TYB
Kiev residents should evacuate for winter – MP
11 Oct, 2025 04:12
The Ukrainian military is incapable of fully blunting Russian strikes on Kiev’s energy infrastructure, making blackouts all but certain, a senior Ukrainian lawmaker has warned, urging citizens to consider temporarily moving out of the city in the coming months.
On Friday, Maryana Bezuglaya weighed in on the recent wave of devastating Russian strikes, which Ukrainian officials said caused massive power outages in Kiev.
“Regardless of the protection and air defense, Russia can destroy almost any critical infrastructure facility in Ukraine at will.
The only question is the number of missiles and drones,” she said, adding that if a single power plant is hammered by dozens of strikes, it would almost certainly be crippled.
Bezuglaya reiterated her warning in late summer, when she said, “the winter would be difficult, and there would be blackouts.”
She urged Ukrainians to be realistic about the challenges ahead, stock up on essentials, and support each other during the crisis.
The best thing is to consider temporarily moving out of the city this fall and winter. This especially applies to Kiev residents. Kiev is a strategic and symbolic target.
It is possible that it will be completely ‘drained down’. Darkness without sewage and water supply in mid-winter,” the MP said.
On Friday, the local authorities reported that Russian strikes had hit Kiev’s left bank particularly hard, with many areas experiencing blackouts and water supply problems, with similar issues recorded in the rest of the capital.
Media reports indicated that several strikes affected Kiev’s Thermal Power Plant No. 6, one of the city’s key electricity suppliers. According to some estimates, over the last ten days, a total of 63 energy facilities across the country have come under attack.
On Friday, the Russian Defense Ministry confirmed that its forces had launched a massive strike on Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, stating that “all designated targets were hit.”
It stressed that the attack came in response to “terrorist attacks by the Kiev regime on civilian sites in Russia.” Moscow maintains that it never targets civilians.
https://www.rt.com/russia/626216-kiev-residents-evacuate-winter/
Russia, Ukraine trade drone strikes overnight
11.10.2025
Ukraine and Russia exchanged overnight drone attacks across multiple fronts, with Kyiv calling it one of the largest assaults in weeks and Moscow saying its forces destroyed dozens of Ukrainian UAVs over its territory.
Ukraine’s Air Force said Russia launched 78 Shahed, Gerbera, and other attack drones from Orel, Millerovo, Kursk, and Chauda in Crimea on the night of Oct. 11.
“As of 09:00 (0600GMT), air defenses shot down or suppressed 54 enemy UAVs in the north, south, and east of the country,” the force said on Telegram, adding that 21 drones hit six locations and that the attack was ongoing.
Kyiv said air defense units, electronic warfare systems, and mobile fire groups were engaged in repelling the assault.
Russia’s Defense Ministry said its air defense systems intercepted and destroyed 42 Ukrainian drones over several regions between 11 pm (2000GMT) on Oct. 10 and 7 am (0400GMT) on Oct. 11.
The ministry said 19 drones were downed over Volgograd, 15 over Rostov, three over Ulyanovsk, two each over Voronezh and Bashkortostan, and one over Saratov.
Both sides reported no casualties from the latest drone exchanges, which come amid more than a thousand days of the Russia-Ukraine war that began in February 2022.
https://www.aa.com.tr/en/russia-ukraine-war/russia-ukraine-trade-drone-strikes-overnight/3714401
Zelensky Confers With Leaders of Germany, UK, Finland, Advances Ukraine-Netherlands Cooperation on Drone Co-Production
Oct. 11, 2025, 11:35 am
President Volodymyr Zelensky held a series of talks with European leaders on Friday following a heavy barrage of Russian missile and drone attacks on his country, his official website reported.
He spoke with both Federal Chancellor of Germany, Friedrich Merz, the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Keir Starmer, and the President of Finland, Alexander Stubb.
The discussions with Merz focused on analyzing Russian intentions and reinforcing joint defense capabilities, including cooperation within the Coalition of the Willing and the PURL initiative.
In his conversation with Starmer, Zelensky explored ways to enhance Ukraine’s air defense and coordinated ongoing collaboration with international partners.
He also expressed gratitude to Finland’s president for the consistent and steadfast support of Ukraine.
