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Map Shows Russian Air Bases Hit in 'Pearl Harbor' Drone Raid

Map Shows Russian Air Bases Hit in 'Pearl Harbor' Drone Raid

Newsweek2 days ago

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
Coordinated, long-range strikes on multiple Russian airbases thousands of miles from Ukraine took out more than a third of Russia's strategic cruise missile carriers, according to Kyiv, dealing a stinging blow to Moscow ahead of renewed peace talks.
Ukraine on Sunday launched 117 individually-operated drones at four airbases across Russia, officials said, in an attack branded "Russia's Pearl Harbor" by observers, referencing Japan's infamous 1941 assault on the U.S. Pacific Fleet at Oahu, Hawaii.
The operation, codenamed "Spiderweb," inflicted roughly $7 billion in damage as Kyiv struck more than 40 Russian aircraft simultaneously, including nuclear-capable bombers, Ukraine's SBU domestic security agency said.
Why It Matters
Russian and Ukrainian officials are meeting for fresh rounds of ceasefire negotiations in Istanbul on Monday, although there is muted optimism for what the pained talks could produce. Meetings in Turkey last month secured the largest prisoner swap of the war, but failed to yield much progress on a ceasefire deal.
Brokering an agreement to bring Europe's largest land conflict since World War II to a close has been a core foreign policy pledge for President Donald Trump, although his administration has said it is willing to walk away if a deal cannot be swiftly reached.
Russia has in recent weeks launched its largest-scale aerial attacks of the more than three years of war on Ukraine.
What To Know
The head of Ukraine's SBU security service, Lieutenant General Vasyl Malyuk, said on Monday that Kyiv hit 41 aircraft, including Tu-95 and Tu-22 strategic bombers Russia has used extensively to fire long-range missiles at Ukraine.
Ukraine also struck an A-50 spy plane, Malyuk said. The A-50 surveillance aircraft is an expensive and scarce asset for Russia, previously targeted by Ukraine.
Footage widely circulating online appears to show several aircraft in flames or damaged. Andriy Kovalenko, an official with Ukraine's national security and defense council, said on Monday "at least 13 Russian aircraft were destroyed."
Ukraine said it had targeted four airfields "simultaneously," while Russia's Defense Ministry said Ukraine had used first person-view (FPV) drones to target military airfields in five regions — Amur, Irkutsk, Ivanovo, Murmansk and Ryazan.
Moscow acknowledged "several" aircraft had caught fire in the strikes in Murmansk, in northwestern Russia, and Irkutsk, in Siberia.
The SBU did not name Ukrainka, an airbase in the Amur region reportedly hit by drones, as a target. An SBU spokesperson declined to comment when approached for clarification.
Satellite imagery captured by Airbus on September 20, 2023, and provided by Google Earth shows Russia's Ukrainka air base, one of five Russian bomber bases targeted in a Ukrainian drone attack on June 1, 2025.
Satellite imagery captured by Airbus on September 20, 2023, and provided by Google Earth shows Russia's Ukrainka air base, one of five Russian bomber bases targeted in a Ukrainian drone attack on June 1, 2025.
Airbus/Google Earth
Igor Kobzev, the governor of Russia's Irkutsk region, said an unspecified number of drones had struck a military facility near the village of Sredny, close to the Belaya airfield. Kobzev, as well as Russian and Ukrainian media reports, said drones had been launched from trucks parked close to the airfields.
The trucks, stationed near the targets, likely helped Ukraine to avoid Russian air defenses and electronic warfare systems, the U.S.-based think tank, the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), said on Sunday.
The SBU said it had transported the drones over the border, hiding the uncrewed vehicles in "mobile wooden houses" mounted on trucks with remotely-operated removable roofs.
Ukraine's President, Volodymyr Zelensky, said the long-range strikes were a year-and-a-half in the making.
Russia said "some of the participants" in the attacks had been detained by Russian authorities. Zelensky said those who had helped execute the operation were "withdrawn from Russian territory before the operation" and were "now safe."
Satellite imagery captured by Airbus on August 7, 2023, and provided by Google Earth shows Russia's Ivanovo Severny air base, one of five Russian bomber bases targeted in a Ukrainian drone attack on June 1,...
Satellite imagery captured by Airbus on August 7, 2023, and provided by Google Earth shows Russia's Ivanovo Severny air base, one of five Russian bomber bases targeted in a Ukrainian drone attack on June 1, 2025. More
Airbus/Google Earth
A main planning site for the "Spiderweb" operation on Russian soil was "located directly next to FSB headquarters in one of their regions," Zelensky added. Russia's FSB is Moscow's main security agency, the successor to the feared Soviet-era KGB.
"Managing to execute this operation from the Murmansk Peninsula to Far East as one perfectly timed attack in the face of the FSB is a stunning proof of their skill," said Frederik Mertens, a strategic analyst at Dutch research organization TNO.
While Ukraine has successfully targeted Russia's long-range aviation fleet in the past, there has been "nothing on this scale," Mertens told Newsweek.
The strikes were the first time Ukraine had carried out a drone attack on the Irkutsk region, around 2,800 miles from the Ukrainian border. Kyiv has previously targeted the Ryazan airbase of Dyagilevo and the Olenya airfield in Murmansk.
The Ukrainian strikes could have a "real impact" on Moscow's ability to launch long-range precision strikes at Ukraine, depending on how many of its Tu-95 aircraft Russia has left, Mertens said.
Russia likely has fewer than 90 Tu-22, Tu-95 and Tu-160 aircraft at its disposal, The Economist reported on Sunday.
Satellite imagery captured by Airbus on June 1, 2023, and provided by Google Earth shows Russia's Dyagilevo air base, one of five Russian bomber bases targeted in a Ukrainian drone attack on June 1, 2025.
Satellite imagery captured by Airbus on June 1, 2023, and provided by Google Earth shows Russia's Dyagilevo air base, one of five Russian bomber bases targeted in a Ukrainian drone attack on June 1, 2025.
Airbus/Google Earth
What People Are Saying
Ukrainian President, Volodymyr Zelensky, said in a statement on Sunday: "Planning, organisation, every detail was perfectly executed. It can be said with confidence that this was an absolutely unique operation."
What Happens Next
The second round of peace negotiations are underway in Turkey, but it remains to be seen whether renewed, U.S.-brokered efforts will usher in progress towards a deal.

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