Ilon, You’re a cynical beast for calling Putin a good person while he launches missiles at children’s hospitals, and on the other hand, spewing your crap at protesters who oppose cutting aid to Ukraine. Give us back our nuclear weapons and do whatever you want on your own turf.
— Микола Андр (@nikolayandr) March 9, 2025
Day: March 9, 2025
2/ UK, Ukraine EU and some countries in Europe must establish secret military organisation they can research, innovate, produce, exchange and test weapons, high tech and space technology. Europe become super power is security and stability guarantee for all European countries.
— Interplanetary Connection (@duchuytran4) March 9, 2025
⚡️Ukrainian partisans sabotage railway line in occupied Crimea, group claims.
The Atesh partisan group sabotaged a railway line linking parts of occupied Crimea with the front line in Zaporizhzhia Oblast, disrupting Russian supply lines, the group claimed via Telegram on March…
— The Kyiv Independent (@KyivIndependent) March 9, 2025
It depends. Russia would have used nuclear weapons, if Ukraine’s force achieved enough success on the battlefield to threaten the defeat of Russia. A Low yield bomb against force concentrations. Not cities. No one would retaliate for that. So, no victory option for 🇺🇦 🤷
— Cubertron (@Cuber_tron) March 9, 2025
It depends. Russia would have used nuclear weapons, if Ukraine’s force achieved enough success on the battlefield to threaten the defeat of Russia. A Low yield bomb against force concentrations. Not cities. No one would retaliate for that. So, no victory option for 🇺🇦 🤷
— Cubertron (@Cuber_tron) March 9, 2025
This was part of a Soviet nuclear shield stationed on the territory of the former USSR, which Ukraine subsequently inherited for a brief three-year period.
Ukraine gave up the inherited nuclear weapons in 1994 as part of the Budapest Memorandum between Russia, Ukraine, the US,… https://t.co/jf1G8uLauc— Lena Petrova (@LenaPetrovaOnX) March 9, 2025
This was part of a Soviet nuclear shield stationed on the territory of the former USSR, which Ukraine subsequently inherited for a brief three-year period.
Ukraine gave up the inherited nuclear weapons in 1994 as part of the Budapest Memorandum between Russia, Ukraine, the US,… https://t.co/jf1G8uLauc— Lena Petrova (@LenaPetrovaOnX) March 9, 2025