In Kyiv, the Ukrainian leader also met with the Minister of Defense of the Netherlands, Ruben Brekelmans. Following the meeting, a bilateral Memorandum of Understanding concerning the Co-production of Drones was signed.
In a public address later that day, Zelenskyy emphasized that the only appropriate response to Russian aggression is increased strength, improved air defenses, and sustained pressure on Russia to ensure accountability for its actions.
“All day long, recovery efforts have been underway following the Russian strike. It’s a great deal of work. Electricity has already been restored for more than 725,000 families,” he said.
https://www.kyivpost.com/post/61893
https://kyivindependent.com/ukraine-netherlands-sign-memorandum-on-joint-drone-production/
Ukraine war briefing: Power restored to Kyiv after Russia drone attacks
Fri 10 Oct 2025 21.20 EDT
-
Power was restored to 270,000 consumers in Kyiv after attacks from Russia knocked it out, Ukraine’s energy minister Svitlana Hrynchuk wrote on Facebook on Friday.
People in Kyiv heard blasts throughout Thursday night and many woke up without power on Friday after the huge air attack targeted Ukraine’s energy system. Images posted online showed firefighters working to tackle burning blocks of flats.
Hrynchuk did not say how many people had lost power. Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said the Russian strikes targeted civilian and energy infrastructure as Ukraine prepares for winter temperatures.
-
Russian drones and missiles damaged 12 apartment buildings in the south-eastern Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia, killing a seven-year-old boy and injuring four people, according to the regional governor.
The Kyiv mayor, Vitali Klitschko, said 12 people had been injured, with eight of them taken to hospital.
-
Vladimir Putin rowed back his deputy foreign minister’s declaration that the “momentum” from the Alaska talks had been lost and that the “edifice of relations” between the US and Russia “has cracked and is collapsing … the cracks have reached the foundation”.
Rybakov made the comments during the week after Donald Trump hardened his line towards Russia. Putin, Russia’s president, said on Friday: “These are complex issues that require further consideration.
But we remain committed to the discussion that took place in Anchorage.” An aide to Putin said contacts with Washington were continuing.
-
“Fair use” of frozen Russian assets for Ukraine’s defence and rebuilding was discussed between the European Central Bank president, Christine Lagarde, and Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Friday.
“There are solutions for how this can be done,” said Ukraine’s president, calling for more political will in Europe to do it. “We are getting closer to a decision on the assets, and I thank everyone who is helping.”
-
Melania Trump said on Friday that eight Ukrainian children had been reunited with their families after contact with Vladimir Putin.
The US first lady in August wrote a letter to Putin and had her husband hand-deliver it during his meeting with the Russian president in Alaska.
The eight children were been reunited with their families “over the past 24 hours”, the US first lady said on Friday.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/oct/11/ukraine-war-briefing-power-restored-to-kyiv-after-russia-drone-attacks
Deadly Drone and Artillery Attack in Sudan’s El-Fasher Displacement Camp Leaves 60 Dead
October 11, 2025
A deadly drone and artillery attack on a displacement camp in El-Fasher, Sudan, has left at least 60 people dead, as reported by local activists.
This incident, which took place on Saturday, signifies a troubling escalation in the ongoing conflict, particularly as the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) intensify their offensive in the beleaguered city.
Local resistance committees indicated that the RSF targeted the Dar al-Arqam displacement center, situated within a university campus.
Witness accounts lamented the heinous nature of the attack, highlighting that many victims included children, women, and the elderly. Reports described scenes of horrific devastation, with bodies reportedly burned beyond recognition.
Activists have decried the cataclysmic situation in El-Fasher, labeling it a “genocide” and expressing dismay over the lack of global attention to their suffering.
Initial estimates put the death toll at 30, but as recovery efforts progressed, the number grew to 60 due to many bodies remaining trapped under the rubble.
Local resistance committees have emerged as essential players in coordinating aid and meticulously documenting ongoing atrocities amid the chaos.
Since April 2023, the RSF has been in violent conflict with Sudan’s regular army, leading to tens of thousands of deaths and displacing millions of civilians.
The ongoing conflict has also contributed to acute food shortages affecting nearly 25 million people nationwide.
