15 December 2025 — 08:10, Novorossiysk Naval Base.
While radars scanned the sky, the real threat came from the depths of the sea. An AI-assisted long-range underwater platform slipped beneath the port defences and detonated an underkeel charge beneath a Project 636.3 ‘Improved Kilo’ submarine. The vertical water column visible on the surface was not a surface explosion, but an under-keel signature. This section examines the difference between physics and propaganda, the impact on Kalibr capabilities, the One-Third Rule and actual submarine presence, and Novorossiysk's economic vulnerability through war risk insurance, using a dramatised/OSINT-based narrative.
Note/warning: This video is a dramatised analysis framed by open-source intelligence (OSINT) data. Technical tactical/coordinate/timeline details have been generalised or omitted. The reenactments are representative and do not contain information of an operational secret nature.
We support Ukraine's official project, United24.
We are sharing United24's campaigns for Ukraine with you. You can find out more and lend your support via the links below.
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
Legal notice:
This video utilizes the original military operation technical simulation analysis written by milscopex.com and Military Chronicle team.
Cover images, creative images, graphics, and video articles are subject to copyright.
For business and collaboration, please contact us at: [email protected]
15 December 2025 — 08:10, Novorossiysk Naval Base.
While radars scanned the sky, the real threat came from the depths of the sea. An AI-assisted long-range underwater platform slipped beneath the port defences and detonated an underkeel charge beneath a Project 636.3 ‘Improved Kilo’ submarine. The vertical water column visible on the surface was not a surface explosion, but an under-keel signature. This section examines the difference between physics and propaganda, the impact on Kalibr capabilities, the One-Third Rule and actual submarine presence, and Novorossiysk's economic vulnerability through war risk insurance, using a dramatised/OSINT-based narrative.
Note/warning: This video is a dramatised analysis framed by open-source intelligence (OSINT) data. Technical tactical/coordinate/timeline details have been generalised or omitted. The reenactments are representative and do not contain information of an operational secret nature.
We support Ukraine's official project, United24.
We are sharing United24's campaigns for Ukraine with you. You can find out more and lend your support via the links below.
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
Legal notice:
This video utilizes the original military operation technical simulation analysis written by milscopex.com and Military Chronicle team.
Cover images, creative images, graphics, and video articles are subject to copyright.
For business and collaboration, please contact us at: [email protected]
15 December 2025 — 08:10, Novorossiysk Naval Base.
While radars scanned the sky, the real threat came from the depths of the sea. An AI-assisted long-range underwater platform slipped beneath the port defences and detonated an underkeel charge beneath a Project 636.3 ‘Improved Kilo’ submarine. The vertical water column visible on the surface was not a surface explosion, but an under-keel signature. This section examines the difference between physics and propaganda, the impact on Kalibr capabilities, the One-Third Rule and actual submarine presence, and Novorossiysk's economic vulnerability through war risk insurance, using a dramatised/OSINT-based narrative.
Note/warning: This video is a dramatised analysis framed by open-source intelligence (OSINT) data. Technical tactical/coordinate/timeline details have been generalised or omitted. The reenactments are representative and do not contain information of an operational secret nature.
We support Ukraine's official project, United24.
We are sharing United24's campaigns for Ukraine with you. You can find out more and lend your support via the links below.
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
Legal notice:
This video utilizes the original military operation technical simulation analysis written by milscopex.com and Military Chronicle team.
Cover images, creative images, graphics, and video articles are subject to copyright.
For business and collaboration, please contact us at: [email protected]
15 December 2025 — 08:10, Novorossiysk Naval Base.
While radars scanned the sky, the real threat came from the depths of the sea. An AI-assisted long-range underwater platform slipped beneath the port defences and detonated an underkeel charge beneath a Project 636.3 ‘Improved Kilo’ submarine. The vertical water column visible on the surface was not a surface explosion, but an under-keel signature. This section examines the difference between physics and propaganda, the impact on Kalibr capabilities, the One-Third Rule and actual submarine presence, and Novorossiysk's economic vulnerability through war risk insurance, using a dramatised/OSINT-based narrative.
Note/warning: This video is a dramatised analysis framed by open-source intelligence (OSINT) data. Technical tactical/coordinate/timeline details have been generalised or omitted. The reenactments are representative and do not contain information of an operational secret nature.
We support Ukraine's official project, United24.
We are sharing United24's campaigns for Ukraine with you. You can find out more and lend your support via the links below.
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
Legal notice:
This video utilizes the original military operation technical simulation analysis written by milscopex.com and Military Chronicle team.
Cover images, creative images, graphics, and video articles are subject to copyright.
For business and collaboration, please contact us at: [email protected]
On the night of November 25, 2025, a simultaneous saturation attack along the Taganrog–Novorossiysk–Tuapse axis: 249 UAVs and 4 R-360 Neptune-Ds. While swarm/decoy waves saturated the air defenses, the sea-skimming Neptunes advanced below the radar horizon. At the TANTK Beriev site in Taganrog, the A-60 laser test aircraft and the A-100LL test platform were heavily damaged, while the Shekharis Oil Terminal in Novorossiysk caught fire. This section examines the saturation → corridor → terminal IIR chain, the resulting erosion of attention and inventory within the S-400 layered defense, and the deep-front effects through a dramatized/OSINT-based narrative.
Note/Warning: This video is a dramatized analysis framed by open-source (OSINT) data. Technical tactical/coordinate/timeline details have been generalized or omitted. The animations are representative and do not contain operational secrets.
We support Ukraine's official project, United24.
We are sharing United24's campaigns for Ukraine with you. You can find out more and lend your support via the links below.
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
Legal notice:
This video utilizes the original military operation technical simulation analysis written by milscopex.com and Military Chronicle team.
Cover images, creative images, graphics, and video articles are subject to copyright.
For business and collaboration, please contact us at: [email protected]
On the night of November 25, 2025, a simultaneous saturation attack along the Taganrog–Novorossiysk–Tuapse axis: 249 UAVs and 4 R-360 Neptune-Ds. While swarm/decoy waves saturated the air defenses, the sea-skimming Neptunes advanced below the radar horizon. At the TANTK Beriev site in Taganrog, the A-60 laser test aircraft and the A-100LL test platform were heavily damaged, while the Shekharis Oil Terminal in Novorossiysk caught fire. This section examines the saturation → corridor → terminal IIR chain, the resulting erosion of attention and inventory within the S-400 layered defense, and the deep-front effects through a dramatized/OSINT-based narrative.
