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Feb 13 14 tweets 4 min read Read on X
1/ Six months ago, the newly built Russian Navy tugboat Kapitan Ushakov capsized at its moorings during its final outfitting, when it was 97% complete. It's still there today, resting on its side, leading to some hard questions for the Northern Fleet. ⬇️
2/ The only thing that seems to have changed after six months is that the boat is now encased in ice at the Baltic Shipyard pier in St. Petersburg. It's an "endless disgrace", 'Military Informant' complains. But how and why has it not been raised? Image
Image
3/ The shipyard's owner, Yaroslavl Shipyard (YaSZ), says that because the vessel "is being built under a state defence contract ... there is no permission to disclose this information or comment on it."
4/ 'Military Informant' notes that YaSZ is "struggling to find nearly a billion rubles [$13 million] to raise the vessel, as it is teetering on the brink of collapse: debts amount to 26.3 billion [$343 million], revenue has plummeted by a third,…
5/ …and the balance on its accounts is 92 million [$1.2 million].

Experts estimate that replacing the sunken equipment and refurbishing the Ushakov will cost approximately 40% of the tugboat's value."
6/ YaSZ has been engaged in a lengthy legal battle with the Russian Ministry of Defence over unpaid debts, initially to the sum of 1.5 billion rubles ($19.5 million) but later reduced by a court to 187.5 million rubles ($2.4 million). This has brought it to near bankruptcy.
7/ Russian sources reported in November 2025 that YaSZ had not paid its 850 employees for two months. Many workshops were shut down for lack of cash, and employees had been sent on layoffs.
8/ 'Notes of Midshipman Ptichkin' points out that the Norwegian and North Korean navies managed to raise capsized vessels much more quickly. In the meantime, the Ushakov and its expensive equipment is languishing in the water, and is possibly being looted:
9/ "During its downtime, the tugboat managed to become a city landmark: it is photographed, graffiti is painted on it, the boat even starred in a movie, appearing in a typical St. Petersburg series "about policemen".
10/ "It is quite possible that something valuable is being stolen from it. At the very least, some of the portholes are broken, and there are no guards in sight on the ice.
11/ "– The question of why the boat was not raised is very interesting. According to the order of the captain of the Great Port of St. Petersburg, the vessel was supposed to be raised by 20 November, but this did not happen.
12/ "YaSZ signed a contract for the recovery with the St. Petersburg company "Baltspetsflot". Sources in the industry suggest that the shipyard did not have the money. And in general, it is painful to talk about the state of YaSZ.
13/ "– An even more interesting question is why no one helped raise the ship?

After all, this isn't just a problem for one construction plant (YaSZ).

This is a contract for the Navy.

That is, it's in the interests of the state." /end

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More from @ChrisO_wiki

Feb 14
1/ Russian warbloggers are outraged at being told by a journalist that it's their own fault that the Russian government is restricting Telegram. They argue that if not for the warblogger community, the military's lies would have gone unchallenged – which is exactly the point. ⬇️
2/ Komsomolskaya Pravda journalist Ivan Pankin has prompted fury with his claim that "endless nameless insiders, all those endless bloggers, the smartest people on earth who know everything and who have been spreading all sorts of nonsense" have annoyed the Russian government.
3/ He is almost certainly correct, but the warbloggers aren't having any of it and have responded angrily. They claim they have been consistently right in warning about the failures of the Russian military, to the overall benefit of the war effort and Russian population.
Read 23 tweets
Feb 14
1/ In January 2026, Ukraine reported killing 34,000 Russian soldiers – on average 1,096 a day, or 7,846 per week. Thousands of Ukrainians have likely died in the same period. Last month in Ukraine was much bloodier than the average monthly death toll at Auschwitz. ⬇️ Image
2/ The extraordinary lethality of the Ukraine war stands out in comparison to recent wars and mass killings:

🔺 At least 7,000 people are reported to have been killed in the recent Iranian uprising. More have died in Ukraine in each week of last month.
3/🔺 At least 84,000 people died in the Gaza war between 7 October 2023 and 10 October 2025 – an average of 3,500 per week. The number of weekly fatalities in the Ukraine war last month alone was more than twice Gaza's monthly average. Image
Read 12 tweets
Feb 13
1/ Russian ultra-nationalist ideologue Alexander Dugin predicts that Western civilization will collapse due to the Epstein files, clearing the way for Russia and China to take over. He calls for all-out opposition to the West, and for Russia to save Iran from Donald Trump. ⬇️ Image
2/ Dugin writes:

"The West, thanks to Epstein's lists, is beginning to crumble before our eyes. Russia and China have a historic opportunity to become the beneficiaries of the total collapse of the entire Western system.
3/ "Now it's no longer a matter of right or left, if they have a "right" like Epstein Island (or a left). It's time to end the West.

Now is the time for a counterattack.
Read 15 tweets
Feb 12
1/ Russia is reportedly considering proposing a wide-ranging economic partnership with the Trump administration, including joint cooperation to push fossil fuels as an alternative to Chinese and European clean energy solutions, in opposition to curbing climate change. ⬇️ Image
2/ Bloomberg is reporting that Russia has prepared a seven-point memo that includes a return to the dollar settlement system, reversing Putin's by now well-established policy of creating an alternative system insulated from US economic pressure.
3/ The proposals also include joint US-Russian ventures in manufacturing, nuclear energy, oil and LNG extraction, preferential conditions for US companies in Russia to compensate for past losses, cooperation on raw materials, and jointly working against clean energy.
Read 8 tweets
Feb 12
1/ Why does the Russian government appear to be so clueless about the role Telegram plays in military communications? The answer, one warblogger suggests, is that the military leadership doesn't want to admit its failure to provide its own reliable communications solutions. ⬇️ Image
2/ Recent claims by high-ranking officials that Telegram isn't relevant to military communications have prompted howls of outrage and detailed rebuttals from Russian warbloggers, but have also pointed to a deeper problem about what reliance on Telegram (and Starlink) represents.
3/ In both cases, the Russian military has failed abysmally to provide workable solutions. Telegram and Starlink were both adopted so widely because the 'official' alternatives (military messngers and the Yamal satellite constellation) are slow, unreliable and lack key features.
Read 13 tweets
Feb 12
1/ Telegram is deeply embedded into Russian military units' internal communications, providing functionality that MAX, the Russian government's authorised app, doesn't have. A commentary highlights the vast gap that is being opened up by the government's blocking of Telegram. ⬇️ Image
2/ The Two Majors Charitable Foundation writes that without Telegram, information exchange, skills transfer, and moral mobilisation work within the Russian army will be crippled:
3/ "I'd really like to add that for a long time, we've been gathering specialized groups in closed chats, including those focused on engineering and UAVs, to share experiences and build a knowledge base. Almost everyone there is a frontline engineer.
Read 11 tweets

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