Share.

    32 Kommentare

    1. WafflePartyOrgy on

      >one of the biggest fires a Russian refinery experienced …

      so far.

    2. ByronsLastStand on

      At this rate Russia will be reduced to using pans on coal-fired stoves to refine their oil!

    3. Basic_Coffee8969 on

      Several vidoes online, and I have 1 question: are they really driving into that smoke? I mean, I would have turned around….

    4. Scary_Statement4612 on

      I think I’m going to start buy micro shares in horses, since that’s what the country will be using sooner than later.

    5. Iamoggierock on

      Oh it’s getting critical. Ukraine is a fucking legend. And maybe an unstoppable force. Rightfully so.

    6. Complex_Material_702 on

      Their infrared cameras on the drones can easily tell which tanks are full or empty.

    7. Fun_Product_7349 on

      What a well constructed inferno well done people 🇺🇦🫶🏻🇺🇦

    8. Lost_Possibility_647 on

      It would be completely justified of Moscow ran out of energy and they would starve as most food need some energy to be edible.

    9. WebShamanUA on

      it’s just debris from downed drones that were shot down by their air defenses and that’s why there’s smoke 😉

    10. I’ve pointed this out before. The videos of Ukrainian missiles hitting their targets is part of a very long chain. There’s intelligence that picks the target – and I’m sure sometimes it comes from individuals from within Russia feeding information to Ukraine at great risk to themselves. And they don’t just pick the location, but the days and times. Others detect air defences – via lots of methods at varying levels of danger.

      I’ve long wondered if the Ukrainian invasion of Kursk allowed Special Ops teams to get into Russia in the initial chaos and start doing things like that. Maybe some of those long range drone attacks are really just short-range attacks from within Russia. Be a lot of work to track down teams like that all over a country the size of Russia. I mentioned this to a friend who joined up in 2022 – not from a military background – and he was in Kursk for a while. He had no idea, but he wondered about some things he saw. And heard. Some folks spoke very Russian Russian. Apparently Ukrainians speaking Russian don’t sound Russian?

      Anyway, sounds like a dangerous job. And if I had to handle security within Russia I’d be a very stressed out person.

      A pretty small and simple 3d printer can print more complex 3d printers and they can print rather impressive drones. Like I said, being in charge of security in a country the size of Russia would be worrisome.

    11. Considering all these refineries getting hit the air just for miles n miles must be getting contaminated by all sorts of shit. My guess cancer rates are gonna spike shortly in Russia-not that I care about Russians.

    12. Something I’ve noticed: the only time we saw a fuel tank pop its lid was in Moscow, when it got hit by a stray AA missile. The tank was mostly empty, full of air with some fuel vapors, hence the deflagration that made the lid pop.

      When Uktlrainian drones hit tanks, however, we always see big fires like the one above, because *those* tanks were full.

      So yeah, Ukraine really knows which tanks to hit and which are empty.

      You can actually see the fill line on drone footage taken with thermal cameras. I wouldn’t be surprised if that’s how they picked which tank to hit, either from the drone’s footage at arrival, or from IR satellite imagery. (Or both…)

    Leave A Reply