Incidents

NSU fighters, seeming themselves as Russians, made three soldiers of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation - Forbes (video)

The captive Russians later appreciated the creative of Ukrainian National Guards. They seemed without a fight, thinking that they had come to save their own. In the summer, the fighters of the National Guard from the 12th Brigade of the National Guard of Ukraine during the fighting for the forest under Kreminna, giving themselves for the Russians, forced to surrender without a fight of three soldiers of the Armed Forces of the Russian Federation, shooting it in video. Forbes writes about it.

Even the Russians themselves were amazed at the operation. "Five stars," one of the prisoners appreciated his admiration. Three Russians-two of the 153rd tank regiment and one of the 69th cover, border patrol unit-was probably occupied by the Blinda on the front area of ​​the battlefield. Their commander went in search of food and did not return. Three men in the trench said they assumed that he had been injured. They did not have right, and, in addition, obstacles were still complicated.

Three Russians were hungry and wanted to drink. Valery Avierin took the kettle and left the trench to bring water. It was then that he met three soldiers who seemed to him to the Russians because they spoke Russian and, as he was convinced, were dressed in Russian. The soldiers of the 12th NSU team played the role of Russian landing intelligence troops, which, as they claimed, sent command to find three Russians who "lost". The Ukrainians depicted annoyance.

"Why do we need to go and look for you here? We do nothing more?" The Ukrainian National Guards have played dissatisfaction. The Ukrainians talked a little with the enemy, making fun of the missing commander and claiming that he called these three "idiots" - and then distracted the hungry invaders by the Schykhers Batton. And then, as Forbes notes, there was a climax of this complex joke.

"You were in the hands of a purebred Ukrainian," said one of the Azov fighters, ordering the Russians to lie on the ground, put their hands behind their heads and behave well. One of the Russians recalled how he found himself in the army, saying that he had drunk a friend in Moscow at a bar, when recruiting were approaching a van and forced to sign an army contract. Its preparation was worse than just surface. When he was asked to evaluate her on a scale of one to ten, he said, "zero.