El-Fasher, now the last state capital in Darfur not under RSF control, has become a key battleground as these paramilitary forces aim to further entrench their power in the region.
International condemnation of the violence has been swift.
The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Turk, expressed his deep dismay over the RSF’s actions, which appear to target civilians based on ethnicity, resulting in summary executions.
He condemned the relentless attacks on civilians and the destruction of critical infrastructure, calling for an immediate halt to the assaults.
Describing El-Fasher as “an open-air morgue,” activists highlighted the dire humanitarian situation facing its civilian population of around 400,000.
Nearly 18 months into the city’s siege, essential supplies have dwindled, with basic necessities becoming scarce and exorbitantly priced. The closure of most local soup kitchens due to food shortages has worsened the crisis.
In recent weeks, an artillery strike on a mosque claimed the lives of 13 displaced families, while continued assaults on El-Fasher Hospital resulted in at least 20 fatalities among those seeking medical care.
Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, head of the World Health Organization, has urgently called for the protection of healthcare facilities and humanitarian access to assist healthcare workers and patients who are in desperate need.
Many hospitals in El-Fasher have faced continuous bombardment and have been forced to shutter their doors, leaving approximately 80 percent of those requiring medical attention without access to necessary care.
In a tragic escalation, last month, a drone strike on a mosque killed 75 individuals.
According to United Nations data, over one million people have fled El-Fasher since the conflict erupted, accounting for 10 percent of the total internally displaced population in Sudan.
The city’s population has been reduced by about 62 percent, underlining the devastating impact of the ongoing conflict.
Amid daily bombardments, many residents have resorted to seeking refuge in hastily constructed bunkers underground.
Should the RSF achieve dominance in El-Fasher, they would control the entirety of the Darfur region, posing significant implications for regional stability, particularly as the regular army maintains authority over northern, central, and eastern Sudan.
https://news.ssbcrack.com/deadly-drone-and-artillery-attack-in-sudans-el-fasher-displacement-camp-leaves-60-dead/
https://ca.news.yahoo.com/least-60-people-killed-drone-131958891.html
200 US soldiers arrive in Israel, as Witkoff confirms IDF troops completed first phase of withdrawal from Gaza
Oct. 11, 2025, 11:43 a.m. ET
Some 200 US soldiers arrived in Israel on Saturday in an effort to ensure the historic peace agreement ending the war in Gaza holds.
“America’s sons and daughters in uniform are answering the call to deliver peace in the Middle East in support of the Commander in Chief’s direction in this historic moment,” Adm. Brad Cooper, head of the US Central Command, said.
“This great effort will be achieved with no US boots on the ground in Gaza.”
The American military isn’t expected to head into the Gaza Strip — but rather coordinate troops that will come from Egypt, Qatar and Turkey, and manage any heightened tensions with the Israelis.
Part of its role following President Trump’s peace agreement between Israel and Hamas has been described as making sure there are no violations or incursions from either side.
The US army will also set up a center to restart the flow of humanitarian aid to Palestinians, with supplies expected to begin flowing back into the Gaza on Saturday.
Cooper, along with US envoy Steve Witkoff visited an Israeli army post in the Strip Saturday morning to confirm IDF troops were withdrawing as part of the historic cease-fire deal with the terror group, Fox News Chief National Security Correspondent Jennifer Griffin reported.
“CENTCOM has confirmed that the Israeli Defense Forces completed the first phase withdrawal to the yellow line at 12PM local time, said Witkoff on X. “The 72-hour period to release the hostages has begun.”
Witkoff and Cooper have since returned to Israel, with Witkoff set to speak at Tel Aviv’s Hostages’ Square Saturday night.
https://nypost.com/2025/10/11/world-news/200-us-soldiers-arrive-in-israel-as-witkoff-confirms-idf-troops-completed-first-phase-of-withdrawal-from-gaza/
https://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/2025-10-11/ty-article-live/gaza-hostages-expected-monday-as-middle-east-summit-plans-move-forward-says-trump/00000199-d11a-d253-a3bd-f79a4a120000
https://pjmedia.com/catherinesalgado/2025/10/11/hamas-rounding-up-gazans-from-idf-evacuated-areas-report-n4944744
https://www.ynetnews.com/article/hjcdc0wpxx
IDF says strikes in Lebanon destroyed hundreds of Hezbollah construction vehicles
October 11, 2025 12:18 pm
The Israeli Air Force early Saturday morning bombed hundreds of heavy engineering vehicles it said were being used by Hezbollah to restore its infrastructure in southern Lebanon, in an attack that reportedly killed one and was condemned by the Lebanese president.
