llull wrote: ↑28/04/2022 14:16
Moguce je i da je montaza ali opet kad se sjetim onih u Jemenu u japankama ...
Mada sada ima logike sto su silne fotografije ubijenih Ukrajinskih vojnika bez cizama. Aman se Rusima osladile Lowa cizme.
zadnje što želim je da branim ruse, ali ne kontam kako ne vidite vlastitim očima da lik ima regularne vojne čizme koje samo izgledaju kao šunjalice jer su mu prsti upali u šutu...
bilo bi komično da jesu šunjalice, ali nisu
inače kad je neko maloprije postavio vojne delfine, ovo je komično
Soviet Union Navy dolphins
The Soviet Navy operated a research facility to explore military uses of marine mammals at Kazachya Bukhta (44.5800°N 33.4023°E), near Sevastopol. The Russian military's military dolphin program is believed to have languished in the early 1990s.[1]
A Soviet military Beluga whale named Tichka twice escaped in 1991 and 1992, crossed the Black Sea and was admired by the residents of the Turkish town Gerze, who called him Aydın.[2]
Russian Federation, Ukraine and Iran
After the fall of the Soviet Union, the Soviet military dolphin program was passed to the Ukrainian Navy. In March 2000 the BBC reported that the Ukrainian navy had transferred their military dolphin project from Sevastopol to Iran. Iran bought the animals, and the chief trainer carried on his research at their new oceanarium.[3]
In 2012, Ukraine allegedly "resurrected" the military dolphin program.[1] After the 2014 annexation of Crimea, the Ukrainian dolphin program was taken over by Russia.[4] Conflicting statements have been made regarding the fate of the dolphins. One claim is that the program had been demilitarized prior to the annexation, with all military dolphins either sold commercially or dead by natural causes. A counter-claim suggests that dolphins died patriotically after going on hunger strikes and resisting their Russian captors.[5] Russia reportedly intended to used advanced technology to visualise the dolphin's biosonar signals in future military dolphin research.[1]
Government public records show that in 2016, five bottlenose dolphins were purchased by the Russian defence ministry from Moscow’s Utrish Dolphinarium.[6][7]
e čuj Aydin