Note/Warning: This video is a dramatized analysis framed by open-source (OSINT) data. Technical tactical/coordinate/timeline details have been generalized or omitted. The animations are representative and do not contain operational secrets.
We support Ukraine's official project, United24.
We are sharing United24's campaigns for Ukraine with you. You can find out more and lend your support via the links below.
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
Legal notice:
This video utilizes the original military operation technical simulation analysis written by milscopex.com and Military Chronicle team.
Cover images, creative images, graphics, and video articles are subject to copyright.
For business and collaboration, please contact us at: [email protected]
Novorossiysk wasn’t supposed to be touchable. Dense S‑400 coverage, Pantsir/Tor layers, and the Black Sea’s most critical fuel hub at Sheskharis—all wrapped in an “invulnerable” story. On November 14, 2025, four long‑range Neptune cruise missiles rode the sea‑skimming horizon while drone swarms burned attention and inventory. Two missiles neutralized S‑400 clusters east of the city; two cut pumps/power at Sheskharis. Then the UAVs arrived from multiple vectors.
This episode explains the saturation → corridor → terminal sequence; why radar horizon and IIR scene‑matching matter; and how hitting search/engagement brains and manifolds creates cascading effects.
Note: This is a dramatized, OSINT‑grounded analysis. We generalize or omit sensitive timelines, altitudes, and comms.
We support Ukraine's official project, United24.
We are sharing United24's campaigns for Ukraine with you. You can find out more and lend your support via the links below.
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
Legal notice:
This video utilizes the original military operation technical simulation analysis written by milscopex.com and Military Chronicle team.
Cover images, creative images, graphics, and video articles are subject to copyright.
For business and collaboration, please contact us at: [email protected]
Novorossiysk wasn’t supposed to be touchable. Dense S‑400 coverage, Pantsir/Tor layers, and the Black Sea’s most critical fuel hub at Sheskharis—all wrapped in an “invulnerable” story. On November 14, 2025, four long‑range Neptune cruise missiles rode the sea‑skimming horizon while drone swarms burned attention and inventory. Two missiles neutralized S‑400 clusters east of the city; two cut pumps/power at Sheskharis. Then the UAVs arrived from multiple vectors.
This episode explains the saturation → corridor → terminal sequence; why radar horizon and IIR scene‑matching matter; and how hitting search/engagement brains and manifolds creates cascading effects.
Note: This is a dramatized, OSINT‑grounded analysis. We generalize or omit sensitive timelines, altitudes, and comms.
We support Ukraine's official project, United24.
We are sharing United24's campaigns for Ukraine with you. You can find out more and lend your support via the links below.
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
Legal notice:
This video utilizes the original military operation technical simulation analysis written by milscopex.com and Military Chronicle team.
Cover images, creative images, graphics, and video articles are subject to copyright.
For business and collaboration, please contact us at: [email protected]
On October 21, 2025, two Ukrainian Su‑24M “Fencers” launched four Storm Shadow/SCALP‑EG cruise missiles into Bryansk Oblast, striking a solid‑propellant/explosives complex that feeds multiple Russian weapons families. This episode breaks down the saturation‑then‑corridor concept: swarms to overload the IADS, low‑altitude TERPROM routing, IIR terminal match, and why BROACH tandem warheads are built for buried, hardened targets.
This is a dramatized, OSINT‑grounded analysis. We generalize or omit sensitive TTPs (timelines, altitudes, comms). Our aim is to explain how the system-of-systems fight evolves—what it means for artillery throughput, missile pacing, and the future of Russian air defense.
Sources: mixed public reporting, defense references, commercial satellite/thermal cues, and expert synthesis; no classified data used.
We support Ukraine's official project, United24.
We are sharing United24's campaigns for Ukraine with you. You can find out more and lend your support via the links below.
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
Legal notice:
This video utilizes the original military operation technical simulation analysis written by milscopex.com and Military Chronicle team.
Cover images, creative images, graphics, and video articles are subject to copyright.
For business and collaboration, please contact us at: [email protected]
On October 21, 2025, two Ukrainian Su‑24M “Fencers” launched four Storm Shadow/SCALP‑EG cruise missiles into Bryansk Oblast, striking a solid‑propellant/explosives complex that feeds multiple Russian weapons families. This episode breaks down the saturation‑then‑corridor concept: swarms to overload the IADS, low‑altitude TERPROM routing, IIR terminal match, and why BROACH tandem warheads are built for buried, hardened targets.
This is a dramatized, OSINT‑grounded analysis. We generalize or omit sensitive TTPs (timelines, altitudes, comms). Our aim is to explain how the system-of-systems fight evolves—what it means for artillery throughput, missile pacing, and the future of Russian air defense.
Sources: mixed public reporting, defense references, commercial satellite/thermal cues, and expert synthesis; no classified data used.
We support Ukraine's official project, United24.
We are sharing United24's campaigns for Ukraine with you. You can find out more and lend your support via the links below.
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
Legal notice:
This video utilizes the original military operation technical simulation analysis written by milscopex.com and Military Chronicle team.
Cover images, creative images, graphics, and video articles are subject to copyright.
For business and collaboration, please contact us at: [email protected]
#BalticSea #NATO #Submarine #Gripen #Visby #ASW #OSINT
A dramatized explainer based on open sources: how a Russian Kilo‑class submarine (Novorossiysk) surfaced under duress, was towed across NATO waters, and then met Swedish Gripen fighters, Visby corvettes, and Saab 340 patrol aircraft in the Baltic—turning a salvage into a signature harvest. We focus on effects, doctrine, and strategy—no sensitive procedures.
Note: This video is a dramatization grounded in public reporting and OSINT. It omits operational details and does not endorse harm.
Sources:
Swedish Army in Pursuit of Russian Submarine
https://charter97.org/en/news/2025/10/16/659458/
https://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2025/10/15/sweden-russian-submarine/8471760560321/
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/russia-submarine-tracked-fighter-jets-warships-baltic-sea-sweden/
Under the supervision of NATO naval forces, Sweden is tracking a Russian Kilo-class submarine in the Baltic Sea.
https://www.armyrecognition.com/news/navy-news/2025/sweden-shadows-russian-kilo-class-submarine-in-baltic-amid-nato-reinforced-naval-vigilance
Analyst on the Novorossiysk Submarine: Things Are Worse Than They Appear
https://charter97.org/en/news/2025/10/16/659470/
Emergency Situation Out of Control on the "Novorossiysk": What We Know
https://charter97.org/en/news/2025/10/16/659464/
We support Ukraine's official project, United24.
We are sharing United24's campaigns for Ukraine with you. You can find out more and lend your support via the links below.
