I believe that was assumed at first, but later it was revealed Ukraine had pushed a Patriot up to the front and did that. A ballsy move, but one that paid off.
Russians use red as their color, it would be Red on Red for friendly fire and Grey on Grey for enemies, but I don't think that is the terminology they use.
I'm not sure but I'm pretty sure there was a test in the cold war where the soviets intentionally nuked their own brigades in a war game to see what would happen
that one russian bmp mincing his own infantry
in one drone video of a cross-shaped-trench assaults the russian pointman gets shot, lands on the ground and when his comrade comes around the corner a little later the pointman receives a full burst of friendly fire for his efforts
That didn't count as "blue on blue" did it?
Since it was a private citizen shooting an army official.
As far military was concerned, he was in the army as soon as his name was called. He wasn't called over to the office to volunteer, dipshit.
Zinin was never called, he went there because they called his friend up.
Little brother, actually. His friend died by that point, which unhinged him enough to go and do that when he learnt his brother was received a notice
moron, the incident was because a friend of his was being called up not him.
There's no blue-on-blue in Soviet Russia. They'll just write you down as a deserter.
USA Apache firing at a M113, A10C gun running some brits (should have done it again)
>USA
>brits
Maybe you should try reading OP's post again anon.
>russian
>immediately whatabout USA
wow
>shill
>immediately calls everyone russian
do you morons get paid to troll or you're just pathetic?
Go back and read the OP
>idiot
>cant read OP
wow butthurt?
Didn't they shoot down 5 of their own aircraft last month?
I believe that was assumed at first, but later it was revealed Ukraine had pushed a Patriot up to the front and did that. A ballsy move, but one that paid off.
Would it be called red on red for Russian units?
yeah
Russians use red as their color, it would be Red on Red for friendly fire and Grey on Grey for enemies, but I don't think that is the terminology they use.
It's quite an obscure topic actually, do they even track-study their friendly fire incidents?
I'm not sure but I'm pretty sure there was a test in the cold war where the soviets intentionally nuked their own brigades in a war game to see what would happen
that one russian bmp mincing his own infantry
in one drone video of a cross-shaped-trench assaults the russian pointman gets shot, lands on the ground and when his comrade comes around the corner a little later the pointman receives a full burst of friendly fire for his efforts
Russians bombing Belgorad.
the entire war
Everyday. Just everyday. Half on purpose.
Lots on sex within the pussian ranks. Does that count? There are several vids you can Google if ya like.