The Russians are increasingly getting into trouble: it’s no secret and we certainly won’t find out today. But every day adds a new piece to Putin’s strategic mistakes and how his army is increasingly on the brink of a nervous breakdown after a month of conflict. No fuel and air support, the new ones audio intercepted by the New York Times show a situation that is getting worse by the hour. In this specific case, the Russian army speaks of some objectives in its advance towards the city Makariva few kilometers from the capital Kyiv.
The Terror in Audio
Thanks to unsecured radio networks, the American newspaper managed to record some conversations and edit them into a 9minute video. “We urgently need fuel, water, food, vehicles are blocked on the road,” we hear from startled voices. But as the hours go by, the Russians’ plans don’t initially go as hoped. “My situation is very tense, the tanks are approaching and I don’t know who they belong to. There’s a drone overhead and the area is being attacked from all directions. Buran. Over. A comrade who is in another area of the front asks him: “Can you come here?. But the answer is clear. I can’t Buran almost tearfully replies The streets are under attack. They’re attacking where I am. And then no air help ever came: no plane helped that section of the army occupy the small town. “Ask Lampas for air support,” says Yug95. “I can’t do this. End: “Buran replies.” I see, I see, keep trying. About “The Boys Are In Pain.”
The Hacker’s Advice
The interceptions continue with all the suffering of those excited minutes. Eventually no planes or helicopters will come to refuel them. Another soldier, codenamed Sirena03, is asking for help with fuel, water and food. While Buran seeks a way to retreat, the hacker who has meanwhile overheard everything, mockingly interferes in the radio channel in order to get a chance to speak. “Buran, go home. Better a deserter than fertilizer.” Audiovisual investigators worked with ham radio operators and open source groups to obtain radio broadcasts. “The tapes reveal an army grappling with logistical problems and communications failures,” the New York Times said.
Own goal of the Russians
But how is it possible that the Russians at war, with the powerful technological means they hate, allow private conversations to escape in this way? An expert explains to Repubblica: “Because the secure system of cryptography “Era they were based on stopped working after the Russians themselves destroyed many 3G and 4G repeaters. Even today, the generals still communicate with unprotected cell phones. Because of this, anyone with an ordinary twoway radio can listen in, record, and break in like the hacker.