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
Legal notice:
This video utilizes the original military operation technical simulation analysis written by milscopex.com and Military Chronicle team.
Cover images, creative images, graphics, and video articles are subject to copyright.
For business and collaboration, please contact us at: [email protected]
#BalticSea #NATO #Submarine #Gripen #Visby #ASW #OSINT
A dramatized explainer based on open sources: how a Russian Kilo‑class submarine (Novorossiysk) surfaced under duress, was towed across NATO waters, and then met Swedish Gripen fighters, Visby corvettes, and Saab 340 patrol aircraft in the Baltic—turning a salvage into a signature harvest. We focus on effects, doctrine, and strategy—no sensitive procedures.
Note: This video is a dramatization grounded in public reporting and OSINT. It omits operational details and does not endorse harm.
Sources:
Swedish Army in Pursuit of Russian Submarine
https://charter97.org/en/news/2025/10/16/659458/
https://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2025/10/15/sweden-russian-submarine/8471760560321/
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/russia-submarine-tracked-fighter-jets-warships-baltic-sea-sweden/
Under the supervision of NATO naval forces, Sweden is tracking a Russian Kilo-class submarine in the Baltic Sea.
https://www.armyrecognition.com/news/navy-news/2025/sweden-shadows-russian-kilo-class-submarine-in-baltic-amid-nato-reinforced-naval-vigilance
Analyst on the Novorossiysk Submarine: Things Are Worse Than They Appear
https://charter97.org/en/news/2025/10/16/659470/
Emergency Situation Out of Control on the "Novorossiysk": What We Know
https://charter97.org/en/news/2025/10/16/659464/
We support Ukraine's official project, United24.
We are sharing United24's campaigns for Ukraine with you. You can find out more and lend your support via the links below.
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
Legal notice:
This video utilizes the original military operation technical simulation analysis written by milscopex.com and Military Chronicle team.
Cover images, creative images, graphics, and video articles are subject to copyright.
For business and collaboration, please contact us at: [email protected]
In this dramatized, open-source-based analysis, we unpack the Lake Onega strike on the Russian Navy’s Buyan-M corvette “Grad”—why this inland waterway is strategically vital, how perception of safety collapsed, and why strategic depth no longer guarantees immunity in an era of long-range precision. We focus on effects, context, and doctrine—not tactics or instructions.
Note: This video is a dramatization based on public reporting and analysis. It omits sensitive procedures and does not provide operational guidance or endorse harm. Real conflicts are governed by international humanitarian law.
00:48 – Where and why: Lake Onega & the White Sea–Baltic Canal
02:05 – The ship and the message: Why “Grad” mattered
03:20 – “Strategic depth” meets modern reach
04:28 – How illusions crack: elites, safety bubbles, and panic
05:40 – The canal’s double life: commercial vs. strategic
06:55 – The doctrine flip: depth as vulnerability
08:05 – Russia’s dilemma: guard the front or the interior?
09:10 – Lessons without instructions: effects, not TTPs
10:00 – Takeaways & viewer question
We support Ukraine's official project, United24.
We are sharing United24's campaigns for Ukraine with you. You can find out more and lend your support via the links below.
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
Legal notice:
This video utilizes the original military operation technical simulation analysis written by milscopex.com and Military Chronicle team.
Cover images, creative images, graphics, and video articles are subject to copyright.
For business and collaboration, please contact us at: [email protected]
In this dramatized, open-source-based analysis, we unpack the Lake Onega strike on the Russian Navy’s Buyan-M corvette “Grad”—why this inland waterway is strategically vital, how perception of safety collapsed, and why strategic depth no longer guarantees immunity in an era of long-range precision. We focus on effects, context, and doctrine—not tactics or instructions.
Note: This video is a dramatization based on public reporting and analysis. It omits sensitive procedures and does not provide operational guidance or endorse harm. Real conflicts are governed by international humanitarian law.
00:48 – Where and why: Lake Onega & the White Sea–Baltic Canal
02:05 – The ship and the message: Why “Grad” mattered
03:20 – “Strategic depth” meets modern reach
04:28 – How illusions crack: elites, safety bubbles, and panic
05:40 – The canal’s double life: commercial vs. strategic
06:55 – The doctrine flip: depth as vulnerability
08:05 – Russia’s dilemma: guard the front or the interior?
09:10 – Lessons without instructions: effects, not TTPs
10:00 – Takeaways & viewer question
We support Ukraine's official project, United24.
We are sharing United24's campaigns for Ukraine with you. You can find out more and lend your support via the links below.
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
Legal notice:
This video utilizes the original military operation technical simulation analysis written by milscopex.com and Military Chronicle team.
Cover images, creative images, graphics, and video articles are subject to copyright.
For business and collaboration, please contact us at: [email protected]
#Crimea #AirDefense #Drones #Logistics #ModernWarfare #Feodosia #Saky #IADS
On 6 October 2025, the skies over Crimea witnessed a complex operation that would rewrite modern warfare doctrine. This was no ordinary attack; it was a multi-layered, cleverly orchestrated chess move designed by Ukraine to paralyse one of Russia's most heavily fortified strongholds on its southern flank. As Military Chronicle, we are delving into every detail of this groundbreaking operation targeting the Feodosia oil terminal.
On Oct 6, 2025, a multi‑axis raid of drones and missile‑drones punched through Crimea’s layered defenses and set off major fires at strategic sites, including the Feodosia maritime oil terminal. This video dramatizes the strategy—saturation, deception, timing—and analyzes why a few hits on logistics hubs can ripple through fuel, rail, aviation tempo, and civilian life. We focus on effects and doctrine, not tactics or targeting.
Important: Dramatized analysis based on open sources and publicly visible imagery. It omits sensitive procedures and does not provide instructions or endorse harm. Real conflicts are governed by international humanitarian law.
We support Ukraine's official project, @UNITED24media
We are sharing United24's campaigns for Ukraine with you. You can find out more and lend your support via the links below.
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
Legal notice:
This video utilises the original military operation technical simulation analysis written by milscopex.com and Military Chronicle team.
Cover images, creative images, graphics, and video articles are subject to copyright.
For business and collaboration, please contact us at: [email protected]
#Crimea #AirDefense #Drones #Logistics #ModernWarfare #Feodosia #Saky #IADS
On 6 October 2025, the skies over Crimea witnessed a complex operation that would rewrite modern warfare doctrine. This was no ordinary attack; it was a multi-layered, cleverly orchestrated chess move designed by Ukraine to paralyse one of Russia's most heavily fortified strongholds on its southern flank. As Military Chronicle, we are delving into every detail of this groundbreaking operation targeting the Feodosia oil terminal.
