mouse fever’ which includes symptoms such as bleeding eyes and vomiting.
According to the HUR or the Main Intelligence Directorate in the country, the disease has spread across Kupyansk among the Russian troops present there. At the time of the outbreak, the troops were facing shortages of winter supplies.
The disease is a kind of bacterial infection and spreads by direct contact between rodents and humans or even by breathing in their waste matter.
Mouse Fever can lead to symptoms such as body temperatures increasing to 40 degrees, extreme headache, diminished blood pressure, redness, rashes, nausea and vomiting many times in a day, and eye hemorrhages.
Russian commanders have allegedly denied the outbreak of the disease, regarding them as excuses to stay away from the war.
According to the directorate, the disease has decreased the ability of the Russian troops to fight to a greater extent. The command has ignored the complaints surrounding the fever by the army personnel in Russia, saying that the first stages of mouse fever are like that of the common flu and that it is just for avoiding participation in the war.
Following a failed counterattack against the Russian army in the Summer, the armed forces in Ukraine are shifting towards adopting a more defensive strategy. They are securing on-field defences.
Despite getting weapons supplied by the West, the latest assault by Ukraine has been resisted by the strong defenses in the Kremlin alongside the nearly 600-mile front line. It lacked important air cover.
According to Vladimir Putin, the Western allies will be