In an incredible, bittersweet success story, Croatia has announced it has freed itself from the scourge of landmines, 31 years after the country’s civil war.

  • tal@lemmy.today
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    1 day ago

    On one hand, that’s good.

    On the other hand, it does provide some very sobering perspective on how hard it will be to demine Ukraine, a much larger task.

      • testaccount372920@piefed.zip
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        1 day ago

        Another positive perspective: it might take a long time but it’s possible to do it! It doesn’t have to lead to permanent scars.

      • tal@lemmy.today
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        13 hours ago

        It sounds like there’s a variant of the PFM-1, the small “butterfly” mine, that does self-destruct (the PFM-1S). I don’t believe that the larger ones generally do, though, and if so, a search doesn’t turn up material on them.

        My understanding is that the mine designs that Russia (and Ukraine) have in inventory tend to date to the Cold War, too.

        EDIT: And to be clear, even that mine is apparently on a maximum 40 hour timer. That is, that variant is going to be something used when you specifically want fairly short-term area denial, which isn’t going to be what most of the fortifications built are going to have set up.