u/Jackal8570

Introducing Operation Kudu: Supporting Ukraine. Australian War Memorial

Introducing Operation Kudu: Supporting Ukraine. Australian War Memorial

Introducing Operation Kudu: Supporting Ukraine, a new temporary exhibition at the Australian War Memorial.

In late 2023, the Memorial sent four staff members and an official war artist to the United Kingdom to document Australia’s role in Operation Kudu - the Australian Defence Force mission to train Ukrainian forces. The imagery and objects collected on this curatorial deployment now form the core of this new exhibition.

Senior Curator of Photographs, Film and Sound Sarah Kershaw, and Curator of Private Records Bryce Abraham, take us through this new contemporary exhibition.

Now open in the Anzac Hall Mezzanine until 9 September 2026.

youtu.be
u/Jackal8570 — 2 days ago

Check in on your crew. May our fallen brother/sister rest in peace.

We just lost another firefighter to suicide, and my heart is heavy.

Please, keep an eye on each other. And if you are the one drowning right now: Please do not be afraid to ask for help. It doesn't make you weak; it makes you human. You do not have to carry the weight of the job alone.

Rest in peace brother.

u/Jackal8570 — 3 days ago

A Russian ship carrying nuclear reactors sank. Where was it headed?

Believe Ukrainian intelligence may have had a hand in this as reported at the time.

A Russian "shadow fleet" vessel carrying submarine nuclear reactors sank in the Mediterranean Sea. CNN's Nick Paton Walsh reports on what happened where it was heading.

youtu.be
u/Jackal8570 — 4 days ago
▲ 141 r/espionage

‘Putin won’t last’: Russian agent who fled Moscow in a dead cow

It was twilight in September, a date chosen carefully as it is a time of year when the temperatures drop below freezing on the border between Siberia and Kazakhstan but the snow is yet to arrive, allowing an escapee to take cover among the grasses and crops which carpet the frontier in the early autumn.

The high-flying Federal Security Service (FSB) agent, dressed in a gas mask, a rubber suit and wrapped in tin foil, was running for his life from Vladimir Putin’s death squads – populated by a number of his former colleagues.

His escape from the cow, over the border and onto the back of a motorcycle driven by a former Soviet KGB spy, played out in the shadows of two of the biggest espionage cases in European legal history.

But Senin, 47, is no defector. At least, not in his telling.

Instead, he is what screenwriters would call a rogue agent: an innocent man, he claims, framed for a crime he did not commit, using a very particular set of skills acquired over a long and highly decorated career to stay a step ahead of his own side while trying to clear his name.

It is a story almost too extraordinary to believe. But much of his tale, including how Russian agents have pursued him and his family across Europe, is corroborated by court records and investigations by European security services seen by The Telegraph. Senin’s account, told here for the first time, sheds light on how the Kremlin has dodged repeated rounds of security crackdowns and sanctions to keep a network of spies dotted throughout the Continent – including agents, Senin claims, who have acquired British citizenship.

And it demonstrates how Russia abuses international legal systems to search for those it wants to “liquidate”.

youtube.com
u/Jackal8570 — 4 days ago

South Australian Fire service 'not fit for purpose' in regional SA, uncovered report finds

A report obtained via Freedom of Information found the Metropolitan Fire Service in SA would be "completely dysfunctional" if not for the "desire of the regional staff to make their communities safe".

In his report, a former Tasmania Fire Service chief highlighted poor morale among firefighters and problems with training, equipment and facilities.

abc.net.au
u/Jackal8570 — 4 days ago

Driver from a burning HUMVEE.

Driver from a Burning Humvee” offers a detailed breakdown of the operation from the perspective of the man behind the wheel, revealing the split-second decisions and determination that made the rescue possible.

youtu.be
u/Jackal8570 — 9 days ago

Training Ukrainian Pilots: RAF Flying Instructor

Proudly supporting Ukrainian pilots 🇬🇧 🇺🇦

Hear from one of the RAF’s flying instructors following the recent graduation of Ukrainian students from RAF-led Elementary Flying Training.

youtu.be
u/Jackal8570 — 9 days ago

SASR ‘lost one of its finest’: Soldier dies in parachute training

Just an FYI in case anyone served/crossed paths with him.

Rest In Peace

An experienced Australian special forces soldier has died after a midair collision during a high-altitude parachuting descent while helping instruct an army training exercise.

The soldier has been identified as Warrant Officer Second Class Lachlan Muddle, a 50-year-old SAS sniper, who was involved in instructing the course.

smh.com.au
u/Jackal8570 — 10 days ago

Dry grass crunches underfoot in another scorching hot day.

It could begin with lightning, a harvesting accident, or an escaped burn-off.

But what happens next happens quickly.

Fire hurtles towards the surrounding bush before a call is made to Triple Zero.

And this year is not like previous years.

There are fewer rural volunteer firefighters to pick up the phone.

Those that arrive are worn out from the last bushfire just a few months ago.

