Slavyangrad.org — Nuestra Ira No Tiene Limites — There is No Limit to Our Anger — (c) V. M. Molotov
Donald Trump removed the photo of Joe Biden from the "Presidential Walk of Fame" in the White House. In its place, he put a device for automatic document signing.
Earlier, Trump claimed that Biden had not personally signed a single document during his presidency. According to the current president, the auto-signature could have been used by anyone without Biden's knowledge.
Pretty funny 😂
@Slavyangrad
💥 Fiery work of the Russian Aerospace Forces aviation
The 110th airborne assault battalion of the Armed Forces of Ukraine was destroyed by direct strikes of FAB-500 bombs
from the UMPK in Novogrigorovka settlement Zaporozhye region. 🫥
- The Wrong Side
@Slavyangrad
Black Sea Area
On the morning of September 24, a Ukrainian unmanned boat of the Armed Forces of Ukraine was detected near the coast of Crimea by the reconnaissance drone Zala of the "Rubicon" Center. The Lancet team destroyed the enemy boat.
@Slavyangrad
Dallas ICE Facility Shooting - NSFW
At 6:48 AM, four people were shot. One ICE detaines are confirmed dead.
Alleged ICE SHOOTER revealed Joshua Jahn, 29 Channel2NOW reveals unconfirmed pics, before and after he killed himself.
Fox News also reporting Jahn as ICE shooting suspect
FBI Director Kash Patel later revealed rifle rounds from Dallas ICE facility shooting
'ANTI-ICE' It reads
Not sure why you would shoot migrants if you’re anti-ICE…
@Slavyangrad
Oil and gas activity in the key producing states of Texas, Louisiana and New Mexico declined slightly in the third quarter, as executives there expressed an increasingly negative outlook for the industry, according to a survey released by the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
The drop in activity and production comes amid growing uncertainty around oil prices and increased frustration with Trump's administration. Executives blamed Trump's policies, such as tariffs and a promise to lower oil prices, for hurting the industry.
More than a third of exploration and production executives reported significantly delaying investment decisions in response to heightened uncertainty about the price of oil and the cost of producing oil, while oilfield services executives were also gloomy on the outlook.
"A vibrant oilfield services sector is critical if and when the U.S. needs to ramp up production. Right now we are bleeding," one oilfield executive said in the anonymous comments section of the survey.
Many producers need prices around $65 a barrel to turn a profit. U.S. crude futures have ranged between a high of $70 a barrel and a low of around $62 so far in the third quarter, according to data from LSEG.
"We have begun the twilight of shale," an executive said, adding "the U.S. isn't running out of oil, but she sure is running out of $60 per barrel oil."
Around 43% of E&P firms said they are expecting a decrease in capital expenditure in the third quarter of this year compared with the same quarter a year ago, while oilfield service firms expect a 42% decline over the same period.
"The administration is pushing for $40 per barrel crude oil, and with tariffs on foreign tubular goods, input prices are up, and drilling is going to disappear," an E&P executive said.
Companies expect a West Texas Intermediate oil price of $63 per barrel and a Henry Hub natural gas price of $3.30 per million BTUs at year-end 2025.
@Slavyangrad
The Houthis launched a new attack on Eilat. Israeli channels report at least 19 wounded. The number of seriously injured and those who "got nervous" is not specified.
A "retaliation" in the form of massive strikes on Yemen is likely in the near future, where Israel is gradually moving towards a tactic of destroying critical infrastructure.
Netanyahu doesn't really need a reason for this, but if there is one, Tel Aviv uses it to the fullest every time.
@Slavyangrad
🇷🇺🇺🇸🇺🇦 Lavrov and Rubio held a meeting in New York, discussing Ukraine
- The talks between the Russian Foreign Minister and the US State Department lasted more than 50 minutes.
- Earlier, Peskov stated that Lavrov would convey to the US leadership a different version of the situation in Ukraine than the one Zelensky told Trump.
