.jpg%3Ftrim%3D239%2C0%2C0%2C0%26width%3D1200%26height%3D800%26crop%3D1200%3A800&w=3840&q=100)
Inside the Peaky Blinders unit in Ukraine launching devastating drone attacks on Putin's forces
At the beginning of Russia's invasion, the group of civilians turned out to defend their hometowns armed only with shotguns like the Shelby gang in the television hit. But after three years of intense fightin g, the unit – named 'The Peaky Blinders' – have evolved to become one of Kyiv's deadliest drone squads.
They play out a deadly game of cat-and-mouse, launching cheap, mass-produced drones to drop bombs on tanks and enemy foxholes while dodging Russian retaliation in the forests in Donetsk in eastern Ukraine. The region is the scene of some of the fiercest fighting of the war.
Their weapons, controlled by remote, cost up to £800 and the unit can lose on average six a day if the wind is particularly strong.
Nearly 85 per cent of daily Russian casualties occur in the area as Russian forces, referred to as Orcs by the unit, try to capture the whole of Donetsk and the neighbouring Luhansk regions.
The National Guard unit became known during their staunch defence of Vovchansk, a city in the Kharkiv region of northeastern Ukraine which has essentially been destroyed by fighting. In October 2024, they were sent to defend around the city of Pokrovsk in Donetsk. The city is a key target for Russia and they have thrown waves of troops at trying to seize it.
After being filmed by the BBC, one of the soldiers in the Peaky Blinders signed two of their signature caps and asked the reporters to gift them to Cillian Murphy, who brought fictional gang leader Thomas Shelby to life.
The flattered Oscar winner reportedly kept one cap, signed the other and sent it back to the frontline soldiers with a message of support for their cause.
Creator Steven Knight took it a step further and sent 30 more flat caps from Garrison Tailors—the official designer of the series—to the then rag-tag bunch of volunteers.
Most of them still wear their flat cap with their own motto: "To Find and Destroy", embroidered into the back - even during combat.
"It all began as a joke but then we developed into a fully operational combat unit and started recruiting members," co-founder and commander of the unit Anton Spitsyn told ABC.
"Everyone here is a volunteer. We don't have any professional soldiers,' he said. "We have already demonstrated that we can effectively defend our land whether you are a builder, a farmer or a musician."
Before the invasion, Anton, who was born in Kharkiv Oblast, taught English to Ukrainian orphans for free, and through his construction business even repaired a children's neurological hospital at his own expense.
Anton was announced dead by his younger brother Oleksandr early in February, having sustained wounds on the battlefield. Oleksandr is said to have succeeded Anton as leader of the unit. The group has promised vengeance on Putin.
Paying tribute to his brother, Oleksandr said at the time: 'Today is the blackest for me on the hardest day of my life.
'Today my own brother passed away. The closest and dearest person to me. It's hard to write and remember the life of Anton, but he lived a hero and died a hero.
'In battle, he received injuries unsuitable for life and went to heaven forever. Rest easy my brother.'
Before the invasion, one of their soldiers Yaroslav Chyzhenko was a family man with his own renovations business.
But when friends volunteered and asked for help, he began raising money and securing vehicles for the frontline before realising he could do more good for his country by joining them in war.
He now provides content on the group, posting photos of the team posing with machine guns and trademark flat caps.
He said: 'Anton was the bravest person I have ever met in my life.
'He led us forward, and we followed him. Together we walked a very dangerous path.
'And this is far from the end. We will continue his work and keep the high bar he set. Rest in peace, brother.'
On the force's Telegram account, they wrote: 'Unfortunately, difficult tragic events happened in the life of our group. Because of this, the channel did not work for some time.
'But no one canceled the war, and if it was not difficult for us, we would move on.
'There are still a lot of occupiers and they need to be stopped.'
Their latest update for thePeaky Blinders 25,000 followers on Telegram says: 'It becomes clear that everything is not so bad with us, and everything is not so good with them.
'Sooner or later, the cannon fodder will run out, just like the 'inexhaustible' stocks of ammunition from the time of the USSR. The main thing is to stand your ground and hit harder every time.'
They added: 'And just like that, everywhere, in every direction, everything is littered with the bodies of Russian soldiers.
'If you look at it all from above, look at the price they pay for advancing on the front line.'
It comes as senior Ukrainian officials warn that Europe's armies are not equipped to handle a new war of robots as Russia 'skyrockets to space' with their own advancements in military technology.
