An exhibition of Russian equipment destroyed in Ukraine has been opened in Poland
By: Maksim Panasovskiy | 27.06.2022, 18:09
Residents and guests of Warsaw can look at Russian equipment that was burned in Ukraine in the first months of the war.
What we know
The first foreign exhibition of destroyed Russian military equipment opened in the capital of Poland on the morning of June 27 at Castle Square. It is called "For our and your freedom." The Ministry of Defense of Ukraine plans to hold such events in several European cities.
Visitors will be able to see the T-72B tank and the 152-mm Msta-S howitzer, as well as rockets for the Uragan and Smerch multiple launch rocket systems. This is how Russian military equipment got into the territory of a NATO country.
Source: Ministry of Defense of Ukraine
For those who want to know more:
- The Russians showed what was left of the Serna boat after being hit by Bayraktar TB2
- Ukraine will receive TALON robots for demining territories
- Lithuania bought six modern EOS C VTOL drones for Ukraine and named them "Magila" - they will help send the occupiers to the grave
- The Russian occupier stole the TV, fixed it on the tank and went on the offensive
- The Armed Forces of Ukraine showed the work of the French CAESAR self-propelled guns and explained in detail how to use them
- Hundreds of Switchblade and Phoenix Ghost kamikaze drones, M777 howitzers, Mi-17 helicopters and HIMARS MLRS – US $1,000,000,000 military aid details revealed
- The Ukrainian army began to use the unique BMP-1TS and BTR-4MV1 in battles
- Ukrainian military for the first time showed the Burevіy MLRS on the Tatra chassis
- Ukrainian artillery destroyed the Russian warehouse with ammunition and "Grads" (video)
- Ukrainian military demonstrated on video how Brimstone missiles destroy Russian equipment
- A 15-year-old Ukrainian with the help of a DJI quadrocopter helped destroy a convoy of Russian equipment
- The Russians passed off the inaccuracy of the TOS "Solntsepyok" system for successful shots - the drone operator did not immediately understand where the missiles fell
- The Ukrainian military showed a "homemade" MLRS mounted on the chassis of an ordinary car