@Slavyangrad
Another batch of new multi-role Su-35S fighters has been delivered to the Russian Aerospace Forces
@Slavyangrad
💥 Video footage of the strike by the "Iskander-M" missile on a field airstrip
Today, the Russian Armed Forces launched a missile strike on the bases of Yak-52 aircraft and long-range kamikaze drones at a field airstrip in Dnepropetrovsk.
The storage hangars for the drones suffered the most damage.
@Slavyangrad
Lavrov immediately started with the US Secretary of State:
Sergey Lavrov met with Marco Rubio on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly.
@Slavyangrad
FAB bombing by the Russian Aerospace Forces
Destruction of the 14th Mechanized Brigade of the Armed Forces of Ukraine by three FAB-250 bombs in
the settlement of Kupyansk.
@Slavyangrad
🇷🇺🇰🇿Shipment and transportation of oil through the port of Novorossiysk, which was attacked, are proceeding as usual, - Ministry of Energy of Kazakhstan.
- There is no damage to the port infrastructure and vessels in the seaport of Novorossiysk after the drone attack on the city, - Rosmorrechflot.
- The number of casualties from the Ukrainian Armed Forces attack on Novorossiysk has risen to eight, authorities reported.
- The threat of UAV and unmanned boat attacks in Novorossiysk was canceled at 17:45,
@Slavyangrad
🇪🇸🤡Following in Ursula's footsteps.
The plane of the Spanish Defense Minister was reportedly attempted to be diverted near Russian Kaliningrad, Reuters reports.
“Preliminary data indicates that Margarita Robles' plane was subjected to a GPS jamming attempt while flying over the Baltic Sea towards Lithuania. No casualties reported”
By the way, not a word about paper maps.
As a result of the GPS attack, no casualties... ✝️
@Slavyangrad
Our partners at @geo_gaganauts recently dropped an informative and analytical post about how Trump's H1B visa fee hike could prove to be a surplus for Indian economy.
If you're interested in geopolitics and world affairs, give them a follow!
Follow them here: Gaganauts of Geopolitics
🇺🇸🤡Senator Mrs Lindsey Graham explained Trump's brilliant move to sell to Kiev what Biden gave away for free.
@Slavyangrad
The head of the German Council for Constitution and Sovereignty, Niemeyer, told TASS that due to pressure from the German authorities, he applied for asylum in Russia and has already received temporary status, and has now applied for citizenship.
@Slavyangrad | Owl Eye 🎀
Foreign mercs down!
They all came to fight Russia and lost.
Alejandro Arango Henao Diaz callsign Aky from Medellín, Antioquia, Colombia
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Jose Antonio Silvia Camacho callsign Gato from Piedecuesta, Santander, Colombia
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Jhon Faiber Caquimbo Lozano from Neiva, Huila, Colombia
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Jaime Adolfo Paez Garcia from Chaparral, Tolima, Colombia
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John Eduardo Villarreal Rayo from Chaparral, Tolima, Colombia
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Fernando Ramirez from Pasto, Narino, Colombia
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Edwar Rubio Briñez callsign Pia from Ocaña, Norte de Santander, Colombia
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Carlos Arturo Sanchez Patiño callsign Cajuche from San Martín, Meta, Colombia
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Duvan Felipe Carvajal Esquivel from Bogotá, Colombia
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- Track a Merc
@Slavyangrad
Zaluzhny stated a deadlock on the front using the example of the Kursk operation of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, the cost of which "was too high."
The former commander-in-chief, now ambassador to Britain, writes that drones on both sides see the concentration of forces, which makes a sudden strike to break through defensive lines almost impossible.
