This should clear out most of the Banished. Give it a few seconds and help will come from the sky all explosives rain down on the Banished below. You'll want to run along the flat surface toward this wreckage that has the final of three buttons. Now to keep heading east and get on top of the ruined UNSC ship.
If you scan, you'll see the button highlighted. Keep moving as well as you can through the underside of the ship and fling yourself around the dead end to this location far above a Banished door that sits below in the cliffside. On your way over to this spot you may get a warning countdown that you're going out of bounds. Use it to scale the corner of the wall in the ruins of the UNSC ship, just by the first button. Press it!įrom there, you're going to need to work on your Grapplingshot skills. This is between the cliffside and the Banished structure you emerged from. The holiday marks the 30th anniversary of the founding of the armed forces of Ukraine following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.This Easter egg involves a strange red Banished button you'll find next to a dead Marine.
NATO’s leadership has been supportive but said Ukraine must carry out defense reforms and tackle corruption first. Russia has described Ukrainian membership in NATO as a “red line,” while Ukraine has urged the military alliance to accelerate its entry and said Moscow had no right to veto such a move. Presidential Press Service Handout/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock US officials have expressed fears that Russia could launch an invasion of Ukrainian territory as soon as early next year. Ukraine’s military brandished weapons in an attempt to flex its power. While there, Zelensky talked up the country’s relationship with NATO countries that have provided Ukraine with weapons and other military supplies. The department added that Blinken and Zelensky agreed on the need for “full restoration of Ukrainian sovereignty over its internationally recognized borders” - including the province of Crimea, which was annexed by Russia in 2014.īlinken and Zelensky spoke ahead of President Biden’s much-anticipated Tuesday video call with Russian President Vladimir Putin.Īccording to Reuters, Zelensky marked the public holiday by meeting with soldiers in the war-torn Donetsk region before flying on to the northeastern city of Kharkiv. Vladimir Sindeyeve/NurPhoto/Shutterstock Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the country’s military is prepared “to defend the freedom and sovereignty of the state from the Russian aggressor.” Presidential Press Service Handout/EPA One Ukrainian serviceman poses with an American armored vehicle. On Monday, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke to Zelensky by phone and restated America’s “unwavering support for Ukraine’s sovereignty, independence, and territorial integrity in the face of Russian aggression,” according to the State Department. US officials have expressed fears that Russia could launch an invasion of Ukrainian territory as soon as early next year and deploy up to 175,000 troops in the effort. The exhibition came on the same day as the publication by Fox News of satellite images showing tens of thousands of Russian forces gathering at several key strategic points along the Ukrainian border. “The Ukrainian army … is confident in its strength and able to thwart any conquest plans of the enemy.” “The servicemen of the Armed Forces of Ukraine continue to fulfill their most important mission – to defend the freedom and sovereignty of the state from the Russian aggressor,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a statement obtained by Reuters. Ukraine celebrated its Day of the Armed Forces holiday Monday with a showy display of American armored vehicles and weapons in an attempt to flex its power as tensions escalate with neighboring Russia. Russia calls on Ukraine civilians to join their army as border fighting loomsīoris Johnson to fly to Ukraine, hold crisis talks with Putin Russia dismisses claims it is ready to invade Ukraine as ‘ridiculous’ UN panel to confront Russia as US considers vote on the ‘mother of all’ sanctions