Russian Murmansk-BN EW jamming complexes take the globe under control
In April of 2019, Russia saw the deployment of Murmansk-BN complexes of radio-electronic suppression in the Kaliningrad region. Thanks to the move, the military command of the Russian army could hear and see a lot better in the Western direction, having thus left competitors behind in the development of the means of electronic warfare or EW jamming technology.
The Murmansk-BN is a strategic EW jamming system. No other country in the world has a system similar to this one. In our times, it is impossible to conduct either a global or a local conflict without means of electronic warfare. Many developed countries introduce artificial intelligence technology, while the role of man in hostilities decreases.
The Murmansk-BN complex performs the functions of radio intelligence intercepting enemy signals and causing interference at a distance of up to 8,000 km.
In a nutshell, Russia has taken control of military radio communications in Europe. If necessary, the Russian military command will be able to disrupt communication between ships, UAVs and different classes of enemy aircraft. The complex itself looks like seven 32 meter antennae aimed at the sky. The antennae are installed on military KamAZ trucks.
From the territory of the Kaliningrad region, Murmansk-BN will cover not only the whole of Europe, but also the entire central and northern Atlantic Ocean, all of Canada and half of the territory of the United States. The complex takes control of 90% of Africa in the southern direction, and in the south-east - all of China and India.
The deployment of Murmansk-BN complexes was not spontaneous. It was an asymmetric response to the American concept of the network-centric war.
Now, in order for the Americans to take advantage of the Network-centric War, they will have to use wired cable systems for communication, which seems nonsensical.
Check more of our videos on our video channel
Go to Pravda.Ru website to read articles that you can not read in Western publications
Murmansk Christian Church.wmv
This is a reading of a brief text about the vision of Murmansk Christian Church and Pastor Kevin Webster. All the video and still shots are from our church and from our city. The text is read by Pastor Kevin.
????????JERUSALEM & BETHLEHEM | The Church of Nativity, Wailing Wall, Golgotha (HOLY LAND VLOG PART 3)
Let's explore the Promise Land!
PLACES VISITED:
- Bethlehem : The Church of Nativity
- Jerusalem, Israel: Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Golgotha, Wailing / Western Wall
WATCH THE PREVIOUS HOLY LAND VLOGS
WATCH EGYPT PART 1
WATCH EGYPT PART 2:
BOOK THIS HOLY LAND TOUR WITH TRAVEL UNLIMITED 128 INC:
Follow Kristen on Instagram:
Subscribe and like the facebook page:
FOLLOW ME AROUND THE WORLD!
TRAVEL VLOG PLAY LIST
#holyland #jerusalem #bethlehem
Farewell to Russia - From Moscow to Murmansk
After four years in the country, Jelle Brandt Corstius says goodbye to his Russia. He visits people and places that are illustrative of the way he has come to know Russia. Thus, he takes us to the subway in Moscow, which forms a society in itself. With his landlord, Jelle visits a Russian Orthodox mass, a promise from long ago that Jelle finally redeemed. We are following him during a visit to a shelter for poor Russians, located directly across the mayor's house, who does everything he can to get rid of them, because they spoil his view.
In the first series: From Moscow to Magadan, Jelle Brandt Corstius traveled from West to East, focusing on the endless Russian countryside and the villages. In this second series: From Moscow to Murmansk, he travels from North to South along the largest river of Russia: the Volga River. A trip along the relatively unknown cities like Murmansk, Volgograd, Dzerzhinsk, Nizhny Novgorod, but also to Moscow and Saint Petersburg. Through topics like women in Russia, new censorship, the environmental problem from Russian perspective and the ideological vacuum, a relatively unknown side of Russia is once again exposed.
Presented by: Jelle Brandt Corstius
Final editor: Gert-Jan Hox
Directed by: Hans Pool
© VPRO August 2012
On VPRO broadcast you will find nonfiction videos with English subtitles, French subtitles and Spanish subtitles, such as documentaries, short interviews and documentary series.