In a statement, the Israel Defense Forces said the airstrikes hit Hezbollah sites where the terror group was storing heavy machinery to use “for rebuilding its terror infrastructure in southern Lebanon.”
The IDF also accused Hezbollah of operating in a manner that poses “a threat to Lebanese civilians and uses them as human shields,” while saying that the “location” of the heavy equipment and its operation by the Iran-backed terror group breached the ceasefire agreement reached last November.
Lebanese President Joseph Aoun condemned Israel for the strikes.
“Once again, southern Lebanon has been the target of a heinous Israeli aggression against civilian installations — without justification or pretext,” Aoun said. “The seriousness of this latest attack lies in the fact that it comes after the ceasefire agreement in Gaza.”
Lebanon’s health ministry said an Israeli strike on the al-Msayleh area left one person dead and seven others wounded. According to Lebanese media, the person who was killed was a Syrian national who was passing by in a van transporting fruits and vegetables.
According to Lebanon’s National News Agency, more than 10 separate strikes were carried out, destroying some 300 vehicles, including bulldozers, excavators, and over 100 small Bobcat utility vehicles.
Earlier this week, an Israeli strike in southern Lebanon killed a Hezbollah operative who was operating an excavator, with the IDF saying that “the terrorist was struck while attempting to restore Hezbollah terror infrastructure.”
Separately, on Friday, the IDF announced that troops demolished a building in southern Lebanon’s Ayta ash-Shab where a cache of weapons belonging to the Hezbollah terror group was located.
The IDF said reservists of the 300th “Baram” Regional Brigade scanned the building before dawn on Friday, following intelligence information that it was being used by Hezbollah.
The soldiers seized the weapons being stored in the building before blowing it up, the army said.
Since the deal to end the fighting, which began after Hezbollah started attacking Israeli communities and military posts following its Palestinian ally Hamas’s October 2023 terror onslaught, Israel has targeted Hezbollah sites and operatives in near-daily strikes.
Under the November 27, 2024, ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah, weapons in south Lebanon were to be held only by the state, and the IDF was permitted to act against imminent threats by the terror group.
Since the beginning of the ceasefire, the IDF says it has carried out over 500 airstrikes against Hezbollah targets in Lebanon, killing over 300 operatives and destroying dozens of sites belonging to the terror group, saying they violated the terms of the truce.
https://www.timesofisrael.com/idf-says-strikes-in-lebanon-destroyed-hundreds-of-hezbollah-construction-vehicles/
https://twitter.com/bintjbeilnews/status/1976879915464376568
https://twitter.com/Annahar/status/1976883598252032418
https://www.jns.org/idf-dismantles-hezbollah-weapons-site-in-southern-lebanon/
https://breakingdefense.com/2025/10/drone-incursions-us-military-falcon-peak-2025-cuas/
With daily drone incursions over bases, NORTHCOM takes aim through Falcon Peak
October 10, 2025 2:27 pm
“We’re between [about] one and two incursions per day” at DoD installations, said NORTHCOM Commander Gen. Gregory Guillot. “I don't know if the problem's worse, or we have more systems out there that can detect them.”
Flying hundreds of feet in the air against a clear blue sky, the small drone barreled toward a defended position, its profile similar to other unmanned systems that have evaded authorities on US installations.
But this drone wouldn’t return to its sender: soon after its detection, defending personnel dispatched their own drone that smashed into the encroacher, sending both plummeting back to earth.
That’s life for a drone during Falcon Peak, a second-year exercise hosted by US Northern Command in late September to hone counter-drone prowess at domestic military facilities.
Despite concerted efforts by the US government to defeat unmanned threats, their incursions into US military installations are increasing, according to NORTHCOM head Gen. Gregory Guillot.
“We’re between [about] one and two incursions per day” at DoD installations, Guillot told reporters during a roundtable here.
