
Inside the Ukrainian Drone Operation That Devastated Russia's Bomber Fleet
KYIV, Ukraine—Ukraine's spectacular drone attack on Russia's strategic bomber fleet on Sunday began with a daunting request from Ukraine's president to his spy chief in late fall 2023.
The Russian Air Force was pummeling Ukraine's power stations and cities with missiles, overwhelming meager air defenses, and Volodymyr Zelensky wanted to know: How can we fight back?
Lt. Gen. Vasyl Maliuk, a 42-year-old career security officer with broad shoulders and a stern mien, has earned a reputation for innovative operations with explosive naval and aerial drones that forced Russia to withdraw much of its Black Sea Fleet from its base in occupied Crimea and damaged dozens of oil plants and military-production facilities deep inside Russia.
But the task was formidable. The strategic bombers that launched many of Russia's most powerful missiles operate from beyond the range of Ukraine's air-defense systems, and were based at airfields across the country as much as 3,000 miles from Ukraine. Ukraine's SBU security service, which Maliuk heads, has deployed long-range aerial drones effectively, but they are vulnerable to Russian air defenses, including missile interceptors and jammers.
What Maliuk and his team came up with shocked the world on Sunday with its audacity. The agency smuggled Ukrainian drone parts into Russia and assembled them at a secret location. SBU operatives inside Russia used unwitting truck drivers to deliver a modern version of the Trojan horse by concealing the drones in the roofs of wooden containers. On Sunday, the roofs, activated remotely, slid open on trucks close to Russian airbases, releasing dozens of drones and adding a dash of Transformers to old-school spycraft.
More than 100 quadcopters, small drones with four rotors, emerged and zipped toward their targets, some descending through smoke billowing from already-damaged aircraft.
A Wall Street Journal analysis of official Ukrainian statements along with satellite images, accounts by people familiar with the operation, and photographs and videos posted on social media shows how a meticulously planned operation that combined homegrown technology with the classic art of deception unfolded.
Ukraine said that it damaged 41 warplanes valued at $7 billion at four bases using drones that cost about $2,000 each. Publicly available videos and satellite imagery reviewed by Journal showed 12 damaged planes across two airbases.
'The numbers the Ukrainians have been providing aren't backed up yet by hard evidence,' said Sam Lair, a research associate at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, a Monterey, Calif.-based think tank that studies weapons of mass destruction. Lair identified the damaged planes through satellite imagery and social media.
Still, he said, 'It's clear that this has dealt a very heavy blow to the Russian strategic bomber force, even if we aren't seeing the numbers that the Ukrainians have claimed.'
Of the four airbases that the SBU said it targeted, satellite imagery indicates that three sustained damage, and only two show visible signs of damaged aircrafts—the Belaya and Olenya airbases.
Satellite imagery from Monday shows that a third airbase, Dyagilevo, sustained only a patch of burned grass, according to Lair.
Much of the damaged equipment is irreplaceable or hard to rebuild. A Ukrainian law-enforcement official said at least one of the targets damaged was a rare A-50 plane, which provides airborne early warning of potential threats and targets as well as command and control of the battlefield. Available satellite imagery doesn't show any damaged A-50s.
Most of the planes hit were Tupolev Tu-95 bombers, a Soviet-era aircraft still crucial to Russia's long-range missile campaigns. While the extent of the damage to Tu-95s remains unclear, in light of the aircrafts' age and scarcity of parts, even relatively minor damage could derail Russia's air missions for months, Lair said.
Maliuk and his agency have plenty of experience striking prime targets, from the use of a truck bomb to damage the Kerch Bridge between mainland Russia and occupied Crimea to assassinations on Russian territory, including the killing of a Russian general with an exploding scooter as well as a bomb hidden in a statuette to kill a prominent war blogger.
Zelensky said that Ukrainian intelligence operatives in Russia had set up a base right under the noses of Russia's Federal Security Service, the FSB. Russian law enforcement searched a concrete warehouse Sunday in Chelyabinsk, an industrial city in the Ural Mountains about 900 miles east of Moscow and a few miles from the local FSB headquarters, according to Russian media.
Russian state media named a Ukrainian deejay who had been living in Russia and recently relocated to the city last year as one of the people responsible for logistics behind the drone attack, purchasing the trucks that would carry the drones and coordinating the drivers. He didn't respond to requests for comment.
