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  • 1 year

    Honestly when they’re done, that manufacturing capacity will do great things for their economy.

      • 1 year

        The second it is safe, the second the war is over, I’m coming over and spending tourism dollars over there.

        • 1 year

          They’ll need it because the war money will stop immediately. They’re being funded only as much as it hurts Russia. Just like Afghanistan in the 80s.

      • Slava Ukraine. Be safe if you can. Wish I could do more to help. I tried to do some things with the digital forces but there isn’t much left I can do that you all need.

    • It’s what many says, Europe needs Ukraine for many reasons and a big one is (sadly), their knowledge about a mordern war.

      • “We need people from this big war to fight the next big war!” is the line of thinking that’s going to burn everything to the ground, just like it did a century ago.

        Between Ukraine/Russia, Israel/Iran, Britain floating warships off the coast of China, Indian and Pakistan firing on one another, North Africa in a decade long bloodbath, the US sending marines to suppress unrest in local cities… its not good folks.

    • Then they can become the world’s supplier of battle-tested drones.

      • 1 year

        Very much so, though they import lots of parts. Generally speaking the Ukrainian defence industry is operating under capacity because cashflow.

        Ukraine builds rockets and the biggest airplanes in the world and has a vibrant IT sector, they can manage drones. Much of the Soviet high-tech design and manufacturing was Ukrainian, that’s one of the reasons why Russia wants its colony back.

      • 1 year

        Given the volume they quote each year they either have sourcing figured out or produce at least some of the parts internally. Keep in mind, in FPV drones a lot of the tech is not some cutting edge stuff.

        Some of the strikes at the residential complexes can be targeted attacks at distributed micro factories.