Posted on 02/24/2024 5:59:01 AM PST by SpeedyInTexas
This list only includes destroyed vehicles and equipment of which photo or videographic evidence is available. Therefore, the amount of equipment destroyed is significantly higher than recorded here. Loitering munitions, drones used as unmanned bait, civilian vehicles and derelict equipment are not included in this list. All possible effort has gone into avoiding duplicate entries and discerning the status of equipment between captured or abandoned. Many of the entries listed as 'abandoned' will likely end up captured or destroyed. Similarly, some of the captured equipment might be destroyed if it can't be recovered. When a vehicle is captured and then lost in service with its new owners, it is only added as a loss of the original operator to avoid double listings. When the origin of a piece of equipment can't be established, it's not included in the list. The Soviet flag is used when the equipment in question was produced prior to 1991. This list is constantly updated as additional footage becomes available.
(Excerpt) Read more at oryxspioenkop.com ...
😂😂😂😂🍈🤡
OPEC+, which humorlessly includes Russia has been increasing output for the past months and a big increase is set to kick in.
Already factoring loss of Russian supply
The two-year payout: What oil price do you need to get your money back in 24 months? In the Delaware Basin, that's the high $50s. In the Midland Basin, it's the mid-to-high $60s.
The 25% return threshold: This is where operators actually want to be to justify drilling new wells.
With WTI hovering around $65, we're basically sitting right on the edge. Not great, not terrible, just uncomfortably close to the line where drilling starts to make sense.
Here's where it gets interesting. Brandon Myers says there's still 1-2 decades of profitable inventory in the Permian at current price levels. That sounds like a lot, but context matters.
At $40 oil? You're looking at maybe 12 months of economic drilling locations. That inventory got hammered during the pre-2020 drilling boom and finished off during COVID when everyone was desperately trying to survive.
At $85 oil? There's plenty of runway for growth.
The sweet spot seems to be that $65-75 range where the industry can maintain current production levels without much growth or decline, what Brandon calls a “jagged plateau.”
https://novilabs.com/blog/is-us-shale-really-running-out-of-steam/
A previously unpublished video has surfaced showing the September 24 naval drone strike on the oil terminal in Tuapse. The footage was filmed by a foreign ship crew docked in the port at the time.
https://x.com/NOELreports/status/1974063003650637883
1 min video
The price of Brent crude is about $10 a barrel cheaper today than it was a year ago. The world markets aren’t as threatened by comrade Putin as he would hope.
Here comes Mr Lucky! It must be the weekend
🚨BREAKING: President Trump and the Pentagon are considering using a "Domestic Civil Disturbance Quick Reaction Force" to deploy National Guard troops on standby to liberal cities plagued by crime and unrest, WaPo reports. pic.twitter.com/m7PvXa7mqX— Election Wizard (@ElectionWiz) August 12, 2025
Dorozhnje and the freight train station of the same name have been occupied after over a week of battles, along with Ivanivka and Nove Shakhove to the north.
DRGs continue to operate in and around Novyi Donbas and on the approaches to Dobropillya. No new DRG activity within Dobropillya's city limits has been recorded over the past 12 hours.
The 12th "Azov" Brigade of the National Guard of Ukraine was deployed to Rubizhne (circled in green), which has prevented it's capture. Nevertheless, Zolotyi Kolodyaz - the focus of the initial media frenzy - has come under Russian control. DRGs continue to operate on the approaches to Hruzke.
Russian forces captured the Krasnolymanskaya Mine and the adjacent terykon. They also secured part of eastern Rodynske and made additional progress in Chervonyi Lyman.
Novoekonomichne has come under Russian control, and progress was made northwest of Hrodivka and west of Myrolyubivka.
The rest of Lysivka has moved into the grey zone, with unconfirmed reports of its capture. Suhkyi Yar and the guitar-shaped fortification continue to hold.
Russian forces continue to push north through western Pokrovsk and completed the capture of Leontovychi.
Positions were improved in northern Kotlyne and east of the village.
Southern Udachne and the town's train station was captured by Russian forces. Most of the rest of the town is a kill-zone or in the grey zone.
