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Russia's ‘Doomsday Radio' crackles into life after ‘Spiderweb' blitz – as Putin weighs options for terrifying revenge

Russia's ‘Doomsday Radio' crackles into life after ‘Spiderweb' blitz – as Putin weighs options for terrifying revenge

The Irish Sun5 days ago

RUSSIA'S mysterious
doomsday radio station called "The Buzzer"
burst into action after Ukraine's daring Operation Spiderweb blitz.
A raging
Vladimir Putin
is now said to be preparing for a terrifying revenge attack after
5
Radio station UVB-76 produces an eerie sound that buzzes 24 hours a day, seven days a week
5
The moment one of dozens of Ukrainian drones flies out of a truck in the Irkutsk region, in Siberia, before striking the 'Belaya' air base
5
Russian Tu-95 bombers burning 'en masse' according to a Ukrainian SBU source
Credit: Ukraine's Security Service
5
Pictures show a huge stockpile of FPV drones hidden inside a secret compartment in a container
Credit: 24 TV/SBU
5
Russian President Vladimir Putin pictured today after Ukraine's drone assault
Credit: Reuters
In the wake of the heavy losses,
Russia
's sinister doomsday
radio
burst into activity, spewing out codewords.
Known to be used by the KGB during the height of the
But its activity is known to increase following major military or political events.
Among the cryptic words it uttered in Russian were Duck, Walrus, Meadow, Bee-eater, and Fun.
While one knows what these eerie signals indicate, speculations are that they are linked to secret military operations or even nuclear protocols.
UVB-76 transmits on the frequency 4625 kHz and is characterised by an eerie sound that buzzes 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
It has been active this year previously after Putin's telephone calls with Donald Trump.
A furious Putin is now expected to attack Ukraine in a revenge blitz.
Most read in The US Sun
Just hours after
Kyiv
's audacious mass drone strike, Moscow launched,
Russia
launched a wave of retaliatory
strikes
overnight.
The deadly strikes overnight killed five in Zaporizhzhia, injured six in Sumy, and several more in the northeastern region of Kharkiv, according to Ukrainian authorities.
It comes as Russian and Ukrainian delegations are set to meet today in Istanbul for a second round of peace talks.
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Putin's secret daughter, 22, ‘working in anti-war art gallery in Paris' after ‘ditching tyrant's name'
Putin's secret daughter, 22, ‘working in anti-war art gallery in Paris' after ‘ditching tyrant's name'

The Irish Sun

time3 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Putin's secret daughter, 22, ‘working in anti-war art gallery in Paris' after ‘ditching tyrant's name'

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Snared by the 'Spider's Web' - How Ukraine carried out their 'audacious' weekend drone attack
Snared by the 'Spider's Web' - How Ukraine carried out their 'audacious' weekend drone attack

The Journal

time5 hours ago

  • The Journal

Snared by the 'Spider's Web' - How Ukraine carried out their 'audacious' weekend drone attack

DESPITE BEING OUTNUMBERED and outgunned, Ukraine managed to use inexpensive drones to destroy Russian nuclear-capable bombers worth billions of dollars last weekend, in an operation carried out after months of planning. The operation targeted dozens of strategic air bases and delivered a major blow to Moscow's long-range bomber fleet. US news outlets described the attack as 'stunning' and 'audacious', UK press said it was 'unprecedented' and 'broad' – and all of them agreed that the major attack on Russia's nuclear-capable strategic bombers highlighted Ukraine's strategic savvy against its much larger invader. Codenamed 'Spider's Web' – or simply 'Web' – the operation was named for its wide geographic coverage across remote Russian locations previously thought to be beyond the reach of Ukraine's long-range drone capabilities. Some military commentators and pro-Russian bloggers even called it the country's 'Pearl Harbour'. 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At least five killed as Russia launches major attack on Ukraine
At least five killed as Russia launches major attack on Ukraine

The Journal

time6 hours ago

  • The Journal

At least five killed as Russia launches major attack on Ukraine

AT LEAST FIVE people have been killed after Russia unleashed a barrage of missiles, drones and bombs across Ukraine early this morning. Russian forces have accelerated attacks on Ukraine in recent weeks, with the Kremlin vowing to retaliate over a brazen attack on its air bases last weekend. The Ukrainian air force said Moscow had fired 206 drones and nine missiles, adding that 'the air attack was repelled by aviation, anti-aircraft missile troops, electronic warfare and unmanned systems units, and mobile fire groups of the Ukrainian Defense Forces'. In Kharkiv, Mayor Igor Terekhov counted 48 Iranian-made drones, two missiles and four guided bombs before dawn in the city of some 1.4 million residents located less than 50 kilometres from the Russian border in northeastern Ukraine. 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