Some of the materials the SBU used in the operation had to be smuggled across tightly controlled borders, including the parts that would eventually be assembled into the attack drones.
A Ukrainian law-enforcement official said the drones used were quadcopters called Osa, produced by the Ukrainian company First Contact. The craft, about the length of a man's arm, are made in Ukraine, can carry a payload just over 7 pounds and travel at a maximum speed of just over 90 miles per hour, according to the manufacturer's website.
Valeriy Borovyk, the founder of First Contact, declined to comment on whether the drones were used in the operation, but said they are manufactured for complex special operations.
Osa, Ukrainian for 'bee,' has several alternatives for how it can be controlled. One of them is the ability to connect to cellular networks, which Russia shuts down when it expects an incoming strike but remain operational when there is an element of surprise, as there was with Sunday's operation.
Borovyk said it was the SBU's meticulous preparation ahead of the strike that would have allowed for drone operators to do their job effectively. He said the strike portion of the operation was the cherry on top.
'But this cake, they prepared it, cooked it, put it in a box, decorated it—to continue the metaphor—and all of this was done with great care and detail,' Borovyk said.
The truck drivers said to Russian authorities that they weren't told about the contents of the containers and were instructed to stop at gas stations or roadside rest stops near the airports, according to Russian media.
Once parked at their designated locations, the roofs of the containers housing the quadcopters were opened remotely, the SBU said, and the drones flew out with a high-pitched buzz.
A photo shows Maliuk as he surveyed diagrams of planes where the most vulnerable spots are marked with red crosses. Justin Bronk, a senior research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute in London, said the crosses mark where internal fuel tanks are located on each type of plane, which would have caused a major fire when ignited by the small payload from the drones.
Celebrating the attack, Zelensky lauded the SBU—and personally thanked Maliuk—for the operation, which he said showed Ukraine is still in the fight.
'Russia's whole narrative, which they spread everywhere, in Europe, in Britain, in America, that they're safe, they're winning the war—this narrative is not working,' Zelensky told reporters Monday. 'They're not safe.'
Write to James Marson at james.marson@wsj.com and Brenna T. Smith at brenna.smith@wsj.com
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Lessons Ukraine's Operation Spider Web has for India
Ukraine's Operation Spider Web has revealed a stark new reality: drones costing as little as $1,000 can destroy aircraft worth $100 million or more. This wildly asymmetric cost ratio underscores urgent lessons for India in modern warfare read more Ukraine achieved its longest-range attack, into Russia, on Sunday, 1 June. Hitting targets on four strategic military bases nearly 4,000 kilometres away from Ukrainian territory and hitting around 40 Russian warplanes. As many as 13 of these were reportedly destroyed, and others were damaged. Ukrainian President Zelenskyy claimed that 117 drones were used in the so-called 'Spider's Web' operation by the Security Service of Ukraine (SSU). The strike had been nearly 18 months in the planning. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Russia acknowledged the Ukrainian attacks and termed them as 'act of terror'. Zelenskyy congratulated SSU head Vasyl Maliuk with the 'absolutely brilliant result' of the operation. 'Interestingly, the 'office' of our operation on Russian territory was located right next to the regional office of the FSB, the powerful Russian state security service,' Zelensky said. 'All the people involved in the operation had been safely moved out of Russia before the strikes,' he added. The attacks took place as Russian and Ukrainian negotiators were heading to Istanbul, Turkey, for a second round of peace talks on Monday. Ukraine's audacious drone attack sent a subtle message to Russia and also the West, which is already suffering from 'war fatigue'. This very daring operation is likely to further constrain relations and negatively impact peace talks. Meanwhile, Russia responded with a massive drone and missile attack. Let us look at the targets and the drone attack modalities. Complex Logistics Planning The whole operation can be described as an 'extremely complex logistic' plan. The SSU first transported the first-person view (FPV) drones to Russia in mobile wooden crates. Once on Russian territory, the drones were hidden under the roofs of these cabins, which had been placed on cargo vehicles. The genius of this entire operation was not the technology but in the organisational and logistical part, multiplied by total local sloppiness in terms of ensuring elementary security measures. Drone Attack Modalities On the afternoon of 1 June 2025, the SSU launched a clandestine attack codenamed 'Spider's Web' on multiple Russian military airfields, targeting strategic bombers. Undoubtedly an 'audacious and sophisticated' operation. The strike that was 18 months in the making successfully targeted 41 Russian bombers. The drones were hidden in wooden mobile cabins atop trucks. The cabins had remotely operated roofs. Trucks were brought near the airbases. