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Russo-Ukrainian War 2014-25

Started by mongers, August 06, 2014, 03:12:53 PM

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Legbiter

The border between Russia and Estonia yesterday.  :lol: The wait until 42 seconds in is well worth it.

https://twitter.com/EvgenyFeldman/status/1655929807732097032
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celedhring

So they held their victory day celebration right across the border, and blasted the Russki anthem like an asshole neighbor turning up their stereo?

They come across as such a puerile and vindictive people some times...

Hamilcar

So what's up with Lukashenka? Sick? Poisoned? Act?

Legbiter

Quote from: celedhring on May 10, 2023, 01:31:14 AMSo they held their victory day celebration right across the border, and blasted the Russki anthem like an asshole neighbor turning up their stereo?

They come across as such a puerile and vindictive people some times...

"A Russian is a Russian even if fried in butter".
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Josquius

I find it curious theres a castle on each side of the river. This was the Swedish-Russian border?
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Legbiter

Quote from: Josquius on May 10, 2023, 07:22:23 AMI find it curious theres a castle on each side of the river. This was the Swedish-Russian border?

 :)
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Legbiter

Ukrainian tanks and infantry in a, get this, combined arms operation clearing out vatnik positions near Bakmut. :hmm:

https://twitter.com/wartranslated/status/1656064355539058688
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Josquius

Quote from: Legbiter on May 10, 2023, 07:50:27 AMUkrainian tanks and infantry in a, get this, combined arms operation clearing out vatnik positions near Bakmut. :hmm:

https://twitter.com/wartranslated/status/1656064355539058688

So many Russians being ran over by tanks.
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The Brain

Quote from: Josquius on May 10, 2023, 07:22:23 AMI find it curious theres a castle on each side of the river. This was the Swedish-Russian border?

For some decades around 1600 AFAIK.
Women want me. Men want to be with me.

Admiral Yi

It is noteworthy.  I can't think of anywhere else with two castles built that close together.

Syt

Quote from: Admiral Yi on May 10, 2023, 09:37:58 AMIt is noteworthy.  I can't think of anywhere else with two castles built that close together.

Seems counter-castles (or siege castles) were a thing:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counter-castle
I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein's brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops.
—Stephen Jay Gould

Proud owner of 42 Zoupa Points.

Duque de Bragança

#13977
Another indirect consequence of the war, more exonym fun in the former Königsberg:

Time for Régiomonte or Monterégio in Portuguese I guess; French could use Montréal in theory but ask Viper or Goupil Gril about possible confusions.  :P

QuoteKaliningrad: Russia fury as Poland body recommends renaming exclave

Kaliningrad is home to Russia's only ice-free European port
By Adam Easton in Warsaw and Tom Spender in London
BBC News
The Kremlin has reacted furiously after a Polish government body advised using a different name for Russia's exclave of Kaliningrad on the Baltic Sea coast.
The Polish committee said the city and wider area should instead be called Królewiec.

This was the area's traditional name, it said, and the decision no longer to use an "imposed name" was partly a result of Russia invading Ukraine.
Russia said the decision was "bordering on madness" and "a hostile act".
"We know that throughout history, Poland has slipped from time to time into this madness of hatred towards Russians," said Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov.
For hundreds of years before World War Two, the area was known as Königsberg and was part of East Prussia. Królewiec is the Polish translation of Königsberg.
However, after World War Two, the city and wider region were placed under Soviet administration. The Soviets renamed it Kaliningrad after Mikhail Kalinin, one of the leaders of the Bolshevik revolution.
Kaliningrad profile
After the Soviet Union collapsed, Kaliningrad became part of the territory of Russia, making it an exclave - an area that is geographically separated from a country's main territory - located between Poland and Lithuania.
Kaliningrad is strategically important to Moscow because it houses the Russian Baltic Fleet at the port of Baltiysk and is the country's only ice-free European port.
Map showing Kaliningrad
On Tuesday, Poland's Committee on Standardisation of Geographical Names Outside the Republic of Poland said it was recommending with immediate effect that the city be known in Poland as Królewiec and the exclave's wider area as Obwód Królewiecki.
It said the name Kaliningrad was unrelated to either the city or the region and had an "emotional and negative" resonance in Poland.
Mikhail Kalinin was one of six Soviet Politburo signatories to the order to execute more than 21,000 Polish prisoners of war in the forests of Katyn and elsewhere in 1940.
Russia's invasion of Ukraine and its propaganda efforts had prompted Poland to re-evaluate controversial "imposed names", the committee added.
"Each country has the right to use in its language traditional names constituting its cultural heritage, but it cannot be forced to use names unacceptable by it in its language," the committee said.
Moscow initially blamed the Nazis for the Katyn Massacre when the Germans discovered the mass graves in 1943.
Because Moscow imposed a communist regime on Poland after World War Two, the relatives of the victims were unable to publicly discuss or find anything out about the crime for five decades. Russia only acknowledged its responsibility for the massacre in 1990.
Although the state committee's recommendation is not binding, it is expected that Polish state bodies will now refer to Kaliningrad as Królewiec. Poland's foreign ministry has issued a positive assessment of the name change.
poland puts up razor wire at Kaliningrad border

Poland is putting up razor wire at its border with the exclave
Poland has also begun to fortify its border with the exclave following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
The Polish military has erected a temporary 2.5m-high razor wire fence and last month began work to install cameras and motion sensors along the 232-km border. Anti-tank obstacles have also been positioned at border crossings.
Polish officials are concerned that Russia could use that border as a new migrant route into the EU, following reports of increased direct flights from the Middle East and elsewhere to Kaliningrad.
Poland has erected a 5.5m-high steel fence along part of its border with Belarus after an increase in migrants crossing into Poland, Lithuania and Latvia from there.

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-65545636

grumbler

Quote from: Legbiter on May 10, 2023, 07:50:27 AMUkrainian tanks and infantry in a, get this, combined arms operation clearing out vatnik positions near Bakmut. :hmm:

https://twitter.com/wartranslated/status/1656064355539058688

I'd be curious to know how that tank commander knew that the infantry they were facing had no MPATs.  Crashing through the brush like that in advance of your infantry would be very dangerous if the defenders had something like RPG-7s.
The future is all around us, waiting, in moments of transition, to be born in moments of revelation. No one knows the shape of that future or where it will take us. We know only that it is always born in pain.   -G'Kar

Bayraktar!

Admiral Yi

Quote from: Syt on May 10, 2023, 09:44:43 AMSeems counter-castles (or siege castles) were a thing:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counter-castle

Seems based on that wiki that they were either temporary structures to shelter siege engines or permanent structures outside siege engine range.  Those two castles don't fit in either category.