On Oct 6, 2025, a multi‑axis raid of drones and missile‑drones punched through Crimea’s layered defenses and set off major fires at strategic sites, including the Feodosia maritime oil terminal. This video dramatizes the strategy—saturation, deception, timing—and analyzes why a few hits on logistics hubs can ripple through fuel, rail, aviation tempo, and civilian life. We focus on effects and doctrine, not tactics or targeting.
Important: Dramatized analysis based on open sources and publicly visible imagery. It omits sensitive procedures and does not provide instructions or endorse harm. Real conflicts are governed by international humanitarian law.
We support Ukraine's official project, @UNITED24media
We are sharing United24's campaigns for Ukraine with you. You can find out more and lend your support via the links below.
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
Legal notice:
This video utilises the original military operation technical simulation analysis written by milscopex.com and Military Chronicle team.
Cover images, creative images, graphics, and video articles are subject to copyright.
For business and collaboration, please contact us at: [email protected]
#Belgorod #AirDefense #HIMARS #Drones #EW #Logistics #ModernWarfare
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
On Sept 28, 2025, a multi‑axis strike and deception campaign culminated in a precision hit on Belgorod’s power grid—a rear‑area node that supported logistics, command, and rail movement. This video dramatizes how saturation, electronic confusion, and timing can overwhelm layered defenses—and why a single grid hub can be a systemic center of gravity. We focus on strategy and effects (not tactics or procedures).
Important: This is a dramatized analysis based on open sources. It omits sensitive details and does not provide instructions or endorse harm. Real conflicts are governed by International Humanitarian Law.
#Belgorod #AirDefense #HIMARS #Drones #EW #Logistics #ModernWarfare
ALLIES OF STEEL:
Fundraiser for lifesaving ground robots
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/allies-of-steel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=allies
And here are the links for Fundraiser #2 — a joint campaign by UNITED24 and Saint Javelin to raise $150,000 for an AI-controlled turret:
🔗 https://u24.gov.ua/news/saint-sentinel?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=military-chronicle&utm_campaign=javelin
On Sept 28, 2025, a multi‑axis strike and deception campaign culminated in a precision hit on Belgorod’s power grid—a rear‑area node that supported logistics, command, and rail movement. This video dramatizes how saturation, electronic confusion, and timing can overwhelm layered defenses—and why a single grid hub can be a systemic center of gravity. We focus on strategy and effects (not tactics or procedures).
Important: This is a dramatized analysis based on open sources. It omits sensitive details and does not provide instructions or endorse harm. Real conflicts are governed by International Humanitarian Law.
A dramatized, open‑source‑based breakdown of a Baltic airspace incident: MiG‑31 Foxhounds meet a networked NATO response—F‑35A for sensing, Gripen‑E for BVR control, and Meteor ramjet missiles redefining the No‑Escape Zone. We explain why speed and altitude aren’t enough against modern, network‑centric tactics, how EW can blind legacy systems, and why credible deterrence now pairs policy with a real‑time kill web.
Note: This is a dramatized analysis drawing on publicly available performance data and general doctrine concepts. We exclude operational details and do not provide instructions.
Dramatized scenario based on publicly available performance concepts.
No operational tactics, frequencies, or step‑by‑step methods are disclosed.
Airspace, ROE and policy references are illustrative; defer to official sources for real‑world procedures.
This program is not an endorsement of violence; it explains deterrence dynamics and technology at a high level.
A dramatized, open‑source‑based breakdown of a Baltic airspace incident: MiG‑31 Foxhounds meet a networked NATO response—F‑35A for sensing, Gripen‑E for BVR control, and Meteor ramjet missiles redefining the No‑Escape Zone. We explain why speed and altitude aren’t enough against modern, network‑centric tactics, how EW can blind legacy systems, and why credible deterrence now pairs policy with a real‑time kill web.
Note: This is a dramatized analysis drawing on publicly available performance data and general doctrine concepts. We exclude operational details and do not provide instructions.
Dramatized scenario based on publicly available performance concepts.
No operational tactics, frequencies, or step‑by‑step methods are disclosed.
Airspace, ROE and policy references are illustrative; defer to official sources for real‑world procedures.
This program is not an endorsement of violence; it explains deterrence dynamics and technology at a high level.
#Ukraine #Donetsk #StormShadow #Su24 #OSINT #AirDefense #CommandAndControlA forty‑year‑old Su‑24M, two bunker‑busting cruise missiles, and a precision strike on Russian headquarters in Donetsk. This documentary‑style breakdown follows how signals cues, unmanned swarms, and timing combined to produce command paralysis—halting a planned armored push before it began. We focus on effects, decision‑making, and strategy, not “how‑to” details.Disclaimer: Based on open‑source reporting and publicly available imagery; independent verification of every point is not possible.
#Ukraine #Donetsk #StormShadow #Su24 #OSINT #AirDefense #CommandAndControlA forty‑year‑old Su‑24M, two bunker‑busting cruise missiles, and a precision strike on Russian headquarters in Donetsk. This documentary‑style breakdown follows how signals cues, unmanned swarms, and timing combined to produce command paralysis—halting a planned armored push before it began. We focus on effects, decision‑making, and strategy, not “how‑to” details.Disclaimer: Based on open‑source reporting and publicly available imagery; independent verification of every point is not possible.
#Ukraine #Primorsk #Baltic #OSINT #AirDefense #ShadowFleet
A Baltic port, a “shadow fleet,” and a 1,000‑kilometer drone gambit.
This documentary‑style breakdown follows a long‑range saturation attack that overloaded defenses, slipped a small strike element through, and hit Primorsk’s pumping nodes and tankers—a temporary choke on one of Russia’s biggest oil gateways. We focus on effects, timing, and economics—not tactics or “how‑to.”
Disclaimer: Based on open‑source reporting and satellite/visual evidence; independent verification of every claim is not possible.
#Ukraine #Primorsk #Baltic #OSINT #AirDefense #ShadowFleet
A Baltic port, a “shadow fleet,” and a 1,000‑kilometer drone gambit.
This documentary‑style breakdown follows a long‑range saturation attack that overloaded defenses, slipped a small strike element through, and hit Primorsk’s pumping nodes and tankers—a temporary choke on one of Russia’s biggest oil gateways. We focus on effects, timing, and economics—not tactics or “how‑to.”
Disclaimer: Based on open‑source reporting and satellite/visual evidence; independent verification of every claim is not possible.
Crimea’s air picture flickered—then failed at the worst possible moment.
