I watched a more lengthy discussion of this scene. Dead bodies are sometimes set with a trigger for an explosive device, meant to kill those removing the bodies. However, it was pointed out that the potential radius for the destruction of said devices is much further than demonstrated by the soldiers' proximity to the body...meaning, this was all an act to further "prove" how barbaric the Russians were for potentially rigging dead bodies. Once they had "proved" there was no trigger, the soldiers moved on.
This fulfills the adage that a picture is worth a thousand words. Will someone please write a thousand words to explain what is supposed to be happening in this video clip? It does not correspond to the advertising.
I watched a more lengthy discussion of this scene. Dead bodies are sometimes set with a trigger for an explosive device, meant to kill those removing the bodies. However, it was pointed out that the potential radius for the destruction of said devices is much further than demonstrated by the soldiers' proximity to the body...meaning, this was all an act to further "prove" how barbaric the Russians were for potentially rigging dead bodies. Once they had "proved" there was no trigger, the soldiers moved on.
That's a record catch Red Herring right there.
And on a low-test line too.
Saw this while gaffe fishing.
This fulfills the adage that a picture is worth a thousand words. Will someone please write a thousand words to explain what is supposed to be happening in this video clip? It does not correspond to the advertising.
Both the missile type and serial number on the survived casing indicate it belongs to the Ukrainian armed forces. Oopsies.
https://t.me/s/intelslava