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Developing drones takes our Wild Hornets R&D team all over Like Chornobyl⤵️ Soldiers invited our team to help stop the Shaheds that ruzzia often flies overhead One even hit the plant Please boost our drone R&D fieldwork—join our raffle👇 Brave soldiers who protect Chornobyl graciously hosted us and gave...

14,872 görüntüleme • 4 ay önce •via X (Twitter)

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I thank each of our combat brigades, all soldiers, and commanders who are using all their strength to destroy the enemy, especially by effectively deploying our drone capabilities. Our Ukrainian Defense and Security Forces are already gaining an advantage in this area – in July, our soldiers deployed more drones than the occupiers. This needs to be a steady trend on the front – across all types of drones available to our units: from FPV to all others, including our long-range drones – which are already having a strategic impact on the war. Impacting – in the interests of Ukraine. And our Ukrainian leadership in drones can not only be a factor that brings a just end to the war closer but also makes Ukraine a supplier of security for other states. Today, Mykhailo Fedorov, Vice Prime Minister for Innovations, Development of Education, Science and Technologies, and Oleksandr Kamyshin, Minister of Strategic Industries of Ukraine, also reported at the Staff meeting on drone production and financing. For this year, a million drones have already been contracted with our manufacturers, and by the end of the year, there will be more. Our drone production capabilities are consistently expanding. We're working not only with state funding but also with partners who are investing in our drone manufacturing. These drones are crucial for our defense now and will later enhance security for everyone who values life and stands with us in solidarity.

Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Володимир Зеленський

317,144 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce

40 years since Chornobyl: 10 facts about the largest man-made disaster of the 20th century. ▪️ The tragedy could have happened earlier. The first serious accident at the Chornobyl Nuclear Power Plant did not occur in 1986, but four years earlier. On September 14, 1982, part of the radioactive fuel entered the graphite structure of the reactor. Gamma radiation levels in some rooms exceeded safe limits by 100 times, and localized contamination was detected around the plant. Instead of a public investigation, the KGB classified the incident. ▪️ 400 times more powerful than Hiroshima. The explosion of Reactor No. 4 became the largest man-made accident in history (Level 7 on the INES scale). About 400 times more radioactive material was released into the atmosphere than during the Hiroshima bombing. The total release was around 5,300 petabecquerels, several times more than the 2011 Fukushima accident. ▪️ Who first reported the accident. The first alarm came from Sweden: on April 28, detectors at the Forsmark nuclear plant (1,100 km from Chornobyl) detected radioactive particles. After analysis, Sweden concluded the source was the USSR. Only then did Moscow release a vague statement on national television. In Kyiv, the KGB blocked foreign journalists, and the public was told not to panic. ▪️ Hiding the truth. On July 8, 1986, the USSR’s KGB issued a classified document ordering the secrecy of all information about the accident at Chornobyl. Classified were the scale of destruction, radiation levels, contamination of food and water, cases of radiation sickness, and details of cleanup operations. ▪️ Soviet disinformation. Knowing about the accident, a football match between Dynamo and Spartak in Kyiv still took place, attended by 80,000 spectators. Even on May 1, people were forced to participate in May Day parades. Later, elevated radiation levels were detected on schoolchildren’s clothing. ▪️ Evacuation only 36 hours later. On April 27, residents of Prypiat were told via radio about a “temporary evacuation.” They were told to bring documents and essentials and assured they would return in three days. About 44,500 people were evacuated within hours. By the end of summer, over 90,000 people were relocated from 81 settlements. ▪️ Scale of the disaster. Contamination affected over 2,300 towns and villages in Ukraine, with about 2.6 million residents. In total, around 8.5 million people in Ukraine, Belarus, and Russia were exposed to radiation in the first days. Fallout covered an area of about 200,000 square km. ▪️ The sarcophagi over Chornobyl. To prevent further radiation spread, a protective structure called the “Shelter Object” was built over Reactor No. 4 in 1986 in just 206 days. It was intended to last 20-30 years. In 2016, a new safe confinement structure was installed - a 109-meter-high, 36,000-ton arch designed for about 100 years of operation. ▪️ Occupation of Chornobyl in 2022. At the start of the full-scale invasion, Russian forces seized the site. Their goal was to advance toward Kyiv through the exclusion zone. Equipment movement stirred radioactive dust, and power systems for nuclear waste storage were disrupted. ▪️ Strike on the shelter. On February 14, 2025, Russian forces struck the Chornobyl shelter with a drone carrying an explosive warhead. The arch was damaged, including its waterproof membrane. Firefighting lasted nearly three weeks. The structure remained intact enough to prevent a radioactive release. 📹 Footage showing Soviet TV misinformation about the Chornobyl accident

Anton Gerashchenko

21,803 görüntüleme • 2 ay önce