No it's really not worse with some types of ammunition, retard. The amount of artillery being used here guarantees a UXO situation across the front. Once UXO is determined the actual munitions are totally irrelevant. I know this for a personal fact. The only way to avoid this is avoiding the conflict in the first place.
Enormous sections of the Ukraine are already uninhabitable, will be for decades. All from completely conventional shells. Because that's how it works in real life and not on CNN.
Stop trying to pretend like you have the slightest clue about military stuff. You're an ignorant fool.
No it's really not worse with some types of ammunition, retard. The amount of artillery being used here guarantees a UXO situation across the front.
Of course it's worse with some types of munition, you absolute moron. If 20% of shells from cluster munitions don't explode, then that's way worse than: "UHHHH THERE ARE ALREADY SOME DUDS THERE".
The only way to avoid this is avoiding the conflict in the first place.
Sounds like a good idea tbh, but you don't seem to be able to distinguish between 'bad' and 'worse'.
Stop trying to pretend like you have the slightest clue about military stuff. You're an ignorant fool.
I mean, let's not start about who here is an 'ignorant fool', because I don't think you'll come out of that looking well.
Yeah kids totally won't end up discovering a normal artillery shell either huh. Only these extra special ones.
Stop repeating the media's bullshit. Because the exact same thing happens with landmines, normal artillery shells, and literally anything else that explodes. All of which have been used in such an amount already as to render the conflict zones uninhabitable.
If it's about warfare and CNN says it, odds are it's wrong.
They're bleating about "muh war crimes" for one reason. To distract from the fact that these things are the bottom of the barrel. We're out of conventional shells to give Kiev regime.
Nevermind how utterly absurd and fundamentally stupid it is for anyone who posts here of all places to be blindly repeating the media narrative.
No it's really not worse with some types of ammunition, retard. The amount of artillery being used here guarantees a UXO situation across the front. Once UXO is determined the actual munitions are totally irrelevant. I know this for a personal fact. The only way to avoid this is avoiding the conflict in the first place.
Enormous sections of the Ukraine are already uninhabitable, will be for decades. All from completely conventional shells. Because that's how it works in real life and not on CNN.
Stop trying to pretend like you have the slightest clue about military stuff. You're an ignorant fool.
Of course it's worse with some types of munition, you absolute moron. If 20% of shells from cluster munitions don't explode, then that's way worse than: "UHHHH THERE ARE ALREADY SOME DUDS THERE".
Sounds like a good idea tbh, but you don't seem to be able to distinguish between 'bad' and 'worse'.
I mean, let's not start about who here is an 'ignorant fool', because I don't think you'll come out of that looking well.
Also, bear in mind that cluster munitions are of necessity small enough for a kid to pick up and play with.
Some five-year-old who doesn't know better isn't doing that with a dud 155 that's buried itself into the mud, is he?
Yeah kids totally won't end up discovering a normal artillery shell either huh. Only these extra special ones.
Stop repeating the media's bullshit. Because the exact same thing happens with landmines, normal artillery shells, and literally anything else that explodes. All of which have been used in such an amount already as to render the conflict zones uninhabitable.
If it's about warfare and CNN says it, odds are it's wrong.
They're bleating about "muh war crimes" for one reason. To distract from the fact that these things are the bottom of the barrel. We're out of conventional shells to give Kiev regime.
Nevermind how utterly absurd and fundamentally stupid it is for anyone who posts here of all places to be blindly repeating the media narrative.