2022年2月12日土曜日

Glamorous female Ukraine soldiers train to take on Russian army | news.com.au — Australia’s leading news site

Glamorous female Ukraine soldiers train to take on Russian army | news.com.au — Australia's leading news site


Glamorous female Ukraine soldiers train to take on Russian army

【烏-露危機】ウクライナの女性兵士は美女しかいないと話題 画像あり [猪木いっぱい★]
https://asahi.5ch.net/test/read.cgi/newsplus/1644660137/-100
1猪木いっぱい ★2022/02/12(土) 19:02:17.74ID:JeRIlNpk9>>10>>11>>49>>57
ウクライナの女性兵士は、ビデオ共有アプリTikTokを利用して、ロシアとのソフトパワープロパガンダ戦争に勝つために自分たちの魅力的な写真やビデオを投稿しています。 

ウクライナの軍服を着た女性が踊り、兵舎で浮気し、弾丸を持っている女性のクリップがソーシャルメディアで話題になっています。 

ロシアとウクライナの間の緊張が緊張し続けているので、舞台裏で率直なビデオと軍隊の写真を共有することは、準戦争のもう一つの前線になりました。 

通常、ビデオには兵士が踊りを披露する様子が描かれていますが、女性軍が武器を分解して組み立て直したり、兵舎で楽しんだりする様子も映し出されています。 

あるTikTokビデオは、ウクライナの旗と軍の記章が付いた軍服を着たまま、歌に合わせて真似をしている若い女性のグループを示しています。 

このグループは、ウクライナの兵舎の外にいるようです。 

gooqle翻訳一部割愛全文はリンク先へ 動画も! ※翻訳の精度を高めています。 
https://www.news.com.au/technology/innovation/military/glamorous-female-ukraine-soldiers-train-to-take-on-russian-army/news-story/943251b963806fd6b0ac3430c20be47e 
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Female Ukrainian soldiers are taking to social media to post glam pictures in a bid to win the soft power propaganda war with Russia.

Female Ukrainian soldiers are taking to the video-sharing app TikTok to post glamorous pictures and videos of themselves in their bid to win the soft power propaganda war with Russia.

Clips of women in Ukrainian military uniforms dancing, fooling around in barracks, and even holding bullets have gone viral on social media, The Sun reports.

As tensions between Russia and Ukraine remain strained, sharing candid videos and pictures of troops behind the scenes have become another front for a quasi-war.

Ukraine's female soldiers are going viral Picture: TikTok/@vi.ka_222
Ukraine's female soldiers are going viral Picture: TikTok/@vi.ka_222
The videos often feature posing female troops. Picture: TikTok/@katiusha2882
The videos often feature posing female troops. Picture: TikTok/@katiusha2882

Typically, the videos feature soldiers performing dances, but some also show female troops taking apart and reassembling weapons, or having fun in barracks.

One TikTok video shows a group of young women miming along to a song while dressed in military uniforms with the Ukrainian flag and military insignia.

The group appears to be outside a military barracks in Ukraine.

Female troops have shared a number of pictures and videos of themselves in uniforms. Picture: TikTok/@@vi.ka_222
Female troops have shared a number of pictures and videos of themselves in uniforms. Picture: TikTok/@@vi.ka_222

On the same account, the young woman shares a series of pictures and short videos of herself and fellow recruits posing and carrying out military drills.

The account has racked up almost 35k followers and nearly 600k likes.

Another account features clips of three young female recruits in military fatigues posing together on manoeuvers in the woods, pretending to spank each other in their barracks, and sleeping in their quarters.

The account, with almost 5k followers and 52k likes, has the bio: "Girl with the camouflage heart," in reference to her military service.

A Ukrainian soldier dances in her uniform. Picture: TikTok/@katiusha2882
A Ukrainian soldier dances in her uniform. Picture: TikTok/@katiusha2882
One female soldier holds ammunition casings in her manicured hand. Picture: Instagram/@_krii_13/
One female soldier holds ammunition casings in her manicured hand. Picture: Instagram/@_krii_13/

Iryna Greytsarovska, who has more than 3k followers and 27k likes, says in her TikTok bio: "Ukraine above all."

She shares a number of videos of herself singing and dancing while wearing her Ukrainian military uniform.

A further account, belonging to a female soldier Katiusha, features a number of glamorous videos of the recruit and her comrades in full fatigues, dancing sexily and on patrol in a full face of make-up.

A recruit poses with a rifle. Picture: Instagram/@_krii_13/
A recruit poses with a rifle. Picture: Instagram/@_krii_13/

Her account has quickly grown to almost 30k followers and almost 500k likes.

An Instagram account linked to one of the TikTok pages includes a picture of a female Ukrainian soldier holding bullets in her manicured hand next to a large gun.

"This is love," the caption of the bullet picture reads.

Such videos and pictures appear to serve a soft power role for Ukraine, and receive glowing praise in Ukrainian media.

Videos under the hashtag 'military girls' have garnered thousands of likes. Picture: TikTok/@@vi.ka_222
Videos under the hashtag 'military girls' have garnered thousands of likes. Picture: TikTok/@@vi.ka_222

A clip of Ukrainian commando Oleksandr Kolym dancing to Whitney Houston's "Queen Of The Night" recently went viral, with comments praising the "indestructibility of the Ukrainian spirit" and expressing the belief that Ukraine "will definitely win with that sort of attitude".

It comes after Ukraine expanded military conscription to include all women "fit for military service" between the ages of 18 and 60 as threats with Russia rose.

A soldier at a target range. Picture: TikTok/@anna_shorina
A soldier at a target range. Picture: TikTok/@anna_shorina

The edict from Ukraine's Ministry of Defence in December 2021 means that in the event of a major war, this female reserve can be mobilised as part of the national reserve to serve in a broad range of military specialties.