A NORTHCOM spokesperson later told Breaking Defense there were 230 drone incursions reported over military installations between September 2023 and September 2024, which jumped by 82 percent to approximately 420 sightings reported over roughly the same period the following year.
Whatever the cause of the increase — and Guillot noted, “I don’t know if the problem’s worse, or we have more systems out there that can detect them” — that kind of major jump is bound to get a response from the Pentagon.
Drone incursions over domestic bases have been a top problem for officials following mysterious unmanned flights over Langley Air Force Base in Virginia in late 2023 and other high-profile sightings, prompting widespread scrutiny over why many installations seem powerless to stop them.
The issue, officials have said, is that typical counter-drone technologies are not safe to use in civilian airspace, a problem compounded by a byzantine set of rules for installation self-protection.
Hence the Falcon Peak effort, where the government has called up industry to offer its very best solutions that can detect, track and defeat small drones in ways that maintain the integrity of civilian airspace.
Similar to the first Falcon Peak, held last year at the foothills of Cheyenne Mountain in Colorado, this year’s event used testing ranges belonging to Eglin Air Force Base on the beaches of Santa Rosa Island in Florida.
“What we learned last year at Falcon Peak” between the DoD and industry is that “we’re pretty good at detecting UAS [unmanned aerial systems] of all types and sizes,” Guillot said.
“Our ability to track them once we’ve detected them, especially through maneuvers and altitude changes was okay, not great. And then our ability to defeat them was poor, especially if it was only in a non-kinetic means.”
The good news? Guillot then said that based on results from this year’s Falcon Peak, it’s clear there’s been significant improvement in all three areas.
Like last year, Guillot said his general observation is that most drone incursions on US military installations are probably just hobbyists who don’t know the rules.
Still, officials have said apprehended drone operators, like a Chinese national who flew a drone over Vandenberg Space Force Base late last year, pose national security threats too.
(Guillot said officials have yet to establish a link between drone overflights and a foreign government.)
“So majority, I think, are hobbyists that are in the wrong place at the wrong time. But there’s enough of the others that has me concerned,” he said.
Industry Brings Its Kit
Over the course of several days, NORTHCOM ran hundreds of incursion scenarios to test industry’s counter-drone mettle, with some culminating in “pretty complex” events that involved multiple drones, various flight profiles and even internal navigation technologies that don’t emit signals, according to NORTHCOM Deputy Test Director Jason Mayes.
“They were successful in some, not successful in others,” Mayes said on the Falcon Peak sidelines, adding that it would take time to fully analyze results.
1/3
Guillot said his “focus area” for the event this year was low-collateral kinetic defeat, as demos last year using non-kinetic tools — think jamming or hijacking a drone to commandeer its controls — showed that the approach has limitations.
More traditional kinetic weapons also pose a risk to bystanders, prompting the need for a solution that can take down a drone with minimal threat to others in the area.
The smashing intercept viewed by Breaking Defense was performed by Anduril’s Anvil drone, one element of a broader package of capabilities offered by the company that NORTHCOM selected to serve as the command’s first “flyaway kit.”
The kit, according to a NORTHCOM presentation shown to Falcon Peak attendees, includes the Anvil, a trailer-mobile radar and camera tower, an electronic warfare system called Pulsar, an infrared sensing system dubbed SkyFence and command and control (C2) software through the firm’s Lattice platform.
The Falcon Peak event “was an opportunity to continue the learning and the refinement of how we deliver that system, how we train the teams that are going to use it [and] how we provide them with the tools that they need to be able to operate that kit on their own,” Parks Hughes, Anduril’s senior director for air defense, told Breaking Defense at the AFA conference in September, days after Falcon Peak concluded. “It’s always valuable to test the system against a variety of threats.”
Other vendors, like Anduril, brought along comprehensive solutions. But some firms brought individual pieces of the puzzle to show off.
Norwegian firm Squarehead Technology, for example, brought along an acoustic sensor called Discovair. Acoustic detection has recently grown in popularity since many drones now no longer emit electronic signals, and can instead only be sensed by physically listening for features like rotors.
