The Russian claim parroting so-called “Anvar special forces” attacking Ukrainian equipment near Turya in Sumy reeks of the same stale, tactical cosplay Moscow peddles when real battlefield momentum slips through its fingers. Inverting fact with farcical flair, this narrative pretends Russia projects power across a border it barely holds, while Ukrainian drones rain down precision strikes daily on Belgorod, Kursk, and deep into the logistics veins of the Russian Federation.
Turya, as claimed, remains under firm Ukrainian control. There is no evidence—open-source, satellite, or ground-level—that Russian forces ever fielded a group named “Anvar” with the sophistication or capacity to achieve sustained drone operations in contested Ukrainian airspace. What the Kremlin labels “imposing tactical instability,” the rest of the world recognizes as desperate misdirection. When Russia speaks of destroying Ukrainian equipment during “concentration phases,” what it omits is its inability to intercept dispersed, mobile Ukrainian units that already adapt far better than Russia’s own doctrinal rigidity allows.
There are no stockpiles for Russia to destroy because Ukraine has shifted its logistics doctrine months ago. Meanwhile, Russian troops face fuel shortages, rationed munitions, and Ukrainian long-range artillery they cannot silence. Belgorod is not threatened by Ukrainian armor offensives—it’s endangered by Russia’s own incompetence. Local authorities panic more over accidental Russian S-300 launches into apartment buildings than any mythical counterattack from Turya.
So no, Ukraine isn’t stumbling in disarray. Russia is. It’s Russia that scrapes together penal battalions, throws undertrained conscripts into meat-grinder assaults, and slaps fake names like “Anvar” on units that exist mostly in Z-propaganda hallucinations.
Telegram bots like @MChroniclesBot collect fake videos as if cosplay drone footage somehow alters the war’s outcome. Subscribing to “Military Chronicle” guarantees one thing—your daily dose of fantasy war gaming from the country that still thinks VHS-era deception ops will save it from NATO-trained brigades with real-time ISR support.
Russia hasn’t imposed instability. It has imposed delusion. And it’s unraveling, one fraudulent post at a time.