A wave of UJ‑26 drones forced delays in the detection/communication chain; Flamingo‑class cruise missiles followed, hitting an intelligence compound in Armyansk and a Sevastopol pier. Buildings stood—but functions failed: power distribution/backbone services, field comms, fueling, and patrol rhythms. In this breakdown we explain why an imperfect blackout was enough, and how a few minutes of uncertainty turned into an expensive day for coastal defense.
Chapters: target ecosystem • timing window • functional kills vs. facades • port and patrol impact • what adapts next
Open‑source documentary analysis. No operational instructions.
Crimea’s air picture flickered—then failed at the worst possible moment.
A wave of UJ‑26 drones forced delays in the detection/communication chain; Flamingo‑class cruise missiles followed, hitting an intelligence compound in Armyansk and a Sevastopol pier. Buildings stood—but functions failed: power distribution/backbone services, field comms, fueling, and patrol rhythms. In this breakdown we explain why an imperfect blackout was enough, and how a few minutes of uncertainty turned into an expensive day for coastal defense.
Chapters: target ecosystem • timing window • functional kills vs. facades • port and patrol impact • what adapts next
Open‑source documentary analysis. No operational instructions.
#Ukraine #F16 #JDAM #Kherson #Airpower #OpenSourceAnalysis
10 Aug 2025 — Kherson.
A single F‑16 launched two JDAM‑ER precision‑guided bombs against a buried Russian command facility that Ukrainian intelligence had monitored for months. The strike aimed to cause internal collapse rather than surface damage—disrupting ventilation, power, and corridors in a single blow. In this video we break down the planning, the decoy window, the stand‑off release, and what happened next: a 72‑hour command gap that stalled artillery scheduling, logistics approvals, and drone tasking across the sector.
In this episode:
Mapping the target ecosystem (antennas, access, rhythms)
Why low‑observable approach + brief pop‑up can open a window
How JDAM‑ER creates interior effects on fortified structures (high‑level)
What a command outage does to a frontline’s tempo
Adaptations after the strike: mobile bases, faster tasking, tighter sync
Question for you: Do strikes against command nodes change the balance more than hits on equipment parks or depots? Tell us below.
Subscribe, like, and turn on notifications to support independent analysis.
Documentary analysis based on open sources; no operational instructions.
#Ukraine #F16 #JDAM #Kherson #Airpower #OpenSourceAnalysis
10 Aug 2025 — Kherson.
A single F‑16 launched two JDAM‑ER precision‑guided bombs against a buried Russian command facility that Ukrainian intelligence had monitored for months. The strike aimed to cause internal collapse rather than surface damage—disrupting ventilation, power, and corridors in a single blow. In this video we break down the planning, the decoy window, the stand‑off release, and what happened next: a 72‑hour command gap that stalled artillery scheduling, logistics approvals, and drone tasking across the sector.
In this episode:
Mapping the target ecosystem (antennas, access, rhythms)
Why low‑observable approach + brief pop‑up can open a window
How JDAM‑ER creates interior effects on fortified structures (high‑level)
What a command outage does to a frontline’s tempo
Adaptations after the strike: mobile bases, faster tasking, tighter sync
Question for you: Do strikes against command nodes change the balance more than hits on equipment parks or depots? Tell us below.
Subscribe, like, and turn on notifications to support independent analysis.
Documentary analysis based on open sources; no operational instructions.
19 Aug 2025 – Tokmak–Urozhayne rail link.
Ukraine used Malyuk‑V2 loitering munitions to hit a fuel train: 7 drones, 6:48 minutes, ~150 tons of fuel. Post‑blast, ~312 m of track was deformed; the line shut for ~6 days. We explain how one precision strike disrupted Crimea & southern front logistics, what “self‑igniting target” doctrine means, and why rail outages stall artillery ammo, JP‑8 air fuel, and armor moves.
In this video:
Timeline and drone concept (at a high level)
Rail super/substructure damage & repair window
72‑hour operational ripple effects
Why low‑cost drones produce strategic outcomes
The future of conventional war: logistics‑first attrition
Share your view below. Subscribe, like, and turn on notifications.
19 Aug 2025 – Tokmak–Urozhayne rail link.
Ukraine used Malyuk‑V2 loitering munitions to hit a fuel train: 7 drones, 6:48 minutes, ~150 tons of fuel. Post‑blast, ~312 m of track was deformed; the line shut for ~6 days. We explain how one precision strike disrupted Crimea & southern front logistics, what “self‑igniting target” doctrine means, and why rail outages stall artillery ammo, JP‑8 air fuel, and armor moves.
In this video:
Timeline and drone concept (at a high level)
Rail super/substructure damage & repair window
72‑hour operational ripple effects
Why low‑cost drones produce strategic outcomes
The future of conventional war: logistics‑first attrition
Share your view below. Subscribe, like, and turn on notifications.
August 7, 2025, 06:20 a.m.
Russia’s powerful S-400 Triumf system in Crimea detected nine Storm Shadow missiles. Eight were intercepted—yet one slipped through, destroying a Podlyot-K1 radar and opening a deadly gap.
Through this gap, Ukraine’s Phantom drone fleet surged forward. What followed was one of the most daring UAV operations of the war:
• BK-16 Russian Navy speedboat hit and heavily damaged.
• Three radar nodes (Nebo-SVU, Podlyot-K1, 96L6E) simultaneously suppressed.
• Ai-Petri domed radar facility struck, opening a temporary blind corridor.
• Pantsir batteries & Su-30SM jets scramble but cannot fully contain the attack.
⸻
⚡ Key Takeaways:
• Ukraine sacrificed 8 Storm Shadows to crack open Russia’s radar web.
• Phantom surface drones launched 41 UAVs from the sea.
• Russian air defenses wasted millions in missiles against cheap drones.
• For hours, Crimea’s radar picture went dark—a major strategic blow.
This was not just a single raid. It’s a new model of drone-based pressure warfare, draining Russia’s defenses and exposing even “untouchable” rear areas like Crimea.
⸻
📲 Stay with us for more battlefield analysis:
• Subscribe + 🔔 for frontline updates.
• Join our Telegram for exclusive drone combat footage.
• Like & share to counter disinformation.
⸻
⚠️ Disclaimer: This video is based on verified OSINT, military reports, and open-source battlefield footage. Created for educational and documentary purposes.
August 7, 2025, 06:20 a.m.
Russia’s powerful S-400 Triumf system in Crimea detected nine Storm Shadow missiles. Eight were intercepted—yet one slipped through, destroying a Podlyot-K1 radar and opening a deadly gap.
