No, OPEC doesn't control the world. Try another one.
You brought up the missiles because you had to insert some stupid quip addressing our past, lol.
I brought them up because you and the rest of DebilZov were going apeshit over the fake news that Russia will run out of weapons in 2 weeks, if you have forgotten what you were spewing then I propose you take something for memory improvement.
I recommend Shiitake mushrooms.
With how many missiles, how many get through, and why are they tolerating such an attrition rate instead of doing real saturation attacks like a proper military would in such circumstances?
Blah-blah-yadda-yadda-but-what-about...
No, you said that they will run out of missiles in 2 weeks or thereabouts.
You said they stick chips taken out of washing machines in jets or one of your buddies linked that shit which Von der Laineyen was parroting originally.
Proper military equipment does. Go watch an Orlan-10 dissection to see what's inside.
Oh, noes, suicidal and mass produced surveillance drones whose main advantages are low price, containing nothing really sensitive where components are concerned and expendability are made with cheap-ass, COTS equipment.
I mean it is not like the Bayraktar uses them,
too.
And the original CIA drones:
Ghost Wars: The Secret History of the CIA, Afghanistan, and Bin Laden, from the Soviet Invasion to September 10, 2001
Clarridge wondered if technology might not solve the problem that human intelligence seemed unable to crack. He loved the Counterterrorist Center’s engineers on the science and technology side; they took what Clarridge liked to call a “Radio Shack approach” to problem-solving. Clarridge commissioned them to work on a highly classified pilotless drone equipped with intercept equipment, an infrared camera, and low-noise wooden propellers. It might fly overhead at about 2,500 feet and locate the American hostages. He spent $7 million on five prototypes in what he dubbed the Eagle Program.
Another use for the drones might be sabotage operations in Libya. Clarridge wanted to load one drone with two hundred pounds of C-4 plastic explosives and one hundred pounds of ball bearings. His plan was to fly it onto Tripoli’s air field at night, blow it up, and destroy “a whole bunch” of commercial airliners sitting unoccupied on the ground. He also tried to load small rockets onto the drones that could be used to fire at predesignated targets.
31 But all of the technology was in its infancy. And Clarridge made some of his colleagues very nervous, especially in the era of Iran-Contra.
Clarridge wanted to kill the terrorists outright. He found the American government’s position against assassination of leaders who sponsored terrorism to be “hypocritical.” The president would authorize the military “to carry out air attacks that may or may not hit and kill the real target” but would not authorize the Counterterrorist Center to stealthily assassinate the same man. He asked, “ Why is an expensive military raid with heavy collateral damage to our allies and to innocent children okay—more morally acceptable than a bullet to the head
...
The Pentagon tended to invest in large, fast, complex drones that resembled pilotless fighter jets. These were very expensive, technically sophisticated, and politically unpopular. The CIA preferred smaller, lighter, cheaper drones that could take pictures and intercept communications in situations where satellites or high-flying spy planes did not offer enough coverage. Its experiments were easier to fund, but many at the Pentagon and in Congress dismissed the smaller prototypes as clunky toys of marginal value
Unmanned: Drones, Data, and the Illusion of Perfect Warfare
The role Predator played that night is exquisitely dissected by Richard Whittle in his
Predator: The Secret Origins of the Drone Revolution. The air force–flown CIA Predator over Kabul that day and night,
equipped literally with a Radio Shack black box receiver, picked up radio signals from an evident al Qaeda convoy and tracked it to Wazir Akbar Khan Street, the targets labeled AOM 592 and 597. Air force F-15Es flying in the vicinity were called to attack the target, Whittle writes, based upon his sources, and bombed it twice, contradicting what the paper trail said; but the F-15 mission was later also lauded in a semiofficial air force history, “the longest fighter combat mission in history.”
20 The important point, though, is that the Predator didn’t fire on Atef’s house, instead going on to shoot a single Hellfire at another house—AOM 666?—that a group of people escaped to from Atef’s house, watching them as they ran through the streets of Kabul.
Yup, my name is Marduk...
Hello fellow clickbait enjoyer. Why do i care about some clickbaiter though? Clickbait reality doesn't make.
Armia wysyła wezwania na obowiązkowe ćwiczenia wojskowe. Tego nie unikniesz!
Did you get drafted? No wonder. Mass conscription into the army began. You need to know
The Polish army sends reservists calls for military exercises. The army is expected to receive 200,000 this year. people. They have 14 days to pack and check in at the military unit. Compulsory military exercises require taking free leave, for which a small monetary equivalent is due, so they think how to avoid conscription.
Yeah, OK, dude...
Stop talking to a mirror.
Again, my name is not Marduk!
No, but I will be calling you a liar, liar!
Show me where I called you a commie, show me, in one of my posts, where is it written 'Marduk is a commie'?
I am pretty sure you have called me one though.
Yup, one given in good faith, too bad you are too proud to take it.
Guess you share the diplomatic talents of the countries you fanboy.
I mean, it is not I who has been throwing ad hominems around for the past few posts or so.
Thus far your little fit of anger was 100% predictable.
Your going in circles and trying to change the subject was predictable, too.
I mean, it was interesting poking you the first 2-3 times, but now you have become totally transparent and predictable.