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6/15/2025, 2:05:30 PM
>>507461933
> INSIDE A CAMOUFLAGED DRONE WORKSHOP, ONE STEP AWAY FROM THE FRONT LINES IN UKRAINE
> A dozen soldiers work from a home-workshop to transform civilian-use devices that come to them from the government or private entities into attack weapons.
> An ordinary house in an ordinary town near the Pokrovsk front ( Donetsk region , eastern Ukraine) has been converted into a center for adapting drones for combat. It's impossible to guess from the outside what's going on inside. Facilities of this type are springing up like mushrooms to supply the growing needs of the Ukrainian army
> The project was presented to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in February. “Some days we deliver up to 100 [drones], although the normal number is around 20,” explains Flint (nom de guerre), 46, a member of the 68th Brigade
> Drones arrive at this residence from both the government and private entities. They arrive as civilian-use devices and leave ready to attack Russian positions. These are not high-tech weapons, but rather high-need for immediate consumption.
> Up to a dozen people work in this workshop-house, which continues to grow in response to the needs imposed by the conflict. Basically, they adapt the control system, as well as the video and radio signals of the drones.
> It's a half-hour task for each of the basic models, says Vadim, 41, who previously worked in a computer components office in Khmelnytskyi. Although most are suicide bombers , in some cases a clamp is installed on the bottom that can support up to one and a half kilos of weight. Typically, this clamp is used to transport an explosive device that is dropped from the air onto the designated target
> "This is safer than the front," Vadim says.
Remember this the next time a "civilian target" is hit
https://archive.md/r5vsg
> INSIDE A CAMOUFLAGED DRONE WORKSHOP, ONE STEP AWAY FROM THE FRONT LINES IN UKRAINE
> A dozen soldiers work from a home-workshop to transform civilian-use devices that come to them from the government or private entities into attack weapons.
> An ordinary house in an ordinary town near the Pokrovsk front ( Donetsk region , eastern Ukraine) has been converted into a center for adapting drones for combat. It's impossible to guess from the outside what's going on inside. Facilities of this type are springing up like mushrooms to supply the growing needs of the Ukrainian army
> The project was presented to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in February. “Some days we deliver up to 100 [drones], although the normal number is around 20,” explains Flint (nom de guerre), 46, a member of the 68th Brigade
> Drones arrive at this residence from both the government and private entities. They arrive as civilian-use devices and leave ready to attack Russian positions. These are not high-tech weapons, but rather high-need for immediate consumption.
> Up to a dozen people work in this workshop-house, which continues to grow in response to the needs imposed by the conflict. Basically, they adapt the control system, as well as the video and radio signals of the drones.
> It's a half-hour task for each of the basic models, says Vadim, 41, who previously worked in a computer components office in Khmelnytskyi. Although most are suicide bombers , in some cases a clamp is installed on the bottom that can support up to one and a half kilos of weight. Typically, this clamp is used to transport an explosive device that is dropped from the air onto the designated target
> "This is safer than the front," Vadim says.
Remember this the next time a "civilian target" is hit
https://archive.md/r5vsg
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