Through this gap, Ukraine’s Phantom drone fleet surged forward. What followed was one of the most daring UAV operations of the war:
• BK-16 Russian Navy speedboat hit and heavily damaged.
• Three radar nodes (Nebo-SVU, Podlyot-K1, 96L6E) simultaneously suppressed.
• Ai-Petri domed radar facility struck, opening a temporary blind corridor.
• Pantsir batteries & Su-30SM jets scramble but cannot fully contain the attack.
⸻
⚡ Key Takeaways:
• Ukraine sacrificed 8 Storm Shadows to crack open Russia’s radar web.
• Phantom surface drones launched 41 UAVs from the sea.
• Russian air defenses wasted millions in missiles against cheap drones.
• For hours, Crimea’s radar picture went dark—a major strategic blow.
This was not just a single raid. It’s a new model of drone-based pressure warfare, draining Russia’s defenses and exposing even “untouchable” rear areas like Crimea.
⸻
📲 Stay with us for more battlefield analysis:
• Subscribe + 🔔 for frontline updates.
• Join our Telegram for exclusive drone combat footage.
• Like & share to counter disinformation.
⸻
⚠️ Disclaimer: This video is based on verified OSINT, military reports, and open-source battlefield footage. Created for educational and documentary purposes.
Incredible precision, strategic execution, and devastating results.
On July 25, 2025, Ukrainian forces executed a daring operation to destroy a critical Russian bridge in Bryansk, cutting off a vital supply route used by Russian forces in their military operations.
The bridge was a key node on the Russian logistics line, used to transport 1,200 tons of fuel and ammunition every day. Ukrainian intelligence detected Russian plans to infiltrate Ukrainian border towns using this vital crossing.
In a well-coordinated attack, Ukrainian forces deployed their advanced Vampir drones in a mission that showcased how modern warfare is being revolutionized by unmanned systems. The Vampir drones, designed for precision strikes, carried explosives to trigger a chain reaction that destroyed the bridge, with minimal resources expended.
Ukrainian drone operators used the Vampir drone, equipped with high-explosive payloads, to exploit a flaw in the Russian defense systems. The TM-62 anti-tank mines, which were placed by Russian forces as part of their defense, were turned against them, detonated by the same drones. The result? A massive explosion that severed one of the most important Russian supply routes.
What you’ll see:
Target: Bryansk, Russia
The destruction of a critical bridge that was crucial for Russian military logistics.
The innovative use of Vampir drones and their role in cutting off Russian supplies.
Drone Attack Tactics
Precision bombing: How Ukrainian drones bypassed Russian defenses and hit the target without detection.
Use of LoRa signal technology and advanced jamming to neutralize Russian radar systems.
Impact and Consequences
The logistical fallout: How this attack disrupted the supply of fuel and ammunition to Russian forces.
How Ukrainian forces used drones to break down Russian defenses without risking human lives.
Military Strategy
The cost-effectiveness of low-cost drone strikes against expensive Russian infrastructure.
The shift in warfare tactics: How drones are shaping modern military strategies.
📊 Battle Impact:
Cost to Russia:
The bridge, once a vital part of Russian logistics, was rendered inoperable with minimal expenditure from Ukraine’s side.
Russian forces will need significant time to rebuild the bridge, and their resupply lines will be disrupted for days.
Technological Superiority:
The use of Vampir drones showcases how unmanned systems can infiltrate enemy defenses and deliver critical strikes with incredible precision.
Psychological Effect:
The destruction of this bridge not only impacts logistics but sends a clear message to Russia about the vulnerability of its supply chain and the reach of Ukraine’s technological warfare.
💡 Why It Matters:
This operation demonstrates how unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are revolutionizing modern warfare. Ukraine’s innovative use of drones has bypassed Russian defenses, proving that military strategy today is not just about numbers or firepower but about intelligence, precision, and speed. This shift marks a new phase in warfare, where traditional weapons are complemented by cutting-edge drone technology capable of striking deep within enemy territory.
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Stay updated with real-time breakdowns of Ukrainian strikes, drone operations, and how modern warfare is changing one operation at a time.
Subscribe
Like & Share
Join our Telegram group for the latest updates and exclusive content!
📉 Why This Operation Matters:
Ukraine has not just targeted a bridge; it has severed a lifeline, halted Russian supply chains, and delivered a blow to Russian morale. The Vampir drones symbolize how innovation and adaptation to new technologies can turn the tide in modern conflicts. This operation is a game-changer, showing that with the right tools and precision, even the most heavily guarded targets are vulnerable.
⚠️ Disclaimer:
This video presents an analysis based on verified open-source intelligence, frontline footage, and official reports. It is for educational and documentary purposes only. Viewer discretion is advised.
Incredible precision, strategic execution, and devastating results.
On July 25, 2025, Ukrainian forces executed a daring operation to destroy a critical Russian bridge in Bryansk, cutting off a vital supply route used by Russian forces in their military operations.
The bridge was a key node on the Russian logistics line, used to transport 1,200 tons of fuel and ammunition every day. Ukrainian intelligence detected Russian plans to infiltrate Ukrainian border towns using this vital crossing.
In a well-coordinated attack, Ukrainian forces deployed their advanced Vampir drones in a mission that showcased how modern warfare is being revolutionized by unmanned systems. The Vampir drones, designed for precision strikes, carried explosives to trigger a chain reaction that destroyed the bridge, with minimal resources expended.
Ukrainian drone operators used the Vampir drone, equipped with high-explosive payloads, to exploit a flaw in the Russian defense systems. The TM-62 anti-tank mines, which were placed by Russian forces as part of their defense, were turned against them, detonated by the same drones. The result? A massive explosion that severed one of the most important Russian supply routes.
What you’ll see:
Target: Bryansk, Russia
The destruction of a critical bridge that was crucial for Russian military logistics.
The innovative use of Vampir drones and their role in cutting off Russian supplies.
Drone Attack Tactics
Precision bombing: How Ukrainian drones bypassed Russian defenses and hit the target without detection.
Use of LoRa signal technology and advanced jamming to neutralize Russian radar systems.
Impact and Consequences
The logistical fallout: How this attack disrupted the supply of fuel and ammunition to Russian forces.
How Ukrainian forces used drones to break down Russian defenses without risking human lives.
Military Strategy
The cost-effectiveness of low-cost drone strikes against expensive Russian infrastructure.
The shift in warfare tactics: How drones are shaping modern military strategies.
📊 Battle Impact:
Cost to Russia:
The bridge, once a vital part of Russian logistics, was rendered inoperable with minimal expenditure from Ukraine’s side.