This channel offers some of the best travel series from the Dutch broadcaster VPRO. Our series explore cultures from all over the world. VPRO storytellers have lived abroad for years with an open mind and endless curiosity, allowing them to become one with their new country. Thanks to these qualities, they are the perfect guides to let you experience a place and culture through the eyes of a local. Uncovering the soul of a country, through an intrinsic and honest connection, is what VPRO and its presenters do best.
So subscribe to our channel and we will be delighted to share our adventures with you!
more information at VPRObroadcast.com
Visit additional youtube channels bij VPRO broadcast:
VPRO Broadcast:
VPRO Metropolis:
VPRO Documentary:
VPRO World Stories:
VPRO Extra:
VPRO VG (world music):
VPRO 3voor12 (alternative music):
VPRO 3voor12 extra (music stories):
VPRObroadcast.com
English, French and Spanish subtitles by Ericsson and co-funded by the European Union.
Murmansk Church Choir St.Trifon. 2
HOME AND ABROAD
Church service in Moscow on eve of Kursk anniversary
Murmansk
1. Museum exterior
2. Anchor outside museum
3. Wall of photographs of sailors
4. Kursk model
5. Clothes
6. Picture of crew standing on boat
7. Picture of crew members
8. Various personal and family photos
9. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Aleksander Raube, Museum curator and photographer We wanted to show pictures of weddings, birthdays, family photos that would create a memorial to them so that they wouldn't be forgotten, I wanted to create a living memory of them.
Moscow
10. Pan from chandelier to church service
11. Close up of priest crossing himself
12. Close up on candle
13. Various of service
14. Close up of icon
15. Various of service
16. Woman crying
17. Church exterior, crosses on cupolas
18. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Viktor Losikov, Countera Admiral, Russian Navy Sailors all have a special bond, and I am here to pay my dues, respect and grief to my fellow servicemen, that is why I've come.
19. Wide of church
STORYLINE:
A year after one of the world's most tragic submarine accidents, Russians are still grieving for the 118 sailors that went down with the Kursk in the Barents Sea.
On August 12 last year, during what were to be routine naval exercises, Northern Fleet authorities lost contact with the nuclear submarine.
Only days later did they admit an explosion had taken place on board, killing most of the submariners instantly, the rest probably dying a few hours later.
Aleksander Raube, a photographer, decided to open a museum dedicated to the crew of the Kursk.
The pictures recall happier times and milestones in the sailors' lives.
At one of Moscow's oldest churches dedicated to the patron saint of soldiers, more than a hundred Muscovites paid their respects to the crew on Saturday.
Memorial services are scheduled for Sunday in the northern sea port Videyaeva, the Kursk's home base.
Hundreds of relatives of the crew have already arrived at the closed town to pay their respects.
You can license this story through AP Archive:
Find out more about AP Archive:
Unique Temple Devoted to All Faiths in Russia
In Russia, a unique temple is being built for all religions. Symbols of different faiths are displayed on top of the building, including Orthodox Christianity, Buddhism, Judaism and Islam. The temple is the brainchild of a man who claims he was visited by Jesus Christ. VOA's Deborah Block has more.
Originally published at -
Russian censorship - From Moscow to Murmansk
Censorship in Russia is not limited to journalism: in all possible areas people are threatened and opposed. In this episode of 'From Moscow to Murmansk' Jelle Brandt Corstius brings attention to censorship in Russia and (death) threats to critical journalists, human rights activists and dissidents.
Original title: New censorship
In the first series: From Moscow to Magadan, Jelle Brandt Corstius traveled from West to East, focusing on the endless Russian countryside and the villages. In this second series: From Moscow to Murmansk, he travels from North to South along the largest river of Russia: the Volga River. A trip along the relatively unknown cities like Murmansk, Volgograd, Dzerzhinsk, Nizhny Novgorod, but also to Moscow and Saint Petersburg. Through topics like women in Russia, new censorship, the environmental problem from Russian perspective and the ideological vacuum, a relatively unknown side of Russia is once again exposed.