Oleksandr Prokudin, governor of Ukraine's frontline region of Kherson Oblast told The Independent: 'Every army in Europe has to prepare for the new war. It might sound arrogant, but no military in Europe or the United Kingdom is prepared for what is coming, for that kind of war. It's a war between robots, machines, drones. It is not what people are used to.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
35 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Trump ally mistakes D.C.'s female mayor for a man in rant
A Republican senator went on a rant about the dangers of living in Washington, D.C ., under the current Mayor Muriel Bowser while continuously mistaking her for a man. Crime in the nation's capital has become a hot-button issue on the national scale after President Donald Trump nationalized the Washington police and deployed the National Guard to the city. While speaking on Fox News on Wednesday, Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., stressed how dangerous the district is. The senator claimed that he doesn't wear his seatbelt while driving his Jeep around town, which is illegal, because he's afraid of being carjacked and not being able to get out of the car fast enough. 'The reason why I don't buckle up, and people can say whatever they want to, they can raise their eyebrows at me again, is because of carjacking,' Mullin said. 'I don't want to be stuck in my vehicle when I need to exit in a hurry, because I got a seatbelt around me.' 'The left media and the leaders in Washington D.C., especially the, and I will say this, the very racist mayor, and people may get eyebrows when I raise that, but he's the one that brings in race into the conversation,' Mullin said, referencing D.C. Mayor Bowser. 'So he's the one that's pointing the fingers at it, and when you point one finger, you got three pointing back at you.' The Republican lawmaker was immediately ripped for misgendering the mayor. 'If you're going to smear the mayor of D.C. with falsehoods, at least give the audience the impression that you know who she is,' NY law professor Ryan Goodman wrote on X. 'Multiple times Mullin refers to the mayor as 'he.'' Journalist Mehdi Hasan also noted how Mullin 'repeatedly refers to the mayor of D.C. as a 'he.'' Many online speculated that Mullin had mistaken Bowser with Baltimore's Mayor Brandon Scott, who is a man. Bowser, the female D.C. mayor, has held office since 2015 and has had a friction-filled relationship with the second-term president due to his repeated criticisms over D.C.'s safety and crime problems. She has called Trump's deployment this week 'unsettling and unprecedented,' though she added 'I can't say that, given some of the rhetoric of the past, that we're totally surprised.' The 79-year-old president has repeatedly called for law and order and ridiculed D.C. as being one of the most dangerous cities in the US. 'Our capital city has been overtaken by violent gangs, bloodthirsty criminals, roving mobs of wild youth, [expletive] out maniacs and homeless people, and we're not going to let it happen anymore,' Trump said Monday at an event announcing the federalization of D.C.'s authorities. 'We're not going to take it.'


Daily Mail
36 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Moment Trump ally shocks host by calling D.C.'s female mayor a MAN multiple times live on air
A Republican senator went on a rant about the dangers of living in Washington, D.C., under the current Mayor Muriel Bowser while continuously mistaking her for a man. Crime in the nation's capital has become a hot-button issue on the national scale after President Donald Trump nationalized the Washington police and deployed the National Guard to the city. While speaking on Fox News on Wednesday, Sen. Markwayne Mullin, R-Okla., stressed how dangerous the district is. The senator claimed that he doesn't wear his seatbelt while driving his Jeep around town, which is illegal, because he's afraid of being carjacked and not being able to get out of the car fast enough. 'The reason why I don't buckle up, and people can say whatever they want to, they can raise their eyebrows at me again, is because of carjacking,' Mullin said. 'I don't want to be stuck in my vehicle when I need to exit in a hurry, because I got a seatbelt around me.' 'The left media and the leaders in Washington D.C., especially the, and I will say this, the very racist mayor, and people may get eyebrows when I raise that, but he's the one that brings in race into the conversation,' Mullin said, referencing D.C. Mayor Bowser. 'So he's the one that's pointing the fingers at it, and when you point one finger, you got three pointing back at you.' The Republican lawmaker was immediately ripped for misgendering the mayor. 'If you're going to smear the mayor of D.C. with falsehoods, at least give the audience the impression that you know who she is,' NY law professor Ryan Goodman wrote on X. 'Multiple times Mullin refers to the mayor as 'he.'' Journalist Mehdi Hasan also noted how Mullin 'repeatedly refers to the mayor of D.C. as a 'he.'' Many online speculated that Mullin had mistaken Bowser with Baltimore's Mayor Brandon Scott, who is a man. Bowser, the female D.C. mayor, has held office since 2015 and has had a friction-filled relationship with the second-term president due to his repeated criticisms over D.C.'s safety and crime problems. She has called Trump's deployment this week 'unsettling and unprecedented,' though she added 'I can't say that, given some of the rhetoric of the past, that we're totally surprised.' The 79-year-old president has repeatedly called for law and order and ridiculed D.C. as being one of the most dangerous cities in the US. 'Our capital city has been overtaken by violent gangs, bloodthirsty criminals, roving mobs of wild youth, drugged out maniacs and homeless people, and we're not going to let it happen anymore,' Trump said Monday at an event announcing the federalization of D.C.'s authorities. 'We're not going to take it.' Trump's deployment is expected to surge a total of 800 National Guard troops to the capital city. Already, D.C. has been buzzing with additional police and federal forces, like the FBI and DEA. Videos on social media show authorities setting up traffic checkpoints and combing through neighborhoods throughout the city.


