On May 12, the aggressor’s Ministry of Defense announced that a Mi-28 helicopter “crashed” near the occupied Dzhankoy. The Russian occupiers stated that the “incident” allegedly occurred “during a training flight carried out according to the plan”, while it is stated that “the helicopter did not have ammunition”, that “the crew of the vehicle, two pilots, died” and that allegedly “destruction on there was no land.
The simplest response to this would be to state that now on the fake “memorial to the fallen helicopter pilots” that the Russian invaders wanted to make in the same Dzhankoy for those killed from the “39th Helicopter Regiment” there will be more names that the aggressor is still hiding.
On the other hand, in social networks, Crimean residents ask a simple question – “why didn’t they eject? The MI-28 has a crew rescue system. Shooting blades and inflatable ramps for crew members. All this in three seconds”. And here it is not the rhetorical question itself that is remarkable, but a commentary on it from a certain Viktor Prasolov, associated with the Sevastopol military hospital, the invaders “did not eject because they did not want to. Would that answer be okay?”.
Of course, all this can only be “urban gossip”, but it is noteworthy that the next day, May 13, Russia missed helicopters in the Bryansk Region and the aggressor is in no hurry to talk about a new “incident” there, especially considering the published videos.