Presented by: Jelle Brandt Corstius
Final editor: Gert-Jan Hox
Directed by: Hans Pool
© VPRO August 2012
On VPRO broadcast you will find nonfiction videos with English subtitles, French subtitles and Spanish subtitles, such as documentaries, short interviews and documentary series.
This channel offers some of the best travel series from the Dutch broadcaster VPRO. Our series explore cultures from all over the world. VPRO storytellers have lived abroad for years with an open mind and endless curiosity, allowing them to become one with their new country. Thanks to these qualities, they are the perfect guides to let you experience a place and culture through the eyes of a local. Uncovering the soul of a country, through an intrinsic and honest connection, is what VPRO and its presenters do best.
So subscribe to our channel and we will be delighted to share our adventures with you!
more information at VPRObroadcast.com
Visit additional youtube channels bij VPRO broadcast:
VPRO Broadcast:
VPRO Metropolis:
VPRO Documentary:
VPRO World Stories:
VPRO Extra:
VPRO VG (world music):
VPRO 3voor12 (alternative music):
VPRO 3voor12 extra (music stories):
VPRObroadcast.com
English, French and Spanish subtitles by Ericsson and co-funded by the European Union.
75th Anniversary of the arrival in Murmansk - Commander AJ ‘Nat’ Gould, Royal - Short
75 years ago, on August 31, 1941, in Arkhangelsk moored transports the first allied convoy received the code name Dervish, with military supplies for fighting with Nazi Germany, the Soviet Union.August 12, 1941 Dervish, which consisted of six British and one Danish ship, secretly left the English Liverpool. The holds were mines, bombs, small arms, food, medicine, wool and much needed in our industry rubber. In addition, transports were carrying trucks and 16 Hurricane fighters disassembled. All this is equally distributed to the courts, to the loss of any of them did not lead to the complete destruction of any kind of cargo. Escorts were air defense ship, the destroyer, and five armed trawlers. The caravan went to Iceland. After a brief parking in hawala Fjord, where the escort trawlers replaced destroyers and minesweepers, 21 August Dervish headed for Archangel. Out in the ocean, and a cover unit, which accounted for an aircraft carrier, two cruisers and three destroyers.Going first allied convoys in the Soviet port took ten days and ended safely. Arkhangelsk, in spite of the alarming situation on the Soviet-German front, the Allies organized an enthusiastic meeting.Reverse allied convoy, joined by eight Soviet ships, left our port on 29 September. On the same day from Iceland came next, to get to Arkhangelsk on 11 October. Prior to January 1942 and Arkhangelsk Molotovsk (now Severodvinsk) took seven convoys composed of 56 transports. In the future, the main place of their unloading became Murmansk.All the years of the Great Patriotic War in the northern ports of the Soviet Union went 41 Allied convoy of 811 ships, of which achieved the goal of 720, 58 were killed during the transition and 33 for various reasons, we have returned to the departure ports. The 37 reverse convoys of 715 courts in England and Iceland profits 680. 29 enemy transports sunk, eight were forced to turn back. The bulk of the lost transports owned by the United States and England, only nine went under the Soviet flag.Total Arctic convoys delivered to our country of about 4 million tons of cargo, which accounted for 22.7% of the total supply of the Western allies.
The Island of Valaam. / Остров Валаам.
Valaam is the island in Republic of Karelia of Russia, located in the Northern part of the largest freshwater lakes in Europe - Ladoga, it is the largest island in the Valaam archipelago. On the island there is the village of Valaam, and the monument of Russian architecture - the Valaam monastery, founded before the baptism of Russia, in the year 960, the monk Sergius and Herman, the Greek Holy monks. Transfiguration monastery became the spiritual center of Ladoga lands. It is believed that in ancient times on the island, was located the main temple of Veles (or Volos) and Perun, who were the main deities for the Gentiles living close. The monastic tradition says that the Holy Apostle Andrew, enlightener of the Scythians and the Slavic peoples, moving along the route from the Varangians to the Greeks, blessed of cross the mountain on the island. In the 15th century the monastery was called the Great Lavra or the Northern Athos. Here was the center of world Orthodoxy and writing of books. By the early 16th century in the monastery lived 600 monks. Now in the monastery about two hundred inhabitants. Life revived in All saints, the Baptist, St. Nicholas, Svyatoostrovsky, Sergievsky sketes.
