Cargo 200 or Gross Dreschia is a code that has been used since the Soviet era and continues to be used in the former Soviet Union countries.
Cargo 200 is a code used to identify air cargo, and was widely used in the 1980s during the Soviet-Afghan war.
The official meaning of the cargo is "the body of a deceased soldier", which is contained in a zinc coffin specifically designed for air transport.
Meanwhile, the unofficial meaning of this code is that the body of a dead soldier was transported from the battlefield, making Cargo 200
It has become a slang term used to refer to the rate of manpower loss in war.
The Cargo 200 is still in use today, especially in the war between Russia and Ukraine, especially on the Russian side.
This makes the term Cargo 200 a term that no one in Russia wants to hear, because it means that Russia is not only losing manpower,
This also means that the deceased person might have been someone close to him.
Cargo 200 is one of the words that Russians don't want to hear.