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD At the right moment, the roofs were remotely opened, and the drones took off to strike the Russian bombers. Each of the 117 drones launched had its own controlling pilot. The targets were Russian strategic nuclear-capable bombers Tu-95 and Tu-22M3, as well as A-50 early warning warplanes. The attack destroyed or severely damaged dozens of aircraft deep inside Russian territory. Screenshots from footage released by Ukraine purportedly showed drone attacks on Russian warplanes. Video footage from several Russian military airfields showed destroyed aircraft and planes engulfed in flames, though the full extent of the damage is still being assessed. Ukraine has estimated that 34 per cent of Russia's strategic bombers were damaged, costing $7 billion in losses to Russian strategic aviation, a claim that most call highly exaggerated. The Russian government confirmed that in the Murmansk and Irkutsk regions, several aircraft reportedly caught fire after drones were launched from nearby areas. The blazes were extinguished, and there were no casualties. The Russian Defence Ministry said that the Ukrainian drones had attacked airfields in five regions, stretching across five time zones. The attack on Belaya air base in Irkutsk was especially significant; it marked the first time any location in Siberia had come under attack. The Olenya base in Murmansk is one of Russia's key strategic airfields with high-value nuclear-capable aircraft. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD The operation was reportedly authorised and carried out at the highest levels. Some military analysts have likened Ukraine's elaborate drone operation to a covert Israeli strike in September 2024, when Israel remotely detonated beepers and walkie-talkies it had earlier distributed to Hezbollah operatives in Lebanon and killed at least nine people and wounded some 2,800, after the devices exploded nearly simultaneously across multiple sites. The other somewhat equivalent operations were Israel's 1976 'Entebbe Raid' to rescue hostages 2,500 miles away; US Navy SEAL's 2011 'Operation Neptune Spear' to kill Osama bin Laden in Abbottabad, Pakistan; and the 2007 Israeli 'Operation Orchard' stealth bombing of a Syrian nuclear facility. Such an elaborate operation, mostly by the Ukrainians, would have had the involvement of local Russians. Some of the participants in the terrorist attacks have been detained, Russian sources said. Russian Strategic Bombers The Tupolev Tu-22M is a supersonic, variable-sweep wing, long-range strategic and maritime strike bomber developed in the 1960s. Just before the Ukraine conflict, there were 66 aircraft in service. Combat range is 2,500 km with a typical 10,000 kg weapons load. It can carry four Kh-47M2 Kinzhal nuclear-capable hypersonic air-launched ballistic missiles. Many of which have been fired on targets in Ukraine. The Tupolev Tu-160 is also a supersonic, variable-sweep wing heavy strategic bomber. It is the largest and heaviest Mach 2-plus supersonic military aircraft ever built. The first upgraded variant, the Tu-160M, joined service in December 2014. In addition to 16 old, 50 new aircraft were to be built. The aircraft has a combat range of 2,000 km at Mach 1.5 and 7,300 km at subsonic speeds. It can carry a maximum of 45,000 kg of ordnance, including 12 conventional or nuclear cruise missiles. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Attacked Airbases The Russian Aerospace Forces' Belaya airbase is in Irkutsk Oblast (Siberia). This was the farthest target, nearly 4,900 kilometres east from Kiev. It is controlled by Russia's long-range aviation. It has significant ramp space and 38 bomber revetments. It houses the Tu-22M3 bomber. There are a few transport aircraft. The base was especially important in projecting power against China following the Sino-Soviet split of the late 1960s. Not too far from the airbase is the Irkutsk Aviation Plant that produced over 7,000 aircraft, including the Su-27, Su-30 and Yak-130. It is also involved in the production of the MC-21 airliner. Olenya airbase, also of Russian Aerospace Forces, is at Olenegorsk, Murmansk Oblast. It is in the northwestern part of Russia, very close to northern Finland. It is also a major Russian Navy reconnaissance base, located on the Kola Peninsula, 92 km south of Murmansk. It is a key facility for intercontinental flights across the North Atlantic basin. The airbase operates Tupolev Tu-22M3 aircraft. Interestingly, the Tu-95V aircraft carrying the Tsar Bomba, the most powerful nuclear weapon ever detonated, took off from the airbase on 30 October 1961. The first test launch of the Kh-47M2 Kinzhal 'dagger', a nuclear-capable air-launched ballistic missile, fired from a MiG-31K, in the Arctic took place mid-November 2019 from the airbase. In July 2024 Ukraine made an unconfirmed claim that they attacked the base with a drone and hit a Tu-22M3 bomber. