1/ A prominent Russian warblogger and Ka-52 helicopter pilot appears to have killed himself after posting an apparent farewell video on Telegram. 'Voivode', real name Alexey Zemtsov, says he has committed suicide due to pressure from his superiors. ⬇️
2/ Zemtsov is a Guards Senior Lieutenant in the Russian Aerospace Forces (VKS) and administrator of the Telegram channel 'The Voivode Broadcasts', which has about 152,000 followers. He has been a prolific warblogger, but his criticisms caused serious problems with his superiors.
3/ He has published a farewell post on his channel, saying in a series of videos that he has "exercised the right of his last officer's honour" (i.e., decided to commit suicide) and declaring that "I won't be able to survive this disgrace". He explains his reasons.
4/ "If you're watching this video, it means I'm no longer alive," Zemtsov states. He says that his career as a military helicopter pilot was ruined after his wife cheated on him with his assistant, who ran his Telegram channel.
5/ He was indicted on criminal charges after beating up his wife's lover and spent four and a half months in pre-trial detention. He was charged with threatening to kill, damaging property, and extortion on an especially large scale.
6/ Zemtsov says that his unit commander, Colonel Avramenko, objected to his activities on Telegram.
7/ Specifically, he says, after he exposed the practice of military pilots marching in formation after completing combat missions, he was grounded and sent to a remote unit far away from Ukraine.
8/ According to Zemtsov, VKS Deputy Commander Vladimir Kravchenko suggested that he should go to the hospital and thus be forced to resign. Zemtsov claims that Kravchenko regularly sent pilots to hospitals as a means of dismissig them.
8/ He says that at the request of Colonel Avramenko, he was sent instead to an assault unit in the spring of 2026. Later, he was brought back to pretrial detention on charges of "discrediting the army."
10/ This related to a mocking post about a contract soldier being issued a helmet with the inscription "US Army." He was forced to retract the post with a rebuttal the following day.
11/ Zemtsov claims that the charge of "discrediting" prevented him from serving as a rank-and-file infantryman, which he views as an affront to an officer’s honour.
12/ According to Zemtsov, the charge was brought on instructions from Kravchenko; in the farewell video, he shows what he claims is a dossier of incriminating evidence against the deputy commander-in-chief of the Aerospace Forces.
13/ Zemtsov claims that Avramenko's superiors threatened him with a case of "abuse of authority" for sending Zemtsov to fight in the infantry. His commander was therefore forced to bring charges and recall him to pre-trial detention.
14/ Zemtsov appeals in the videos to the head of the Russian Investigative Committee, Alexander Bastrykin, asking him to investigate the Rostov Military Investigative Directorate, specifically Senior Lieutenant Kantemirov, whom he accuses of fraudulently extracting testimony.
15/ SOTA notes that Zemtsov was a fairly open Nazi sympathiser, using the email address orel1488as@gmail.com and being photographed giving a Nazi salute. His death has not yet been confirmed. /end
1/ A senior Russian official has condemned Amazon's 'Fallout' TV series for rotting the brains of the Russian people. He calls for what amounts to an uplifting Russian version of 'Fallout' as a corrective. Russian commentators are scornful about what they call his "nonsense". ⬇️
2/ The Russian newspaper Vedemosti reports that Alexey Semenov, Deputy Head of the Presidential Directorate for Monitoring and Analysis of Social Processes, says Russia needs a "state order for a bright future".
3/ In an article, "The Architecture of the Future – Constructing Meanings," published in issue No. 5 of the journal "Gosudarstvo" ('State'), Semenov specifically calls out the US TV shows 'Fallout' and 'Paradise' for criticism.
1/ Since March 2026, Ukraine has been using AI-controlled Hornet kamikaze drones to attack Russian targets. They have excelled in action, causing carnage among the Russians. A crashed example permits a detailed look at how it works. ⬇️
2/ The Russian Telegram channel 'Hammer of the Witches', which focuses on UAVs, has taken a look at an example of a Hornet which crashed in a nearly intact condition. It calls the lightweight drone "the most dangerous threat to our rear logistics."
3/ The drone is made from foam and moulded plastic, with a wingspan of 2.2m and a length of 1.4m. It weighs about 5 kg without its payload and battery, and is propelled by a 300kv electric motor powered by a 10,000mAh battery. Its range is 60-70 km with a top speed of 120 km/h.
1/ Ukraine is systematically attacking Russian forces with AI-controlled kamikaze drones. Russian warbloggers are seriously worried, calling them a "scourge", and say it's no longer safe within 150 km (93 miles) of the front line. ⬇️
"All major roads within 150 km of the line of contact will be within the strike zone."
3/ "What we've seen over the past two months on the Pokrovsk and Kremensk sectors of the front, as well as in the Valuysk direction, were, as we expected, tests of new types of Hornet ("Martian") drones with an AI-based guidance system.
1/ Russian warbloggers are becoming increasingly open in expressing fears that Russia will lose the war unless various problems are resolved. 'Denazification UA' complains that Russia's failure to wean itself off imported Chinese drones and components will lead to defeat. ⬇️
2/ Over the past four years, Ukraine has undertaken a massive effort to scale up and indigenise its drone production. There are now over 40 drone component manufacturers in Ukraine, producing an increasing number of indigeneously-made drone parts.
3/ While both Ukraine and Russia still depend heavily on Chinese components, Russia is still stuck in Ukraine's former position of also having to import finished systems. Now, 99% of Ukraine's drones are assembled entirely in Ukraine, albeit with a lot of Chinese components.
1/ Moscow is being disrupted badly by a widespread shutdown of the Internet ahead of the May 9 Victory parade. A scathing Russian commentary complains that it is costing the economy trillions of rubles, sacrificing economic health for illusory security. ⬇️
2/ Russia's increasingly draconian Internet shutdowns have come as a huge shock to a country which had come to rely heavily on online services. Although the Russian government has whitelisted certain websites and services, the latest shutdown seems to have broken that, too.
3/ 'Political Report' complains:
"Russian citizens today experienced the full impact of the government's "concern" for their own security: authorities shut down mobile communications in most regions of the country,…
1/ The world is very rapidly running out of refined fuel due to the Strait of Hormuz blockade, according to a new Goldman Sachs report, with only 45 days' worth of stockpiles of jet fuel, naphtha, and LPG remaining. Rationing, surcharges, and mass cancellations are forecast. ⬇️
2/ A research note authored by Goldman Sachs strategists Yulia Zhestkova Grigsby and Daan Struyven has examined the impact of Middle East disruptions on refined product markets, finding that jet fuel and diesel are being hit far harder than crude oil.
3/ The analysts estimate that about 101 days' worth of usable global oil stocks remain in stockpiles. (While more oil than that is stockpiled, it can't all be used, as the JP Morgan report summarised below explains.)