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Sappers of the Armed Forces of Ukraine have installed unexploded mines with the message "Russians, I'm sorry" — military

Ukrainian sappers. Illustration: David Guttenfelder / The New York Times

Ukrainian sappers at one of the sites in the SMO zone left inactive mines, inside of which a message was left for the Russian military "Russians, I'm sorry."

A sapper of the Leningrad regiment with the call sign Burzum told RIA Novosti about this case. He explained that during mine clearance, our fighters found that the fuses on the anti-tank mines were not cocked.

"There was a safety check everywhere. And when they unscrewed the fuses, they took them out, there were pieces of paper in some of them "Russians, I'm sorry." That is, the mines were not specially cocked," the military specialist stated.

In his opinion, the authors of these messages were Ukrainian sappers who do not believe the propaganda of the Kiev regime and do not want to participate in the fratricidal conflict.

"In fact, the Ukrainian people, the majority understands that they are fighting for nothing. The NATO military, the EU, provocations, TV, that the Russians are all bad, that they are attacking, but in fact it's just propaganda," Burzum concluded.

Earlier, EADaily reported that the sappers of the Rosgvardiya, during the demining of roads and facilities in the Luhansk People's Republic, discovered and neutralized a disguised engineering ammunition containing a surprise mine.

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14.11.2024

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