<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><urlset xmlns="http://www.sitemaps.org/schemas/sitemap/0.9" xmlns:news="http://www.google.com/schemas/sitemap-news/0.9" xmlns:xhtml="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xmlns:image="http://www.google.com/schemas/sitemap-image/1.1" xmlns:video="http://www.google.com/schemas/sitemap-video/1.1"><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/about/instance/home</loc></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/browse?scope=local</loc></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/331B3Q4yCTaNZ2NZxhyXpi</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/22abe0ab-b756-49cc-ab61-6d3ce2e43245.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Wings of the Red Star E1 - Supersonic Transport</video:title><video:description>Wings of the Red Star E1 - Supersonic Transport</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/107a2323-e3d9-45cf-9e9d-4c1a2c3d6ea3/b7c8951c-41d4-4216-a522-54af51b31d35-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/331B3Q4yCTaNZ2NZxhyXpi</video:player_loc><video:duration>2518</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>2</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-04T21:58:19.928Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/bCEJrSgifpsKEwHKPFVXM7</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/70cf73f3-53d3-4ad1-947c-d30822bc731a.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Wings of the Red Star E2 - Duel Over Korea</video:title><video:description>Wings of the Red Star E2 - Duel Over Korea</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/561a081a-a386-44ca-bbcb-a497a71a1e4c/b961f8fb-050d-45e5-9a22-3b8ab6949c95-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/bCEJrSgifpsKEwHKPFVXM7</video:player_loc><video:duration>2598</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>0</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-04T22:02:01.438Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/6xzN782Gz7fPEaYW7BL5fe</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/415cf17b-95d3-4755-88dc-5f7e35c71eda.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Wings of the Red Star E3 - The Great Patriotic War</video:title><video:description>Wings of the Red Star E3 - The Great Patriotic War</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/2ce693b8-524a-4c1d-a5d3-5494d8381019/ce90ec45-9316-4b2f-93b7-016e2edaa4a2-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/6xzN782Gz7fPEaYW7BL5fe</video:player_loc><video:duration>2988</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>0</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-04T22:00:27.200Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/gwNSXLP2Q2UqZzmvDkbWLf</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/7ebf63f0-29d4-4434-bc75-d048757e636d.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Wings of the Red Star E4 - The Flying Tank</video:title><video:description>Wings of the Red Star E4 - The Flying Tank</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/7dc64872-3f55-4e30-9760-f14f11040fbe/39edc5fe-65e9-4813-ad64-98e151602224-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/gwNSXLP2Q2UqZzmvDkbWLf</video:player_loc><video:duration>2686</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>0</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-04T22:05:25.904Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/gfKEpZ6BUu6nAbMz2C5hdz</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/5aba137b-7f62-4a04-904b-bdd1e8daf9ed.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Wings of the Red Star E5 - The Phantom's Foe</video:title><video:description>Wings of the Red Star E5 - The Phantom's Foe</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/7b886689-1b6c-4570-aa09-233d8abc6a59/5d52772a-8c2d-4a99-8936-3e8444855afd-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/gfKEpZ6BUu6nAbMz2C5hdz</video:player_loc><video:duration>2599</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>0</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T12:40:07.205Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/oUQzTJENXj8Ga54Gqs8GcR</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/64951b39-28a3-4ddc-a922-7c2684b7e628.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Wings of the Red Star E6 - The Swing Wing Solution</video:title><video:description>Wings of the Red Star E6 - The Swing Wing Solution</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/b989aaf0-17b7-4ca5-9ca8-ea43f76b0187/e003c18d-7982-4313-bf10-da4d073f1a9a-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/oUQzTJENXj8Ga54Gqs8GcR</video:player_loc><video:duration>2498</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>0</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T12:46:48.514Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/jbL8JXDnSdQKh1YUCYXSbG</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/72844fb6-b337-4bf7-bd9a-1946c0e21a22.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Wings of the Red Star E7 - The Foxbat Deception</video:title><video:description>1971, Western intelligence analysts panic.
A new Soviet fighter appears over the Sinai. It flies at Mach 3.2. It climbs to 80,000 feet. It carries missiles the size of telephone poles. NATO gives it a fearsome name: Foxbat. The West believes the USSR has leapfrogged American aviation.
They were wrong. The MiG‑25 was not a dogfighter. It was not an interceptor. It was a high‑speed bluff – built from steel, powered by thirsty turbojets, and incapable of turning. The deception lasted until September 6, 1976, when a Soviet pilot landed one in Japan.</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/934521bd-0c39-4e3c-9b0a-2a946a55350c/f831c133-52ad-4c12-ad6b-e8620c504743-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/jbL8JXDnSdQKh1YUCYXSbG</video:player_loc><video:duration>2550</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>3</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T12:48:18.223Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/qUmKqFwHdARq7GH7vHANEU</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/8799f0c6-1e57-4aa2-8b5f-aac1271700c5.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Wings of the Red Star E8 - The Last Generation</video:title><video:description>The 1970s. The Soviet Union is losing the air war.
American F‑15 Eagles and F‑16 Fighting Falcons have rewritten the rules of dogfighting – energy maneuverability, fly‑by‑wire, look‑down/shoot‑down radar. The MiG‑25 and MiG‑23 cannot keep up. Moscow demands a response: two new fighters, built from a blank sheet of paper, that will finally match – and beat – the West.

The result: the Su‑27 Flanker and the MiG‑29 Fulcrum. They are the last true Soviet fighters. And they arrived just as the Red Star was falling.

In this episode:

⭐ The Su‑27 Flanker – The answer to the F‑15. We break down its massive airframe, its fly‑by‑wire system, its helmet‑mounted sight, and the legendary Oleg Tsoy cobra maneuver (Pugachev's Cobra). Why the Flanker was so good that China cloned it (J‑11) and Russia still flies it today.

⭐ The MiG‑29 Fulcrum – The lightweight counterpart to the F‑16. We examine its twin engines, its insane low‑speed agility, and its fatal flaw: short range. How the Fulcrum became the export king – but a logistical nightmare.

The Collapse – The Soviet Union falls in 1991. The production lines keep running, but the money stops. Pilots aren't paid. Fuel is rationed. Entire regiments of Flankers and Fulcrums sit idle. We trace how these brilliant machines survived the 1990s – and who flew them after the USSR died.</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/c9aaca6d-4fba-4fea-a24a-102727248948/33e9a613-1595-42b0-b79f-920e5d8b2e26-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/qUmKqFwHdARq7GH7vHANEU</video:player_loc><video:duration>2743</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>1</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T12:51:54.434Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/cEJieKe24WjQ4bW2gZEk7V</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/652f2a12-46ec-4176-a469-1454caed6434.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Wings of the Red Star E9 - Tu 95 The Nuclear Bear</video:title><video:description>1952. The Soviet Union needs a bomber that can reach America.
The B-52 is on the drawing board in the US, powered by eight jet engines. The Soviets have no reliable long‑range jet engine yet. Their solution? A radical design with four massive turboprops driving contra‑rotating propellers – producing supersonic tip speeds and a sound that NATO would learn to fear.
The result is the Tu‑95 Bear. It is loud. It is slow. It is still flying 70 years later.

In this episode:

🐻 The Engine That Refused to Die – The Kuznetsov NK‑12 turboprop – the most powerful propeller engine ever built. We explain why contra‑rotating props create that distinctive howl, how the Bear can fly 9,000 miles without refueling, and why turboprops actually beat early jets in fuel efficiency.