The Discovair device “allows you to sort of listen to everything at once, in all directions. And if it doesn’t sound like a drone we just throw it out,” Knut Torbjørn Moe, Squarehead’s vice president of defense, told Breaking Defense at the company’s Falcon Peak booth.
A key thing to get right is eliminating false positives, he said, noting that “it’s becoming clear to everybody” that technologies like acoustic detection are “needed to be able to fight back against” newer drone threats.
The small American company Thalrix was also present at Falcon Peak and brought along a camera system called Sentinel.
According to CEO Justin Luce, the low-cost camera rings in at about $20,000 for daytime operations and $30,000 for a version that can perform both day and night monitoring.
The system, roughly the size of a shoebox and weighing four pounds, can detect the smallest drones, also known as Group 1, about one and a half kilometers away.
“The main thing for us is, as we’ve seen the price of the effectors and the weapon systems come down, we haven’t seen the price of detection” similarly decline, Luce told Breaking Defense at the company’s Falcon Peak booth.
“So our goal has just been getting the cost of our systems down as low as possible, and then putting it out there, testing it and seeing how low can we get this price point.”
Similar to others, Thalrix has its own C2 system, but like in the spirit of Falcon Peak — where Guillot said a top goal was vendors being able to connect different systems together — Luce said the company advises integrating the Sentinel with other companies’ software.
“We recommend any of the existing C2s, as opposed to throwing our own in the ring,” he said. “Because there are already so many options. No need to add another one.”
Authority Challenges
Beyond technical limitations that prevent facilities from halting drone incursions, policy plays a big role both in determining who can respond to drone flights and how.
Some DoD installations like special operations and nuclear facilities are expressly permitted under US law to take measures to defend themselves against unmanned threats, but others are not. The issue is currently being sorted out on Capitol Hill, as lawmakers weigh a legislative proposal submitted by the Pentagon earlier this year [PDF] that would broaden the category of facilities that are permitted to defend against drones and enforce perimeter security, among other changes. (Thanks to a bipartisan amendment, the Senate’s version of the Pentagon’s annual defense policy bill that passed late Thursday includes changes sought by the department, though the provision will need to make it into a final version of the legislation and signed into law.)
2/3
Mayes said too that Pentagon officials are working to centralize and streamline relevant information on the topic, and that installation commanders have the ability to take out a drone that they deem as a threat to life or critical assets.
“So there’s definitely engagement criteria that have to be met. We can’t just shoot anything down just because it’s over our installation,” he said.
Engaging drones further requires coordination with the Department of Transportation, chiefly through the Federal Aviation Administration.
Heeding a call by Guillot, NORTHCOM was tapped last year to serve as a homeland DoD “synchronizer” for counter-drone authorities, meaning that the command leads all interagency coordination on the issue.
“It gives us a lot of ability to go out and drive standardizing responses where necessary,” Guillot said of the synchronizer role.
Falcon Peak’s focus on low-kinetic intercepts appears to be due in part to the regulations required for intercepting drones. Wary of shooting into a civilian-trafficked sky, some officials have talked about using tools like lasers to defeat drones, though Mayes said that more learning is needed.
“I think we’re moving forward, but it’s a very, very slow process,” Mayes said, pointing to potential collateral effects like a laser disrupting a satellite in low earth orbit. “I think there’s a pathway to get there, but where we’re at in that yet, I’m not really sure.”
Through its new counter-drone leadership, NORTHCOM is also responsible for deploying the Anduril-supplied flyaway kit where necessary.
Under a framework outlined by Guillot, if installations are having trouble repelling unmanned incursions, NORTHCOM can come to one’s aid by deploying the kit within 24 hours.
The command aims to field up to three kits — one each on the East and West Coasts and one in Alaska — that could come with different features provided by other vendors.
“I think 24 hours is fast. Obviously we’d like to be faster,” Guillot said.
According to Mayes, the flyaway kit currently comes with about a half dozen Anvil interceptors, which can carry other means of defeat like spoofing a signal.
(The Anvil that took down the target drone was also reused from a previous event, so some may be able to take out multiple targets depending on how they’re used.)
Estimating the kit’s cost at up to $12 million depending on configuration, Mayes described it as a stopgap measure to fill a need that the military services are ultimately responsible for satisfying.
“The systems aren’t cheap, so there is a budget aspect of that,” he said.
