Indeed, there may have been a tactical nuke stored among other armaments. I hope people there have Geiger counters.
Ulara
Which words? If you mean Roskomnadzor, it's a typical example of the bureacratic newspeak, invented in Russia during the establishment of the Communist regime. It's meant to terrify.
Otherwise Slavic languages have about as many consonants as French.
It were Ukrainians who initially populated this region, so it's no wonder that people there still preserve the Ukrainian accent. People from Donetsk and Luhansk puppet republics also speak with this Ukrainian accent.
It's interesting that the speaker pronounces the letter "г" softly, in a Ukrainian manner. Well, the town of Sudzha was once a capital of Ukraine, even if only for a month: https://ukrainetoday.org/sudzha-the-city-in-the-kursk-region-was-once-ukrainian/
Sudzha was previously a capital of Ukraine, even if only for a month: https://ukrainetoday.org/sudzha-the-city-in-the-kursk-region-was-once-ukrainian/
Apparently, some officer thought that this combat vehicle was completely protected and invulnerable.
The Rashists left Chernobyl after one of their crazy units dug in a radioactive forest, and the Ukrainian staff of the closed power plant scared the Rashists of all possible consequences.
And it's on the rise 🙂
Thank you for your kind support 🇺🇦🇺🇸
I was talking about the tactical nuke that might have been stored there. By the way, the locals in Toropets said that the explosion would be much bigger if another storage facility was hit. Perhaps they were talking about some deep storage with a nuke that remained intact. And this is probably the reason why the Ruscists now strictly forbid any publication of the aftermath.
The explosion of the nuke in the storage is very different from the explosion of the intentionally exploded armed nuke. It may not even explode at all, but only spread radioactive material.
But in this case, the radioactivity level did not increase, so evidently no nuke was hit.