It were Ukrainians who initially populated this region, so it’s no wonder that people there still preserve the Ukrainian accent. People from Donetsk and Luhansk puppet republics also speak with this Ukrainian accent.
It’s interesting that the speaker pronounces the letter “г” softly, in a Ukrainian manner. Well, the town of Sudzha was once a capital of Ukraine, even if only for a month: https://ukrainetoday.org/sudzha-the-city-in-the-kursk-region-was-once-ukrainian/
Sudzha was previously a capital of Ukraine, even if only for a month: https://ukrainetoday.org/sudzha-the-city-in-the-kursk-region-was-once-ukrainian/
Well, you can, but first you should learn more about these tanks: https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidaxe/2023/11/19/ukraines-leopard-1-tanks-roll-toward-the-front-line-but-without-extra-armor/
If you care to read a purely Ukrainian weapon expert, David Axe, in the purely Ukrainian Forbes magazine :-)
Samuel Charap is a Ruscist sympathizer who has been promoting pro-Ruscist sentiments, having close connections with Russia. He’s been wrong again and again on Russian issues.
Limited capabilities? Pootin and his cronies can launch the nuclear Armageddon - and they regularly threaten to do it.
Indeed, this is another illogical excrement, - a masked pro-Russia sentiment from the well-known Pootin sympathizer Samuel Charap.
Which words? If you mean Roskomnadzor, it’s a typical example of the bureacratic newspeak, invented in Russia during the establishment of the Communist regime. It’s meant to terrify.
Otherwise Slavic languages have about as many consonants as French.