Scottish Sun
an hour ago
- Scottish Sun
Nicola Sturgeon reveals ‘rape taunts' and miscarriage abuse after memoir published
Her new book contains a number of other bombshell revelations Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) NICOLA Sturgeon yesterday told how she has faced rape taunts and abuse about her miscarriage since revealing her memoir this week. The former First Minister blamed critics of her gender self-ID push as she spoke to an audience today at her official book launch in Edinburgh. Sign up for the Politics newsletter Sign up 4 Nicola Sturgeon revealed the vile abuse she received over her miscarriage Credit: Alamy 4 Ms Sturgeon with former Newsnight presenter Kirsty Wark Credit: PA 4 Her memoir Frankly contains deeply personal revelations and bombshells from her political career Credit: John Kirkby Ms Sturgeon also said some of her fiercest critics on the trans issues had "other prejudices', repeating the claim they were like supporters of US President Donald Trump, Russian dictator Vladimir Putin, and leader of Turkey Recip Erdogan. Speaking to former Newsnight presenter Kirsty Wark at the Edinburgh Book Festival, the ex-SNP leader attacked critics of her doomed gender self-ID push. Branding the debate 'toxic', Ms Sturgeon said: "These are people who call themselves feminists, standing up for women's rights saying things about me, such as when I described my miscarriage experience the other day, 'I haven't laughed as much in years', accusing me of making it up, people saying they hope I am raped in a toilet. 'These are the kinds of things that go in both directions." Speaking afterwards she said had not spoken to cops about the social media posts but said the scale of abuse directed towards women in particular made her 'deeply concerned' for democracy. And she blasted the abuse she received over her backing of trans rights, adding: 'I've been vilified and received some awful abuse.' During the event she also rolled her eyes at the mention of fierce anti-self ID critic and former SNP MP, Joanna Cherry KC - before taking several fawning questions from the audience about how good she was as First Minister. Ms Sturgeon also defiantly doubled down on her backing of the controversial gender reform bid, but said she wished she had found a 'more collegiate way forward'. She added: 'My life would be easier if I just gave in on this issue and said yeah I got it wrong and we should never try to make life better for the trans community. 'But I will never - to make my own life easier - betray a stigmatised minority, because that's not why I came into politics.' Five of the biggest BOMBSHELL moments from Nicola Sturgeon's new memoir And in a fresh swipe at her gender critics and repeating a 2023 claim where she said feminist voices against trans rights were 'deeply misogynist, often homophobic, possibly some of them racist as well', she said: 'I defy anybody to say that there are not people, supporters of Trump, Putin or Erdogan or here people like supporters of Farage who fall into these categories and have chosen to take on this issue. 'It is the soft underbelly of other prejudice and I find it really hard to believe that even people who passionately disagree with me can't see that.' Ms Sturgeon's memoir, titled Frankly, has already sparked fury from allies of her late mentor Alex Salmond. In it, she accuses the former first minister of not reading the SNP's blueprint for indy, the White Paper, of being opposed to gay marriage, and of potentially leaking sexual misconduct claims against himself. This led to Salmond allies including Alba Party leader Kenny MacAskill and others accusing her of 'rewriting history' and 'twisting the knife' into Mr Salmond. But Ms Sturgeon rejected this, saying: 'I am not rewriting history. 'It is my story in my words and I am pretty glad I have done it.'