Ukraine conflict
#3201
Gets Weekends Off
Thread Starter
Joined APC: Jun 2022
Posts: 1,437
At least interesting as bragging about a poop deck anchor line. Try & focus on a keel below the waves? It’ll take you much further in discussion.
***do not listen to Hub capped. He is NOT your friend. She/he advises bloodshed’s answer. End this war now. Whatever it takes.
***do not listen to Hub capped. He is NOT your friend. She/he advises bloodshed’s answer. End this war now. Whatever it takes.
Maybe start a 3rd account and weigh in……
lololololololol i cannot tell you how much this makes me laugh
#3202
Gets Weekends Off
Thread Starter
Joined APC: Jun 2022
Posts: 1,437
You done ****ed up A A Ron……
I especially love when you tried to lecture me about integrity a couple months back
oh christ this is awesome, i feel like i need to go play the lottery now.
#3203
Yes. Russia needs to withdraw asap. 500,000+ dead. Think of those poor Russian mothers. (am I virtue signaling enough for you, METO?)
https://i.redd.it/9njtrzamqa3d1.jpeg
https://i.redd.it/9njtrzamqa3d1.jpeg
505,100 dead? Nobody coukd get it that precise even for their own side, far less the other. How would anyone know how many of the other guy's wounded went on to die if their wounds? Same for tanks, APCs, etc.
Everybody lies during a war. Even us. At the battle of Savo in WWII we lost three heavy cruisers and the censors didn't let that get out pubicly until guys getting home told their local newsies.
https://www.history.navy.mil/content...lied%20vessels.
You are naive if you believe either side.
#3204
Gets Weekends Off
Thread Starter
Joined APC: Jun 2022
Posts: 1,437
Seriously? You believe the propaganda? From either side?
505,100 dead? Nobody coukd get it that precise even for their own side, far less the other. How would anyone know how many of the other guy's wounded went on to die if their wounds? Same for tanks, APCs, etc.
Everybody lies during a war. Even us. At the battle of Savo in WWII we lost three heavy cruisers and the censors didn't let that get out pubicly until guys getting home told their local newsies.
https://www.history.navy.mil/content...lied%20vessels.
You are naive if you believe either side.
505,100 dead? Nobody coukd get it that precise even for their own side, far less the other. How would anyone know how many of the other guy's wounded went on to die if their wounds? Same for tanks, APCs, etc.
Everybody lies during a war. Even us. At the battle of Savo in WWII we lost three heavy cruisers and the censors didn't let that get out pubicly until guys getting home told their local newsies.
https://www.history.navy.mil/content...lied%20vessels.
You are naive if you believe either side.
maybe whine more about integrity lolololol
did you have a slight adrenal rush when you figured out your mistake? Man i wish i could have seen the panic
#3205
Gets Weekends Off
Joined APC: Apr 2011
Posts: 1,831
One account until the end. Pathetic really. Open the pod bay doors HAL.
#3206
Gets Weekends Off
Thread Starter
Joined APC: Jun 2022
Posts: 1,437
One account?
you normally reference your name and “I” in the same sentence?
nah bru….youre a bafoon doing anything to “win” an argument. I cant even remotely understand the level of insanity it takes to post as much as you do and use an alternate account to be the only person that agrees with yourself.
absolute desperate insanity
#3207
Please use the sharing tools found via the share button at the top or side of articles. Copying articles to share with others is a breach of FT.com T&Cs and Copyright Policy. Email [email protected] to buy additional rights. Subscribers may share up to 10 or 20 articles per month using the gift article service. More information can be found here.