Period 1839-1917 is the heyday of the monastery. In 1989 on December 13, the day of memory of St. Andrew, when the island came six monks, the monastery began the process of revival. And 16 years later, in 2005, was first heard 1000-pound bell Andrew, mounted on the bell tower in the monastery in the framework of the restoration of an ancient belfry. The feast of the Nativity of the blessed virgin Mary September 21, 2008 Patriarch Alexy II consecrated the St. Vladimir skete on Valaam island and conducted the first divine Liturgy in the temple. Resurrection skete, located above Big Nikon Bay, on the mountain, was built in the early twentieth century in the place where according to tradition St. The Apostle Andrew erected a stone cross. Valaam island attracts every year thousands of tourists. The reason - the Valaam Islands have a unique nature, pine forests on the cliffs, warm and quiet inland lakes, the Spaso-Preobrazhensky Valaam monastery. During its formation, the monks brought the land, seeds and seedlings of plants from different parts of our country. For such a Northern location is not usual to see some trees and grass. The age of some of them is over three hundred years. The work of the Valaam monks are so fundamental that some areas are truly hand-made. Balaam - the natural reserve, a unique monument of Park art. There are more than 480 species of plants. The island was visited repeatedly by emperors Alexander I, Alexander II, and other members of the imperial family and also Tchaikovsky and Mendeleyev.
The present life of the monastery, another indication that faith invariably raises and restores the monastery from the ruins. So it was throughout the history of Valaam barbarous raids of the Swedes in ancient times, the bombing and the uncertain fate of the monastery during World War 2, it complete, it would seem that the devastation in the era of atheism – monastic life always has returned to these shores.
Russia experiences an unseasonably warm winter
AP Television
File - Moscow Russia -12 March 2006
1. Wide shot of Saint Peter and Paul Serbian Church in Moscow
2. Wide shot of people on church porch in the snow
File - Moscow Russia 05 March 2006
3. Wide of Kremlin snowy exterior
Moscow, Russia - November 30, 2006
4. Wide shot of White House building with green lawn in the foreground
5. Mid of couple sitting on a bench
6. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Vox Pop, No name available,Murmansk resident:
(Global warming) frightens me, actually it doesn't. Because we live in Murmansk and if it will be warmer (as a a result of global warming) out there we would be very glad. That is why we are not frightened of global warming.
7. Wide of woman walking, talking on the phone
8. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Vox Pop, No name available, Moscow resident:
There's going to be blurred summer and blurred winter (as a result of global warming). There will be snow with rain and warm temperature during the winter, and it's not going to be warm as it used to be during the summer, it will snow.
9. Wide of workers working on a green lawn
10. Wide of woman standing next to a decorated christmas tree
11. Mid of people crossing the road
12. Wide of Kremlin walls
13. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Dmitry Kiktyov, deputy director of Russian Weather Service:
We feel it is rather warm in Moscow at the moment, but don't explain it all with global warming. Global warming is a tendency which shows itself in several dozen of years, and there are things which are happening now. The current warmth in Moscow is a result of a moist, warm air from the northern Atlantics.
14. Wide of Dmitry Kiktyov speaking to his colleague
15. Mid shot of russian weather service worker pointing at computer screen.
LEADIN
Russia has been experiencing an unseasonably warm winter.
The record breaking temperatures in Moscow have seen green grass lawns and flowers blooming early.
STORYLINE
Russia is famous for its harsh winters.
Temperatures in Moscow have bene known to drop as low as minus 30 degrees celsius,
But this year there's been less snow than usual.