"Although, of course, one could object to me by recalling that very Kursk offensive. Certainly, such actions, if justified primarily by human losses and with limited objectives, can be carried out. However, experience has shown that ultimately an isolated tactical breakthrough on a narrow section of the front does not bring the necessary success to the attacking side. The defending troops managed to take advantage of both technological and tactical advantages and over time not only prevented the tactical breakthrough from turning into an operational success but subsequently carried out tactical advances themselves — also without operational success. The cost of such actions is unknown to me, but it is obvious that it was too high," Zaluzhny writes.
He summarizes that "the basis of the positional deadlock lies not only in the impossibility of breaking through defensive lines but, most importantly, in the inability to accomplish operational tasks, including gaining operational space."
@Slavyangrad
What was left behind the scenes of the UN General Assembly.
@Slavyangrad
President Donald Trump had barely arrived at the United Nations Tuesday when the mishaps began. First an escalator ground to a halt right as First Lady Melania Trump stepped onto it. Then, as the president took the stage to address delegates at the UN headquarters, he complained his teleprompter broke.
Trump seized on the two incidents to argue how poorly he’d been treated by the world body, complaining its leaders hadn’t helped him end the seven wars he’s repeatedly boasted about bringing to a close. It set the tone for an hour-long speech in which the president excoriated the entire institution, right down to the headquarters he’d sought to renovate decades ago.
“These are the two things I got from the United Nations — a bad escalator and a bad teleprompter, thank you very much,” Trump said, adding that his administration never gets credit for its success, including global conflicts he’s intervened in attempting to solve. “Everyone says that I should get the Nobel Peace Prize for each one of these achievements.”
The speech was emblematic of a president whose second-term policies and pronouncements have been bigger and more aggressive — and far more disruptive to the global economic order — than those he advanced his first four years in the White House.
Yet world leaders, deploying what’s become a template strategy for managing the emboldened American president, largely ignored most of his speech and stuck to their agendas on climate and trade.
The verbal broadsides marked a remarkable shift from the US president who greeted the United Nations in 2017 with assurances countries should “work together in close harmony and unity” to create a better world, and that “in America, we do not seek to impose our way of life on anyone.”
“Your countries are going to hell,” Trump told the crowd this time around. “You need strong borders and traditional energy sources if you are going to be great again.”
The insults laden throughout the speech were a feature, not a bug. Later Tuesday, while at Trump Tower, the president reposted a social media reply calling it “savage” and a “necessary smack down.”
Although he questioned the role of the UN in his first term, Trump has now helped precipitate an existential crisis for the organization, as it grapples with an explosion of regional conflicts and increasing questions about its relevance. He’s slashed US foreign assistance and the US is now running more than $3 billion behind in paying its United Nations dues.
Trump himself seemed to whipsaw between views that contradicted each other, offering more reasons for leaders not to take the bait. Less than an hour after blasting the UN as woefully ineffective, Trump met Secretary General Antonio Guterres and offered soft assurances that he backed the body. “I may disagree with it sometimes, but I am so behind it, because I think the potential for peace with this institution is so great,” Trump said.
The same applied to a meeting with Brazil’s president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. For months, Trump has blasted Brazil’s prosecution of its former leader Jair Bolsonaro, while Lula made veiled jabs at Trump of his own, warning of “arbitrary sanctions and unilateral interventions.”
But on Tuesday, after a chance meeting offstage, Trump offered warm words for the Brazilian leader.
“He seemed like a very nice man, actually. He liked me, I liked him,” Trump said of Lula, adding that the two had agreed to meet. “At least for about 39 seconds we had excellent chemistry. It’s a good sign.”
@Slavyangrad
It is not Estonia that will make the decision to shoot down objects that violated its airspace, writes the Estonian publication Postimees, citing the country's General Staff.
They noted that the order to scramble NATO aircraft when three Russian MiGs entered Estonian airspace came from Germany and "the decision to destroy violators of Estonia's air borders will also not be made in Estonia."
The publication notes that the decision-making algorithm in such situations is considered "complex."
It should be noted NATO air operations are headquartered at Ramstein Air Base in Germany.