The remaining Ukrainian soldiers in Pokrovsk, Myrnohrad, and the surrounding villages are about to be encircled if nothing is done very soon. Only one road remains even slightly safe for a withdrawal to take place.
I will make a full and more accurate map update tomorrow, but I thought I should share these developments sooner rather than later.
****
Serious allegations from former CIA officer Larry Johnson about Senator Lindsey Graham: “There will be news coming out in the next couple of months about how he has profited financially off of money that came out of Ukraine, laundered through Latvia and made it way into his bank account. And now we're talking significant amounts of money. Department of justice is looking at it.”
Awesome🇺🇸
Stalingrad has been in “liberated”😂
“The SSU continues to inflict serious damage on the Russian economy by targeting oil and gas industry facilities. The reduction of petrodollar revenues directly affects the aggressor's ability to continue its war against Ukraine. Nearly 40% of Russia's refinery capacity is already not working. We will keep working to increase that number,” the SSU source said.
Both facilities were part of Russia's air defense system designed to counter Ukrainian drones.
The P-14F Lena radar was a key element in controlling the airspace around the Buturlinovka Russian Air Force base.
The Sopka-2 radar complex, located in the village of Harmashivka, was part of Russia's continuous radar coverage line along the border with Ukraine.
The P-14 (also referred to by the NATO reporting name “Tall King”) is a 2D VHF radar that was developed and operated by the Soviet Union.
Here, Russian fighters have returned to the battlefield, but this time, they are fighting for Ukraine. As the front shifts southwards, new footage shows how Russian soldiers are storming Russian lines, helping Ukrainians to accelerate counterattacks that now stretch across two regions.
As previously reported, Ukrainians started a counterattack in western Donetsk, where Ukrainian forces pushed back Russian units from exposed frontline villages near the Mokri Yali River. The aim was to collapse vulnerable salients, reset the frontline, and gain more favorable terrain, especially while Russian battalions were still overextended from their previous advances.
Now, a new player on the Ukrainian side has joined the fight. The Russian Volunteer Corps, a unit made up entirely of Russian citizens who rejected Putin’s so-called special military operation, has joined the battle on the Ukrainian side. Newly released footage shows the conducting of house-to-house clearing in Russian-occupied villages, targeting Russian positions with FPV drones, and capturing enemy troops and weapons. In one of the key engagements, the unit’s assault groups advanced through treelines near Andriivka-Klevtsove and engaged entrenched Russian positions. Bombers and tanks supported the push, while FPV drones isolated defenders by striking dugouts and movement corridors. By the end of the operation, the Russian volunteer Corps had taken sixteen Russian soldiers prisoner, with dozens more killed or wounded.
The volunteer unit was not operating alone, because Ukrainian special forces conducted a parallel assault in the same village, reportedly eliminating over 90 Russian troops and capturing 5 more. They also seized several Russian strongpoints near the settlement, likely forward observation posts, which gave them better fire control over the surrounding terrain. The footage now makes it clear: the attack began from the west, with special forces, softening up enemy positions and clearing the path for the main assault units to follow.
With early success confirmed, the Ukrainian command has now expanded the operation. The 225th Assault Brigade, best known for breaching Russian defenses during its successful offensive in the Kursk region, has redeployed and launched a new thrust further south. Combat footage from Vorone village shows the 225th using Bradley armored vehicles to engage Russian positions and clear treelines. This push appears to be aimed at eliminating Russian infiltration groups that had tried to bypass the frontline and threaten Ukrainian supply nodes near Sosnivka. According to reports, this southern thrust stopped what could have been a serious Russian breach. It is a clear sign that Ukraine is not only regaining ground but actively reinforcing weak points and stabilizing the entire sector.
What makes this so effective is that, first, Ukrainian units are relying heavily on drone-coordinated assaults, allowing them to strike Russian positions from the air before moving in with ground units. Second, the area offers unusually favorable conditions for Ukraine’s tactics, because the terrain includes open fields and light treelines that improve drone connectivity and provide clear sightlines. There are no deep gullies or dried riverbeds, terrain features that usually disrupt drone signals. Finally, the Russian positions here are poorly prepared, and because this was not a long-held front, Russian troops were never able to inherit solid fortifications. Their trenches lack top-down protection, making them highly vulnerable to drone-dropped munitions.