Temperatures in Moscow have reached record highs of 7 degrees celsius (44.6� Fahrenheit).
(In the western region of Kaliningrad (Russia) the warm weather has caused many plants to bloom early).
Deputy director of the Russian Weather Service, Dmitry Kiktyov, says the current weather conditions are not a result of global warming but a result of moist warm air from the Northern Atlantic.
Many Russian citizens remain unconcerned about the recent warm temperatures.
A resident from the northern fishing town of Murmansk (Russia) says she is not frightened by the effects of global warming and would welcome the warmer weather.
But the unseasonably mild temperatures aren't set to last.
The Hydro-meteorological centre of Russia predicts that from the start of December temperatures will drop and Russia will experience severe, cold weather.
Keyword-climate change
You can license this story through AP Archive:
Find out more about AP Archive:
Church service in Moscow on eve of Kursk anniversary
Murmansk
1. Museum exterior
2. Anchor outside museum
3. Wall of photographs of sailors
4. Kursk model
5. Clothes
6. Picture of crew standing on boat
7. Picture of crew members
8. Various personal and family photos
9. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Aleksander Raube, Museum curator and photographer We wanted to show pictures of weddings, birthdays, family photos that would create a memorial to them so that they wouldn't be forgotten, I wanted to create a living memory of them.
Moscow
10. Pan from chandelier to church service
11. Close up of priest crossing himself
12. Close up on candle
13. Various of service
14. Close up of icon
15. Various of service
16. Woman crying
17. Church exterior, crosses on cupolas
18. SOUNDBITE (Russian) Viktor Losikov, Countera Admiral, Russian Navy Sailors all have a special bond, and I am here to pay my dues, respect and grief to my fellow servicemen, that is why I've come.
19. Wide of church
STORYLINE:
A year after one of the world's most tragic submarine accidents, Russians are still grieving for the 118 sailors that went down with the Kursk in the Barents Sea.
On August 12 last year, during what were to be routine naval exercises, Northern Fleet authorities lost contact with the nuclear submarine.
Only days later did they admit an explosion had taken place on board, killing most of the submariners instantly, the rest probably dying a few hours later.
Aleksander Raube, a photographer, decided to open a museum dedicated to the crew of the Kursk.
The pictures recall happier times and milestones in the sailors' lives.
At one of Moscow's oldest churches dedicated to the patron saint of soldiers, more than a hundred Muscovites paid their respects to the crew on Saturday.
Memorial services are scheduled for Sunday in the northern sea port Videyaeva, the Kursk's home base.
Hundreds of relatives of the crew have already arrived at the closed town to pay their respects.
You can license this story through AP Archive:
Find out more about AP Archive:
Urban Exploration: All Saints Church
Where Elvi production presents Urban Exploration, ANOTHER EUROPEAN URBEX TRIP at theAll saints church.
THANKS TO ALL THE EXPLORERS! Music by Uzbazur 345 Video by Elvira Macchiavelli
European Urbex trip edition.
Visit also our fan page on FB. Uzbazur345 and LIKE Where Elvi production urbex Trip of FB.
О, исполненный благодати- O full of grace
О, исполненный благодати, Ты еси радость всей твари
Объединенный хор Троице-Сергиевой Лавры. Сергей Лавры и Московской Духовной
Академии и семинарии под руководством архимандрита Матфея.
Here I present the Greek Chant O full of Peace, Thou art the joy of creation. This hymn dedicated to the theotokos is harmonised by Deacon, Sergei Zosimovich Trubachev.
Sung by The Choir of the Trinity St Sergius Lavra & the
Moscow Theological Academy & Seminary.
Directed by Archimandrite Matfei
Accompanying photographs of the Variaamo-Hutynsky Monastery, Khutyn, Novgorod.
RUSSIA: MURMANSK: KURSK SUBMARINE DISASTER: MOURNING
Russian/Nat
XFA
Stunned Russians mourned on Tuesday for the 118 sailors who died on the Kursk submarine.
