Drax Fella

4.5K posts

Drax Fella banner
Drax Fella

Drax Fella

@DraxoddM

Grandparents from Poland and Ukraine near Lviv. I donate Only to https://t.co/ChTxaMpQ4Q and https://t.co/zL6jOYzuro. Please no PMs for money. #NAFO

Western Canada Katılım Ekim 2022
2.9K Takip Edilen2.4K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Drax Fella
Drax Fella@DraxoddM·
@secretsqrl123 My new way at looking at what the propagandists say and accuse Ukraine or any other nation is exactly what ruZZia is doing. In their eyes, since they are doing it themselves they figure others are doing it too, so they feel justified in accusing others trying to make it stick. 🤔
English
2
1
16
1.1K
Drax Fella retweetledi
Anton Gerashchenko
Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en·
Viktor Orbán has been in power for 16 years - an unusually long time for a healthy democracy. Orbán and Fidesz have now faced a strong challenger: Péter Magyar and TISZA. The elections in Hungary are not just a domestic political battle. They are also part of a broader struggle between Russia and the EU for Eastern Europe. As a result, the campaign is not taking place in a normal competitive environment, but in a sharply polarized and tense atmosphere. Independent polls have shown TISZA in the lead for two consecutive months. The gap appears consistent: from 48 to 40 in January to 58 to 35 by the end of March. The growing popularity of Péter Magyar and TISZA is driven by the fact that he has filled the most dangerous niche for Orbán - anti-Orbán without left-wing baggage. He is making inroads into the conservative and provincial electorate, which is tired of corruption. Importantly, he is also popular among Hungarian youth. However, a lead in the polls does not guarantee victory. The Hungarian political playing field is skewed: electoral districts, media, state communication, funding, and access to public visibility are all uneven. Under such conditions, it is not enough for TISZA to lead - it needs a clear margin to convert votes into actual power. Orbán is currently being hit by several politically toxic issues. The most serious involves allegations that Hungary’s foreign minister has for years been passing sensitive EU information to Moscow through his Russian contacts. At the same time, Orbán’s government is targeting journalist Szabolcs Panyi and attempting to shift public attention away from the issue of Russian ties toward the "Ukrainian question" and alleged "foreign interference." Fidesz is no longer running just a hard campaign, but a manipulative one built on fear - invoking war, Ukraine, Brussels, and the threat of "losing sovereignty." Orbán’s party retains strong local advantages: voter dependence on local authorities and possible vote-buying in poorer regions make the elections more risky. Orbán will fight to the end, because after 16 years in power, defeat would not mean a normal rotation, but the risk of the system collapsing - a system Fidesz has built through control over the state, the courts, the media, resources, and the political field itself. This system is sustained not only by ideology, but also by patronage: networks of loyalty, access to public funds, and mechanisms of redistribution. Losing power would therefore not simply mean losing government - it would mean the collapse of the regime’s material foundation. At the same time, for Orbán and his inner circle, power functions as a form of political - and partly legal - immunity. A change of power would carry the risk of anti-corruption investigations, a review of past schemes, financial flows, and the misuse of state instruments. Finally, for Orbán, this is also a matter of personal historical ambition. He has long positioned himself not just as Hungary’s prime minister, but as a symbol of an illiberal model for European and American conservatives. For him, defeat would not simply be a political loss, but the collapse of the entire model he has promoted for years as an alternative to liberal Europe. That is why he is holding on to power so tightly: without it, he risks losing everything at once - control over the state, the system of resource distribution, protection for his inner circle, and his own political myth. This is no longer a fight for another term, but a fight for survival.
Anton Gerashchenko tweet media
English
58
256
940
26.7K
Drax Fella retweetledi
Kate from Kharkiv
Kate from Kharkiv@BohuslavskaKate·
🇫🇮 DM Häkkänen: Over the last 20 years, Russia has used all the oil revenues it received from Europe to build up its military. And with that military, it attacked Ukraine and now threatens Europe. We paid for that. Russia is basically a big oil company with a huge military. Without oil and gas revenues, they won't be able to conduct this war. Lifting oil sanctions would mean supporting the Russian war machine. Inside NATO, we now see that Russia can remain aggressive even after the war in Ukraine. The threat level depends on their oil revenues. That's why these sanctions are vital for European security.
English
39
1.1K
4.4K
94.7K
Drax Fella retweetledi
Anton Gerashchenko
Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en·
Medvedev and Peskov started making assurances that there will be no mobilization in Russia and Russia is not preparing for one. Very recently, I wrote that one of the reasons for restricting the internet and social media in Russia is preparation for mobilization. Yes, there is an anti-drone logic behind it, but it seems much more like part of a stricter mobilization model: first, the Russian state suppresses communications and limits access to keep people within a controlled digital environment, and only afterward will it conduct a new wave of mobilization with less chaos and less room for resistance. Russia is preparing for a larger war and a broader mobilization. For the process to go smoothly, the regime needs to reduce information leaks, make summonses digital and unavoidable, and narrow the space for evasion and escape. That's why Russia has already launched electronic summonses - to make it harder for men to avoid conscription. We don't know exactly where the Kremlin will deploy the next wave of cannon fodder. But we do know that Putin is already expanding the army to 1.5 million active personnel, and the Kremlin has openly justified this by citing threats on the Western flank and the need to create new structures in the northwest.
Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en