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Dyagilevo airbase operated by Russian Aerospace Forces is in the Ryazan Oblast. It serves as a training centre for Russia's strategic bomber force. It is very close to Belarus and not so far from Ukraine. It has a Flight Refueller Aircraft (FRA) regiment with the Ilyushin Il-78/78M and the Instructor Red Banner Heavy Bomber Aviation Regiment as part of the Centre for Combat Employment. A number of Tu-16, Tu-22, and M-4 aircraft are mothballed here. It is a training base for Tu-22M3, Tu-134, Tu-95MS and An-26. Air tankers operating Il-78 and Il-78M are stationed here. On 5 December 2022, the base was attacked by Ukrainian drones which damaged a Tu-22M3 bomber and destroyed a fuel truck. Ivanovo Severny airbase, northeast of Moscow, is controlled by Military Transport Aviation. It is home to the IL-76 aircraft and also to the Airborne Early Warning and Control (AEW&C) Aviation Regiment. It also has the combat training/development centre for military transport aviation and uses the A-50 and A-50U AEW&C aircraft. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD Not the First Long-Distance Attack Despite the great success of Ukrainian attacks, the world needs to temper expectations of the strategic outcomes. Russia has been under these sorts of attacks for some time, and Moscow's resolve to achieve its war goals has not been affected. Ukraine had been undertaking a long-range strike campaign against targets inside Russia. They have hit targets in capital Moscow. It has done this to degrade Russia's war-making capacity by attacking factories and oil refineries. Ukrainian drone attacks on Russia's Ryazan refinery southeast of Moscow in March and May 2024 knocked out 3.3 million metric tonnes, or 4 per cent, of Russia's total oil refining capacity. In June 2024, Ukraine had claimed a successful drone strike on a Sukhoi Su-57 fifth-generation aircraft at the Akhtubinsk airfield, which is 589 kilometres from the front lines in Ukraine. Russian Response to Drone Strikes Ukraine's most damaging drone strike of the war was escalatory in nature. Russia struck Ukraine with vengeance after the Ukrainian drone attack. The Ukrainian authorities say 472 drones and seven ballistic and cruise missiles were involved in a wave of attacks on Ukraine. Ukraine claimed it to be one of the largest single Russian drone attacks so far. Ukraine says it 'neutralised' 385 aerial drones/projectiles. Ukraine's land forces said 12 of its military personnel were killed and more than 60 injured in a Russian missile strike on a training centre. Ukraine accused Russia of undermining the next round of peace talks. STORY CONTINUES BELOW THIS AD What were counter-drone options? Such a massive drone attack so deep was not anticipated by Russia, though there had been deep drone attacks in the past. There clearly was significant local support for this operation that had been building silently for 18 months. Ukrainians speak fluent Russian and merge with the local population. Clearly it was an intelligence failure from the Russian side. If it can happen in a country that is run autocratically with a powerful Federal Security Service (FSB), the successor of the KGB, then it can happen in other lesser security-conscious countries even more easily. The drones were flying in from just outside the airbases. Very little flying time. FPV control was carried out using the mobile networks. A webcam was connected to the PC, which transmitted the image and sent back commands to control the drone. If there had been some means to know and had there been time, the mobile Internet could have been turned off. An airfield with such strategic assets should have had anti-drone boundary security. This should have included electro-optical and IR cameras, anti-drone snipers, signal jammers, and anti-drone directed energy systems. The aircraft themselves could have been secured by foldable large nets. To Summarise The Spider Web operation represents a new normal for Ukraine's asymmetric warfare strategy, combining long-term covert planning, insider logistics, and high-precision drone warfare to deliver one of the most impactful strikes of the conflict. It indeed was a 'black day' for the Russian military and security establishment, as they made 'serious intelligence errors'. The strike has been a tactical and strategic success with a high degree of symbolism. Ukraine's ability to strike strategic infrastructure deep inside Russian territory, using low-cost and high-level intelligence tactics, brings in a new dynamic to warfare. Will these attacks force dispersal of Russia's strategic assets? To create infrastructure to secure them? Will Russians now move their aircraft more frequently to different locations? Will Russia bring in anti-drone defences at all major airfields? The full import of the Ukrainian drone strikes on Russia's military capabilities is too early to assess at this stage. The losses will reduce the number