Before people comment after just reading the title and not the article:
>In Bulgaria, we do not have the opportunity to repair missiles of this type, but Ukraine does
— Defence Minister Todor Tagarev
Ukraine will help all those that aided them in times of need. There is no fear to have in Bulgaria over being left undefended. Ukraine will not forget its friends.
Basically a “if you can get it running, it’s yours” deal. Ukraine’s got the gear heads and equipment to do so, and Bulgaria has the stockpile. Seems like a good deal.
Ukraine used to extend the lifespan of a lot of old S-300 missiles, so yeah, it makes sense.
Thanks?
Considering the political climate in Bulgaria, I understand the pro-Russian forces are pretty strong, compared to other countries, it is also possible not all of them are defective.
They are “defective” so the pro-Russians cannot complain about the donation.
And the articles also has some tidbits in that direction:
“The fault in the fact that this equipment cannot be serviced is rather political, Nikolai Drenchev from the Revival party said during the debate.
Drone dropped missile ordinance when?
Very poor choice of words for a headline
that headline is misleading.
The article is about missiles that are worthless for Bulgaria, but gold for Ukraine
10 comments
Before people comment after just reading the title and not the article:
>In Bulgaria, we do not have the opportunity to repair missiles of this type, but Ukraine does
— Defence Minister Todor Tagarev
Ukraine will help all those that aided them in times of need. There is no fear to have in Bulgaria over being left undefended. Ukraine will not forget its friends.
Basically a “if you can get it running, it’s yours” deal. Ukraine’s got the gear heads and equipment to do so, and Bulgaria has the stockpile. Seems like a good deal.
Ukraine used to extend the lifespan of a lot of old S-300 missiles, so yeah, it makes sense.
Thanks?
Considering the political climate in Bulgaria, I understand the pro-Russian forces are pretty strong, compared to other countries, it is also possible not all of them are defective.
They are “defective” so the pro-Russians cannot complain about the donation.
And the articles also has some tidbits in that direction:
“The fault in the fact that this equipment cannot be serviced is rather political, Nikolai Drenchev from the Revival party said during the debate.
Drone dropped missile ordinance when?
Very poor choice of words for a headline
that headline is misleading.
The article is about missiles that are worthless for Bulgaria, but gold for Ukraine
The ukrainians will figure out how to fix it