Ukrajina
- drug_profi
- Posts: 64673
- Joined: 16/07/2012 16:00
#174501 Re: Ukrajina
WTF.
Ruska vojska... latentni homoseksualci kao i svi ultra desnicari.
Ruska vojska... latentni homoseksualci kao i svi ultra desnicari.
- drug_profi
- Posts: 64673
- Joined: 16/07/2012 16:00
#174502 Re: Ukrajina
Ako se sjećate slike od neki dan gdje 4 suncokreta spavaju na cesti (mala sličica iznad ovog videa).
Evo sad snimak "incidenta".
Evo sad snimak "incidenta".
- dzeno123
- Posts: 1843
- Joined: 20/04/2009 20:39
- Location: Dreamland
#174503 Re: Ukrajina
Ljudi upozoravaju godinama, sklopili dogovor, eto vam sve ali nemojte nato na nasim granicama. Nastimaju se izbori,dovede se kepec i poturi svoj narod u rat. Meni je to zalosno, meni je zalosno sto su i nas tako zavadili pa ti vidite kako god hocete. Sto prije kraj rata ma kako god, pogledajte brojke ljudi koji su izgubili zivote.
- Chmoljo
- Administrativni siledžija u penziji
- Posts: 52066
- Joined: 05/06/2008 03:41
- Location: i vukove stid reći odakle sam...
#174504 Re: Ukrajina
Banned user for reason “trolanje”
» dzeno123
trajno
» dzeno123
trajno
- drug_profi
- Posts: 64673
- Joined: 16/07/2012 16:00
#174505 Re: Ukrajina
Članak u Tajmsu, razgovor sa krimskim partizanima.
Inside a partisan group fighting Ukraine’s counteroffensive behind enemy lines
Ako vam iskoči paywall evo copy/paste u spoileru. Mašinski prevod na BS ne valja pa ostavljam izvornik.
Inside a partisan group fighting Ukraine’s counteroffensive behind enemy lines
Ako vam iskoči paywall evo copy/paste u spoileru. Mašinski prevod na BS ne valja pa ostavljam izvornik.
Spoiler
Show
Inside a partisan group fighting Ukraine’s counteroffensive behind enemy lines
Hunted tirelessly by Putin’s men, their work is dangerous and secret. Now is their time to speak
Maxim Tucker
Monday July 03 2023, 5.20pm BST, The Times
Sidling through the door of the Russian military recruitment centre in occupied Donetsk, Dmitri was glad to have the summer sun to blame for the nervous sweat on the back of his neck.
He was barely old enough to vote, yet this was already the second time Dmitri would swear allegiance to a flag. His handler in Ukrainian military intelligence was waiting with bated breath to discover whether their ruse would dupe President Putin’s forces.
In spring last year he had signed up to the National Resistance, a battalion-strong group of Ukrainian partisans led by “Honta”, a reconnaissance company captain in the Azov regiment. Badly wounded in urban combat during his unit’s fierce defence of Mariupol, Honta had become stranded behind enemy lines but was kept alive by friendly locals who moved him covertly from house to house until he could recover.
Starting with that network of sympathetic civilians, Honta has been growing his partisan movement ever since. It is one of many across occupied Ukraine.
Today those men and women are fighting Ukraine’s counteroffensive from behind enemy lines: blowing up bridges, sabotaging supply vehicles, killing collaborators and locating targets for British Storm Shadow missiles fired by Ukrainian jet pilots. The less daring or less able play their role too: spraying graffiti threats to Russian troops, scattering tyre spikes across supply routes and whispering reports on their movements.
They are highly secretive and hunted relentlessly by the Russian security services, but together with Ukraine’s military intelligence, GUR, they agreed to tell The Times about their missions in the hope of recruiting more members before the main assault.
‘Now is the time for maximum effort’
“Helping our troops in the counteroffensive to get back our territories is our priority,” Honta said. “This is the right time for us to make maximum effort; we are trying to inflict maximum damage on the enemy to make life easier for the guys at the front.”
Some actions are months in the planning. A June 21 sabotage mission blasted a railway intersection deep in occupied Crimea, near the town of Feodosia, severing the peninsula’s rail link with Russia once more, after last year’s attack on the Kerch bridge.