of cruise missile-carrying airborne platforms. These Russian supersonic/hypersonic air-launched cruise missiles (ALCM) are harder to intercept. These strikes have greatly enhanced the Ukrainian military's and civilian population's morale and 'Will' to continue to defend the country that was fast depleting since US President Trump decided to slow the military aid and support. For the peace talks, Ukraine has sent the signal that they are not negotiating from a position of weakness. The aim of the attack was to put political pressure on Russian President Putin to negotiate a war termination agreement favourable to Ukraine. If peace talks do not move forward, Russia could substantially increase aerial assaults to redeem its military honour. In 2012, Russian President Vladimir Putin declared, 'Nuclear weapons remain the most important guarantee of Russia's sovereignty and territorial integrity and play a key role in maintaining the regional balance and stability.' Russia's nuclear arsenal would also come into play in the event of 'actions by an adversary affecting elements of critical importance, the disablement of which would disrupt response actions by nuclear forces.' In 2024 Vladimir Putin ordered Russia's nuclear doctrine to be updated to consider the complicated geopolitical realities that had emerged from the ongoing Special Military Operation (SMO) in Ukraine, where the conflict had morphed into a proxy war between the collective West (NATO and the US) and Russia. Operation 'Spider Web' has been an assault on critical Russian military infrastructure directly related to Russia's strategic nuclear deterrence. Imagine an attack on B-2 bombers stationed at Whiteman Air Force Base in Missouri. Many feel that this attack could not have occurred without the consent of Ukraine's European partners, in particular the UK, France and Germany, all of whom were engaged in direct consultations with President Zelenskyy in the days leading up to the execution of the operation. Even the US could have been in the know. Hope such events do not push the world into a catastrophic situation. Lessons for India – Whole of Nation Approach In the four-day 'Operation Sindoor', India had learnt lessons and the importance of drones and loitering munitions (LM) as offensive weapons and also the need for counter-drone systems and strategy. Ukraine's Operation Spider Web has revealed a stark new reality: drones costing as little as $1,000 can destroy aircraft worth $100 million or more. This wildly asymmetric cost ratio underscores urgent lessons for India in modern warfare. The impact of drones on future warfare has been re-emphasised. The composition of future militaries would require a balance between exquisite weapon platforms with large numbers of cheaper capabilities. Military stations in densely populated cities are vulnerable to ground attacks. One would recall the attack by Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) and Al Qaeda which took place on May 22, 2011, at PNS Mehran, the headquarters of the Pakistan Navy's Naval Air Arm and the most populous Pakistani military installation, located near the PAF's Faisal Air Force Base of Karachi. 15 attackers killed 18 military personnel and wounded 16 in a sophisticated terrorist attack and also destroyed two American-built P-3C Orion surveillance aircraft. Similarly, there were failed attacks at IAF's Pathankot airfield and also a drone attack against Jammu airfield. The military bases, in war zones and deeper home, are now even more vulnerable. Some of the larger strategic assets, such as AEW&C, Flight Refueller Aircraft (FRA), and Cargo aircraft, cannot be parked under hardened shelters. Placed in the open, they will be vulnerable. While aircraft strikes and even cruise missiles can be intercepted, small drones in large numbers, launched from across the airfield boundary wall, would have different dynamics. Airfield security would have to be tightened. These scarce and expensive assets must be dispersed more often. Security around all airbases and military installations has to be further tightened. The Russian intelligence agencies and internal security apparatus could not track these drone-laden trucks for so long. Security is now everyone's business. India is a multicultural country with a huge population. Most military installations and airfields have civilian populations and structures close to the boundary walls. The local police, the highway and traffic police, the Intelligence Bureau (IB), and military police all have to be in great coordination. General public awareness has also to go up. Anti-drone measures have evolved and need to be put in place at all to defend high-value targets. These could be used to hit not just military targets but also political centres of power. Large political rallies and religious congregations. Time to get into a huddle and do some out-of-the-box thinking and get our 'anti-drone' act right. The writer is former Director General, Centre for Air Power Studies. Views expressed in the above piece are personal and solely those of the author. They do not necessarily reflect Firstpost's views.