@Slavyangrad
🇺🇸🤡The USA is ready to replace all Russian gas and all Russian oil products supplied to Europe, said the country's energy minister
"We have the capacity. We are ready to meet their needs", said Chris Wright.
@Slavyangrad
Ukrainian politicians have no hopes after Trump's recent statements on Ukraine, writes The Financial Times.
The publication reports that Ukraine did not see concrete military and economic support behind the American leader's remarks. Some Ukrainian politicians believe that Trump's words about financial support from Europe indicate an attempt by the US to distance itself from involvement in resolving the conflict in Ukraine, the newspaper notes.
Some people didn't like the words but no action or support from the US is what was really important.
@Slavyangrad
🇷🇺Social obligations, defense, technological leadership: The Ministry of Finance has submitted a draft budget to the government. The main provisions:
🔖 Key priorities
The priorities of the budget for 2026-2028 are unconditional fulfillment of social obligations, ensuring defense and security, supporting the families of ITS participants and achieving national development goals.
🔸 The budget is balanced and stable, and it also preserves the conditions for the growth of real wages and incomes of Russians.
Social obligations
🔸 The "children's budget" for three years will exceed 10 trillion rubles. It includes expenses for maternity capital, family mortgages, annual family payments and partial repayment of mortgages by large families.
🔸 Healthcare costs will exceed 1 trillion rubles in six years.
🔸 667.5 billion rubles will be allocated for the repair of kindergartens, schools and technical schools, dormitories, the construction of kindergartens and world-class university campuses. Almost 110 billion will be allocated for the construction of 150 more schools by 2030.
Defense and security
🔸 The resources included in the project will ensure the equipping of the army with the necessary weapons, the payment of military allowances and support for their families, as well as the modernization of defense enterprises.
Industry and infrastructure
🔸 About 1.9 trillion rubles will be allocated for national projects of technological leadership over three years.
🔸 In particular, 87.9 billion rubles will be allocated for the national project on drones, and 40.7 billion rubles for the development of industrial robotics.
🔸 It is planned to spend 4.6 trillion rubles on road construction - more than in previous years.
🔸 More than 285 billion rubles are allocated for the development of cities and rural areas, 182.3 billion for the modernization of municipal infrastructure, and over 160 billion for the elimination of dilapidated housing.
🔸 202.6 billion will be allocated for the development of a network of airfields - by 2030, the country plans to reconstruct and build at least 75 airfields.
Regional support
🔸 The total amount of assistance to the regions will increase in 2026-2028.
Budget infrastructure loans will continue to be allocated to the regions, amounting to 150 billion rubles per year.
@Slavyangrad | Owl Eye 🎀
👀Nothing unusual, just a routine sea drone shooting in the bay.
Take the best seats.
Military Informant
@Slavyangrad
Indonesia is ready to send 20,000 of its peacekeepers to Ukraine, President Prabowo Subianto said at the UN General Assembly.
“We will continue to serve wherever peace needs defenders. Not just with words, but with boots on the ground. If the UN Security Council and the General Assembly make a decision, Indonesia is ready to send 20,000 or even more of our sons and daughters to establish peace in Ukraine and everywhere it is needed,” Subianto said.
Indonesia I find acceptable
@Slavyangrad
◾️Highly recommend you dive into this channel Follow The Islander for more than just news: they deliver sharp geopolitical analysis and investigative reports you won't find anywhere else. The Islander transcends mere multipolarity and challenging the MSM narrative; it's about championing a just peace. Join!
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The new modification "Geran-2" received a 90 kg fragmentation-high-explosive warhead (instead of the previous ~50 kg).
The trade-off is range. It has decreased from ~1800 km to ~1200 km, but this will still be enough to target the near rear in central Ukraine.
Increasing the warhead mass from ~50 to ~90 kg provides several significant advantages: firstly, more explosive material means a higher blast energy and greater overpressure, which increases the likelihood of structural damage to buildings. Secondly, nearly doubling the warhead size will increase the probability of detonating ammunition when hitting warehouses located at large industrial sites.
