Comments by "" (@efghggdxlmfn33) on "Ukr Despair: US No Missile Strikes Rus; NATO No Ukr AD; Krasnogorovka Falls; Rus Enters Kherson" video.
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@JohnJohnson-n3n Krasnogorovka is taken. What next?
And then comes the most interesting part. Five kilometres to the west, there is, in fact, a super-fortification of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, consisting of a cascade of settlements: the villages of Gornyak and Zoryanoye, two settlements of Aleksandropol and Kurakhovka, and the central point of this area is the city of Gornyak.
There is a high probability that the Russian Armed Forces group, currently attacking the Ukrainian Armed Forces positions in Ukrainsk, will also converge here from the north. If this happens in parallel with the Russian Armed Forces strike from Krasnogorovka to the west, the garrison will have to fight back from several sides at once. The all-round defence would be possible only if the positions here are equipped in the same way as in Avdiivka. However, according to preliminary data, the Ukrainian army did not have time to fill everything with concrete. Theoretically, a cascade of former reservoirs (pools) could help the Ukrainian Armed Forces defend the new area, but attempts to gain a foothold there in the last few days have been thwarted by Russian artillery. The main difficulty is that the entire chain of settlements is located on a hill, but with the current density of artillery work, this is not as big a problem as before.
@ Slavyangrad
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@JimCOsd55 On June 22, 1941, Mongolia officially declared its fidelity to the obligations assumed under the protocol concluded on March 12, 1936: "in the event of a military attack on one of the contracting parties, to provide each other with all possible, including military assistance. As soon as Germany attacked the Soviet Union, Mongolian volunteers went to fight in the Red Army.
On June 23, 1941, a crowded rally was held in Ulaanbaatar, at which the Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the MPR, Marshal Khorlogiin Choibalsan, spoke. He called on the Mongolian people to fully support the Soviet Union. Mongolia switched its economy to a military regime and launched a movement to provide voluntary assistance to the Red Army. The whole country began to live and work under the motto "Everything for the front, everything for Victory!"The people of Mongolia rightly believed that their country was the deep rear of the Soviet Union, and did everything possible to support the front.
Residents of Mongolia contributed money, gold and silver jewelry and other valuables, warm clothes, and food to the Red Army relief fund. Youth brigades for fur and meat harvesting were organized locally. The women of Mongolia organized hundreds of clubs for children and teenagers, in which they knitted warm scarves and mittens for the soldiers of the Red Army. Many became donors, voluntarily donating blood for wounded Red Army soldiers. Funds from subbotniks organized by trade unions and youth organizations were contributed to the Red Army relief Fund. The workers worked overtime, refused days off and vacations, exceeded their plans, and transferred the manufactured products and earned money to the relief fund.
In every family, in all the nomads, they collected gifts for the veterans. It became a duty for every worker to send a gift to the front for Soviet soldiers. Despite the fact that Mongolia's population was less than one million people, they transferred unimaginable aid to the Soviet Union. In the first echelon, 15,000 sheepskin coats, the same number of fur jackets, 1,500 pairs of felt boots, 6,000 wool sweaters, fur mittens and vests, blankets made of sheepskin, etc. were delivered to the front.
The second echelon with food was sent from Mongolia already in February 1942 — 37 wagons loaded with food (meat, sausage, bakery products, butter, vodka, various canned goods and confectionery, as well as cigarettes) and warm clothes (felt boots, fur coats and sheepskin coats, padded jackets, warm vests, etc.) with From 1941 to 1944, eight echelons with gifts were sent from the MPR to the Soviet Union, which were collected by the inhabitants of Mongolia.
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Polish mercenaries and a number of sympathizers are beginning to howl in the Internet that the 47th brigade of the AFU "Magura" will soon be left alone near Pokrovsk. There are no reserves to cover it at the moment.
The reason for this is the tactical and operative metamorphosis of Syrsky, who, it seems, after his brilliant (not) decision to enter the Kursk region, doesn't know which part of the front to plug first.
Part of the 47th Brigade, as it turned out earlier, was destroyed near Sumy. Another part was knocked out/wounded and only a third is now in combat-ready condition.
Judging by the tone of some reports, New York and Toretsk were flowers for the AFU. But Pokrovsk may have berries that the Ukrainian army has not seen before.
In addition to Pokrovsk, Syrsky's frontline dilemma also includes the Nevelsk cauldron and Ugledar, which Syrsky and his superiors may want to turn into another fortress, but the 72nd brigade of the AFU VERY much does not.
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