☢️ The Nuclear Mission – The Tu‑95 was designed to carry thermonuclear bombs to American cities. We trace its intended one‑way missions over the North Pole, its terrifying low‑level penetration tactics, and the moment a Bear dropped the Tsar Bomba (the largest nuclear device ever detonated).

🛰️ The Spy Bear – The Tu‑95 became more than a bomber. The Tu‑142 antisubmarine variant, the Tu‑95RTs maritime reconnaissance, and the Tu‑95MS cruise missile carrier. How these old airframes became the backbone of Soviet naval intelligence.

🇷🇺 NATO's Wake‑Up Call – Cold War intercepts: F‑4 Phantoms, F‑15s, and F‑16s escorting Bears off the coast of Alaska, Iceland, and Norway. Rare audio of RAF pilots calling out "Bear, Bear, Bear – we have visual." We interview a former Norwegian F‑16 pilot who intercepted Bears in the 1980s.

🔥 Still Flying in 2025 – The Tu‑95MS is still in Russian service, launching Kh‑101 cruise missiles at targets in Ukraine. We examine how a 70‑year‑old propeller bomber remains relevant – and why Russia refuses to retire the Bear.

Plus: 3D animation of the NK‑12 engine and contra‑rotating propellers, cockpit footage of a Tu‑95 takeoff (the vibration is real), and the story of the ...</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/5e7cdae7-1d42-4d10-8ff6-15a647642f5d/7e5e9f5e-348a-417d-9aba-2e2827967f76-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/cEJieKe24WjQ4bW2gZEk7V</video:player_loc><video:duration>2950</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>1</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T12:54:07.764Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/trw7kxLDihNsrMKAwvWQKN</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/17513e05-db4a-46e7-980b-a12a35e4dabf.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Wings of the Red Star E10 -  Tu-22M The Backfire Bomber</video:title><video:description>The 1960s. The Soviet Navy is losing the carrier race.
America builds supercarriers – floating airfields that can project power anywhere. The Soviet Union has no answer. Until they weaponize speed.
The Tu-22M Backfire is a bomber like no other – swing wings, Mach 2 dash capability, and a payload designed for one mission: sink the carrier, kill the fleet. NATO panics. Arms control negotiators obsess. And the Backfire becomes the most feared Soviet bomber of the Cold War.

In this episode:

🔥 The Backfire Problem – Why the US believed the Tu-22M could strike American soil (it couldn't – not without refueling). The intelligence miscalculation that shaped SALT II arms talks. We reveal the real range figures and why NATO spent billions countering a "phantom threat."

🦅 Variable Sweep – Again, Better – The Tu-22M perfected the swing wing for low‑level penetration. We break down its 20° to 65° sweep range, its terrain‑following radar, and why it could fly under Western air defenses at 200 feet, Mach 0.85.

🚢 The Carrier Killer – The Backfire's primary weapon: the Kh-22 (AS-4 Kitchen) supersonic anti‑ship missile. Mach 4.5. 1,000 kg warhead. Designed to break a carrier's back. We simulate a Soviet strike package: 12 Backfires, 24 missiles, one task force.

⚔ Afghanistan and Chechnya – The Backfire wasn't just for oceans. We examine its conventional bombing role – dropping dumb bombs on mountain strongholds, a crude but effective use of a supersonic strategic bomber.

🌍 Still Flying – Ukraine 2025 – The Tu-22M3 is still in Russian service, launching Kh-32 cruise missiles at ground targets. We analyze its combat performance over Syria and Ukraine, and why Ukraine claims to have shot down several Backfires with S-200 missiles.

Plus: Cockpit footage of a Tu-22M wings sweeping back, 3D animation of the Kh-22 missile separation, and a former Soviet naval aviator explaining how they trained to attack a carrier battle group.</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/de36e4c0-581c-479d-876f-db197179cfac/8986955d-87eb-4dbf-a39a-aa151232009e-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/trw7kxLDihNsrMKAwvWQKN</video:player_loc><video:duration>2649</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>3</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T12:55:58.569Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/f6kbKAZjAhc6QcL7ULEvkT</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/bee7dca4-ab65-42dc-9ed9-1fc15b64b121.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Wings of the Red Star E11 - Russian Giants</video:title><video:description>Size is a statement.
The Soviet Union believed in bigger. Bigger bombs. Bigger rockets. And above all, bigger airplanes. While the West built practical airlifters and efficient bombers, the USSR constructed aerial giants that defied logic – and sometimes gravity.
This episode is about the monsters: the An-124 Ruslan, the An-225 Mriya, and the Tu-160 Blackjack. The last giants of the Red Star.

In this episode:

✈️ An-124 Ruslan – The Soviet answer to the C-5 Galaxy. We break down its massive cargo hold (enough for a train locomotive), its nose and tail loading doors, and its astonishing 405,000 kg takeoff weight. How it became the backbone of outsized cargo – and how it still carries tanks, helicopters, and even other planes.

☁️ An-225 Mriya – The world's heaviest aircraft ever. Six engines. 32 landing gear wheels. A wingspan longer than the Wright Brothers' first flight distance. Designed to airlift the Buran space shuttle. Only one was ever completed – destroyed in the Battle of Antonov Airport, 2022. We tell the story of Mriya's creation, its 240 world records, and its tragic end.

🖤 Tu-160 Blackjack – The supersonic strategic bomber that NATO feared most. Bigger and faster than the B-1B Lancer. Variable‑sweep wings, four afterburning engines, and a payload of 12 cruise missiles. Why it was the last bomber designed by the Soviet Union – and how Putin has revived production in the 2020s.

💔 The Fall of the Giants – The USSR collapses in 1991. The Antonov design bureau is left in newly independent Ukraine. Russia keeps the Tu-160s – but Ukraine inherits 19 Blackjacks, then scraps most of them for American aid money. We examine the geopolitical tragedy that scattered the giants.

🔥 Legacy – An-124s still fly commercially. One An-225 is gone. The Tu-160 still patrols the Arctic. We ask: will we ever see such massive Soviet aircraft again? Or were they the last roar of a superpower reaching for the sky?</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/721e7bc6-7fc2-4b3b-a7a0-c2c3d0557145/ac744af7-7355-4e1d-8791-ec8177f0be72-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/f6kbKAZjAhc6QcL7ULEvkT</video:player_loc><video:duration>2689</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>2</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T13:31:42.812Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/gCU73c8pYuSgFQFq3ZHeP1</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/ae5ff3cd-132b-432a-a060-a28021534107.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Fighters 1 ⁄ 18 _ First Victories Full Length</video:title><video:description>The 1930s. The Soviet Union is building an air force from nothing.
Factories roar to life. Design bureaus compete. Young pilots train on wood-and-fabric biplanes. Then, in the skies over Spain, the first true test arrives – against German Messerschmitts and Italian Fiat CR.32s. This is where Soviet fighter aviation began. These are the first victories.

In this full-length episode:

✈ The Forgotten Pioneers – The I-15 Chaika (Seagull), a nimble biplane that outturned anything in the sky. The I-16 Rata (Rat), the world’s first cantilever-wing monoplane fighter with retractable landing gear. We examine how these two designs shocked the West at the 1935 May Day parade.

🇪🇸 Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) – The proving ground. Soviet pilots (many disguised as volunteers) fly I-16s against Franco’s Nationalists. We reconstruct dogfights over Madrid, the first air-to-air missile (improvised grenades on wires), and the rise of Soviet aces like Sergei Gritsevets and Yevgeny Stepanov.

