300k for infantry: Zelenskyy announces major military pay bump for June
The government finally realized that motivation works better when it is backed by a solid pile of cash.
The government finally realized that motivation works better when it is backed by a solid pile of cash.
Our drones just flew over a thousand kilometers to hit Tatarstan's oil crown jewels and a key rocket-fuel ingredient factory in Samara. Because if you can't make rubber for missiles, you can't shoot them.
The Ministry of Defence is apparently cooking up a reform that addresses the two biggest questions every soldier has: "when do I get paid more?" and "when do I get to go home?"
Another sleepless night, another massive drone hunt. While everyone was trying to get some sleep, the air defense crews were busy setting new records in local pest control.
The State Statistics Service dropped a massive wartime demographic report with UNICEF, and the vibe is basically: fewer kids, less domestic violence, and a surprising amount of tap water bacteria.
Just when we think things can't get any more bizarrely tragic, we find out a man died in Kyiv after mobilization actions, and nobody even bothered to do an autopsy before handing the body to his family.
Just when you think the neighbor couldn't get any more pathetic, they launch over five hundred flying mopeds in three days just to declare war on agricultural sheds and a random Panamanian boat.
Another busy morning in Russia: three strategic sites went up in flames simultaneously, including a military factory 1,500 kilometers away from the border.
Russia has been chasing this one family across borders for decades, destroying three generations. Now, we say goodbye to drone operator Revaz Gegetchkori.
While the world debates if AI will write their next email, the Ukrainian military is actually getting some useful sci-fi gear. The Ministry of Defence just approved a new robotic mine-hunter called NEO-1.
Polish politicians are furious over Ukrainian historical naming choices, but threatening to close the main military transit hub is where reality hits them hard.
While Russia is doing its best to break Ukrainian infrastructure, the state is quietly trying to scrap one of its most notoriously corrupt Soviet-era legacy institutions.