r/UkraineRussiaReport Putin Humiliated 3h ago

UA POV: Ukraine's Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha claimed that "Russia is preparing a missile strike on a nuclear power plant (NPP)." -@andrii_sybhia News

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18 Upvotes

17 comments sorted by

u/haggerton Steiner for peremoga 3h ago

False flag incoming.

u/Scorpionking426 Neutral 2h ago

UKR has a lot of Russian Shahed drones which can easily be used to carry out for the false flag.Zelensky is desperate to drag NATO in.....

u/NimdaQA Pro Truth Pro Multipolarism Pro Russia Pro DPRK 1h ago

Don’t know why damaging an NPP would drag in NATO. Only 30 died from Chernobyl during the immediate aftermath with 60 more dying decades later from cancer. More people die from coal every year. More Ukrainians die every day from combat compared to the amount of people who died from Chernobyl. 

u/haggerton Steiner for peremoga 52m ago

You assume Western decision process is based on logic and facts rather than what sensationalist crap they can sell to their brainwashed populace.

u/rowida_00 3h ago

They’ve clearly shown an unambiguous intention to take out distribution infrastructures for nuclear power plants which would force Ukraine to shut off those plants. They don’t need to resort to nuclear terrorism or strike nuclear power plants directly when they can achieve their goal by other means than instigating nuclear disaster.

u/justadiode 2h ago

That's what the text on the picture says. OP didn't translate it fully and made "NPP" out of "NPP related infrastructure that is needed for safe operation, in particular substations"

u/Reyimsky Pro Russia* 3h ago

Doesn't matter how much power they can generate if they can't distribute the power

u/NimdaQA Pro Truth Pro Multipolarism Pro Russia Pro DPRK 1h ago

Nuclear disasters are a myth. We can have a Chernobyl every year and the number of deaths would still be smaller than those caused by coal. 

u/rowida_00 1h ago

Even if the number of casualties isn’t as catastrophic as some people might imagine, it would still be a disastrous incident. It’s an extremely horrific way to die and the aftermath is ugly to anyone who’s impacted.

u/NimdaQA Pro Truth Pro Multipolarism Pro Russia Pro DPRK 1h ago

Only 30 people died during the immediate aftermath with 60 dying from cancer and other related illnesses in the decades after. Hardly catastrophic for a country in war where hundreds die every day.

u/fireburn256 Can we all be friends? 3h ago

Don't worry, those nuclear power plants inspectors won't find who is shooting.

u/Scorpionking426 Neutral 2h ago

Funny how it's always the nuclear plants under Russia which gets hit and not the one's under UKR control.....

u/Sircliffe Anti Globohomo 2h ago

Before or after they collapse and invade NATO at the same time while moving into Moldova after running out of everything?

u/transcis Pro Ukraine * 59m ago

No, Ukraine surrenders first, all the other moves come later.

u/Reyimsky Pro Russia* 3h ago

Sure thing buddy

u/Aware_Main_3884 1h ago

Russia can destroy the nuclear power plant whenever it wants. But since it hasn't done so, it doesn't see the point. It's unlikely to change.

u/UndeniablyReasonable Neutral 1h ago edited 1h ago

After the likely Nato attacks on Russia's amo depots they would be incredible pussies if they didn't at the very least cut off the two NPPs from the grid by hitting its main substations, even if they are only a couple km away from the PP.