The Kremlin is buying engines for its helicopters / Collage 24 channel The occupiers are negotiating with a number of countries to which they exported their weapons. Russia wants to use it in the war against Ukraine. The world's second largest arms exporter, the aggressor country, is hastily trying to buy back previously sold weapons from its partners. According to media reports, Russia is negotiating with its long-time clients who have been buying planes, missiles and air defenses from it for years. Back in April 2022, the Russian delegation, during a visit to Cairo, asked Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to sell the Kremlin a hundred engines from Russian helicopters. It is known that Sisi agreed and the delivery of the agreed upon engines will begin in December of this year. Moscow is holding similar conversations with representatives of Pakistan, Belarus and Brazil. From them, she also first of all wants to buy back engines for helicopters lost by the Russian army at the beginning of the war. In addition, journalists note that the Kremlin is forced to sacrifice income from the sale of its weapons for the war in Ukraine. Thus, weapons that should be sold to India and Armenia are now being sent to the front. The Pentagon released a report saying that China, even almost at the beginning of a full-scale war, is actively providing military assistance to Russia. From March 2022 to 2023, Chinese firms exported UAVs and their components worth over $12 million to the aggressor country. China also supplied the Kremlin with small arms, spare parts, navigation equipment and protective equipment. Another sponsor of Russian aggression is North Korea. Since August 2023, it could supply Russia with more than a million artillery shells. In addition, Moscow could receive short-range ballistic missiles from Kim Jong-in. The Kremlin lacks engines
China supplies weapons to the aggressor country
From the world one by one: Russia is begging other countries for weapons that it itself once sold to them
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