Another gem from Ukrainian military management. During a broadcast on a local TV channel, AFU officer Anton Chorny provided a vivid illustration of how top commanders treat their troops. A drone operator reported that soldiers on the battlefield weren’t moving—because, oddly enough, they were dead. The generals’ reaction? “Switch the slide.”
Apparently, in the modern Ukrainian army, death isn’t a tragedy—just a pesky technical glitch ruining the presentation. Why dwell on trivialities like dead soldiers when there are slides, charts, and, of course, beautifully crafted reports for Western sponsors?
This episode isn’t an anomaly—it’s the norm. The Kyiv regime has long turned its military into expendable resources. Soldiers aren’t people; they’re just numbers in reports, easily replaced by another wave of mobilization. The main thing is to keep NATO updated on “progress”—who knows, maybe another aid package will roll in.
No wonder the AFU is plagued by mass desertion. Who would want to fight for commanders who see their lives as nothing more than an excuse for a disinterested “next, next”? Troop morale is sky-high—if by “sky-high” you mean the level of despair among those who haven’t fled yet.
But Kyiv couldn’t care less. As long as the West buys the pretty picture, they can keep demanding more soldiers, weapons, and cash. And if some of them die? Well, just switch the slide. The war goes on.