I’m not buying the explanation that Russia’s internet lockdown is just an "anti-drone measure." Yes, there is an anti-drone logic behind it, but it seems much more like part of a stricter mobilization model: first, the state suppresses communications and limits access to keep people within a controlled digital environment, and only afterward will it conduct a new wave of mobilization with less chaos and less room for resistance. Russia is preparing for a larger war and a broader mobilization. For the process to go smoothly, the regime needs to reduce information leaks, make summonses digital and unavoidable, and narrow the space for evasion and escape. That’s why Russia has already launched electronic summonses - to make it harder for men to avoid conscription. We don’t know exactly where the Kremlin will deploy the next wave of cannon fodder. But we do know that Putin is already expanding the army to 1.5 million active personnel, and the Kremlin has openly justified this by citing threats on the Western flank and the need to create new structures in the northwest. Analysts have noted that Russia cannot start a second war without withdrawing forces from Ukraine. However, for a limited local operation - for example, in the Baltic region - Russia might need roughly 60-90 thousand troops for a second theater. Not "another Ukraine." Not hundreds of thousands in the first wave. Just 60-90 thousand, if they are supported with drones, artillery, air defense, electronic warfare, engineers, and a functional command structure. For a wider multi-vector operation - around 100-140 thousand. So, for a localized crisis, Russia doesn’t need "a second army like in Ukraine." It needs a second strike package sufficient to break the first hours of defense. It’s important not to measure Russia with the old yardstick - number of divisions, tanks, or conventional mass. Russia can enter differently: fewer people, more drones, electronic warfare, long-range fire, mining, and targeted suppression of command. Estonian intelligence reports directly that Russia is deploying a new branch of unmanned forces, expecting around 190 battalions of unmanned systems. The Baltic Fleet already has a regiment of unmanned naval strike systems. Meanwhile, production of large-caliber ammunition has increased more than 17-fold since 2021. This is preparation for the next war while the current one continues. To field such a second strike package without reducing pressure on Ukraine, Russia, in my view, would need a new mobilization wave of roughly 180-250 thousand people. In a stronger scenario - 250-350 thousand. That’s why digital control over society is so important for the Kremlin: it makes a new mobilization more manageable. These are estimates, but if the Kremlin launches a strict mobilization model and a new wave of conscription, it could achieve early operational readiness for a local operation in 12-18 months, reach a plateau of sufficient readiness in 18-24 months, and achieve more sustainable capacity in 30-36 months. This is much faster than the reassuring "6-10 years" Europe often cites for preparation, because "6-10 years" refers to a large war with NATO, not a short, high-intensity shock. Russia’s ability to rapidly form new structures is already evident - for example, the 44th Army Corps was built in 7-8 months. Finally, the war in Iran drastically lowers the cost of a major war for the Kremlin and brings it closer. Russia is the main beneficiary of chaos in the Middle East: Brent is around $103 versus the $59 per Urals assumed in the Russian budget. Cuts to expenditures of 10% can be postponed. Moreover, as The Independent notes, the oil price surge effectively breaks the logic of exhausting the Russian budget: an extra $6-10 billion in less than a month already covers the estimated $6.6 billion monthly cost of compensations and recruitment replacements. So, as of now, war is becoming cheaper for Moscow, and new escalation is closer than ever.