Russian forces will need significant time to rebuild the bridge, and their resupply lines will be disrupted for days.
Technological Superiority:
The use of Vampir drones showcases how unmanned systems can infiltrate enemy defenses and deliver critical strikes with incredible precision.
Psychological Effect:
The destruction of this bridge not only impacts logistics but sends a clear message to Russia about the vulnerability of its supply chain and the reach of Ukraine’s technological warfare.
💡 Why It Matters:
This operation demonstrates how unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are revolutionizing modern warfare. Ukraine’s innovative use of drones has bypassed Russian defenses, proving that military strategy today is not just about numbers or firepower but about intelligence, precision, and speed. This shift marks a new phase in warfare, where traditional weapons are complemented by cutting-edge drone technology capable of striking deep within enemy territory.
📲 Subscribe, Like & Join Our Telegram:
Stay updated with real-time breakdowns of Ukrainian strikes, drone operations, and how modern warfare is changing one operation at a time.
Subscribe
Like & Share
Join our Telegram group for the latest updates and exclusive content!
📉 Why This Operation Matters:
Ukraine has not just targeted a bridge; it has severed a lifeline, halted Russian supply chains, and delivered a blow to Russian morale. The Vampir drones symbolize how innovation and adaptation to new technologies can turn the tide in modern conflicts. This operation is a game-changer, showing that with the right tools and precision, even the most heavily guarded targets are vulnerable.
⚠️ Disclaimer:
This video presents an analysis based on verified open-source intelligence, frontline footage, and official reports. It is for educational and documentary purposes only. Viewer discretion is advised.
Ukrainian Jets STRIKE Russian Bridge with JDAM Bombs — Then Main Connection Collapsed
On July 7, 2025, 14:25, a Ukrainian MiG‑29 executed a 23‑minute stand‑off mission that collapsed a steel‑reinforced arch bridge over the Karachokrak River—a critical bottleneck feeding Zaporizhia, Melitopol, and Crimea.
Flying a low‑altitude ingress and a brief climb, the jet released two GBU‑62 JDAM‑ER glide bombs from ~22 km and exited the corridor before Russian Buk‑M2/Tor batteries could respond. The dual impacts shattered the main girder, dropping the deck into the river and cutting daily throughput of fuel & ammo along one of Russia’s busiest supply arteries.
In this video we break down:
Mission profile & timing—why planners exploited a short EW/radar “window”
JDAM‑ER mechanics—glide release, guidance, and delayed fusing on bridge girders
Air defense picture—why Buk/Tor failed to intercept a stand‑off glider pair
Operational effects—fuel shortages, stalled crossings, and a 10‑day logistics gap
What’s next—F‑16 integration and the expanding “cut & choke” bridge strategy
If you value clear, sourced battlefield analysis, subscribe, turn on notifications, and share to counter disinformation.
Russia’s Massive Tank Convoy Wiped Off the Map in Ukraine's Hidden Ambush @UNITED24media
On July 25, 2025, at exactly 9:50 a.m., a massive 71-vehicle Russian armored convoy attempted a bold two-pronged raid across the Luhansk–Donetsk axis—only to be ambushed in one of the most devastating Ukrainian counterstrikes of the war.
Ukrainian drones tracked every movement. Leopard 2A6 tanks, Marder IFVs, Paladin howitzers, Switchblade kamikaze drones, and FPV swarms were perfectly positioned. Within 40 minutes, 64 vehicles were destroyed, including T-72s, BTR-82s, MT-LBs, and pickups loaded with MANPADS and mortars.
Russian forces suffered catastrophic losses. Meanwhile, Ukraine used fewer than half its fire plans. The outcome changed the pace of the front—completely freezing the Russian advance for days.
➤ Watch as we break down how Ukraine’s coordinated tank-killer ambush annihilated Russia’s largest convoy attempt since 2022.
On July 24, 2025, Ukraine launched one of its most strategically devastating attacks of the war. Using a swarm of low-RCS PD-1 drones, Ukrainian forces bypassed Russia’s elite S-400 air defense systems and delivered a crushing blow to the Lukoil oil facility in Sochi. The attack caused massive fires, airport disruptions, and economic tremors across Russia’s Black Sea region.
But how did $95,000 drones defeat a $550 million missile shield? How did operators navigate past radar, spoof filters, and deliver precision strikes?
In this exclusive analysis, we break down:
• The PD-1’s stealth design and infrared masking
• How Ukraine used decoy Tu-141s to blind the S-400’s radar focus
• The timing, detonation sequence, and target prioritization at the Lukoil site
• Why this attack may mark the beginning of a new phase in drone warfare
• What this means for Russia’s air defense credibility and oil logistics
• The economics: $760,000 in drones vs. hundreds of millions in damage
This is not just another drone attack. This is modern war rewritten by code, silence, and algorithms. Subscribe and watch until the end to understand why even the most advanced systems are now vulnerable to carbon-winged ghosts.
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Ukrainian Soldiers in Humvee Storm North Korean Trenches - Then This Happened...
July 20, 2025. In the rural outskirts of Guyevo, Kursk Oblast, an extraordinary 8-vs-25 encounter took place that rewrote the rules of modern commando warfare. Ukrainian special forces, riding in two Humvees, found themselves face-to-face with 25 North Korean artillery and infantry troops operating on Russian soil under Kremlin command.
What unfolded next was a meticulously executed ambush powered by silent infiltration, thermal-guided turret systems, remote-controlled ground robots, ECM jamming, and real-time HIMARS support. With just 8 commandos, Ukraine neutralized an entire North Korean detachment, destroyed a Koksan 170mm artillery gun, blew up an ammunition truck, and silenced a DJI-style recon drone mid-flight.
This is the detailed frontline report of how intelligence, surprise, and technology triumphed over numbers—and how Russia’s reliance on foreign manpower backfired spectacularly.