The result is that Russian forces have been forced into passivity because after Ukraine’s initial strikes, Russian soldiers had to retreat into underground dugouts and basements, reducing their ability to move or coordinate defense. Ukrainian footage shows several Russian positions taken almost intact, with defenders surrendering rather than holding ground.
Overall, Ukraine’s counteroffensive in this sector is not only regaining territory, but it is also systematically undoing months of slow Russian gains. Once again, Russian units appear to have hit their operational ceiling, as seen in Sumy; they can advance through weaker positions but struggle to hold ground under pressure. That this collapse is now being accelerated by Russian nationals themselves from the Russian Volunteer Corps, which adds a powerful symbolic layer. And with the 225th Brigade, which broke through Russian lines in Kursk, reinforcing the front, Ukraine is turning battlefield momentum into political messaging.”
I wonder how many other Russians will join this fight against the stupidity and cruelty of Putin and Dugin, as the prospect of years more useless war becomes the only expectation for Russians who have hoped for peace in the near future.
This might fund some game changing weapon supplies to Ukraine (security guarantee), and reconstruction:
Kyiv Independent (4 Sept):
“Ukraine and the U.S. held the first board meeting of an investment fund tied to a resources deal that has been a centerpiece of President Donald Trump’s administration’s talks with Kyiv in his second term.
The meeting on Sept. 3 launches the operations for the fund, designed to sustain American interest in Ukraine and help its war-torn economy with foreign investment now and for future reconstruction.
During the meeting, the board authorized the opening of bank accounts, appointed an administrator and investment advisor, and named the members of the four committees responsible for overseeing the funds’ operations, Prime Minister Yuliia Svyrydenko wrote on her Telegram channel.
The U.S. also announced its three board managers to the fund, who include Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, and Chief Investment Officer Connor Coleman and Vice President and General Counsel Robert Stebbins from the International Development Finance Corporation (DFC).
Kyiv previously announced its three representatives on Sept. 1: Economy, Environment, and Agriculture Minister Oleksiy Sobolev and his deputy Yegor Perelygin, and State Secretary of the Foreign Ministry Oleksandr Karasevich.
“I think it went very well,” Perelygin told the Kyiv Independent after the meeting.
“The fund is not only a complex mechanism for economic growth and reconstruction — it’s a market maker level instrument in the making that can foster the development of strategic sectors like mining and refining critical minerals.”
The next steps are to sign off on the investment guidelines and create a list of initial projects that “align with the Fund’s vision and objectives” that can be “feasibly developed,” Perelygin said. The board hopes to kickstart the development of three “high-quality” projects in the next 18 months, he added.
The board is planning follow-up discussions on potential projects through the fund, and a U.S. delegation will start scouting sites when it arrives in Ukraine next week. The government has already announced an auction for the Dobra lithium mine.
Sobolev told Bloomberg TV on Aug. 29 that the fund was “progressing very nicely,” adding that Ukraine is preparing to auction more mining licenses to create investment opportunities for U.S. companies. He noted the recently greenlit Dobra lithium project, saying that mining would be one of the more “interesting” areas for the U.S.
The lithium deposit in central Ukraine contains 80-105 million metric tons of the highly coveted material, used in batteries. Washington-backed mining company TechMet said it will bid on the project, although it could run into a legal battle with Australian firm European Lithium, which claims to have the rights to Dobra’s license
Kyiv and Washington signed a deal on April 30 giving the U.S. special access to investment projects in Ukraine, spanning natural resources, related infrastructure, and even defense projects. New military aid could be included as part of Washington’s future contributions, if the U.S. chooses to consider military assistance for the fund.
Many Ukrainian companies believe that if it works out, the agreement will inject critical foreign capital and technology into cash-starved sectors like critical raw materials. Natural resources, oil and gas, infrastructure, and defense projects are also on the table...
...The U.S. will have off-take rights — meaning the U.S. has first dibs on materials extracted — but it will be on commercial terms rather than special terms. The DFC will also back investments with political risk insurance to ease the concerns of investors.”
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