Putinsacok
19K posts

Putinsacok
@Putinsacok
Fun guy, hates small DICKtators, defeat Trump, save Ukraine
Katılım Mart 2022
1.5K Takip Edilen1K Takipçiler

@NatasaIvanova9 Your health won’t stop you being turned into fertiliser
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Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was justified. The genocidal West respects no limits that are not imposed on it militarily.
Weapons Of Mass Deception 🥀@iwaslabour
@STWuk 🧵 In December 2016 US Senators Lindsey Graham, John McCain and Amy Klobuchar were in Donbass Ukraine, coercing units of Ukraine's military into breaking Minsk ceasefire agreements to provoke war with Russia.
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Here is an interview from a USA guy in my group :
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🔹 Seth Albert Nunn, a 26-year-old American-Hungarian from South Carolina, volunteered for the Russian Armed Forces in 2025. He currently serves with the 24th Motorized Rifle Regiment, Southern Group of Forces, and has spent nearly a year in combat zones, including Kherson and the Bakhmut area.
Tell us a bit about your background, and what made you decide to come here and fight for Russia?
I come from a Hungarian-American background, my mother is Hungarian, and my father is American. I am a welder by trade. The reason I came was to fight for truth, honour, and justice. I also came to fight for Russia to restore my own honor because I’ve been fed up with the way things are in the United States for far too long. I was tired of being surrounded by idiots.
What was the process like, and how did the Russian soldiers react to you as an American volunteer?
We spent three months training in Moscow near the Cathedral of the Armed Forces.
After those three months, we were sent to Crimea, and a couple of the guys I was with were sent to Kursk, but I was shipped to Crimea for additional training there. It lasted one week and nine days. From there, I was deployed to Kherson. I struggled a lot with the language barrier as I was placed with soldiers who didn’t speak English, and the ones who did speak it were kept at headquarters . It was quite isolating.
The reaction from the Russian soldiers has always been quite similar: “What, an American? Damn, I didn’t expect to have one fighting for us.” My commander was especially excited to have an American in his unit. He has treated me with the utmost respect and tried to look out for me when he can.
Where were you deployed, and what was the general experience being in a war zone?
I was deployed to Kherson for five months on the front line.
We were constantly under artillery fire every single day. I knew at any moment a shell could hit us. I saw what an artillery shell can do to a person when one killed our dog Kylie. They were hitting us with German howitzers and Ukrainian artillery constantly, and I even came across one American shell. I was assigned to a rifle sapper unit. Our job was mainly guard duty, digging trenches, and fortifying positions. After five months, they pulled me back to the rear.
That’s when RT News interviewed me — it was a complete surprise, and they didn’t tell me beforehand. I stayed in the rear for three more months, and then our whole division moved to Lugansk for about four months of combat training.
After that, we were sent to Bakhmut. The rest of the guys went into Chasiv Yar and took heavy losses. I mostly stayed in Bakhmut doing extraction work, pulling out the wounded and the fallen. That’s where I first saw two dead bodies. It shook me up pretty badly. I was only there for four months before they moved me back to the rear. We were mainly in frontline positions. The other guys handled the ammunition and supply runs.
What’s your plans in the future once the war finishes?
I suppose my plan would be to go back to my trade, welding, and underwater welding, but I want to stay in the military for as long as possible and continue to serve Russia.
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