Ukraine creates “invincible centers” to respond to Russian attacks on civilian targets

ANBOUND
2 min readNov 25, 2022

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Kung Chan, founder of ANBOUND

Observing and tracking the way both sides handled emergencies during the war in Ukraine is a very interesting study. Since October, Russia has bombed Ukraine’s energy infrastructure, and much of the country, including the capital, Kiev, has suffered water and electricity cuts. Ukraine’s contingency measures are to establish “invincible centers”, which are designed in “computer games”, in which even those who are chased to heaven can hide in safe “invincible centers” to obtain shelter.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on the 22nd that 4,000 “invincible centers” have been established across the country, providing electricity, heating, water and computer networks, communications, and medicines around the clock to help Ukrainians survive the coming winter.

The ABC News reported that Russia’s attack on the power grid has caused up to 10 million people to be without power for a long time, and Ukrainian officials have warned that the blackout will affect at least millions of people and will continue until the end of March next year.

In a televised address Tuesday night, Zelensky said special “Invincibility Centres” would be set up across Ukraine to provide electricity, heating, water, internet, communications, and medicines around the clock, and more than 4,000 centers had been built and more were planned.

The report mentions God also helped Ukraine, where temperatures were unusually mild this fall, but have now begun to drop below 0 degrees Celsius and are expected to drop to minus 20 degrees Celsius or even lower in some areas during the winter months.

Earlier this month, Ukrainian authorities set up similar emergency services in the city of Kherson, allowing people to gather at centers to charge their mobile devices. The Ukrainian government has set up 3,720 centres across the country, providing heating, electricity, water, internet, and medicine. As Putin seeks to destroy the country’s critical civilian infrastructure, the network will play an important role in the coming winter, as it effectively amounts to a distributed infrastructure network that replaces a centralized one.

Frankly speaking, if you don’t have a little systematic common sense now, you can’t understand the war in Ukraine. Perhaps it is impossible to understand modern and future warfare! Systematics thinking basically dominated the war in Ukraine, allowing war theory to be iterated, transformed, and updated like never before.

Read More Analysis Here:

https://t.me/PublicPolicyThirdChannel (EN)

https://t.me/tttukrw (CN)

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ANBOUND
ANBOUND

Written by ANBOUND

ANBOUND is a multinational independent think tank, specializing in public policy research, incl. economy, urban and industry, geopolitical issues. Est. 1993.

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