⚔ The Khalkhin Gol War (1939) – Japan vs. USSR in Mongolia. Why this forgotten battle gave Soviet pilots invaluable combat experience – and how the I-16 defeated the Japanese Ki-27.

🔧 Design Under Pressure – The Polikarpov design bureau. Nikolai Polikarpov, the “King of Fighters,” imprisoned then released to build the I-16. We explore the brutal engineering compromises: wooden skinned wings, no radio on early models, and a cockpit that pilots called “a flying coffin.”

📉 The Cost of Victory – The lessons learned – and ignored. By 1941, the I-16 was obsolete. But the pilots who survived Spain and Mongolia would become the aces of the Great Patriotic War. Their first victories taught them how to die – and how to kill.</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/7e9ff746-0694-436b-b5f0-10cba3137b32/aeb99295-358a-47f2-bc95-90b874cfadea-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/gCU73c8pYuSgFQFq3ZHeP1</video:player_loc><video:duration>2980</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>1</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T13:38:46.099Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/7d54VQ97Btp6smdkbrvBgL</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/3411e45d-0003-4780-8f97-ffecd4cc22fc.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Fighters 2 ⁄ 18 _ The Stormy Years</video:title><video:description>June 22, 1941. Operation Barbarossa.
The Luftwaffe destroys over 2,000 Soviet aircraft in the first day – most on the ground. The I-16s and I-153s that won in Spain are now death traps against the Messerschmitt Bf 109F. But the Soviet Union cannot retreat from the sky. These are the stormy years – when everything went wrong, and a few brave pilots kept fighting anyway.

In this full-length episode:

☠️ The Disaster of 1941 – Why Stalin ignored warning signs. How the purges decimated experienced commanders. The brutal math: 21,000 Soviet aircraft lost in the first six months. We analyze the tactical failures – rigid doctrine, no radios, and flying straight into German anti-aircraft fire.

⚙️ The New Generation Arrives – The Yak-1, LaGG-3, and MiG-3. Rushed into production with wooden airframes and unreliable engines. We examine each: the Yak-1 (the best of the bad lot), the LaGG-3 (the "guaranteed varnished coffin" – too heavy, underpowered), and the MiG-3 (fast at high altitude, useless on the Eastern Front's low-level battlefields).

🎖 The Aces Who Would Not Die – The rise of Soviet fighter legends: Alexander Pokryshkin (later 59 kills, but in 1941 just trying to survive), Lydia Litvyak (the "White Lily" – one of the world's top female aces), and the horrific attrition rates. How a pilot with 10 victories was a rare survivor.

🔥 Stalingrad – The Turning Sky – By late 1942, the Yak-9 and La-5 (radial engine, metal construction) arrive. We reconstruct a dogfight over the Volga: Soviet La-5s vs. German Bf 109G. The introduction of the Kuban tactic (vertical maneuvering, altitude reserve) by Pokryshkin – a doctrine that finally matched German tactics.

📉 The Cost – Over 44,000 Soviet fighters lost during the war. But by the end of 1943, the Luftwaffe no longer had air superiority on the Eastern Front. We trace how the "stormy years" forged a ruthless, resilient air force – one that learned to win through blood and fire.</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/32464397-2626-4752-9401-8845ef78cd96/2c05d364-562a-43f3-91ef-3b5d3eda5d9f-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/7d54VQ97Btp6smdkbrvBgL</video:player_loc><video:duration>3031</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>0</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T14:08:01.184Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/6htPm9KK3onMLyDTbMyhwp</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/c5d5c4f3-5982-4789-b881-6f70c2848d08.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Fighters 3 ⁄ 18 _ The Jet Era</video:title><video:description>1945. Berlin is in ruins. The Soviet Union captures German jet engines, blueprints, and engineers.
Stalin demands a jet fighter – immediately. Within two years, the USSR goes from biplanes to Mach 0.9. The result is a mess of rushed designs, deadly flameouts, and one legendary fighter that changed air power forever: the MiG‑15.

In this full-length episode:

🔧 The German Seed – The BMW 003 and Junkers Jumo 004 engines captured from defeated Luftwaffe facilities. We trace how Soviet engineers reverse‑engineered them into the Klimov RD-20 and RD-10 – crude but workable first jets.

✈ The First Generation – MiG‑9 &amp; Yak‑15 – Two very different approaches. The MiG‑9 (twin engines buried in the nose) – fast but prone to ingesting its own cannon exhaust. The Yak‑15 (a Yak‑3 with a jet engine bolted underneath) – crude, but it worked. Rare footage of both flying in 1946.

⭐ The Game Changer – MiG‑15 – Britain’s Labour government, in a stunning act of naivety, sells Rolls‑Royce Nene engines to the USSR. The result? The Klimov VK-1 – a copy that powered the MiG‑15. We explain why this fighter – swept wings, pressurised cockpit, heavy cannon – outclassed everything except the F-86 Sabre.

🇰🇵 Korea – The Jet War Begins – The MiG‑15 vs. F-86 Sabre. Not just a dogfight – a revolution. We re‑create the MiG Alley ambushes, the high‑altitude advantage, and why the MiG‑15 terrified B‑29 crews (who called it “the silver menace”).

📈 The Soviet Jet Industry Matures – How the MiG‑15 led to the MiG‑17 (the Korean War veteran’s refined cousin), the MiG‑19 (the first Soviet supersonic fighter), and the MiG‑21 (covered in a previous episode). The jet era was not just about speed – it was about radar, missiles, and all‑weather capability.</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/2acabc6d-79cb-41a9-b868-9c04ab46f973/31eb3f8f-e749-4814-93c0-787852bf97e5-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/6htPm9KK3onMLyDTbMyhwp</video:player_loc><video:duration>3028</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>1</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T14:08:17.842Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/82VGSbffAnLjPNt1eCjkvf</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/360386ce-8718-40bb-9433-6e378691a77e.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Fighters 4 ⁄ 18 _ A Struggle for Superiority</video:title><video:description>The 1960s. The Soviet Union is losing the fighter race.
America fields the F-4 Phantom – powerful, radar‑equipped, missile‑armed. The Soviet MiG-21 is nimble but short‑legged. The MiG-23 is fast but flawed. Then come the F-14, F-15, and F-16 – a new generation that outflies anything the USSR has. Moscow demands a response. What follows is a decade of struggle, failure, and finally, triumph.

In this full-length episode:

📉 The Gap Widens – Why the MiG‑23 (swing wing, look‑down radar) failed to close the gap. Its poor agility, unreliable engines, and horrific accident rate. We compare it to the F-4 and F-14 – and explain why Soviet pilots called it “the beast.”

🔬 Learning from the Foxbat Deception – The MiG‑25 scared NATO but was a tactical dead end. How its 1976 defection revealed Soviet weaknesses – and forced a total rethink.

📋 The PFI Program – The Soviet “Perspektivnyy Frontovoy Istrebitel” (Advanced Tactical Fighter). A requirement for two new fighters: a heavy long‑range interceptor (to match the F-15) and a light agile dogfighter (to counter the F-16). The result: the Su‑27 Flanker and MiG‑29 Fulcrum.