“We prepared it for the counteroffensive,” Honta said, adding that it had taken three months to organise and was carried out just as Kyiv stepped up probing attacks by mechanised brigades on the front. “We want to harm the enemy as much as possible, to reduce some of their capabilities on the front line, disrupt logistics, break morale, give a sense of insecurity.”
Operation Dmitri has taken even longer. The Russian recruiters paid the young man from Donbas scant attention on that baking summer’s day last year. They asked a few questions about his short life to date, jotted down his particulars. He had no criminal background, no public record of any ideology. They handed him a form with instructions to report for duty before basic training, across the border in Rostov-on-Don. Just another Donbas boy for the meat grinder.
But Dmitri was different. After eight years of life under Russian occupation, the shift from hybrid war to full invasion offered him a chance to vent his frustrations with the Kremlin-backed mafia who controlled his town, stealing businesses and dismantling entire industries for sale back in Russia.
Beatings had been commonplace in parts of the Donbas controlled by separatists since 2014, but the invasion ushered in a new savagery, with widespread reports of rape, torture and dismemberment.
‘It’s an Indiana Jones story’
Using the Telegram encrypted messaging service, Dmitri responded to a Ukrainian call for partisans to fight the Russian invaders in the occupied territories. It would be dangerous, secretive work, without glory or payment beyond the odd cryptocurrency transfer for equipment. Anything else would give him away. Instructions, locations of weapons caches and video manuals on how to build explosives would be sent via Telegram. He would be alone.
“These people on occupied territories are taking unbelievable risks, but we cannot give them a medal, or a gift, or an official salary. They think now that they are alone,” said Khmel, a Ukrainian GUR intelligence officer involved in the operation. “After this interview they will understand that people in the West read about them, remember about them. They will understand that we have friends.”
Dmitri was vetted by the GUR and proved a capable operator, passing the entry-level tasks easily: writing graffiti and setting vehicles marked with the pro-war “Z” sign ablaze. He was soon blooded by “liquidating” a collaborating official. The National Resistance calling card features the old Azov regiment emblem: a stylised trident, the symbol of Ukraine, over a Cossack “Idea of Nation” symbol, a logo controversial for its similarity to the Wolfsangel used by ultranationalist groups. Russia has sought to use that symbol as evidence of Nazi ideology, causing the Azov regiment to ditch it last year in favour of a simple trident.
“His legend was good — he was a usual boy from Donbas with a job, without any pro-Ukrainian history or standout details in his biography — that’s why Honta asked him to join the Russian army,” Khmel said.
“He had two months solid training [with the Russians] in Rostov-on-Don, then the recruits were moved back to Donbas to a base where they would be assigned their different units. At this point they were one or two weeks away from fighting our guys. And they were in range of our Himars missiles.”
Dmitri messaged GUR that there were high-ranking officers, including colonels, on the base. The target was too great an opportunity to pass up, he said.
“He texted us and sent us co-ordinates, but the problem was he also had to be on station. So he sent us his own co-ordinates, he didn’t have a choice — he knew we would strike but he didn’t know when or where Himars will come. When the attack started, we lost contact with him,” Khmel said, shaking his head.
Yet Dmitri had survived. Three days later, he contacted the GUR from a Russian field hospital. He told them he had been hit, but would recover. Knowing the Himars would be coming, he sprinted away from the base as soon as the first missile slammed into it several weeks ago, vaporising his fellow recruits. The blast of one of the next missiles caught him, but he had put enough distance between himself and the impact zone to avoid being critically wounded.
“We had some tough conversations with Honta about this mission, we didn’t know when we selected him exactly how we would use him. But when he told us that he will be at this point, it was a huge chance. We think we got between 60-100 Russian soldiers there,” Khmel said, joking that Dmitri was a good soldier and would probably be promoted by the Russian army. There are other partisans busy infiltrating the Russian military which is desperate for recruits too, he said.
“It’s an Indiana Jones story. It’s about risk and adrenaline, and when you want to kill the enemy, grow in our network, you want to surprise yourself.”
Over the past month the counteroffensive by Ukrainian forces has already reclaimed some 50 square miles of the Zaporizhzhia region which the National Resistance operates in.
But a successful mission can have unforeseen consequences. On June 11, Honta’s men blew up a railway bridge outside the village of Yakymivka, en route to the logistical hub of Melitopol. The railroad was used to transfer anti-aircraft ammunition from Crimea to the Russian defensive lines in the region, and the Russians were furious.
