After the 2014 Euromaidan revolution and Yanukovych’s escape to Russia, the SBU was gutted.
Kyiv had to rebuild its intelligence services from scratch.
7/ Young, post-Soviet recruits - especially from western Ukraine - filled the ranks.
While the CIA was wary of working closely with the SBU due to corruption and Soviet legacy, it saw promise in the military intelligence agency, HUR.
8/ In 2015, then-HUR chief Gen. Valerii Kondratyuk offered the CIA a goldmine of intel. One U.S. officer said: “They knew things we just, frankly, had no idea of.”
The CIA responded with gear, training, and deeper cooperation. It came with great personal risk for the general.
9/ “HUR was our little baby,” one U.S. official reportedly said.
This tight partnership turned Ukraine’s HUR into one of the most effective intelligence services operating against Russia.
10/ The Kremlin knows it. Russian security services treat Ukrainian intelligence with a mix of hatred and respect.
But Moscow simply views Ukraine a US & UK proxy.
This is a huge mistake.
The FSB doesn't know what's been coming their way.
11/ HUR’s reach was visible as early as 2016, when Unit 2245 clashed with Russian FSB forces in occupied Crimea.
Two FSB agents were killed. The operation spooked Washington, leading to the sacking of Kondratyuk.
Washington was upset at Kyiv for angering Moscow.
12/ Russia retaliated.
Maksym Shapoval, involved in the 2016 Crimea raid, was assassinated in 2017.
A bomb attack aimed at Kyrylo Budanov (now HUR’s head) failed when it detonated too early.
13/ Ukraine began its own campaign after rebuilding its intel agencies.
HUR/SBU eliminated several pro-Russian militant leaders in Donbas between 2015–2016, including “Motorola” and “Givi” - notorious for their brutality.
14/ Post-2022, Kyiv’s operations continued to scale.
Long-range strikes, car bombs, & even targeted shootings inside Russia have become part of its playbook.
This psychological pressure against Moscow is not welcomed by the West.
Western officals are scared of provoking RU.
15/ Still, Ukrainian officials believe these actions are effective.
“They demonstrate that fears of escalation are overstated,” said MP @SashaUstinovaUA
@SashaUstinovaUA 16/ The killings “show Ukraine can reach high-level targets anywhere inside Russia and that capability has the potential to expose the internal fractures in Putin’s regime,” she said.
17/ And like Mossad’s decades-long hunt for Nazis, Ukraine’s message is clear:
There is no safe haven for those who committed atrocities in places like Bucha and Mariupol.
Putin’s propaganda machine has accused Britain of providing explosives used in a series of high-profile assassinations inside Russia – and warned that “British blood must be spilled” in retaliation.
When a state is at peace, it has one way of dealing with its enemies,” Chervinsky said. “But during wartime, when your territory is occupied, you have to be more forceful.” newyorker.com/magazine/2025/…
Dec 2015, Pavel Dremov, bricklayer turned pro-Russian Cossack commander in occupied eastern Ukraine, was killed by a car bomb while driving a Range Rover.
SBU planted explosives in the vehicle, delivered to Dremov as a gift. Once he drove out, the SBU detonated the bomb.
🧵1/ Fiber-optic drones continue to expand on the battlefield.
They're also much harder to stop.
Both Ukraine and Russia are turning to fiber-optic drones that can’t be jammed, as both sides look for an edge.
Let’s break down what’s happening. 👇
2/ Fighting in russia’s Kursk region became a test lab for fiber-optics.
One UA commander reported a surge in Russian drones - especially fiber-optic FPVs - saying “you can’t jam them” and that Ukraine has lost a lot of equipment.
This helped the Russians immensely in Kursk.
3/ These drones are guided by cables instead of wireless signals, making them immune to electronic warfare.
That’s a big problem. Most traditional drone defenses are built around jamming radio frequencies.
🧵1/ Russia’s war against Ukraine isn’t just about territory - it’s also a battle over memory and identity.
Vladimir Putin aims not only to conquer Ukraine but to erase its past and rewrite its history.
2/ Since 2014 and especially after the full-scale invasion in 2022 - Ukraine has worked to remove Soviet-era symbols, including hundreds of Lenin statues.
By 2021, the last Lenin on public land was gone.
In contrast, Russian-occupied areas are seeing Lenins return.
3/ Despite Putin’s own criticism of Lenin, these statues now serve as symbols of restored Russian control.
As historian Serhy Yekelchyk explains: in Ukraine, “Lenin doesn’t stand for communism, but for Russian control.”
Covert ops in Ukraine to becoming a hub in the EU for China and Putin, Orbán is laying the groundwork for something much bigger - and far more dangerous - for Europe.
Let’s unpack what’s happening. 👇
2/ Ukraine recently exposed a Hungarian military intel network operating in Zakarpattia - a Ukrainian region with a sizable Hungarian minority.
The goal?
Quiet preparation for future territorial claims under the “protecting ethnic minorities” excuse (like russia does).
3/ This is straight out of the Kremlin’s playbook.
And it’s not the only thing Orbán borrowed from Putin: he’s built a loyal inner circle, looted the country, and turned Hungary into the EU’s most corrupt state while consolidating autocratic power.