Comments by "" (@efghggdxlmfn33) on "Russia Storms Strategic Krasnohorivka u0026 Chasiv Yar" video.
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@seminolevessicles Due to the shortage of funds from the Ukrainian army, soldiers pay for the purchase of drones and spare parts for front-line equipment from their salaries.
A 33-year-old serviceman with the call sign Viking told The Guardian about this.
The fighter was seriously injured when he tried to get spare parts for a car that his unit used to evacuate from the battlefield.
Another military man with the call sign Swede, whose detachment of the 1st Ukrainian mechanized brigade is located in the Zaporozhye direction, uses modernized Czech T-64 tanks of the Soviet standard. According to him, the job of drone operators will partly be to act in tandem with armored vehicles "like their eyes" when they are deployed to attack.
"We pay up to 70% of our salary for the purchase of drones," the Swede said, focusing on the new attack drones.
Another military man, with the call sign Spielberg, noted that at the front, drones are used as bombers, not kamikazes — "because there is no money to constantly replace them."
"But the most surprising thing, given the importance that the Ukrainian military attaches to drones, is that the soldiers themselves have to finance the effort because the army cannot afford them," writes The Guardian.
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@seminolevessicles Due to the shortage of funds from the Ukrainian army, soldiers pay for the purchase of drones and spare parts for front-line equipment from their salaries.
A 33-year-old serviceman with the call sign Viking told The Guardian about this.
The fighter was seriously injured when he tried to get spare parts for a car that his unit used to evacuate from the battlefield.
Another military man with the call sign Swede, whose detachment of the 1st Ukrainian mechanized brigade is located in the Zaporozhye direction, uses modernized Czech T-64 tanks of the Soviet standard. According to him, the job of drone operators will partly be to act in tandem with armored vehicles "like their eyes" when they are deployed to attack.
"We pay up to 70% of our salary for the purchase of drones," the Swede said, focusing on the new attack drones.
Another military man, with the call sign Spielberg, noted that at the front, drones are used as bombers, not kamikazes — "because there is no money to constantly replace them."
"But the most surprising thing, given the importance that the Ukrainian military attaches to drones, is that the soldiers themselves have to finance the effort because the army cannot afford them," writes The Guardian.
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