⚔ Design Wars – Sukhoi vs. Mikoyan – Inside the fierce rivalry. Sukhoi’s Su‑27 (large, heavy, with revolutionary fly‑by‑wire) vs. MiG’s MiG‑29 (smaller, cheaper, but short‑range). Rare archival footage of prototypes T-10 (Su‑27) and 9-12 (MiG‑29).

🛫 First Flights and Near‑Disasters – The Su‑27 nearly killed its test pilot during a high‑AoA spin. The MiG‑29 lost a prototype to an engine fire. We trace the painful path to production.

🌟 Finally, Parity – By the mid‑1980s, the Su‑27 and MiG‑29 enter service. For the first time since the MiG‑15, Soviet fighters are equal – some say superior – to their American rivals. We examine the Flanker’s legendary Pugachev’s Cobra and the Fulcrum’s helmet‑sighted missiles.</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/38f4cf9e-3391-4cea-8ae0-60bdc0da6dfc/5420d05a-3350-45d5-99a1-df5c225b353f-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/82VGSbffAnLjPNt1eCjkvf</video:player_loc><video:duration>3022</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>2</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T14:50:26.739Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/4AcBUzkW9Amr5D9L5WkKj1</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/9ae56b65-66be-4231-b1c4-c3498aa17258.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Bombers 5 ⁄ 18_ The Flying Armada Full Length</video:title><video:description>The Cold War was won – or lost – in the skies above the Arctic.
The Soviet Union built an armada of bombers unlike any in history. Not sleek or elegant, but massive, loud, and terrifying. Their mission: to fly through NATO defenses, deliver nuclear weapons, and keep fighting even after an apocalypse. This is the story of the Flying Armada – the bombers that never stopped patrolling.

In this full-length episode:

🐻 Tu‑95 Bear – The Unstoppable Turboprop – First flight 1952, still flying today. We dissect its NK‑12 engines (the most powerful turboprops ever made), its contra‑rotating propellers (the source of that distinctive howl), and its incredible 9,000‑mile range. How a 1950s design became the symbol of Russian strategic power – and why NATO interceptors still scramble to meet it.

🔥 Tu‑22M Backfire – The Carrier Killer – A supersonic swing‑wing bomber designed to sink US Navy carrier groups. We examine its Kh‑22 missile (Mach 4.5, 1,000 kg warhead), its low‑level penetration tactics, and why the SALT II treaty tried to ban it. Rare footage of a Backfire launching a missile at a target ship.

🖤 Tu‑160 Blackjack – The Last Soviet Giant – The largest and heaviest supersonic bomber ever built. Variable‑sweep wings, four afterburning engines, and a payload of 12 cruise missiles. We trace its troubled development (first flight 1981, but only 35 built), its post‑Soviet resurrection under Putin, and its combat use over Syria and Ukraine.

☢️ The Doctrine of Mutual Destruction – How Soviet bombers fit into the nuclear triad alongside ICBMs and submarines. The concept of “alert” bombers – always armed, always ready. We reconstruct a typical Arctic patrol: a Tu‑95 flying from Murmansk, escorted by Norwegian F-16s, turning back just before entering US airspace.

📉 The Collapse and Revival – After the USSR fell, bombers rotted on ramps in Ukraine and Russia. Ukraine scrapped 19 Tu‑160s for American aid. Russia saved the rest. Today, modernized Tu‑95MS and Tu‑...</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/1d11dd5b-0cac-4e16-b893-aa75cf4c79f8/a5b2aae1-61e3-4b38-9faf-ab175d0a05fc-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/4AcBUzkW9Amr5D9L5WkKj1</video:player_loc><video:duration>2989</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>0</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T14:09:06.445Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/ctFk4StZsG3i2Ky71yvKdB</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/45fbfffb-deb0-4d50-a31b-af5834c74bc6.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Attack Aircraft 6 ⁄ 18_ The Cold War</video:title><video:description>The Cold War was a staring contest – and the bombers never blinked.
From the late 1940s to the fall of the USSR, Soviet strategic bombers flew continuous patrols along the edges of NATO airspace – from the Norwegian Sea to the Bering Strait. Their mission: remind the West that retaliation was always one takeoff away. This episode is about the men, the machines, and the long, frozen standoff in the sky.

In this full-length episode:

☢️ The Birth of Strategic Deterrence – How Stalin demanded a bomber that could reach the US mainland. The Tu-95 Bear (turboprop) and the M-4 Bison (turbojet) – both first flown in the early 1950s. We compare the Bison's flashy show at May Day parades (NATO fell for the "bomber gap" myth) vs. the Bear's real, enduring capability.

🌊 The Arctic Highways – Why the polar route was the shortest path to nuclear delivery. The development of air refueling, cold‑weather survival training, and the psychological toll of 20‑hour missions. Rare audio from a Tu-95 crew crossing the North Pole.

🛡 NATO's Watchdogs – The interceptors: F-4 Phantoms, F-14 Tomcats, F-15 Eagles, and RAF Lightnings. We reconstruct a classic intercept – a Soviet Bear probing Icelandic airspace, met by two Norwegian F-16s. The rules of engagement: never shoot first, never stop watching.

⚠ Close Calls – Near‑accidents and accidental incursions. The 1982 "Whiskey on the Rocks" submarine incident as a bomber‑adjacent crisis. How Soviet bombers practiced simulated cruise missile launches against US carrier groups – and how NATO responded with their own "show of force."

📉 The End of the Cold War – The bomber patrols winding down after 1991. Strategic bombers parked in the Ukrainian steppe – then scrapped or sold. But by the 2000s, Russia resumed Arctic patrols. The Cold War may have ended, but the flying armada returned.</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/5cf1d820-71a6-4db5-a62f-d4766ba29eef/ce15140b-e053-4a2e-b210-66c031350e83-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/ctFk4StZsG3i2Ky71yvKdB</video:player_loc><video:duration>3081</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>0</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T14:09:28.472Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/dQR9Zvv6ktTedFiowD5fJP</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/1dcb666d-cc06-4bb7-a200-a394b69331de.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Attack Aircraft 7 ⁄ 18_ Above the Battlefield Full Length</video:title><video:description>The infantryman's best friend has wings.
Fighters duel for glory. Bombers fly for strategy. But attack aircraft fly for the soldier in the mud. They come in low, slow, and loud – and they put steel on target. The Soviet Union perfected this brutal art: armoured cockpits, massive cannons, and a willingness to absorb enemy fire while protecting their own. This is the story of the planes that fought above the battlefield.

In this full-length episode:

🔩 The Original Flying Tank – Il-2 Sturmovik – The most produced military aircraft in history (36,000+). We break down its armoured shell (up to 12mm of steel), its deadly VYa-23 cannons (capable of penetrating 40mm of armor), and its terrifying vulnerability to rear attack – leading to the rushed addition of a rear gunner. Why German soldiers called it the "Concrete Airplane" and Soviet pilots called it "Flying Infantryman."

💥 Il-10 – The Refined Beast – The post-war evolution. Better armour, more powerful engine, and improved aerodynamics. We examine its combat debut over Berlin in 1945 and its service in Korea.

🚁 The Jet Age Transition – Su-7 &amp; MiG-27 – How the Soviets tried to convert supersonic fighters into attack aircraft. The Su-7 Fitter (fast but fragile) and the MiG-27 Flogger-D (a MiG-23 with a flat nose for terrain-following radar). Why neither truly satisfied the mission – but both saw heavy combat.

