Download Free Audio of A recent video showing a successful strike on Russ... - Woord

Read Aloud the Text Content

This audio was created by Woord's Text to Speech service by content creators from all around the world.


Text Content or SSML code:

A recent video showing a successful strike on Russian tanks was recently posted to Twitter by the official account of the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense and is about two minutes long. The video is shot from a bird's eye view and shows a convoy of three Russian tanks passing through the Ukrrea as Putin's soldiers flee. New combat footage is continuing to emerge from the battlefield in Ukraine. Russian soldiers can be seen fleeing from the tank that was hit, bleeding, as an unspecified piece of Ukrainian ordinance strikes the tank at the front of the line and causes it to sputter to a stop. Eventually, the armored vehicle starts to smoke and an explosion rips out near the back. More soldiers can then be seen escaping from the other two tanks in the back of the convoy as the camera zooms in on them. Through the Woods As the rest of the video progresses, the other two tanks appear to be hit and catch fire repeatedly as huge plumes of smoke start to emerge from the direction the guys were running, signaling additional hits. The video received about 180 000 views on Twitter as of Saturday afternoon. Even after Russian President Vladimir Putin implemented the nation's first partial mobilization since World War II in late September, the Russian military is apparently still having trouble with its personnel. Mother of a drafted son, Elena Slotanivica, claimed that her son and four other males had been charged with deserting the front lines and taking refuge in a forest. In addition, she said that the guys were supposedly dispatched to fight in Ukraine right away despite being promised three months of preparation. For the first time, Russia admitted that its army in its conflict with Ukraine does not have enough materiel. According to Putin's partial mobilization order on Thursday, there are equipment problems for the hundreds of thousands of troops who are reportedly fighting in Ukraine, according to Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov. According to the Ministry of Defense in the UK, Russia is suffering significant equipment losses as a result of its conflict in Ukraine. Russian soldiers were reportedly losing more than 40 armored vehicles per day as of mid-October, according to British sources on Thursday. Belarus, a friend of Moscow, has been the source of more tanks and offensive equipment for the Russian military. Additionally, the general staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces stated last month that Russian forces are losing a lot of personnel due to a lack of basic weaponry training. The staff at the time stated in an update on Facebook that preliminary evidence indicated that a sizable portion of the weaponry and military hardware that the occupier provided to the Donetsk and Nova public directions were either partially or entirely unsuitable for use in warfare. We are specifically referring to T-62 tanks that have been removed from long-term storage. In recent weeks, as Ukrainian military troops have been conducting counteroffensives around the nation, it has also been claimed that foreign Russian military soldiers have left behind equipment. Russian-occupied land being reclaimed. In late October, the Ukrainian National Guard claimed that the tanks and other supplies left behind by Moscow had increased its firepower by a factor of two. The most recent instance is a T-80 tank. The bmp3 was produced in 2021 and is also in perfect operating order. They left nothing to chance, not even the documentation. According to the press office of the Ukrainian National Guard, fighter Yuri Tarasov from the National Guard was quoted. It's fortunate that our clueless neighbors left their equipment in such excellent shape. foreign harmatta foreign foreign foreign