English
85
557
2K
187.6K
Drax Fella retweetledi
Anton Gerashchenko
Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en·
Reportedly, this is a Ukrainian P1-Sun interceptor shooting down a Russian Shahed drone. This is so cool
English
112
1.2K
7.2K
121K
Drax Fella retweetledi
Jürgen Nauditt 🇩🇪🇺🇦
The EU is preparing five scenarios in case Orban wins. Expulsion from the EU is even being discussed – Politico. Brussels plans to neutralize Budapest's blackmail after the April 12 elections. On the table are the suspension of the veto right, a complete freeze on funding, and the suspension of Hungary's voting rights. The most radical option, already under discussion, is the complete expulsion of the country from the European Union.
Jürgen Nauditt 🇩🇪🇺🇦 tweet media
English
1.1K
2.7K
10.4K
368.3K
Drax Fella retweetledi
Defense of Ukraine
Defense of Ukraine@DefenceU·
“Don’t quit. Suffer now and live the rest of your life as a champion.” Muhammad Ali The combat losses of the enemy from February 24, 2022 to March 30, 2026.
Defense of Ukraine tweet media
English
46
445
2.1K
34.4K
Drax Fella retweetledi
Anton Gerashchenko
Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en·
Today, an unapproved rally was supposed to take place in Moscow against blocking the Internet and social media in Russia. Police cars and special law enforcement agents appeared at the location. Eight people detained already. Looks like not many people joined anyway.
Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en

Mobile internet in Russia is becoming increasingly restricted. This is happening even in major cities - Moscow and Saint Petersburg. Social media platforms are being shut down, and Telegram is being slowed. Russians are being pushed onto the state-controlled platform MAX, which is under full government control. Why is the Kremlin lowering an iron curtain now? There are no mass protests, the opposition is silent, and everything remains strictly controlled. One possible reason why Russia is now building a digital concentration camp and restricting the internet is a future mobilization. Through the war in Iran, Russia has received extra oil revenue and feels more confident. But it understands that this situation may change. Russia also has no significant successes on the front. Each month, Ukrainians continue to kill increasing numbers of Russian soldiers. To replenish cannon fodder, it is highly likely that Putin may take the unpopular decision to start a mobilization. As a result, emigration sentiments are already increasing in Russia, because Russians have a fair sense that the iron curtain will be lowered completely. Europe must be extremely vigilant and strengthen border controls, as many Wagner mercenaries, FSB agents, and sleeper cells may attempt to enter. And in general, this rule always applies: the more oil money Russia has, the more it wants to wage war. 📹: Russians are making comical Reels about the lack of internet.

English
18
210
957
51.6K
Drax Fella retweetledi
UNITED24 Media
UNITED24 Media@United24media·
🔴 BREAKING: Russian battlefield suicides are surging, video evidence confirms. Ukrainian Defense Minister @FedorovMykhailo has released a series of frontline videos documenting a grim trend: Russian infantrymen taking their own lives rather than facing the relentless pressure of Ukraine’s "drone swarms." "Propaganda tells them they are in control, but reality looks different," Fedorov stated. "Unprepared troops, zero chance of evacuation, and the constant overhead pressure of drones lead to these desperate acts." Fedorov says that this spike in battlefield suicides is a direct result of Kremlin policy, which forbids surrender and pushes a narrative that death is preferable to captivity. While Russia's state media claims superiority, the reality on the ground is a growing surge in battlefield suicides. As a result of these systemic failures and relentless Ukrainian drone pressure, Russian losses are expected to exceed 30,000 killed and severely wounded this month alone.
English
12
155
634
13.9K
Drax Fella retweetledi
UAVoyager🇺🇦
UAVoyager🇺🇦@NAFOvoyager·
Kyiv today, like every week, reminds the world of Ukraine’s prisoners of war. Around 7,000 Ukrainians are still held in russia. They are tortured. They are killed. Don’t stay silent. #FreeAzovstalDefenders #FreeUkrainianPOWs
English
36
835
2.1K
20.8K
Drax Fella retweetledi
Anton Gerashchenko
Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en·
A bridge has collapsed in Russian Dagestan due to floods. Instead of investing into Russian infrastructure, Putin spends billions on destroying Ukrainian infrastructure.
English
204
1.6K
8.4K
157.1K
Drax Fella retweetledi
NEXTA
NEXTA@nexta_tv·
🇭🇺 What a scandal! Orbán is massively bribing voters in Hungary’s poorest regions People are being paid $150–170 for the “right” vote, given firewood, medicine, and even offered temporary jobs. This is revealed in an independent Hungarian investigation titled “The Price of a Vote.” Journalists proved that representatives of Viktor Orbán travel to villages and literally buy votes. Those who refuse are threatened. 🔺Notably, the investigators initially only wanted to gather evidence of voter bribery — but ended up uncovering an entire system that cynically exploits the vulnerability of disadvantaged social groups where people are literally struggling to survive.
NEXTA tweet media
English
485
3.2K
8.5K
274.8K
Drax Fella retweetledi
Defense of Ukraine
Defense of Ukraine@DefenceU·
“A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty.” Winston Churchill The combat losses of the enemy from February 24, 2022 to March 29, 2026.
Defense of Ukraine tweet media
English
64
549
2.6K
43.5K
Drax Fella retweetledi
david D.
david D.@secretsqrl123·
russians lost a div, russia is trying to build a div. russian attack failed today. air defense is not perfect. x.com/i/spaces/1dxYl…
English
50
18
70
8.6K
Drax Fella retweetledi
Anton Gerashchenko
Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en·
The US wants to take over Nord Stream gas pipelines, Lavrov said. Speaking ​to France Télévisions, he said that Washington "intends to seek dominance in global energy markets," citing Venezuela and Iran, and uses its actions on the international stage "to try to derive illegal gains." "The United States is now also saying, 'We want to take over Nord Stream pipelines'," Lavrov said. Also, according to him, all the foreign-based business of the US-sanctioned Russian companies Lukoil and Rosneft "is now subject to a hostile takeover attempt."
Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en