“The Russians turned all the villages near by upside down looking for our people. It’s a different kind of risk from sending co-ordinates when you’re sitting between your new Russian comrades, but you have to work with explosives, then you have to film the result,” said Khmel. “All the people, and I mean all the people [there], were beaten by the Russians. That’s their usual practice.”
Yet on occupied territory, the partisans work ordinary jobs and move freely, passing through Russian checkpoints with ease. They have ways to hide their explosives but the most dangerous thing to carry is the National Resistance calling card they drop on the scene of a successful mission, Honta said.
“The Russians have stopped and searched me numerous times at checkpoints. It’s quite usual, we got used to things like that. Initially it gave me anxiety but now since I live in that atmosphere all the time, I just do it casually,” he explained. “We don’t carry a lit Molotov cocktail to the car, we mask it, we have our ways and during a search it usually does not cause any suspicions. But if they find this card . . . it will be hard to get away with it.”
‘All Ukrainians have to help’
Honta’s partisans are divided between a smaller group who carry out the most dangerous operations and a wider support base who provide intelligence and burn cars, including 27 in the past month, Khmel said. Occasionally their targets are much bigger, and the results spectacular.
On June 2 in the occupied seaside city of Berdiansk, a man in plain clothes slipped out of his office for a stroll by the sea, a coffee and a cigarette. Spotting an FSB counter surveillance team from the Russian security services parked near the port, he moved along the seafront in the opposite direction. It was a shame he could not see the target he had reported on — a 50 metre-long bulk carrier ship loaded with ammunition — but he had a good view of the port where it was unloading.
He paused and whipped out his phone. His video missed the incoming Storm Shadow cruise missile, but caught its aftermath — an almighty explosion and mushroom cloud. The missile was on target, he reported via the Telegram channel, and left the scene.
Every such action will save soldiers’ lives during the counteroffensive’s main assault, GUR said, appealing for more Ukrainians to join the National Resistance.
“We have a unique moment to collect active people on occupied territories, it has to be now. The counteroffensive isn’t going to be just one week: it will be hard, it will go through autumn,” Khmel said.
“All Ukrainians have to help our soldiers to liberate our country, it’s not the responsibility of some colonels or brigades. It’s the work of all Ukrainians this summer to make the counteroffensive successful.”
Hunted tirelessly by Putin’s men, their work is dangerous and secret. Now is their time to speak
Maxim Tucker
Monday July 03 2023, 5.20pm BST, The Times
Sidling through the door of the Russian military recruitment centre in occupied Donetsk, Dmitri was glad to have the summer sun to blame for the nervous sweat on the back of his neck.
He was barely old enough to vote, yet this was already the second time Dmitri would swear allegiance to a flag. His handler in Ukrainian military intelligence was waiting with bated breath to discover whether their ruse would dupe President Putin’s forces.
In spring last year he had signed up to the National Resistance, a battalion-strong group of Ukrainian partisans led by “Honta”, a reconnaissance company captain in the Azov regiment. Badly wounded in urban combat during his unit’s fierce defence of Mariupol, Honta had become stranded behind enemy lines but was kept alive by friendly locals who moved him covertly from house to house until he could recover.
Starting with that network of sympathetic civilians, Honta has been growing his partisan movement ever since. It is one of many across occupied Ukraine.
Today those men and women are fighting Ukraine’s counteroffensive from behind enemy lines: blowing up bridges, sabotaging supply vehicles, killing collaborators and locating targets for British Storm Shadow missiles fired by Ukrainian jet pilots. The less daring or less able play their role too: spraying graffiti threats to Russian troops, scattering tyre spikes across supply routes and whispering reports on their movements.
They are highly secretive and hunted relentlessly by the Russian security services, but together with Ukraine’s military intelligence, GUR, they agreed to tell The Times about their missions in the hope of recruiting more members before the main assault.
‘Now is the time for maximum effort’
“Helping our troops in the counteroffensive to get back our territories is our priority,” Honta said. “This is the right time for us to make maximum effort; we are trying to inflict maximum damage on the enemy to make life easier for the guys at the front.”
Some actions are months in the planning. A June 21 sabotage mission blasted a railway intersection deep in occupied Crimea, near the town of Feodosia, severing the peninsula’s rail link with Russia once more, after last year’s attack on the Kerch bridge.