🔍
What You’ll See in This Video:
🛡️ Tactical Setup:
Two Ukrainian Humvees enter Kursk’s Guyevo village via a mine-laced route
V-shaped armor deflects blasts, while run-flat tires absorb a PFM-1S mine
Each Humvee carries RS4 remote turrets, bomb robots, and Cisco-Kiver network links
🔥 Combat Sequence:
Ukrainian commandos engage North Korean troops positioned for infiltration
A GM-94 launcher disables a trench line with CS gas, forcing Koreans to flee
North Korea’s drone uplink is jammed mid-air by RADA-Cube radar; drone shot down
Koksan gun opens fire but HIMARS returns the favor—obliterating the launcher in 160 seconds
🤖 Tech in Action:
Ground robot plants thermobaric charge in trench, collapsing tunnel walls
Starlink uplinks and LIDAR-scan bots guide the assault with pinpoint accuracy
ECM blocks North Korean targeting, while mini drones deliver final strikes
🎯 Strategic Outcome:
25 North Korean troops neutralized
1 HIMARS strike destroys artillery & supply
Russian infiltration plan toward Kharkiv-Sumy line collapses
Ukrainian losses: 1 wounded, 0 killed
📊
Battle Impact & Strategic Significance:
✅ Kursk’s North Korean artillery unit wiped out
✅ Russian infiltration halted on northern axis
✅ Kharkiv & Sumy safe for 48 more hours
✅ Russia exposed using DPRK troops as manpower
✅ Ukrainian HIMARS-Ground Force synergy proven once again
🧩
Why It Matters:
This isn’t just about an ambush—it’s about a strategic rupture. The use of North Korean troops signals desperation in Moscow’s war machine. And Ukraine’s response shows that 8 elite soldiers with data-driven tools can decisively shift the tide—even inside Russia.
The Strela-9 team’s operation confirms one thing: the battlefield now favors intelligence, speed, and precision over sheer numbers. Every future attempt to reinforce Russian lines from the north will now factor in the possibility of a Humvee in the shadows—and a HIMARS in the sky.
🗣️
Join the Conversation:
Can Russia afford to rely on North Korea?
Will we see more foreign troops in Russian uniforms?
Could Ukraine’s high-tech, small-team ambush doctrine become the new standard?
💬 Tell us what you think in the comments.
🚀
CTA – Like, Subscribe & Engage
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Disclaimer:
This video is based on verified open-source footage, OSINT intelligence, and declassified Ukrainian defense briefings. It is presented for educational and documentary purposes. Viewer discretion advised.
What a Blow! Ukrainian F-16 Fighters STRIKE a 3,600-ton ammunition depot - Then This Happened...
On April 21, 2025, Ukrainian F-16 C Block 50+ fighters launched one of the most strategic and destructive air operations of the war. In just 27 minutes, they obliterated 3,600 tons of Russian ammunition, a Shahid-136 drone launch site, a command center, and more—all inside Belgorod Oblast.
This unprecedented deep-strike mission utilized:
AGM-88 HARM missiles to blind S-300 radar systems.
JDAM-ER smart bombs to glide across the border and decimate key targets with surgical precision.
We break down:
The tactical planning behind the strike.
How Ukrainian pilots stayed in national airspace while hitting Russian territory.
The aftermath: over $29 million in destroyed Russian military assets, silenced drone swarms, and a major blow to Russian logistics and morale on the Kharkiv-Sumy front.
📍 Target Locations:
Drone launch hub & Shahid-136 assembly zones.
Ammunition depots near Belgorod rail corridors.
Command centers with GLONASS uplinks and radio towers.
📊 Estimated Cost Ratio:
🇺🇦 Ukraine’s strike cost: $2M
🇷🇺 Russia’s losses: $29M
Return: 1 to 15
📌
What You’ll See in This Video:
🎯 Target:
Russian drone swarms preparing for a second wave attack.
Ammunition and fuel depots linked to Belgorod military logistics.
Concrete command centers housing GLONASS and drone uplinks.
⚔️ Tactics:
HARM missile suppression of radar (SEAD).
Low-altitude nap-of-the-earth flying to evade detection.
Simultaneous multi-axis JDAM bomb drops with precision guidance.
Use of ER wing kits to extend bomb glide range from 17 to 30 km.
Ukrainian Leopard 1A5 Tanks STRIKE Russian Logistic Depot - Then This Happened...
At exactly 12:37 PM on July 12, 2025, two Leopard 1A5 main battle tanks stormed a fortified Russian command center in Piddubne, Donetsk. In just 1.5 hours, these vintage German-built tanks—each nearly 45 years old—obliterated multiple Russian headquarters and depots, destroyed critical ammunition and fuel reserves, and evaded Russian artillery without a scratch.
This was not a support mission. This was a high-risk, low-visibility operation launched deep into contested territory, relying solely on stealth, precision, and daring armored tactics.
From FLIR thermal recon drones to delayed-fuse HESH rounds and smoke-screened retreats, this operation redefined the role of Cold War-era tanks in modern warfare.
In this video, you’ll witness every critical moment—how the Leopards infiltrated, the moment the first shot tore through reinforced concrete, and how the tanks dodged Russian artillery fire using smoke jammers and active countermeasures. And most incredibly—how they did it with zero losses.
⸻
🔥 What You’ll See:
🛡️ The Mission Objective
• Target: Russian 42nd Motorized Rifle Brigade HQ in Piddubne
• Role: Covert strike mission to eliminate 3 key enemy structures
• Bonus Targets: Ammunition depot, fuel tanks, Strela-10 air defense unit
🧠 Tactical Setup
• 2 Leopard 1A5 tanks with modernized fire control systems
• URC-4 jammers used by recon units to block enemy surveillance
• MRAP mine-clearing vehicles with IR soil scanners paved the route
🎯 Precision Strike
• 4x HESH rounds fired at 70–100 meters
• Immediate destruction of command bunkers and logistic depots
• Brimstone-2 HEAT round detonated fuel stores, triggering chain explosions
• Temperatures reached over 1,200°C; total Russian structural loss confirmed
🚨 Artillery Response & Evasion
• Russian 152mm artillery fired in response—3 rounds near-missed
• Leopard tanks deployed laser warning systems (LWS) + Wegmann smoke grenades
• Active jamming and rapid maneuver enabled safe withdrawal
📉 Battle Outcome
• 3 HQs destroyed
• 10+ Russian soldiers confirmed dead
• Ammunition and fuel depot obliterated
• 0 Ukrainian casualties or equipment loss
🧩 Why It Matters:
This isn’t just about old tanks—it’s about how strategic innovation turns legacy platforms into lethal tools. Ukraine’s use of 45-year-old Leopard 1A5s proves that precise coordination, modern fire control, and real-time battlefield awareness can overcome even advanced Russian defenses.
With Challenger 2s, M1 Abrams, and other NATO tanks already in theater, this operation sets the stage for what’s to come. If two Leopards can do this—imagine what 50 can do across the Donetsk, Luhansk, or Sumy fronts.
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⚠️ Disclaimer:
This video includes tactical analysis and visuals based on verified battlefield reports, open-source intelligence, and drone footage. Presented for educational and documentary purposes only. Viewer discretion advised.