten through and through from corruption, lies, censorship, restrictions on freedoms and repression.”

That man was Maximillian Andronnikov, the self-proclaimed commander of the Freedom of Russia Legion, a paramilitary group that, until this week, was chided for its outsized internet and media activity. Under the nickname “Caesar” he has also served as a media spokesperson for the group, which has sought to largely act in the shadows and keep its membership a secret.

But with the raids into southern Russia this week, the spotlight has been turned on both the Freedom of Russia Legion and the Russian Volunteer Corps, another group composed of Russians who now say they are fighting against Putin.
Profiles have shown that a number of the Russian guerrillas are veterans of anti-Kremlin groups and many, particularly in the Russian Volunteer Corps, have connections with Russian far-right organisations. In a photo taken last month, Andronnikov stands next to Denis Nikitin, a white nationalist prominent in the MMA fighting scene who heads the Russian Volunteer Corps.
Andronnikov himself was previously a member of the Russian Imperial Movement (RIM), an ultranationalist group that is publicly opposed to Vladimir Putin but has also fielded pro-Russian fighters in the war since 2014.
Agentstvo, an independent Russian news agency, earlier this year published a 2011 photograph showing Andronnikov at a Russian march with Denis Gariev, the head of RIM’s paramilitary arm. A member of RIM who knows Andronnikov said that he left the group before the war in Ukraine began in 2014.
Andronnikov, who was born in Sochi and later lived in St Petersburg, was also called as a witness in a 2012 case about an alleged military coup being planned by several men in the Urals city of Ekaterinburg. Andronnikov, who was then the head of a St Petersburg “military-patriotic club”, was not charged in the case.
The plot was linked to Vladimir Kvachkov, a retired colonel and hardliner. He was jailed after members of his group, the People’s Front for Liberation of Russia, were accused of training with crossbows in a plot to overthrow the government.
Andronnikov was working as an archery trainer in 2022 when the war began and quickly left for Ukraine, fighting on Kyiv’s side since and saying earlier this year that his ultimate goal was to remove Putin from power. Prior to the raid, he said he had been fighting near the city of Bakhmut.
“I am a good Russian, and on the other side are bad Russians,” he said in another interview earlier this year. “And I kill them every day.”
The militias also include defected members of the Russian security services. Ilya Bogdanov, a former FSB officer, left Russia for Ukraine in 2014 and barely escaped from a Russian secret services kidnapping attempt in 2019. Video published from the raids this week showed Bogdanov hijacking a Russian BTR-82A armoured personnel carrier during the fighting.
Putin’s threat hangs over tiny Moldova, but its people filled me with hope
Nathalie Tocci
Nathalie Tocci
Read more
About 10 fighters from the Freedom of Russia Legion and another 30 from the Russian Volunteer Corps fanned out in a field on Wednesday for a press event that also served as a victory lap after the raids, which marked the first sustained fighting on Russian territory since the beginning of the war.
Pre-planned codswallop. It stinks of fake news.
 
LOL, he’s there for a shakedown.

Things aren’t going well in his little war:


View attachment 787205
Outta the park, Mr. Hawk.
 

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