“We prepared it for the counteroffensive,” Honta said, adding that it had taken three months to organise and was carried out just as Kyiv stepped up probing attacks by mechanised brigades on the front. “We want to harm the enemy as much as possible, to reduce some of their capabilities on the front line, disrupt logistics, break morale, give a sense of insecurity.”
Operation Dmitri has taken even longer. The Russian recruiters paid the young man from Donbas scant attention on that baking summer’s day last year. They asked a few questions about his short life to date, jotted down his particulars. He had no criminal background, no public record of any ideology. They handed him a form with instructions to report for duty before basic training, across the border in Rostov-on-Don. Just another Donbas boy for the meat grinder.
But Dmitri was different. After eight years of life under Russian occupation, the shift from hybrid war to full invasion offered him a chance to vent his frustrations with the Kremlin-backed mafia who controlled his town, stealing businesses and dismantling entire industries for sale back in Russia.
Beatings had been commonplace in parts of the Donbas controlled by separatists since 2014, but the invasion ushered in a new savagery, with widespread reports of rape, torture and dismemberment.
‘It’s an Indiana Jones story’
Using the Telegram encrypted messaging service, Dmitri responded to a Ukrainian call for partisans to fight the Russian invaders in the occupied territories. It would be dangerous, secretive work, without glory or payment beyond the odd cryptocurrency transfer for equipment. Anything else would give him away. Instructions, locations of weapons caches and video manuals on how to build explosives would be sent via Telegram. He would be alone.
“These people on occupied territories are taking unbelievable risks, but we cannot give them a medal, or a gift, or an official salary. They think now that they are alone,” said Khmel, a Ukrainian GUR intelligence officer involved in the operation. “After this interview they will understand that people in the West read about them, remember about them. They will understand that we have friends.”
Dmitri was vetted by the GUR and proved a capable operator, passing the entry-level tasks easily: writing graffiti and setting vehicles marked with the pro-war “Z” sign ablaze. He was soon blooded by “liquidating” a collaborating official. The National Resistance calling card features the old Azov regiment emblem: a stylised trident, the symbol of Ukraine, over a Cossack “Idea of Nation” symbol, a logo controversial for its similarity to the Wolfsangel used by ultranationalist groups. Russia has sought to use that symbol as evidence of Nazi ideology, causing the Azov regiment to ditch it last year in favour of a simple trident.
“His legend was good — he was a usual boy from Donbas with a job, without any pro-Ukrainian history or standout details in his biography — that’s why Honta asked him to join the Russian army,” Khmel said.
“He had two months solid training [with the Russians] in Rostov-on-Don, then the recruits were moved back to Donbas to a base where they would be assigned their different units. At this point they were one or two weeks away from fighting our guys. And they were in range of our Himars missiles.”
Dmitri messaged GUR that there were high-ranking officers, including colonels, on the base. The target was too great an opportunity to pass up, he said.
“He texted us and sent us co-ordinates, but the problem was he also had to be on station. So he sent us his own co-ordinates, he didn’t have a choice — he knew we would strike but he didn’t know when or where Himars will come. When the attack started, we lost contact with him,” Khmel said, shaking his head.
Yet Dmitri had survived. Three days later, he contacted the GUR from a Russian field hospital. He told them he had been hit, but would recover. Knowing the Himars would be coming, he sprinted away from the base as soon as the first missile slammed into it several weeks ago, vaporising his fellow recruits. The blast of one of the next missiles caught him, but he had put enough distance between himself and the impact zone to avoid being critically wounded.
“We had some tough conversations with Honta about this mission, we didn’t know when we selected him exactly how we would use him. But when he told us that he will be at this point, it was a huge chance. We think we got between 60-100 Russian soldiers there,” Khmel said, joking that Dmitri was a good soldier and would probably be promoted by the Russian army. There are other partisans busy infiltrating the Russian military which is desperate for recruits too, he said.
“It’s an Indiana Jones story. It’s about risk and adrenaline, and when you want to kill the enemy, grow in our network, you want to surprise yourself.”
Over the past month the counteroffensive by Ukrainian forces has already reclaimed some 50 square miles of the Zaporizhzhia region which the National Resistance operates in.
But a successful mission can have unforeseen consequences. On June 11, Honta’s men blew up a railway bridge outside the village of Yakymivka, en route to the logistical hub of Melitopol. The railroad was used to transfer anti-aircraft ammunition from Crimea to the Russian defensive lines in the region, and the Russians were furious.