"This is not about conscription after reaching some age, as it is for men," Ukrainian MP Oleksandra Ustinova said.

"And considering more than 122,000 Russian troops are at our borders, the decision seems logical, timely, and sensible."

Ukraine recently introduced conscription for women between 18 and 60. Picture: TikTok/@anna_shorina
Ukraine recently introduced conscription for women between 18 and 60. Picture: TikTok/@anna_shorina

Speaking to Coffee or Die Magazine, Ustinova said: "This sends a powerful signal to Moscow that Ukrainians are ready to resist.

"Although we strive for introduction of the contract army, in current situation, the decision to educate as many people as possible to hold arms and to be ready to serve seems a good one."

As relations between Kiev and Moscow remain tense, British Foreign Secretary Liz Truss has visited Russia to warn of sanctions if Vladimir Putin's army doesn't stand down.

In a frosty joint meeting with her Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov in Moscow, Putin's minister mocked the talks with Truss as "like talking to a deaf person".

On Monday, the UK's Defence Secretary Ben Wallace announced Britain will send 350 extra troops to Poland over fears Russia could invade Ukraine "any day".

Today, a Ukrainian colonel showed off his new British-supplied military equipment as he roared "God Save The Queen" in praise.

Ukraine's soldiers are taking the internet by storm.
Ukraine's soldiers are taking the internet by storm.

As his troops tried out their new anti-tank rocket launchers. Lieutenant Colonel Ihor Bezogluk of Ukraine's 72nd Brigade told The Sun: "God Save the Queen and thank you so much to Britain for giving us the NLAWS.

"We are so pleased with all the support from around the world - especially Britain. This has boosted morale and it will make the Russians think.

"Anything that will help us defend our country is very well received and these missiles have changed the war for us.

"It means we can fight the Russians and it does not matter how many of them there are - now that we have a way of stopping their armour."

Last week, Ukrainian civilians attended open military training amid fears of an imminent invasion.

A picture of a Ukrainian woman, 59, in a headscarf holding a wooden gun during a military training exercise went viral earlier this month.

Ukrainian officials and the West fear there could be an attack over the next month - with a flurry of cyber attacks and flashes of violence in the Donbas region.

The Donbas has been at war since 2014 as Russian-backed separatists fight to break away from the Ukraine.

Kiev and Moscow have been feuding for the past eight years as Russia doesn't like the fact Ukraine is becoming closer to the West.

Both former Soviet states used to be allies - but Ukraine's government now seeks to draw closer ties the US, UK and Europe, potentially even joining NATO.

Paranoid leader Vlad sees Kiev signing up for the defensive alliance as a direct threat to Russia.

Ukraine's leaders have urged their people not to panic as the shadow of invasion looms - but they are taking no chances.

As reported in the German publication BILD, a foreign intelligence service says it has gathered details of Russia's "post-war plans" for Ukraine, which it says are currently being discussed in top Russian military circles.

Even though Russia has not invaded Ukraine, preparations for this scenario are already underway.

According to the report, the Russian army plans to encircle and besiege Ukraine's major cities after destroying the country's forces in the field.

After this, secret service sleeper cells already smuggled into Ukraine, as well as local politicians loyal to Vladimir Putin, would be activated in the towns, while "secret service agents would penetrate into the cities".

They would have the task of "establishing pro-Russia leaderships in the cities" which would then "agree on the surrender and handover" to the Russian occupiers.

According to BILD, Russian intelligence forces would next "seize strategic facilities, eliminate threats, recruit those willing to cooperate and establish a new leadership in the conquered cities."

This practice would be used in all of Ukraine's key cities until all of them "peacefully" came under Russian control.

Following the capture of Ukraine's cities, the report states, Putin plans to set up a puppet parliament in the country, a so-called "People's Rada".

This would replace the Ukrainian parliament and declare it null and void.

Security service sources state: "This People's Rada will become the puppet legislature of Ukraine, peppered with so-called representatives previously selected by the Russian secret service."

Out of this sham parliament would emerge a "backup government" which would rule the country according to Russia's will.

According to the secret service, this would give the coup "the appearance of democracy and legal protection".

To push through such a plan would require massive propaganda efforts by Russian media in Ukraine and the West, while pro-Russian "experts" and politicians would be used to justify the invasion and takeover of Ukraine.

Next, would follow the darkest stage of Putin's alleged plans - the breaking of ordinary Ukrainians' resistance by the puppet government.

The report states that the government's role "would be to declare a state of emergency and, particularly threatening, to implement the Russian plan to set up camps in which those Ukrainians who showed themselves to be uncooperative would be sorted out."

Camps for the detention of pro-Ukrainian activists are allegedly already being planned, with lists drawn up of who will be locked up.

Newly-established pro-Russian secret services would then help with the terrorising of Ukraine's population to break the country's resistance, using the suppression of the pro-democracy movement in Belarus after 2020's stolen election as a potential model.

It is alleged that Russia's security service the FSB is currently training pro-Russian groups for deployment in Ukraine and that Putin has tasked them with recruiting Ukrainian politicians and eliminating opponents of the Kremlin.

The end goal of this invasion would be the calling of a nationwide referendum on absorbing Ukraine into Russia.

According to the report, "a full-scale invasion is currently the most likely scenario".

Military expert Robert Lee from King's College London told BILD: "Russia will probably have most of the armed forces it plans to deploy in a week and could then escalate the situation in the short term if it so chooses".

Russia's embassy has denied any such plan to invade and take over Ukraine, branding the report "a strange mixture of speculation and rumours" that "the embassy fundamentally does not comment on".

This story was published by The Sun and reproduced with permission.

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