Why did Ukraine publicly disclose so much info about Operation “Spiderweb”?
That’s a very good question — and the answer reveals how modern warfare now goes far beyond the battlefield.
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2/ First: russians would’ve figured it out anyway.
You don’t destroy 40+ aircraft across 4 airbases without someone noticing. Satellite imagery, media leaks, and local reports would’ve told the story eventually.
So why not own the narrative?
3/ Second: disclosure is the strategy.
Ukraine revealed how it pulled off the operation — smuggling drones in decoy trucks, driving them 5,000 km through russia, and remotely launching them under the enemy’s nose.
This wasn’t just a strike. It was a psychological ambush.
4/ Now, every russian cargo truck becomes a potential weapon.
Every driver is a potential saboteur.
Every highway — a threat vector.
Result? Paranoia, friction, and skyrocketing internal costs.
5/ russia will now be forced to:
– Inspect every suspicious truck
– Monitor internal roads with military resources
– Distrust their own private drivers
– Slow down all logistics, civilian and military alike
6/ This strains infrastructure. Chokes supply chains. Erodes trust.
Ukraine didn’t just hit planes — it weaponized uncertainty. It turned russia’s vast territory into a battlefield of doubt.
7/ This is asymmetric warfare at its finest.
You don’t need to match your enemy plane-for-plane. You just need to make them afraid of their own shadow.
That’s how you win without even firing the next shot.
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In 1991, I was just a 9 year old kid when Ukraine declared independence from the USSR (aka russia). I remember the celebration, the joy, the hope — Ukrainians were finally free after decades of oppression and persecution.
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2/ I also remember my grandfather telling me that this freedom had come at a terrible price — the lives of many Ukrainians. At the time, I couldn’t fully grasp his words. Today, I do. I understand that freedom is not free.
3/ Now, as russia bombs Ukrainian cities every day, I see the cost. I have already lost three friends. Five of my relatives are serving on the front lines. Many more of my friends risk their lives daily for freedom.
Donald Trump has just signed an executive order imposing an additional 25% tariff on India for buying russian oil.
At first glance, this may look like a major policy shift… But
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2/ India is one of the largest buyers of russian crude. It profits by refining and reselling this oil while Ukraine is being bombed. By targeting India, Trump officially acknowledging that russia’s war is not just a regional conflict but a threat to U.S. national security.
3/ In fact, Trump’s executive order explicitly states that russia’s actions “continue to pose an extraordinary threat to the national security and foreign policy of the United States.” That’s the strongest anti-russian statement he has made since returning to office.
Yeonsoo Go, a 20‑year‑old Purdue University student, went into what she thought was a routine visa hearing in New York. When she walked out, ICE agents were waiting. She was arrested on the spot and sent to a detention center in Louisiana.
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2/ She’s the daughter of an Episcopal priest. A woman of faith. A student trying to build her future. Instead of due process, she’s trapped in a system designed to terrify and dehumanize.
3/ What troubles me even more: many of the same Christian communities now rallying for her release voted for the very government that put her behind bars. A government that has made cruelty toward immigrants not a glitch, but a feature.
Former President of Poland Lech Walesa wrote the following letter to Trump back in March 2025, after Trump had a meeting with Zelenskyy in the Oval Office. Unfortunately, nothing has changed since then. Only empty promises...
Your Excellency, Mr. President,
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2/ We watched your conversation with President Volodymyr Zelensky with fear and distaste. It is insulting that you expect Ukraine to show gratitude for U.S. material aid in its fight against russia.
3/ Gratitude is owed to the heroic Ukrainian soldiers who have been shedding their blood for over 11 years to defend the free world’s values and their homeland, attacked by Putin’s russia. How can the leader of a country symbolizing the free world fail to recognize this?
Ukraine’s former Commander-in-Chief, General Valerii Zaluzhnyi, has reflected on what this war has taught Ukrainians — and the world.
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We are the state. On February 24, 2022, Ukraine survived because ordinary people refused to give up. Not institutions, not abstractions — people. Security always comes at a cost, and society must be ready to pay it. /2
The enemy is never as great as propaganda claims. Power is not measured in tanks or missiles, but in spirit — the will to resist, even against overwhelming force. /3
Trump: “I’m disappointed in President Putin. Very disappointed in him. So we’re gonna have to look, and I’m gonna reduce that 50 days that I gave him to a lesser number because I think I already know the answer to what’s going to happen.”
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2/ First of all — it was your actions and your appeasement that led to this escalation. Since you took office, russia has tripled its missile and drone attacks on Ukrainian cities and civilians.
3/ Second — if you “already know the answer to what’s going to happen,” then act. Don’t play Taco. People are dying.