“The Russians turned all the villages near by upside down looking for our people. It’s a different kind of risk from sending co-ordinates when you’re sitting between your new Russian comrades, but you have to work with explosives, then you have to film the result,” said Khmel. “All the people, and I mean all the people [there], were beaten by the Russians. That’s their usual practice.”
Yet on occupied territory, the partisans work ordinary jobs and move freely, passing through Russian checkpoints with ease. They have ways to hide their explosives but the most dangerous thing to carry is the National Resistance calling card they drop on the scene of a successful mission, Honta said.
“The Russians have stopped and searched me numerous times at checkpoints. It’s quite usual, we got used to things like that. Initially it gave me anxiety but now since I live in that atmosphere all the time, I just do it casually,” he explained. “We don’t carry a lit Molotov cocktail to the car, we mask it, we have our ways and during a search it usually does not cause any suspicions. But if they find this card . . . it will be hard to get away with it.”
‘All Ukrainians have to help’
Honta’s partisans are divided between a smaller group who carry out the most dangerous operations and a wider support base who provide intelligence and burn cars, including 27 in the past month, Khmel said. Occasionally their targets are much bigger, and the results spectacular.
On June 2 in the occupied seaside city of Berdiansk, a man in plain clothes slipped out of his office for a stroll by the sea, a coffee and a cigarette. Spotting an FSB counter surveillance team from the Russian security services parked near the port, he moved along the seafront in the opposite direction. It was a shame he could not see the target he had reported on — a 50 metre-long bulk carrier ship loaded with ammunition — but he had a good view of the port where it was unloading.
He paused and whipped out his phone. His video missed the incoming Storm Shadow cruise missile, but caught its aftermath — an almighty explosion and mushroom cloud. The missile was on target, he reported via the Telegram channel, and left the scene.
Every such action will save soldiers’ lives during the counteroffensive’s main assault, GUR said, appealing for more Ukrainians to join the National Resistance.
“We have a unique moment to collect active people on occupied territories, it has to be now. The counteroffensive isn’t going to be just one week: it will be hard, it will go through autumn,” Khmel said.
“All Ukrainians have to help our soldiers to liberate our country, it’s not the responsibility of some colonels or brigades. It’s the work of all Ukrainians this summer to make the counteroffensive successful.”
- drug_profi
- Posts: 64673
- Joined: 16/07/2012 16:00
#174506 Re: Ukrajina
"Ko nas bre zavadi?"
Ta priča.
Ta priča.
- drug_profi
- Posts: 64673
- Joined: 16/07/2012 16:00
#174507 Re: Ukrajina
Gledam ove Bohdane, Cezare...
Velika je steta sto se nije mogao naci put za M-10 koji je po karakteristikama gotovo nalik Archeru.

Velika je steta sto se nije mogao naci put za M-10 koji je po karakteristikama gotovo nalik Archeru.

- TheProfessional
- Posts: 164
- Joined: 13/04/2013 19:27
#174508 Re: Ukrajina
Ja iz nekog razloga imam puno vise povjerenja u manualni punjac nego automatski. Radije nek nadje put za jos M777drug_profi wrote: ↑06/07/2023 01:13 Gledam ove Bohdane, Cezare...
Velika je steta sto se nije mogao naci put za M-10 koji je po karakteristikama gotovo nalik Archeru.
![]()
-
RefPus
- Posts: 219
- Joined: 30/04/2023 17:39
#174509 Re: Ukrajina
Ukri formirali vise brigada od Kine i Indije zajedbo, zapad ih opremio, zapovjednog kadra imaju koliko i Farski otoci, a oni u mjesec-dva ofanzive ostvarili samo napredak u gubicima ljudstva i tehnike. Rat je, ne mogu stalno pobjedjivati na frontu, ali ovolika kolicina plakanja i kukanja na zapad ce im se na kraju obiti o glavu. Dobili su vise vojne pomoci nego sto su mogli zamisliti, a vec izgubili hrpu tehnike a da nisu napravili nista.
Vrijeme uopce nije na njihovoj strani,
Vrijeme uopce nije na njihovoj strani,
- drug_profi
- Posts: 64673
- Joined: 16/07/2012 16:00
#174510 Re: Ukrajina
Volnovaha, mjesto danasnje iznenadne posjete raketa ZSU sastanku u zgradi okupacione Administracije.