🦅 The True Successor – Su-25 Frogfoot – The Soviet A-10. Designed from a blank sheet for low‑intensity wars. We examine its titanium-armoured cockpit (can survive 23mm hits), its nine hardpoints (4,400 kg of ordnance), its rugged landing gear (unpaved strips), and its legendary survivability over Afghanistan. Rare footage of an Su-25 returning with half a wing missing.

⛰ Afghanistan (1979–1989) – The Crucible – How the Su-25 became the Mujahideen's nightmare. We reconstruct a typical mission: flying below mountain ridgelines, dodging Stinger missiles, delivering cluster bombs on enemy hideouts....</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/67ffa861-b9ca-4a80-856f-79ab27e56d5b/50564edc-36e1-4a25-a9e2-d5c7d72ed663-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/dQR9Zvv6ktTedFiowD5fJP</video:player_loc><video:duration>2999</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>0</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T14:47:51.319Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/uViSJtwzdxQ4BV8qMU2jXW</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/569bf2c7-c29f-460c-ac9f-708e856046a1.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Attack Aircraft 8 ⁄ 18_ The Jet Strike Full Length</video:title><video:description>The propeller was dead. The jet age demanded speed.
But close air support needs low altitude, heavy payloads, and brutal durability. The marriage of jet power and ground attack was never easy – and the Soviets learned that lesson the hard way. The Jet Strike era saw supersonic fighter‑bombers pressed into the mud, swing‑wing pioneers, and the first dedicated jet attack aircraft that finally got the formula right.

In this full-length episode:

💨 Su-7 Fitter – The Fast but Fragile Pioneer – The Soviet Union's first jet fighter‑bomber (1955). Designed for high‑speed nuclear strike, then thrown into conventional wars. We examine its afterburning engine, its heavy payload (2,000 kg), and its fatal flaw: a dangerously high landing speed and poor low‑speed handling. How the Su-7 became a pilot‑killer on landing approach – but a brutal bomber over Egypt and India.

🦅 Su-17 Fitter-C – The Swing‑Wing Solution – The Su-7's variable‑geometry evolution. Adding swing wings transformed a dangerous brick into a capable strike platform. We break down its 30° to 63° wing sweep, its improved short‑field performance, and its combat career from Afghanistan to Libya. Why the Su-17 outlived its successor – and still flies today.

🎯 MiG-27 Flogger-D – The Dedicated Attacker – Born from the MiG-23 fighter, the MiG-27 was redesigned for ground attack: flat nose (terrain radar), titanium belly armour, a six‑barrel 30mm cannon that shook the airframe apart. We analyze its devastating gun runs and its service in Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, and Kazakhstan.

🚀 Su-24 Fencer – The Soviet F-111 – The ultimate Soviet strike aircraft of the Cold War. Variable‑swing wings, terrain‑following radar, two seats, and precision‑guided weapon capability. We reconstruct a low‑level, high‑speed penetration mission: the Su-24 flying at 200 feet, Mach 0.9, through NATO air defences. Its combat debut in Afghanistan and its modern role over Ukraine.

⚔ Lessons from the Battlefield – Why the jet strike ...</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/ea315165-f4ff-4762-a001-813a40e0e63c/10367896-cc97-46e9-a52b-9bbd84886de0-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/uViSJtwzdxQ4BV8qMU2jXW</video:player_loc><video:duration>3052</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>0</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T14:48:04.509Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/oFqQ3keE7XsfKLtBsQifi6</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/1ef1969c-319c-4ba7-a19f-84e3227eb3f5.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Transports 9 ⁄ 18_ The Air Carriers</video:title><video:description>The Soviet Union was the largest country on earth. Roads were few. Railways were slow. The only way to bind 15 republics into one nation was the sky.
Aeroflot was not just an airline – it was a state monopoly, a propaganda tool, and a lifeline. By the 1970s, it carried more passengers than any other airline in the world. This episode explores the air carriers of the USSR: the jetliners, the turboprops, the supersonic experiment, and the everyday workhorses that moved a superpower.

In this full-length episode:

✈️ The First Soviet Jetliner – Tu-104 (1956) – Based on the Tu-16 bomber. The world’s second operational jet airliner (after the Comet). We examine its rushed development, its terrifying rudder reversal problem, and its glamorous debut – carrying Khrushchev on diplomatic tours. Rare footage of the Tu-104 landing with a drogue parachute (brakes were weak).

🐻 The Turboprop Workhorse – Il-18 (1959) – The Soviet DC-6. Four turboprops, 100 passengers, and unmatched reliability. Over 700 built, still flying in North Korea today. Why the Il-18 became the backbone of Aeroflot's domestic network – from Moscow to Siberia to Africa.

🌍 The Long‑Hauler – Il-62 (1967) – The Soviet VC10. Four rear‑mounted engines, a sleek fuselage, and the ability to fly Moscow to Havana non‑stop (with a fuel stop in between). We break down its unique tail‑support landing gear (to prevent tipping while boarding) and its legendary service record – the preferred jet of Soviet leaders and still flying in North Korea.

🚀 The Supersonic Dream – Tu-144 (1968) – The Soviet Concorde. Rushed into passenger service in 1975, withdrawn after a 1978 crash. We cover its beauty, its flaws, and the 1973 Paris Air Show disaster. Was the Tu-144 a genuine achievement or a political vanity project? We let the facts decide.

🏢 The Wide‑Body Era – Il-86 &amp; Il-96 (1980s) – The Soviet answer to the DC-10 and A300. The Il-86 (four engines, 350 passengers, overhead luggage bins finally!) and the Il-9...</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/b7aa5bc8-0095-475c-a29c-d73744f8d5ff/0231fe41-43b6-46a4-8686-45d8a22f8bb4-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/oFqQ3keE7XsfKLtBsQifi6</video:player_loc><video:duration>3034</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>0</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T14:49:10.617Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/xpEso1vo7Uc62J4bBME8Fz</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/91552a9b-ddb7-4bb5-9182-347adaa0660d.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Civil Aircraft 10 ⁄ 18_ Wings Over Continents</video:title><video:description>The Iron Curtain did not close the sky.
While Soviet citizens needed exit visas, Aeroflot jets flew freely to over 70 countries. These were not just passenger flights – they were instruments of diplomacy, trade, and soft power. This episode traces the wings over continents: the routes, the aircraft, and the crews that represented the USSR far beyond its borders.

In this full-length episode:

🌍 The First International Routes – How Aeroflot expanded after WWII. The first international destination: Prague (1945) on Lisunov Li-2s (Soviet DC-3s). By the 1960s, the Tu-104 and Il-18 reached London, Paris, Tokyo, and Delhi. Rare timetables and photos from the golden age of Soviet international travel.

✈️ The Flagship – Il-62 – The long‑hauler that defined Soviet prestige. Non‑stop Moscow to Havana? Not quite – a fuel stop in Murmansk or Gander, Newfoundland. But the Il-62 could fly Moscow to Tokyo, Moscow to Conakry, and Moscow to Santiago. We examine cabin layouts (first class had leather seats, economy had slightly less leather), and interview a former flight attendant who remembers serving caviar over the Atlantic.

🌎 Across the Atlantic – The Moscow–New York Route – Aeroflot began flights to JFK in 1968, using Il-62s. The Cold War in the sky: Soviet crews staying in supervised hotels, American authorities watching every move. We reconstruct a typical flight – 11 hours, a refueling stop in Gander (Canada), and the strange ritual of passport checks mid‑flight.