https://www.ft.com/content/028c4115-...a-7cd7ffa7fa56
Czechoslovak Group, the largest ammunition supplier in central Europe, warned that rising prices and poor quality meant that half the shells it had received could not be sent to Ukraine’s battlefields as quickly as planned. A Czech-led initiative to buy artillery ammunition for Kyiv would start delivering rounds in June, Michal Strnad, owner and chair of CSG, told the Financial Times. But he said that about 50 per cent of the parts acquired by his company on behalf of the Czech government in places such as Africa and Asia were not good enough to be sent without further work to Ukraine. For some shells, CSG is being forced to add missing components from its own production. “Every week the price is going up and there are big issues with the components,” Strnad said during an interview in his company’s Prague offices. “It’s not an easy job.” However, he stressed that the Czech initiative remained “on track” and that CSG was committed to delivering its assigned part of the supplies. The war in Ukraine was helping to send prices soaring for the limited number of shells that could be purchased outside of the EU at a time when there was no spare ammunition in Europe, Strnad warned. He said that the order books of European ammunition makers were full for up to the next eight years, depending on the type of parts, even as “all of us are increasing the capacities”. Even in the unlikely scenario of Ukraine’s war finishing right now, he said, “there will be huge work in front of us to replenish the strategic stocks of Nato countries”. Strnad’s comments came as EU leaders from the Netherlands, Denmark, Latvia and Poland, along with Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal, attended a dinner in Prague hosted by Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala on Tuesday to discuss Ukraine’s weapons shortfall, which is crippling its efforts to fight Russia. Fiala said that 15 EU and Nato countries had so far contributed €1.6bn to the Czech initiative, which was announced in February and aims to provide 1.5m artillery shells to Ukraine. A first batch of tens of thousands of 155mm calibre shells would be delivered next month to Ukraine, Fiala said.
https://www.ft.com/content/028c4115-...a-7cd7ffa7fa56
Czechoslovak Group, the largest ammunition supplier in central Europe, warned that rising prices and poor quality meant that half the shells it had received could not be sent to Ukraine’s battlefields as quickly as planned. A Czech-led initiative to buy artillery ammunition for Kyiv would start delivering rounds in June, Michal Strnad, owner and chair of CSG, told the Financial Times. But he said that about 50 per cent of the parts acquired by his company on behalf of the Czech government in places such as Africa and Asia were not good enough to be sent without further work to Ukraine. For some shells, CSG is being forced to add missing components from its own production. “Every week the price is going up and there are big issues with the components,” Strnad said during an interview in his company’s Prague offices. “It’s not an easy job.” However, he stressed that the Czech initiative remained “on track” and that CSG was committed to delivering its assigned part of the supplies. The war in Ukraine was helping to send prices soaring for the limited number of shells that could be purchased outside of the EU at a time when there was no spare ammunition in Europe, Strnad warned. He said that the order books of European ammunition makers were full for up to the next eight years, depending on the type of parts, even as “all of us are increasing the capacities”. Even in the unlikely scenario of Ukraine’s war finishing right now, he said, “there will be huge work in front of us to replenish the strategic stocks of Nato countries”. Strnad’s comments came as EU leaders from the Netherlands, Denmark, Latvia and Poland, along with Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmyhal, attended a dinner in Prague hosted by Czech Prime Minister Petr Fiala on Tuesday to discuss Ukraine’s weapons shortfall, which is crippling its efforts to fight Russia. Fiala said that 15 EU and Nato countries had so far contributed €1.6bn to the Czech initiative, which was announced in February and aims to provide 1.5m artillery shells to Ukraine. A first batch of tens of thousands of 155mm calibre shells would be delivered next month to Ukraine, Fiala said.
#3208
please komrade kargo
One account?
you normally reference your name and “I” in the same sentence?
nah bru….youre a bafoon doing anything to “win” an argument. I cant even remotely understand the level of insanity it takes to post as much as you do and use an alternate account to be the only person that agrees with yourself.
absolute desperate insanity
One account?
you normally reference your name and “I” in the same sentence?
nah bru….youre a bafoon doing anything to “win” an argument. I cant even remotely understand the level of insanity it takes to post as much as you do and use an alternate account to be the only person that agrees with yourself.
absolute desperate insanity
But speaking rationality to delusional people is a fools errand - nor do I believe your particular irrationality is amenable to a cure, so believe whatever toots your flute, I don't respect you enough to be offended by it.
#3210
2:56
Ukrainians are having to make some very hard choices about what they can defend, and they are fighting an enemy that has adapted itself to exploit their weaknesses.
BBC international editor Jeremy Bowen explains why Ukraine is facing its worst crisis since Russia's invasion.
https://www.bbc.com/news/videos/cg33nzygez5o
Hard choices as Ukraine faces worst crisis since war began
Ukraine's second biggest city, Kharkiv, which is just 20 miles from the Russian border, is under attack and Russia's soldiers are advancing.Ukrainians are having to make some very hard choices about what they can defend, and they are fighting an enemy that has adapted itself to exploit their weaknesses.
BBC international editor Jeremy Bowen explains why Ukraine is facing its worst crisis since Russia's invasion.
https://www.bbc.com/news/videos/cg33nzygez5o
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post