- cross-posted to:
- drones
- cross-posted to:
- drones
Mirror: https://files.catbox.moe/w6y92i.mp4
Source: https://t.me/combatfootageua/8636
Наші бійці проходять через заміновану територію, щоб урятувати підбитий дрон (вартість 600 тис. грн.).
Our soldiers are passing through a mined area to save a downed drone (worth UAH 600,000).
Now they have to carry a metal detector, drone, and a huge set of balls. Seems unfair.
They can ditch the metal detector as it will continuously ring because of the steel in their balls
This is where the value of human life comes into play and why financial contributions equal lives. Would you risk being killed or maimed for 16k? Even for the poorest Americans, that’s equal to less than a years worth of work. This dude is out there risking it all to pick it up again. Nobody should feel obligated to risk their lives to retrieve a drone like that. That said, I’d probably be tempted to grab a metal detector and make my way out there if I were fighting for my backyard as well.
It’s not like there was just a stack of $16,000 sitting out there in the minefield. There was a tool sitting out there that they could be using to kill Russians and save Ukrainians. A stack of $16,000 is worthless out there on the battlefield, but having that drone could mean everything. So I understand taking risks like this.
“For the want of a nail”
The problem is: what’s more risk, walking the minefield to get the drone back, or not walking the minefield, not having the drone, and having to deal with the Russians that the drone could have taken out of the fight?
The use of the metal detector seemed half-hearted, they weren’t diligently sweeping constantly, especially when they got close to the target, or when they are navigating brush.
They were not marking their path, for their companion to follow, or for them to retrace later.
They’re approach seems a little cavalier