🌍 Africa and Asia – The Soviet Sphere – Aeroflot served Angola, Ethiopia, Mozambique, and Vietnam – aligned nations. The Tu-154 (the Soviet 727) became the workhorse of these routes. We cover the Tu-154 – fast, loud, and thirsty – but reliable enough to handle rough runways and hot climates. Why African nations loved the Tu-154 (and why some still fly it).

🤝 Humanitarian and Diplomatic Missions – The Il-76 (military transport converted for civilian cargo) carried emergency aid to Bangladesh, earth...</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/fe591a92-3553-4330-98a9-190020e69593/6355cd4a-5eee-4bbc-b26f-a7ef92c53626-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/xpEso1vo7Uc62J4bBME8Fz</video:player_loc><video:duration>2985</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>0</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T14:49:42.506Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/2wKyfzkfJE44jAqv2gmZ4t</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/0850dc0c-a7a1-46da-8353-e91144e3f1c9.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Ground Defense 11 ⁄ 18_ The Ground Effect</video:title><video:description>The 1960s. American spy satellites photograph a giant craft in the Caspian Sea.
It has wings, but it doesn't fly. It has a hull, but it's not a ship. It moves at 300 knots, just a few meters above the water – invisible to radar, immune to torpedoes. NATO calls it the Caspian Sea Monster. The Soviets call it an ekranoplan – a ground‑effect vehicle. This episode reveals the full story: the science, the ambition, and the tragic end of a unique weapon.

In this full-length episode:

🌊 The Science of Ground Effect – What happens when a wing flies within its own wingspan of the ground? Increased lift, reduced drag. We explain the physics simply: the air cushion trapped beneath the wing turns the vehicle into a high‑speed, low‑altitude missile platform. Perfect for the Caspian and the Black Sea.

🦅 KM – The Caspian Sea Monster – The prototype (Korabl Maket). Eight jet engines on the nose (to push) and two on the tail (to lift). 100 meters long – bigger than a Boeing 747. We examine its 1966 first flight, its 1975 crash (pilot error, not design), and the incredible photos that confused Western intelligence for years.

⚡ Lun – The Missile Carrier – The operational ekranoplan. Armed with six SS‑N‑22 Sunburn anti‑ship missiles, designed to kill NATO carrier groups. We break down its 400‑ton takeoff weight, its speed of 550 km/h, and its unique flying experience – a bumpy, vibrating ride just 4 meters above the waves. Rare footage of a Lun on a combat patrol.

💀 Why It Failed – The ekranoplan was brilliant but impractical. It could not operate in rough seas. It could not fly over land. It required a huge, expensive maintenance base. Only one Lun was completed. A second was left unfinished. After the USSR collapsed, the surviving Lun sat rusting in Kaspiysk – until it was towed to a museum in 2021.

🕊 The Smaller Cousins – A‑90 Orlyonok – A troop‑transport ekranoplan that could also fly as a conventional seaplane. We cover its service with the Soviet Navy, its ab...</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/0c644b4c-57aa-41e1-a080-3e2822f51dbd/63baffc9-a606-4bbf-804c-677447f3bab0-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/2wKyfzkfJE44jAqv2gmZ4t</video:player_loc><video:duration>2952</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>1</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T14:49:31.017Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/tdCcMSJhoBMpNfZFgJep2f</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/94ccd42a-48ef-4fef-af62-f18955481107.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Transports 12 ⁄ 18_The Steel Albatross</video:title><video:description>The Soviet Union has the longest coastline in the world. And for decades, it had no aircraft carriers.
The answer was amphibian planes – flying boats that could land on water, operate from any bay or river, and hunt submarines across the Arctic and the Pacific. These were not fragile seaplanes. They were steel albatrosses – tough, ugly, and utterly reliable. This episode traces the Soviet obsession with amphibious aviation.

In this full-length episode:

🦢 The Early Years – Be-2 and Be-4 – The first Soviet flying boats of the 1930s. Wooden hulls, radial engines, and limited range. We see rare footage of these pre-war birds patrolling the Black Sea.

⚓ The Workhorse – Be-6 Madge (1949) – The first Soviet post-war flying boat. Twin engines, a gull wing, and a magnetic anomaly detector (MAD) boom for submarine hunting. We examine its service in the Pacific Fleet, its ability to carry depth charges and torpedoes, and its surprising longevity – the Be-6 flew for over 30 years.

✈️ The Jet Experiment – Be-10 Mallow (1956) – The world's first jet-powered flying boat. Two turbojets mounted above the wing. It could hit Mach 0.85, but the saltwater spray destroyed the engines. Only a handful were built. We reveal why this beautiful but flawed design was a dead end – and why one survives in a Russian museum.

🐦 The Masterpiece – Be-12 Chaika (Seagull) (1960) – Still in service today. We break down its gull wing (to keep engines clear of spray), its turboprop engines, and its unique hull design. The Be-12 has flown continuously for over 60 years – hunting submarines, performing search and rescue, and even fighting fires. Why the Russian Navy refuses to retire it.

🌊 The Giant – A-40 Albatross (1986) – The largest amphibian ever built. Twin jets, 40-meter wingspan, and the ability to carry 6,500 kg of weapons. We cover its test flights, its cancellation after the USSR collapsed, and why one prototype remains in storage – waiting for a revival that may never come....</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/dc69fae9-e0bb-45f0-b80b-940b226aa3cc/11d0da4a-2d7c-4745-8f41-2e0032a2e930-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/tdCcMSJhoBMpNfZFgJep2f</video:player_loc><video:duration>2976</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>2</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T18:17:26.469Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/8X1Wn7S1gxUJfvR2NWdKem</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/8cd1c296-99f8-44f4-9c78-aeb7e2b70c62.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Ground Defense 13 ⁄ 18_ Air Rovers</video:title><video:description>The Soviet Union loved helicopters. Not as fragile scouts – but as flying trucks, armoured gunships, and sky-high cranes.
While the West built nimble attack helicopters, the USSR built monsters. The Mi-8 became the most produced helicopter in history. The Mi-24 Hind terrified mujahideen from Afghanistan to Chechnya. And the Mi-26 remains the heaviest lifting helicopter ever built. This episode is about the Flying Crane – and the rotor blades that kept the Soviet war machine moving.

In this full-length episode:

🚁 Mi-1 – The First Soviet Helicopter – The clumsy but important start. Based on German wartime designs, the Mi-1 proved that Soviet rotorcraft could work.

🚛 Mi-8 Hip – The Workhorse of the World – Over 17,000 built – more than any other helicopter. We examine its twin turbines, its cavernous cabin (24 troops or 12 stretchers), and its endless variants: attack, cargo, electronic warfare, even airborne command post. Why the Mi-8 still flies in over 50 countries.

🐅 Mi-24 Hind – The Flying Infantry Fighting Vehicle – Not just an attack helicopter – a troop transport with wings. We break down its armoured cockpit, its heavy weapons (GSh-30 cannon, anti-tank missiles, rocket pods), and its terrifying presence over Afghanistan. Why the Mujahideen called it the "Devil's Chariot." Rare footage of a Hind rolling in on a mountain target.

🏗 Mi-26 Halo – The Heavy Lifter – The largest production helicopter ever built. Eight rotor blades, two turboshaft engines (11,000 hp each), and a payload of 20 tons – enough to lift a C-130 fuselage. We examine its 1982 first flight, its role in the Chernobyl disaster (lifting contaminated debris), and its modern use in Arctic resupply.

