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May 30 9 tweets 3 min read Read on X
During a rotation on the frontline, a combat medic, Iryna 'Cheka' Tsybukh was killed in Kharkiv region. She would have turned 26 on June 1st.

Her brother, Yuriy Tsybukh, shared a posthumous letter that Cheka' wrote in case she would get killed—translation in the thread below. Image
“Hi, accept my condolences. I don't like seeing you sad, but over time, this despair will fade, and life will go on. So don't waste time on suffering, move forward.

It's now 7:19 PM, Saturday, April 8, 2023. My team and I are working on reconnaissance for the 80th brigade. ‘Dream On’ by Aerosmith is playing in the background. There have been so many close calls this past year, I figured I should write a posthumous letter just in case."
It's sad to me how we lead our frail lives, relying on societal approval so much, that we only find true freedom in death alone. The only problem is life ends, and that freedom bears no meaning.

From today on, I don't care what people will say about me, about you, about this text, about anything. Whether these words get likes or not, finally no one's opinion matters to me anymore because I'm dead.
Freedom is the highest value. Almost 26 years passed by, often bogged down by fears and insecurities. But these distractions had no place in my pursuit of freedom.

I'm grateful to myself, my parents, my brother, my family, and my friends for allowing me to be free and live the life I wanted.
In order to be free, you have to attain new kinds of values. You have to understand yourself well, know who you are, know what happiness means to you, and how to achieve it. Once you have these answers, the most important thing is to keep moving forward.
Here in Donetsk, I'm on my path, being myself and doing what I want. Nothing else matters really, which is writing this letter comes so easily - because right this moment, same as the moment when my time comes, I have no regrets in the face of death because I’m finally living the life that I wanted.

I won't lie, to feel this true freedom, I'll need more rounds of therapy, face more fears, and shed more tears.
Today, everything is behind me; my life is over, and it was important for me to live with dignity: to be honest, kind, and loving. Today, we are working for the heroes, and it's a great way to reaffirm my values - to be that person truly.

Thank you to everyone who loved and supported me. Don't mourn me; life is so short. If it continues after death, we'll meet again.
My brother, don't worry about me. I stopped worrying about you when you turned 17. Today, you had your first tour of princely Lviv, and I'm so proud of you.

Whoever you choose to be, trust yourself, listen to yourself, love yourself, and live a happy life. If I can, I'll support you from heaven. But what really matters is that while I was alive, we loved each other and were wonderful siblings. Those were good times.

Let these memories warm you and motivate you, but don't let them upset you.Image
To have the strength to be a free person, you must be brave.

Only the brave find happiness, and it is better to die running than to live rotting.

Be worthy of the feats of our heroes, don't despair, and be brave!"

Kisses, your Cheka
08.04.23 Donetsk region

Eternal memory 🕯️

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Photos from the line 0 by Marian Kushnir.

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On December 31, 2022, 140 Ukrainian soldiers, including 30-year-old Oleksii Anulya, a kickboxer from Chernihiv, returned from Russian captivity. Oleksiy talked about torture, beatings, torture with electric shocks and starvation. Read excerpts from his testimony published in @TextyOrgUa below.
It started — at 7.00 they beat you, at 8.00 — they beat you during the inspection; at 10.00 — they beat you before the walk. Every time we walked through the detention center — they beat you; in front of the exercise yard — they beat you; when you went in — they beat you even more. When you came out — you were searching thoroughly and beat you from all sides with sticks. If you went further — they beat you again.
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"If you look at NATO’s textbooks and at the maths which we did [in planning the counter-offensive], four months should have been enough time for us to have reached Crimea, to have fought in Crimea, to return from Crimea, and to have gone back in and out again," - General Zaluzhnyi said sarcastically in an interview with the Economist.
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1/ Despite General Zaluzhny’s sardonic tone, the anticipation surrounding Ukraine's summer and autumn offensives was substantial. Prior to their commencement, there was a prevailing notion that perhaps only the Russian military struggled offensively, a belief bolstered by their recent setbacks around Vuhledar.
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Oct 31, 2023
Due to recent gains by the Russian army near Avdiivka, some are mistakenly downplaying the town's strategic importance.

People have compared it to Bakhmut and suggested that focusing on Avdiivka is a misguided use of resources.

The reality tells a different story, here's why: Image
/1 First off, Avdiivka has evolved into one of Donbas' most heavily fortified zones between 2014 and 2022. Its defenses feature underground tunnels, concrete bunkers, and a host of other barriers that significantly impede any enemy advance.

Here's a glimpse: Image
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Oct 27, 2023
How Russian Armored Vehicles “disappear”. Part 2.

The largest Russian storage base, "Vagzhanovo".

The fact that the "Vagzhanovo" base in Buryatia is the largest in Russia is evidenced by calculations made by The Moscow Times based on Google Earth data.

A brief history of the base in numbers: Five months before the full-scale war in Ukraine - in September 2021 - there were approximately 3,840 armored vehicles stored in "Vagzhanovo".

Eight months into the full-scale war - in November 2022 - there were about 2,600 armored vehicles left at the base, and by May 2023, approximately 2,270 remained. Thus, during this time, 1,570 units, or 40.8% of the armored vehicles, were removed from the base. The majority of them (32%) were removed after the mobilization was announced at the end of 2022.
Image
Let's start the count from the Google Earth image dated May 16, 2023.

First, let's compare the images we will be using in the future with the ones from Google Earth. Unfortunately, it was not possible to obtain images of similar quality, but this does not hinder the count.

Part of the base #1, as we can see, corresponds to the other
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Part of base #2, while not perfect, has similarities that can be found. Image
Read 11 tweets

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