News

The T-72 has proved to be a resilient and easy-to-maintain tank; however, it has fallen victim to portable anti-tank weapons and drones.
How drone operators could estimate the weight of a decoy by just looking at it, why Russians build fake camps of theatrical proportions that are extremely easy to spot by Ukrainians, how candles were ...
Britain on Monday imposed new sanctions on Russia's so-called "shadow fleet", targeting 135 oil tankers along with two ...
For Russia, the invasion of Ukraine has been a messy ordeal, as their brazen blitzkrieg tactics designed to conquer Kyiv in ...
Australia's government said on Saturday it had delivered M1A1 Abrams tanks to Ukraine as part of a A$245 million ($160 ...
Russian weapons pounded four Ukrainian cities overnight from Tuesday to Wednesday, injuring at least 15 people in an attack that mostly targeted energy infrastructure, ...
Russian observers celebrated a drone strike on a Ukrainian Leopard 2A6 near Pysarivka. They filmed the moment it hit the tank’s frontal turret—the exact spot where its armor is thickest.
Kills on tanks and multiple launch rocket systems used to offer the top bonus for Ukraine's drone pilots. That's now changed dramatically.
Ukrainian troops used a Pringles can and a drone to destroy a Russian tank, showing how improvised weapons are reshaping the battlefield.