⚔ The Attack Successor – Mi-28 Havoc &amp; Ka-50 Black Shark – The post-Soviet generation. The Mi-28 (night-capable, heavily armoured) and the coaxial Ka-50 (no tail rotor, ejection seat). Why neither fully replaced the Hind – and how Russia now uses a mix of all three.</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/405e74a2-cc31-4afb-8ecb-565350911fd2/f75d5658-ab8b-41a6-b9c8-1b4394fb577e-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/8X1Wn7S1gxUJfvR2NWdKem</video:player_loc><video:duration>2954</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>0</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T14:50:39.269Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/wnLXfJeV5wCGp5XHEpu5HR</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/a95aa82c-8dcf-4caf-8fca-a2d5d87307d0.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Helicopters 14 ⁄ 18_ Soldiers &amp; Workers</video:title><video:description>The Soviet Navy could not match American carriers – so it built bombers to sink them.
Soviet Naval Aviation (AVMF) was the red hammer against the US fleet. From long-range reconnaissance Bears to carrier-killing Backfires and the only Soviet carrier jet – the Yak-38 Forger – this episode covers the planes that shadowed every NATO exercise, from the North Atlantic to the Pacific.

In this full-length episode:

🐻 Tu-95RTs Bear-D – The Ocean Watcher – The maritime reconnaissance variant of the Bear. Its mission: find the carrier, track the carrier, and die pointing at the carrier. We examine its massive search radar and its Cold War cat‑and‑mouse with US F-14s.

🔥 Tu-22M Backfire – The Carrier Killer – Deployed with Naval Aviation. Armed with Kh-22 missiles. Designed for one pass against a carrier group. We reconstruct a simulated strike: 12 Backfires, 24 missiles, and the desperate defence of Aegis cruisers.

🦅 Il-38 May – The Sub Hunter – The Soviet Orion. Four turboprops, MAD boom, sonobuoys, and torpedoes. We cover its Cold War patrols over the Norwegian Sea – hunting NATO submarines that threatened the Soviet bastions.

✈️ The Carrier Jets – Yak-38 Forger – The Soviet Harrier. Vertical takeoff and landing – but underpowered, unreliable, and dangerous. We explain why the Yak-38 was hated by its pilots, loved by its enemies, and retired early. Rare footage of a Forger hovering over the deck of the Kiev.

🌊 The Modern Fleet – Su-33 and MiG-29K – The Su-33 Flanker-D (heavy naval interceptor) and the MiG-29K Fulcrum-D (modern replacement). We compare both and examine their combat use over Syria.</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/f5fc7b66-1fe7-4667-abf2-1e4c296ab85b/29269c19-a217-41d6-b207-f2ea060c7ccf-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/wnLXfJeV5wCGp5XHEpu5HR</video:player_loc><video:duration>2937</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>0</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T14:51:47.071Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/pSUbj2935dBfi9WX9DUqcw</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/72f4941f-1965-4f04-a7fb-42f9d2c1f7a6.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Aircraft 15 ⁄ 18_ Training and Sports Full Length</video:title><video:description>The Soviet Union built a wall in the sky. It was called PVO – Protivovozdushnaya Oborona – Air Defence Forces.
Separate from the Air Force, the PVO had one mission: no enemy bomber would ever reach Moscow. This episode covers the dedicated interceptors – the Su-15, MiG-25, MiG-31 – and the surface‑to‑air missile systems that made the Soviet sky the most defended on earth.

In this full-length episode:

🔴 The Su-15 Flagon – The Interceptor That Shot Down Korean Air Lines 007 – The controversial 1983 incident. We examine the Su-15's design: delta wings, powerful radar, and no gun (only missiles). Why it was the PVO's frontline interceptor for 20 years.

⚡ MiG-25 Foxbat – The PVO's High‑Altitude Hammer – Designed to intercept the SR-71 and B-70. We cover its PVO service, its limitations, and its 1976 defection.

🚀 MiG-31 Foxhound – The Ultimate Interceptor – The successor to the MiG-25. Two seats, the first Soviet phased‑array radar (Zaslon), and the ability to fire six long‑range missiles at six targets. We break down its Mach 2.4 speed, its 1,500 km range, and its role as a flying command post. The MiG-31 remains the backbone of Russian air defence today.

🛡 The Missile Wall – S-75, S-125, S-200, S-300 – The surface‑to‑air missiles that protected Soviet cities and military sites. The S-75 downed Gary Powers' U-2. The S-125 sank an Israeli F-16? We explain the difference between interceptor aircraft and SAM systems.

🎖 The Pilots of the PVO – Life in the air defence forces: 24/7 alert duty, interceptions over the Barents Sea, and the psychological toll of sitting in a cockpit, engines running, waiting for World War III.</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/c15d888b-267c-4b5b-bfd4-1a26d6243f2c/5dc243c2-d8cc-41cb-841c-14ce94195488-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/pSUbj2935dBfi9WX9DUqcw</video:player_loc><video:duration>2922</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>0</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T18:17:07.084Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/qnWW3gX63MoDpHerzaZxnm</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/03a7f97c-9c8a-417d-930e-798565d74d36.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Naval Aviation 16 ⁄ 18_ On the Naval Service Full Length documentary</video:title><video:description>The Cold War was fought in the dark – and Soviet reconnaissance planes were the flashlights.
From converted fighters to specialized spy bombers, the USSR built an array of aircraft designed to see without being seen – or survive if they were. This episode covers the Reconnaissance Eye: the MiG-25R (Mach 3 camera platform), the Tu-95RTs (ocean‑scanning radar plane), and the mysterious Yak-27R.

In this full-length episode:

📸 MiG-25R Foxbat-B – The Supersonic Spy – A MiG-25 stripped of weapons, fitted with five cameras. It could overfly Israel, Iran, or Japan at Mach 2.8 – outrunning any interceptor. We examine its 1970s missions over the Middle East and its famous low‑pass over an Israeli air base.

🐻 Tu-95RTs Bear-D – The Ocean Radar Ship – Not a bomber – a flying radar station. Its massive search radar could spot NATO ships from 300 km away. We cover its Cold War role as the carrier‑tracker and its post‑Soviet retirement.

🦅 Il-20 Coot – The Electronic Listener – SIGINT and ELINT platform. Still flying today. We explain how the Il-20 passively listens to enemy communications and radar – without ever being seen.

🕊 The High‑Altitudes – Yak-27R, Su-17R – Converted fighters with camera noses. Dangerous to fly, but essential for tactical reconnaissance over the front lines.

📡 The Modern Era – Su-24MR and UAVs – How Soviet reconnaissance evolved into the digital age. The Su-24MR (fighter‑recon) and the early Soviet drones. The legacy of the reconnaissance eye in Russia's current war in Ukraine.</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/c56bccc4-e3ec-473d-b065-d79becd9660a/a0f66978-2c17-4e6d-9d46-161fb74e3ce4-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/qnWW3gX63MoDpHerzaZxnm</video:player_loc><video:duration>3004</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>1</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T14:52:07.365Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/dACWSSgWdQ5tkVJAfgesK5</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/3707e4dc-b720-4236-b897-a5678cd49dc0.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Transports 17 ⁄ 18_ Military Aircraft</video:title><video:description>An army marches on its stomach. The Soviet army flew on cargo holds.
The USSR built the world's most capable military airlift fleet – from the rugged An-12 to the massive An-124 Ruslan and the ubiquitous Il-76 Candid. This episode covers the Cargo Giants – the planes that dropped paratroopers, delivered tanks, and evacuated wounded from Afghanistan.