And hot wind carries the blaze through paddocks and bushland at record speed.

They are, in short, overpowered.

u/Jackal8570 — 15 days ago

The rise of drone warfare represents a challenge for countries all around the globe. What started in Ukraine has spread to the Middle East: Swarms of drones, accompanied by barrages of missiles, can overwhelm classic air defense systems, causing destruction, despair, and panic. But there are solutions to counter this threat, and we want to introduce them to you in this report.

u/Jackal8570 — 20 days ago

A fallen First World War aviator from the Australian Flying Corps now rests with his identity restored after lying for more than a century in an unnamed grave.

Lieutenant Charles Henry Martin, 23, a Sopwith F.1 Camel fighter pilot from 4 Squadron, Australian Flying Corps, died when his aircraft was presumably hit by a single round of anti-aircraft fire during an offensive patrol over German lines west of Lille on February 17, 1918.

His aircraft, Camel B5207, had been flying in formation with three other aircraft when it suddenly plummeted downwards, its wings folding back as the aircraft disintegrated. No clouds of anti-aircraft were seen, and the event was so remarkable it was later mentioned in the Official history of Australia in the War of 1914-1918.

Lieutenant Martin’s body was recovered by German troops, and he was given an honourable battlefield burial near the wreckage of his aircraft about 400 yards south of the village of Prémesques.

His personal effects, including his identity discs, were recovered by the Germans and forwarded to his family in Port Melbourne, Victoria, via the Red Cross. However, by the time his remains were recovered by a war graves unit after the armistice, there was no grave marker or identifying items left on his body, other than the insignia and tunic that identified him as an officer of the Australian Imperial Force (AIF).

Nameless, Lieutenant Martin was reinterred within an Imperial, later Commonwealth, War Grave at the Rue-David Military Cemetery in Fleubaix as an unknown Australian officer. A century passed, but the desire to return his name to him remained.

Lieutenant Martin’s AIF records contain the letters from family pleading to officials for updates. Via the Red Cross, the family also received descriptions of his crash from pilots who flew on patrol with him that day.

Unfortunately, no grave was found by the military authorities. They had presumed Lieutenant Martin was buried in a German cemetery. The lone grave at Prémesques had been discovered and the body moved, but owing to the immensity of the war graves task, the link was not made.

Perhaps the saddest and most poignant item that remained was a letter, dated February 18, 1918, from German infantry officer Lieutenant Waldemar Karstens. In a translated version of the letter, he tells the family how Lieutenant Martin’s aircraft had fallen the day before.

“The body will be buried here and respectfully cared for, the same as if he were a soldier of ours,” Lieutenant Karstens wrote.

“We take great pain in the loss of your dear son.”

The grave of the unknown Australian officer at Fleurbaix remained an enigma, as burials within Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) cemeteries cannot be disturbed for investigating teams to acquire DNA. Assiduous and painstaking desk research must be used to build a case for identity.

Aaron Pegram, manager of Unrecovered War Casualties – Army (UWC-A), said the case for identification of Lieutenant Martin was based on a review raised by CWGC following the identification of a number of candidates for the remains.

“Initially, there were five candidates for the identity – Lieutenant Martin and four AIF infantry officers,” Dr Pegram said.

“However, the infantry officers fell on the front line, and Prémesques had remained well behind the front line. There was no evidence that the Germans would bury frontline casualties so far away from the front, and Lieutenant Martin’s body was well documented as being laid to rest on his own a few hundred yards from the village.”

The case for Lieutenant Martin was strengthened by German archival records.

“The German regiment responsible for burying Charles made detailed notes in their unit records, including a sketch of the gravesite in relation to Prémesques,” Dr Pegram said.

“At the war’s end, the regiment’s unit records ended up in Belgium and are now held by the Royal Museum of the Armed Forces and Military History in Brussels.

“These documents were crucial in helping us identify Lieutenant Martin as the unknown officer.”

UWC-A investigated the case and made identification of Lieutenant Martin to Australian coronial standards. After more than a century of being missing in action, Lieutenant Martin had finally been identified. CWGC have now cut a new headstone, and the descendants of Lieutenant Martin will gather on April 24 to dedicate the new stone to their treasured ancestor.

Head of Corps Australian Army Aviation Brigadier Andrew Thomas said the remembrance of Lieutenant Martin had much to offer contemporary Army aviators.

“We have a history we can be proud of,” Brigadier Thomas said.

“The genesis of the Australian Army Aviation Corps was founded during the infancy of powered flight.”

Brigadier Thomas said the aircraft of that time were largely made of wood, wire and canvas, yet these machines were thrown into desperate air battles and against defended ground targets flown skilfully by pilots who were writing the first rules of battlefield aviation.

“It takes a special kind of person, a special kind of bravery, to master fear and to master the art of combat flying,” Brigadier Thomas said.

“This is a quality that continues in the Australian Army to this day.”

defence.gov.au
u/Jackal8570 — 25 days ago