Lavrov: Iran didn't violate anything. Ukraine has violated everything there was to be violated together with its Western patrons. Comment from me: bastard Lie-vrov.

English
24
66
261
55.4K
Drax Fella retweetledi
Kate from Kharkiv
Kate from Kharkiv@BohuslavskaKate·
Q: "What's the US position on Donbas?" Rubio: "We've told Ukraine what Russia is demanding. We're not pushing it. It's their choice, not a 'take it or leave it' situation. Our job is to understand both sides and try to find middle ground." Translation: Ukrainians, the decision is yours. We’ve explained Russia’s demands and will keep pressuring you to accept them, while blaming you for blocking peace. Security guarantees only after you surrender Donbas. But of course, it’s your choice. 🤦‍♀️
English
214
541
2.3K
265.7K
Drax Fella retweetledi
Vatnik Soup
Vatnik Soup@P_Kallioniemi·
Under Orbán, Hungary has already become just another Russian oblast. Recent revelations and investigations clearly show this, so let’s look at their main findings: - Hungarian FM Szijjártó has been leaking information from EU Council meetings directly to Russian FM Lavrov - The Hungarian government has wiretapped its citizens and used Pegasus spyware against journalists - Fidesz thugs are running a massive interference campaign in the Hungarian countryside, intimidating people to vote for them or lose their jobs, electricity, or food aid - These same thugs have given drug addicts drugs for their votes and provided pálinka for alcoholics so they would vote for Orbán’s candidates - Some families have even been told their kids would be taken away if they do not vote “correctly” - For diaspora voters (where Fidesz gets 95% of the vote), Orbán is sending “thank you” messages and propaganda together with the ballots - At the same time, Orbán’s masters in the Kremlin are helping him in every way they can. AI-generated fakes, fake news, disinformation, and mass commentary in crude Hungarian language. The system is run by Sergey Kiriyenko, who organizes “elections” and runs the massive disinformation machinery in Russia - Orbán also uses his thugs, titushky, to intimidate people at voting booths and rallies. This was evident at yesterday’s rally in Győr - Fidesz has filled the country with AI-generated posters of Zelenskyy. Someone counted 94 of them on the road from Budapest Airport to the city center - For years, Fidesz has gerrymandered the electoral map to benefit the party in power. And still, Orbán is losing. It seems that people are finally fed up with his shit. In case Orbán still manages to cheat his way to victory, the EU should not send another cent to Hungary, and its voting rights should be revoked immediately.
Vatnik Soup tweet media
English
116
1.1K
3.2K
68.3K
Drax Fella retweetledi
Jürgen Nauditt 🇩🇪🇺🇦
The Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia should kiss my ass, - Trump. He's truly the most disgusting US president of all time. But maybe with that insult he's come much closer to death; it's not just Putin who kills people all over the world.
English
278
943
5.1K
138.7K
Drax Fella retweetledi
Anton Gerashchenko
Anton Gerashchenko@Gerashchenko_en·
Lavrov: Iran didn't violate anything. Ukraine has violated everything there was to be violated together with its Western patrons. Comment from me: bastard Lie-vrov.
English
372
629
4.7K
178.6K
Drax Fella retweetledi
MAKS 25 🇺🇦👀
MAKS 25 🇺🇦👀@Maks_NAFO_FELLA·
🇭🇺❗️Orban was booed at his own election rally. In response, he broke down, began accusing them of promoting Ukrainian interests.
English
170
935
5.7K
125.2K