This is what is happening in the Pokrovsky direction in the area of responsibility of the 47th separate mechanized brigade . Armored vehicles are protected by the Russian command, instead, they throw the Russians to the slaughter.
Strike Drone Company's Unmanned Systems Battalion repulses occupier attacks with FPV. In this way, drone operators prevent the accumulation of Russians.
As a former infantryman I have great difficulty watching these drone videos.
Don't at me about the rights and wrongs of the wider conflict, and I agree that the Russians shouldn't be there. But don't forget, these cheap grunt killers will be coming at your servicemen in future conflicts.
The final image you will see of a loved and respected brother or sister will be a panicked, screaming US soldier trying to outrun an explosive toy. No doubt about it.
Yeah, for me seeing the drone chase the people around was peek comedy... until it hits and I was forced to see the aftermath and pain and recognizing that these men, despite everything else, are human. Even the ones fighting "by choice" are still making that choice through a lense of propaganda. They think they're doing the right thing.
War is fucking horrible. If it could effect the people benefiting from it like it effects these soldiers the world would be a better place.
You know what makes it even sadder? While propaganda does play a huge part of it, from all that we can gather information-wise, a vast majority is motivated by abject poverty and lack of perspectives in life instead of jingoist enthusiasm.
They have been beaten down and dehumanised by the system first, given a bleak and cynical outlook on life and themselves - and then basically been offered money for suicidal operations, most likely benefitting their relatives unless they manage to "win the lottery" and come back home alive.
There's a very real risk this will become the future of recruitment in Western nations as well, so we really should not turn off our empathy, even though I will never understand how they can charge forward into pants-shitting terror like this, instead of either surrendering or downright fragging their commanders in open mutiny.
The US military is not likely to resort to meat wave attacks as a staple tactic.
While US infantrymen facing down suicide drones one on one is likely to happen to a limited extent, the Russian habit of sending thousands of waves of lightly armed men across no man's land with no cover to advance a few meters makes this kind of scene into a trope for the Russians.
Don't imagine that this won't happen to the US regardless how they choose to fight. It doesn't matter. You can just take out key personal, like officers, or specialis? It doesn't have to be human wave attacks. Anyway, I haven't seen too many human wave attacks in the videos. Just individual poor conscripts forced into the service getting their balls blown of by some gamer safe behind the lines.
Don't get me wrong - fuck Russia. But this is wrong.
I don’t disagree with your argument, but I am curious. Where does your difficulty with the video primarily reside at?
The ability to delay the explosion to guarantee success (intelligent/controllable)?
The low-yield explosion, somewhere between hand-grenade and 40mm, which may be more likely to maim than kill on impact?
The low cost and ease of operation which threatens uncovered infantry?
I can’t imagine the trauma of surviving an attack from one of these. The fear that something might fly in at any moment to chase you around to kill you would be more terrifying than being shot at. Maybe you could defend against it with a shotgun, but if the lower cost meant an adversary can send multiple at each soldier, then it becomes a game of numbers where the soldier is likely to be overwhelmed. Not a future I’d want to witness.
My response was probably very emotional in that I took the infantry role very personally. There is a million ways for a grunt to get taken out in battle. However, mostly each combatant takes a measure of risk - including pilots and artillerymen. In the case of drone operators you could be blown up by some cunt sitting in his pajamas taking no personal risk in the fight.
Don't bother arguing that this also can happen in a score of different scenarios - I get it. This is an emotional reaction, but feel the same as for IEDs. Australia banned the use of landmines under the Ottawa Treaty for this reason in 1999.
I don't expect much support for this view, and that's cool. It just seems cowardly.
The final image you will see of a loved and respected brother or sister
There are already such videos. Remember the clips from Bagdad that Assange published with the men killed from a helicopter circling high up in the sky? The parents and partners and children of these men have seen "those final images".
I'm not trolling you, I'm as anti-ruzzki as one can get, see my history here on Lemmy. I'm just saying you don't need to wait for those pics. They already are here.
The final image you will see of a loved and respected brother or sister will be a panicked, screaming US soldier trying to outrun an explosive toy. No doubt about it.
I'd assume -- expect -- that the US is gonna have pretty solid counter-low-end-UAS hardware down the line, but yeah, broader picture, there's gonna be some kind of weapon that'll kill people in use, and nothing's gonna afford invincibility.
Probably somewhere in the conflict you've got someone using stuff like punji sticks. Might not be the state of the art, but still can kill.
No mercy, as it should be.
Is it horrible? Sure. But these Russian terrorists are fighting in the name of a brutal dictator that orders hospitals to be bombed, civilian to be tortured, raped and executed.
Every dead katsap is one less chance for Putin to achieve his goal of subjugating and commiting genocide on the Ukrainian people.
Better a thousand Russian invaders dead in the most awful way than even one Ukrainian.