-
Insanity Is Luigi Mangione’s Only Option: Attorney - 13 mins ago
-
29-year-old theft suspect tells police she’s 12. Story fools no one - 25 mins ago
-
Overlooked Stories - 41 mins ago
-
Winter Weather Warnings in 16 States as 3 Feet of Snow To Hit - 48 mins ago
-
Santa Cruz’s 100-year-old wharf keeps getting thrashed - about 1 hour ago
-
Top 10 Lottery Jackpots in History Ahead of $1.15 Billion Draw - about 1 hour ago
-
Osamu Suzuki, Who Led Japanese Carmaker for Over 4 Decades, Dies at 94 - about 1 hour ago
-
Videos Show Tornado Rip Through Texas - 2 hours ago
-
Telehealth Technology Taught Me to Be a Better Doctor - 2 hours ago
-
Archaeologists Reveal What They’d Love to Discover in 2025 - 3 hours ago
Ukraine Destroys Putin’s Prized $10M Air Defense System
Ukraine has destroyed its 1,000th Russian anti-aircraft missile system in the war, according to Kyiv, which has released unsubstantiated footage of the strike.
Ukraine’s Interior Minister Ihor Klymenko posted a clip on his Telegram channel next to a message that described how a drone unit in the National Guard’s 27th Pechersk Brigade hit the BUK-M1 system on “one of the hottest areas of the front,” without specifying a location or a date. Newsweek has emailed the Russian Defense Ministry for comment.
Ukraine has ramped up domestic drone production and uses the devices on the battlefield, as well as for strikes inside Russian territory, often targeting energy infrastructure and military sites, with the aim of choking its war effort.
The BUK-M1 system was located during reconnaissance in a hotspot on the front line and “with an accurate blow, the enemy equipment was completely destroyed,” said the post, according to a translation. It added that it was worth “10 million U.S. dollars” and that “every day we make the enemy weaker” through such strikes.
The clip shows aerial footage of the strike from several angles and the aftermath of an explosion. Newsweek has as yet been unable to verify the footage or the Ukrainian claims.
Ukraine’s General Staff said Saturday that in the war so far, Russia had lost 999 air defense systems. After the update, the latest strike would take Kyiv’s tally to four figures, although these numbers have not been independently confirmed.
The BUK-M1 is a self-propelled, medium-range surface-to-air missile system that is used to target tactical and strategic aircraft, cruise missiles, helicopters and other aerodynamic targets.
With a NATO reporting name of SA-11 Gadfly, the system has been continually upgraded. The Soviet-designed systems have been used by both sides although, last year, Kyiv said they had converted them to shoot American missiles.
Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky said that Kyiv was testing four types of missiles, telling Ukrainian media that “progress has been made,” as well on drones and electronic warfare systems.
Russia has continued its missiles and drone barrage on civilian targets in Ukraine, frequently using Iranian Shahed drones, but it is reported that Moscow is looking to another ally for help.
The EU’s top diplomat Josep Borrell said there was convincing evidence of Beijing providing lethal aid regarding attack drone production, according to the German media outlet Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ).
European intelligence sources had told Reuters in September that Moscow had secretly established a development and production program in China for attack drones.
An unnamed senior EU official told Politico on Friday that intelligence pointed to a factory inside China that is producing drones, which are shipped to Russia. The EU has yet to determine whether Beijing is aware of the firm’s drone production, according to Politico, and China’s foreign ministry has previously denied knowledge of the project.
Source link