The 24 hour window is needed to not only deploy the kit, but also to provide adequate time to coordinate its use with the FAA.
Asked whether this approach was sufficient to stop a Spiderweb-type operation, where Ukrainian forces stunned the world by destroying Russian air assets deep behind front lines using armed drones launched from trucks, Guillot emphasized a surprise attack will ultimately fall to an installation to defend themselves first.
“One thing that we’re doing is we’re working with the services and the combatant commands to try to replicate that and use some of our existing systems to see if they’re sufficient for the type of thing that we saw over there,” he said.
“But not just to solve last month’s problem, but to think, how are they going to evolve and make sure that we stay ahead.”
3/3
Max Spiers: MK Ultra & the Dark Side of The Phenomenon attacking the Human HEART
Oct 9, 2025
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=huJ2_tdx1oQ
https://x.com/polarityjosh
https://www.youtube.com/@thebasesproject-censored2004
https://www.youtube.com/@thebasesproject-censored2004/search?query=spiers
More UFO INSIDERS
Oct 10, 2025
I talk about other Insiders coming out with their own experiences from the same place where I was stationed
this is the link of the update I did with Dr Michael Salla talking about Eglin Air Force Base and the ships that interacted with the soldiers:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KJyGaoflETY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=as57UwfiI4E
https://x.com/JP_ARKS/status/1976036793746338139
UAPDA not mentioned in House NDAA talks, according to HASC Ranking Member
Oct 11, 2025
Rep. Adam Smith (D-WA) — Ranking Member, House Armed Services Committee (HASC)
Ask a Pol asked:
In this year’s NDAA — National Defense Authorization Act — talks, have you heard anything about Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer’s bipartisan UAPDA — UAP Disclosure Act — amendment?
Key Smith:
“No. I know he’s worked the issue,” Rep. Adam Smith exclusively told Ask a Pol as NDAA debated last month. “I have not heard anything about it.”
Caught our ear:
“I haven’t heard about it,” Smith told us.
ICYMI — Our hunt for UAPDA assassin continues… https://www.askapoluaps.com/p/so-far-no-uapda-pushback-in-ndaa
https://www.askapoluaps.com/p/i-have-not-heard-anything-about-uapda
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/Ih3NjZ6MO1k
https://x.com/MattLaslo
The Civilian Whistleblower 'Michael' goes public on X: "Disclosure is Dead." - Psicoactivo #642
Oct 10, 2025
On the latest Psicoactivo, we have an interesting update from 'Michael', the 'Civilian Whistleblower'.
He now has an X account @WhistlingMike, where he seems to be against UFO Disclosure. In his latest statement, he explains why he believes Disclosure is Dead.
'Michael' post on X: https://x.com/WhistlingMike/status/1976519360572535150
'Michael' profile on X: https://x.com/WhistlingMike
Desmo's X space with 'Michael: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5yBf33whmBs
https://x.com/Desmo_V4/status/1975601597972656514
Upcoming AMA: https://www.reddit.com/r/UFOs/comments/1nzr1fq/upcoming_ama_michael_witness_with_firsthand_uap/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNJnprEct40
Moneypenny
@nic_moneypenny
Five Decades Ahead Of The US! Russian AI Blueprint Covered Up By The CIA
A declassified Soviet/Russian AI blueprint that predicted hybrid neural linguistic intelligence half a century before US LLM models was covered up by the CIA
This is what I discovered today whilst ironically researching plasma physics intelligence
It supplies the missing link between Turing style symbolic systems and biological neural emulation with an explicit linguistic bridge
And significantly reroutes AI's genealogy to include Soviet cybernetic epistemology not just Western cognitive science
The mysterious thing however is that despite some effort I am still unable to get a copy of the actual document and no AI that I have consulted can find it either… although many have confirmed its existence with multiple references
(Thread, references to follow below)
12:27 PM · Oct 9, 2025
https://x.com/nic_moneypenny/status/1976368910501916693
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rVDsW80gzLQ
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/384265096_The_Legacy_of_Dr_Peter_Beter_A_Deep_Dive_into_Controversial_Theories_and_Predictions
https://www.scribd.com/document/394479291/665048
https://www.peterdavidbeter.com/