- drug_profi
- Posts: 64673
- Joined: 16/07/2012 16:00
#174511 Re: Ukrajina
2 minuta za in/out i ispucavanje 6 komada.TheProfessional wrote: ↑06/07/2023 01:19Ja iz nekog razloga imam puno vise povjerenja u manualni punjac nego automatski. Radije nek nadje put za jos M777SpoilerShowdrug_profi wrote: ↑06/07/2023 01:13 Gledam ove Bohdane, Cezare...
Velika je steta sto se nije mogao naci put za M-10 koji je po karakteristikama gotovo nalik Archeru.
![]()
i tako 4 puta.
Spasava posadu, obezbjeđuje podrsku pjesadiji.
3 sjekire jesu onako kul, ali je mnogo posada izginulo.
- drug_profi
- Posts: 64673
- Joined: 16/07/2012 16:00
#174512 Re: Ukrajina
Oko Bahmuta niko izgleda nije kupio leševe.
Ovo će nakon rata biti područje od posebne pažnje za Ukrajinu jer treba sve kosti pokupiti, sav NUS ukloniti i onda odluciti sta sa ovim.
Meni na pamet padne NP Sutjeska. Tu su nasi djedovi ostavljali kosti, a nasi ocevi ih sakupljali i spremili u zajednicku grobnicu. I dan danas je simbol i svetište za antifašiste ovih prostora. Tako će biti i Forteca Bahmut sa okolicom za Ukrajinu.
Ovo će nakon rata biti područje od posebne pažnje za Ukrajinu jer treba sve kosti pokupiti, sav NUS ukloniti i onda odluciti sta sa ovim.
Meni na pamet padne NP Sutjeska. Tu su nasi djedovi ostavljali kosti, a nasi ocevi ih sakupljali i spremili u zajednicku grobnicu. I dan danas je simbol i svetište za antifašiste ovih prostora. Tako će biti i Forteca Bahmut sa okolicom za Ukrajinu.
- TheProfessional
- Posts: 164
- Joined: 13/04/2013 19:27
#174513 Re: Ukrajina
Mislio sam na ove tipa archer gdje nema posada nikakav uticaj, narocito kad dodje donkvara ili greske punjaca. Akonpogledas Phz2000 ili As90, Krab… nijedna nema automatski punjacdrug_profi wrote: ↑06/07/2023 01:272 minuta za in/out i ispucavanje 6 komada.TheProfessional wrote: ↑06/07/2023 01:19Ja iz nekog razloga imam puno vise povjerenja u manualni punjac nego automatski. Radije nek nadje put za jos M777SpoilerShow
i tako 4 puta.
Spasava posadu, obezbjeđuje podrsku pjesadiji.
3 sjekire jesu onako kul, ali je mnogo posada izginulo.
- drug_profi
- Posts: 64673
- Joined: 16/07/2012 16:00
#174514 Re: Ukrajina
Nema, ali moras odluciti hoces li oklop ili brzinu paljbe, jer antibaterijska odbrana je danas dosla do savrsenstva.TheProfessional wrote: ↑06/07/2023 01:41Mislio sam na ove tipa archer gdje nema posada nikakav uticaj, narocito kad dodje donkvara ili greske punjaca. Akonpogledas Phz2000 ili As90, Krab… nijedna nema automatski punjacdrug_profi wrote: ↑06/07/2023 01:27
2 minuta za in/out i ispucavanje 6 komada.
i tako 4 puta.
Spasava posadu, obezbjeđuje podrsku pjesadiji.
3 sjekire jesu onako kul, ali je mnogo posada izginulo.
Znaci trenutni je trend da je bolje biti brz, nego oklopljen. Dođi - ispali - bježi. Dok nisu stigli da uzvrate.
- drug_profi
- Posts: 64673
- Joined: 16/07/2012 16:00
#174515 Re: Ukrajina
Divlja mačka prede (sound volume)
- drug_profi
- Posts: 64673
- Joined: 16/07/2012 16:00
#174516 Re: Ukrajina
Razni identiteti Prigožina
-
Tarmac
- Posts: 556
- Joined: 03/06/2016 07:13
#174517 Re: Ukrajina
Nas bree niko nije zavadio, provokatoru cetnicki! MRS!!
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Tarmac
- Posts: 556
- Joined: 03/06/2016 07:13
#174518 Re: Ukrajina
Koji vam je najljepsi jucerasnji dogadjaj?