Distraught relatives arrived in Murmansk by train, many demanding to be taken to the spot in the Barents Sea where the bodies of the crew were still trapped in the wreck.
Prayers for the dead were offered at churches in Murmansk and across Russia as plans were announced for a national day of mourning.
The Russian media on Tuesday voiced the outrage of many that their government left it to Norway to announce that all of the sailors aboard the Kursk were dead.
President Vladimir Putin's administration has been hit by a wave of public anger over its slow, often bungled handling of the rescue effort.
People still think that perhaps some of the trapped sailors could have been saved had Russia asked for help from abroad immediately after the accident.
The national newspaper Izvestia said in an editorial, 'It's time for answers.'
Dazed, mourning relatives who gathered in the northern port of Murmansk demanded the navy take them to where the Kursk lay in 108-metre (350-foot) deep water.
According to Russian news reports, the navy was considering taking the relatives on a hospital ship that was standing by in Murmansk.
Russian officials were considering how to recover the bodies of the crew, including using divers.
It would be very difficult to manoeuvre the bodies, many of them probably very badly damaged, through the submarine's narrow internal hatches and out of the small escape hatch at the rear.
Norway was considering a request from Moscow for assistance in recovering the bodies.
SOUNDBITE: (Russian)
We shouldn't be looking to blame the president or the Admiral (Popov - leader of the Northern Fleet). It was not their fault. It was whoever is responsible for our fleet being in such bad condition.
SUPER CAPTION: Vox pop
SOUNDBITE: (Russian)
I think that the government is to blame. If it had asked for help, as the British suggested, I think we could have saved them. It took two days to open those hatches. I think we could have saved some, even if it was just one person, and not lost the whole crew, if we hadn't waited until the last minute, more than a week.
SUPER CAPTION: Vox pop
You can license this story through AP Archive:
Find out more about AP Archive:
RUSSIAN MILITARY IN Moscow
via YouTube Capture
Behind The Scene of Victory Parade in Moscow, 2013. Real Russia ep.46
TV Stations broadcast Victory Parade in Moscow almost all over the World and most of people outside of Russia have seen it at least once but not so many knows what happen behind the scene of Victory Parade on a Red Square.
There way more people in Moscow who wants to see Victory Parade in live than the Red Square can afford. For this reason most of people only have a chance to look at it from behind the scene. For example, on Sofiyskaya Enbankment which is one other side of Kremlin Enbankment where all the soldiers and military vehicles goes after they will cross the Red Square.
So, once we are not as big yet, we were not allowed to be and film on the Red Square itself and to film the best frames there, but we've been just in a common public crowd on Sofiyskaya Enbankment and watched everything behind the scene.
Thus, this video is mostly will give you an imaginations regarding what happens around the Red Square during Victory Parade, this is something you never see on TV.
And if you want to look just a full tv version of Victory Parade itself, we recommend you to watch it at RT channel on YouTube, they have a version with English commentaries.
#russia #moscow #victoryday
Russian Cruiser Aurora - St. Petersburg, Russia - 4K
Russian Cruiser Aurora - St. Petersburg, Russian Federation
Aurora is a 1900 Russian protected cruiser, currently preserved as a museum ship in Saint Petersburg. Aurora was one of three Pallada-class cruisers, built in Saint Petersburg for service in the Pacific. All three ships of this class served during the Russo-Japanese War. Aurora survived the Battle of Tsushima and was interned under US protection in the Philippines, and eventually returned to the Baltic Fleet.
Filmed in 4k.
YouTube - RUSSIAN NAVY.mp4
History Channel
Valaam: Soul journey - RT, James Brown
On an island far from the mainland, the Valaam monastery is one of the Russian Orthodox Church's holiest and most isolated sites. Join James Brown as he meets the monks, mucks in with the volunteers, and encounters a special group of children in one of most spiritual places in the country. For more of James's adventures around Russia follow him on Twitter @jimbrownjourno.