Rookie Russian soldier wildly flung from machine gun turret, nearly kills instructor in viral training video

Rookie Russian soldier wildly flung from machine gun turret, nearly kills instructor in viral training video

This is the insane moment a rookie Russian trooper is flung from a machine gun turret during training and almost kills his instructor.

The viral clip shows what appears to be a nervous Russian soldier preparing to fire a YakB-12.7 helicopter machine gun that was fixed on a stand.

The soldier pulls the trigger and is immediately spun around the turret before letting go and being flung out of view.

The machine gun eventually stops firing and comes to a standstill, and a man who appears to be an instructor resurfaces. Other soldiers come to check on him, and laughter can be heard in the background.

The clip comes as Russian casualties in Ukraine continue to mount.

The Russian soldier tried an old Soviet aviation machine gun, originally designed for a helicopter, that was mounted on a stand. East2west News
The YakB-12.7, a Soviet-designed four-barrel rotary 12.7 mm aircraft machine gun, went berserk. East2west News

Russian casualty figures are not made public, but a study by Mediazone, an independent Russian media outlet, found more than 350,000 Russian troops had been killed in Ukraine since the start of the war in 2022.

Moscow has long been trying to fill its military ranks after sustaining unprecedented casualty rates.

In May, Russian president Vladimir Putin signed a decree offering debt relief for new military sign-ons and an easier pathway to citizenship for wannabe citizens living in Transnistria, according to the ABC.

People who signed a contract with Russia’s defense ministry from May 1 would have debts of up to $130,267 (10 million roubles) wiped, according to a decree posted on the Kremlin’s website.


Here is the latest on the Russia-Ukraine conflict


Russian security affairs academic at the University College London Mark Galeotti said at the time Russia could not recruit soldiers fast enough.

“The financial cost is unsustainable, as is the human cost — Russia cannot replace recruits fast enough to keep the meat grinder fed,” he said.

He suggested Putin may be forced to launch another mass mobilization campaign to conscript Russian citizens.

It comes as Russia struck Ukraine with missiles, drones and guided bombs on Saturday, July 11, killing eight people and wounding dozens of others, officials said.

The soldier pulled the trigger and immediately spun around the turret before letting go and being flung out of view in the video. East2west News

Missiles also hit the capital Kyiv, wounding 12 people including two children, according to the city’s mayor.

AFP journalists in Kyiv heard two series of explosions in the early hours, with an air alert siren sounding minutes after the first blast.

Moscow has been firing missiles and drones at Kyiv almost daily since launching its invasion in February 2022.

But a recent spate of deadly attacks using dozens of ultra-fast ballistic missiles has put Ukraine’s air-defense system under strain.

The machine gun eventually stops firing and comes to a standstill, after nearly killing the instructor. East2west News

Russia launched more than 120 drones and 12 missiles during the night, half of them ballistic, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a post on X.

“Civilian infrastructure was hit even before the air raid alert was issued,” he added.

He posted videos of emergency teams working in the smoke and rubble of ruined buildings.

Apartment buildings, offices and a theological school were damaged in Kyiv, while recovery efforts were under way in other regions, he added.

A Russian “guided aerial bomb” strike on the northern city of Sumy killed five people, including a young girl, the city’s mayor Artem Kobzar said. One other person died in a Russian attack on the eastern town of Sloviansk, while a Russian missile strike on the southern city of Odesa killed two, authorities said.

It comes as US President Donald Trump gave Ukraine the green light to produce US Patriot air defense missiles.

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