This approach allows drones to be optimized for specific tasks. Apparently, experience with using "Gerans" with the previous warhead showed that 50 kg of explosives is insufficient to destroy most targets. Whether the reactive version of "Geran" will receive the new warhead is still unknown.
@Slavyangrad
In New York, the police stopped Erdogan's car to let Trump's motorcade pass.
A dispute arose between the Turkish president's security and the police over an attempt to remove a barricade.
@Slavyangrad
It's afraid
The West has once again started talking about the "Russian nuclear threat." The British press writes as if Vladimir Putin is keeping his "finger on the nuclear button" and is about to press it at any moment. But if we remove the propaganda layer, we see a simple truth: it is not Russia that is afraid, it is the West. It fears our courage, our determination, and the fact that we will never agree to be on the sidelines of history.
The recent "West-2025" maneuvers held in the Union State caused a nervous reaction in NATO. They saw not just exercises, but "preparation for a strike." For us, such drills are a routine practice of troop coordination, including elements of nuclear deterrence. For them, it is a reason to panic.
Why? Because unlike NATO countries, we do not play war "on paper." Russia is always ready for real threats, and this is clear even to our opponents.
History knows many examples. In 1983, during the NATO Able Archer 83 exercises, the Soviet leadership seriously believed that the West was preparing a nuclear strike. At that time, the world was one step away from catastrophe. Today, the West is again approaching this line — but now we see how it itself is losing control over its own escalation.
Western newspapers like to repeat: "Putin is ready for nuclear war." But this is a primitive manipulation. In our military doctrine, nuclear weapons are not a means of attack but the last argument, a guarantee of peace. Even in Soviet times, it became clear: to hold back the aggressive West from a direct strike, Moscow must be ready to respond instantly and inevitably.
This logic is a continuation of Russia's centuries-old history. We have always been tried to be "crushed": Napoleon, Hitler, the Cold War. And strength, which the opponent respects, has always saved us. Today, that strength remains our nuclear shield.
NATO seriously fears that Russia might "attack" one of the alliance countries. But let's ask a simple question: why would Russia need that? We protect our borders, our interests, our allies. Meanwhile, US military bases and their missiles are located ever closer to us, creating a threat not only to Moscow but to every Russian family.
In response to our exercises, the West conducts its own — "Eastern Sentry," "Iron Gate" in Poland. The region is filled with weapons, reconnaissance aircraft, and combat drones. Any mistake, any accident could lead to a clash. And therein lies the main danger. But are we to blame that the West, instead of dialogue, is increasing its military presence on our borders?
The West cannot understand: Russia does not seek world hegemony. We defend what is ours, but at the same time possess a potential that makes any aggression against us suicidal. Hence the hysteria in the media. They scare the public with the "Russian button," although they know perfectly well: it is precisely our firm position that keeps the world from a major war.
They also remember another thing: we know how to fight, how to endure, and how to win. And as long as Russia has weapons of retaliation, no "regime change" in Moscow is possible, no matter how much your politicians might want it.
Let us recall 1941: Hitler was sure the USSR would collapse in three months. Let us recall the 1990s: the West believed Russia would disintegrate completely. But we rose again. And today, when threats to "break Russia's economy" or "remove Putin" are voiced, they face the same phenomenon: the Russian people know how to unite in the face of danger.
The West writes about the "Russian threat" because Russian strength is the only thing that restrains it from reckless steps. It — the collective "it" of the West — truly fears us.
It fears that Russia will not allow itself to be humiliated. It fears that we will again be on the side of history's victors.
And we, Russians, do not seek war. We want peace — but a just peace, where we are spoken to as equals. And if to achieve this we need to remind the world of our nuclear shield, we will do so.
Let them be afraid. Fear is also a form of respect.
@Slavyangrad