1. Vatromet u Makaiivki
2. Oslobodjenje Klisicevke
3. Slika "lijepog" turcina
Ja se nikako ne mogu da odlucim.
1. Vatromet u Makaiivki
2. Oslobodjenje Klisicevke
3. Slika "lijepog" turcina
Ja se nikako ne mogu da odlucim.
- japin_mutapi
- Posts: 11827
- Joined: 11/06/2011 19:00
- Location: Uostalom, mislim da genocidne Kartagene treba demontirati.
#174519 Re: Ukrajina
moj glas ide turcinu 
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Crvene_brigade
- Posts: 4029
- Joined: 19/10/2014 21:31
#174521 Re: Ukrajina
Ide lagano kotlić za fašističke agresore...
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DebelinJoe
- Posts: 4004
- Joined: 03/03/2021 20:06
#174522 Re: Ukrajina

Rodiš se, igraš se, imas oca, mater, brata sestru, Ideš u skoku, guzis komšinicu, voziš ladu, Ideš na utakmicu, I onda život završiš ovako...Sa lobanjom u blatu pored nekakvog Bahmuta, za Putina i Njegov Treći Rim, Od Vladivostoka do Lisabona.
-
Tarmac
- Posts: 556
- Joined: 03/06/2016 07:13
#174523 Re: Ukrajina
Moze li sljedeci put u spoiler ovo?DebelinJoe wrote: ↑06/07/2023 07:49
Rodiš se, igraš se, imas oca, mater, brata sestru, Ideš u skoku, guzis komšinicu, voziš ladu, Ideš na utakmicu, I onda život završiš ovako...Sa lobanjom u blatu pored nekakvog Bahmuta, za Putina i Njegov Treći Rim, Od Vladivostoka do Lisabona.
- japin_mutapi
- Posts: 11827
- Joined: 11/06/2011 19:00
- Location: Uostalom, mislim da genocidne Kartagene treba demontirati.
#174524 Re: Ukrajina
isti su ovaj suncokret i putin
da je ovaj na mjestu putina a putin da je vojnik obicni isto bi bilo
to su russisti u srcu i dusi - daju sve id sebe da imaginarni treci rim i ruska srednjovjekovna feudalna crkveno-militaristicka imperija postane realnost
da ubijaju, kolju, siluju, muce, pljackaju, pale, ruse, unistavaju svakog dana sve koje stignu
nije on ostavio kosti u blatu ukrajine zbog putina vec zbog sebe - isti su i ovaj truhlo i putin
da je ovaj na mjestu putina a putin da je vojnik obicni isto bi bilo
to su russisti u srcu i dusi - daju sve id sebe da imaginarni treci rim i ruska srednjovjekovna feudalna crkveno-militaristicka imperija postane realnost
da ubijaju, kolju, siluju, muce, pljackaju, pale, ruse, unistavaju svakog dana sve koje stignu
nije on ostavio kosti u blatu ukrajine zbog putina vec zbog sebe - isti su i ovaj truhlo i putin
- Gandalf
- Posts: 11137
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#174525 Re: Ukrajina
Nacija koja nije nikada pronašla svoj put ispod skuta religijskih patrijarha. U tristo godina vladavine Romanovih nisu napredovali ni milimetra od srednjevjekovnih razmišljanja. A za 100 + godina vladavine boljševičko - oligarhske buržoazije, postali se još i agresivniji nego što su ikada ranije bili. To je i dan danas agresivna stepska horda iz mračnog vijeka samo sa strujom i internetom kojeg zloupotrebljavaju.japin_mutapi wrote: ↑06/07/2023 08:00 isti su ovaj suncokret i putin
da je ovaj na mjestu putina a putin da je vojnik obicni isto bi bilo
to su russisti u srcu i dusi - daju sve id sebe da imaginarni treci rim i ruska srednjovjekovna feudalna crkveno-militaristicka imperija postane realnost
da ubijaju, kolju, siluju, muce, pljackaju, pale, ruse, unistavaju svakog dana sve koje stignu
nije on ostavio kosti u blatu ukrajine zbog putina vec zbog sebe - isti su i ovaj truhlo i putin
Za komšije opančare u wagneru mokri san je rusija do Milvokija a srbija do Tokija. Na svu sreću cijelog normalnog svijeta, njihova mračna realnost je ipak pogibija u rovu negdje oko Bahmuta.
