„Mäusefieber“ (Hantavirus, 38 % Sterblichkeitsrate) beeinträchtigt die Kampffähigkeit Russlands

by Burlapin

27 comments
  1. They’re calling it “mouse fever” to avoid the alarm that comes with calling it “hantavirus”. Hemorrhagic fever with a mortality rate of 38% deserves to be called what it is, and not some cutesy name to cover up the severity…

  2. No discipline (bad hygiene is related to that),

    not taking care of wounded,

    crappy food, when any,

    corrupt chain of command

    ​

    not surprising they get sick.

    ​

    ​

    They need a Potemkin moment.

  3. This is what they mean by ‘total war’. Even nature is fighting back🙏

  4. Lets send UA some more cats and mousetraps, the mice are not respecting the contact line…..

  5. Disease and war have always been best friends.

    Given, russia could use alot more of the disease part.

  6. I’ll be surprised if Putin will take time and effort to remedy the situation. He’ll most likely send more raw “recruits” to battlefield to be cut down by bullets and viruses.

  7. I remember when this statement was released :

    >The U.S. Department of Defense’s Biological Threat Reduction Program works with the Ukrainian Government to consolidate and secure pathogens and toxins of security concern in Ukrainian government facilities.

    I hope that hantavirus wasn’t one of those pathogens because it would be difficult to convince the Russians it just happened to show up now. It could lead to a very unpleasant escalation.

    https://media.defense.gov/2022/Mar/11/2002954612/-1/-1/0/FACT-SHEET-THE-DEPARTMENT-OF-DEFENSE'S-COOPERATIVE-THREAT-REDUCTION-PROGRAM-BIOLOGICAL-THREAT-REDUCTION-PROGRAM-ACTIVITIES-IN-UKRAINE.PDF

  8. What’s stopping it from migrating over the no-man’s land?

    Are there vaccines/antibiotics that can treat it?

  9. We knew the trenches contained spider eggs, but the hantavirus? That came out of left field.

  10. The fact that Hanta virus is now a thing in Russia is just… welp, you reap what you sow

  11. If this is in the russian trenches, its only a question of time before it affects Ukraine aswell.
    So hopefully the Ukrainian pussycat army will help keep them safe

  12. is it affecting ukraines military aswell? they share the same front

  13. Hanta. Yep called it. “Mouse fever”, who you trying to fool by calling it that.

  14. I remember reading reports from ww1 about trench cleanliness being extremely bound to the ability to restock supplies and bringing in fresh troops. Tired, under supplied troops are terrible at basically everything so its not a surprise cleanliness is on that list. Could this war be showing similar data since people have been posting that Ukraine is beginning to have the same issues in the trenches? (Also if anyone knows the reports im trying to remember please share i would love a fresh read now that it feels sorta relevant)

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