In this full-length episode:

🚛 An-12 Cub – The Soviet C-130 – Four turboprops, rear ramp, and the ability to land on dirt strips. Over 1,200 built. We examine its service in Afghanistan, its role in the 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia, and its continued use by bizarre operators (including a civilian crash in 2022).

📦 Il-76 Candid – The Heavy Lifter – The backbone of Soviet military airlift. Four turbojets, 40-ton payload, and the ability to airdrop tanks via parachute. We break down its design, its dozens of variants (tanker, AWACS, firefighter), and its modern combat use over Syria and Ukraine.

🏗 An-124 Ruslan – The Superheavy – The Soviet answer to the C-5 Galaxy. 150-ton payload, nose and tail loading doors, and the ability to carry an entire train locomotive. We cover its 1982 debut, its commercial success (Antonov Airlines), and its modern revival (Russia now building new An-124s without Ukraine).

✈️ The Giant of Giants – An-225 Mriya – The heaviest aircraft ever flown. We revisit its cargo missions (carrying 250-ton generators, even a Buran space shuttle) and its 2022 destruction at Hostomel Airport.

🪂 Paratrooper Delivery – How Soviet transport planes dropped the VDV (Airborne Troops) – the elite of the Red Army. The BMD-1 parachuting from an Il-76. The terrifying reality of a night drop behind enemy lines.</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/6603b891-f50b-4e0e-8a42-b9c2255302a2/123097c5-18f3-462e-8a70-e8c274f54040-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/dACWSSgWdQ5tkVJAfgesK5</video:player_loc><video:duration>3005</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>2</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T14:53:25.047Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/gEbgG1mo2uRQpyTp8XJdx2</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/59fc8647-02e9-444d-9c9a-d608a3bccf9d.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>Soviet Reconnaissance Planes 18 ⁄ 18_ The Sky Outwatch</video:title><video:description>The Soviet Union is gone. Its aircraft live on.
This final episode of the series is not about a single aircraft – it's about the afterlife of Soviet aviation. The Su-27s and MiG-29s that serve in over 30 nations. The An-124s that carry cargo for Western companies. The Tu-95s that still bomb Ukraine. The air museums from Monino to Kiev. And the question that remains: Was Soviet aviation a triumph of engineering or a monument to waste?

In this full-length episode:

🇺🇦 The Divorce – Ukraine vs. Russia – After 1991, the Antonov design bureau stayed in Ukraine. The Sukhoi and MiG bureaus stayed in Russia. We trace how the breakup crippled both – and why Russian jets now use Chinese components.

🌍 The Export Legacy – The MiG-21 (most produced fighter of the jet age). The Su-27 (China's J-11). The Mi-8 (the world's most common helicopter). Soviet designs became the default air force for dozens of nations – from India to Vietnam to Venezuela.

📉 The Lost Designs – The planes that died with the USSR. The Su-47 Berkut (forward‑swept wing). The MiG 1.44 (Soviet stealth fighter). The unfinished An-225 number two. Could they have changed aviation history?

🔥 The Revival – Putin's New Builds – Tu-160M (new Blackjacks). Su-57 (stealth fighter). But are these Soviet or Russian? We argue that the last true Soviet design was the Su-27 – everything since is an upgrade or a compromise.

🏛 The Final Tribute – Where to See Soviet Aircraft – The Central Air Force Museum in Monino. The UMMC Museum in Verkhnyaya Pyshma. The Kiev State Aviation Museum. The surviving An-225 remnants (Hostomel). A guide for the aviation pilgrim.

✨ Conclusion – The Red Star in the Sky – Our narrator signs off with a reflection on Soviet aviation: the arrogance, the brilliance, the crashes, and the glory. The wings of the Red Star may never fly in formation again – but their shadow is still on the world.</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/7ecdac2e-c122-4a71-bf43-ea84a6081a57/1e75ea01-7537-4971-a231-1526e6033895-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/gEbgG1mo2uRQpyTp8XJdx2</video:player_loc><video:duration>2911</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>1</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-05T14:53:06.926Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/oXr5DGV8Rp16eAAnyHouXt</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/d9655d16-617f-4723-9ae5-28532b7ef93f.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>LOTR_ The Fellowship of the Ring - Opening Scene</video:title><video:description>Three Rings for the Elven-kings under the sky,
Seven for the Dwarf-lords in their halls of stone,
Nine for Mortal Men doomed to die,
One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.
One Ring to rule them all, One Ring to find them,
One Ring to bring them all and in the darkness bind them
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/b9e66a00-e559-4e00-8f6a-04d3b73b47c1/58bdf1e1-94d6-4d9d-b2cb-35b31c39155d-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/oXr5DGV8Rp16eAAnyHouXt</video:player_loc><video:duration>300</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>3</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-08T19:02:30.660Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/cinema/videos">Cinema</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/xp3Hr4viHTgWA8PuzgsoKX</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/66bbcbee-a7b6-462e-bf58-0036545fdb8d.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>MiG-29 Tactical Fighter. Take-off into the Future. Part 2.</video:title><video:description>MiG-29 Tactical Fighter. Take-off into the Future. Part 2.</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/fe4313f4-3292-428b-abdc-0d5dfeb3382d/4bd12fe6-ee87-4df5-9f67-6ec27923d207-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/xp3Hr4viHTgWA8PuzgsoKX</video:player_loc><video:duration>2238</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>3</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-09T14:36:10.476Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/fUAKVEfb6agzUDhgXCHe5S</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/2ff4cebc-6bd0-46af-88e8-7713cc665baa.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>MiG-29 Tactical Fighter. Take-off into the Future. Part 1</video:title><video:description>MiG-29 Tactical Fighter. Take-off into the Future. Part 1</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/78b80988-effb-423b-83c6-c23fd32d36b6/bf169a71-453a-44b4-8c25-a6f68ebc8e30-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/fUAKVEfb6agzUDhgXCHe5S</video:player_loc><video:duration>2284</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>2</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-09T15:14:44.408Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/w/gSrQxVWhtLFAe9krC8M5ae</loc><video:video><video:thumbnail_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/lazy-static/thumbnails/8396d34d-2a18-483d-8901-c0b7fad93883.jpg</video:thumbnail_loc><video:title>SU_57 - Sukhoi PAK FA (T 50) Russian Fighter Documentary in Russian. (EN sub)</video:title><video:description>SU_57 - Sukhoi PAK FA (T 50) Russian Fighter Documentary in Russian. (EN sub)</video:description><video:content_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/static/streaming-playlists/hls/808430e9-9f7f-4988-b999-589dec03935f/8a615213-fd52-4a45-abe2-89f1b3f4aff3-master.m3u8</video:content_loc><video:player_loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/videos/embed/gSrQxVWhtLFAe9krC8M5ae</video:player_loc><video:duration>6009</video:duration><video:rating>0</video:rating><video:view_count>4</video:view_count><video:publication_date>2026-06-10T11:07:22.752Z</video:publication_date><video:family_friendly>YES</video:family_friendly><video:uploader info="https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos">Wings</video:uploader><video:live>NO</video:live></video:video></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/wings/videos</loc></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/c/cinema/videos</loc></url><url><loc>https://cast.pudmed.ir/a/neo/video-channels</loc></url></urlset>