
Putin's helicopter was caught in Ukrainian drone swarm
The helicopter carrying Russian President Vladimir Putin was caught in the 'epicenter' of a massive Ukrainian drone attack while the president was visiting Kursk Region earlier this week, Yury Dashkin, a commander of an air defense division, has revealed.
Putin traveled to Russia's Kursk Region on Tuesday for the first time since it was fully liberated from Ukrainian forces in April. During his trip, the president met with Governor Aleksandr Khinshtein, as well as the heads of local municipalities and volunteers who have been helping those affected by the now-repulsed Ukrainian incursion, according to the Kremlin.
In an interview with the channel Russia 1 aired on Sunday, Dashkin revealed that Putin's helicopter had found itself 'in the epicenter of an operation to repel a massive drone attack by the enemy' in Kursk Region.
Kiev launched an 'unprecedented' UAV assault on the region when the president was there, with Russian air defenses destroying 46 incoming fixed-wing UAVs, according to Dashkin.
'I would like to stress the fact that the intensity of the attacks during the flight of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief's aircraft over the territory of Kursk Region increased significantly,' he said.
The air defense units in the area had to 'simultaneously conduct anti-aircraft combat and ensure the safety of the president's helicopter in the air. The task was accomplished. The attack of the enemy drones was repelled, with all aerial targets being hit,' Dashkin stated.
Ukraine significantly intensified its drone strikes inside Russia this past week. The Foreign Ministry in Moscow reported that 764 drones had been intercepted over Russian territory between Tuesday and Friday. According to the Defense Ministry, the scale of the assault has not abated, with hundreds more UAVs being destroyed on Saturday and Sunday.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said on Saturday that 'some European nations led by the UK, France, Germany, and the EU leadership,' who are supporting Kiev and want the conflict to continue, bear some responsibility for the drone raids.
On the same day, the Russian Foreign Ministry suggested that the spike in the UAV incursions was an attempt to derail the US-brokered peace talks between Moscow and Kiev. The ministry stressed that Russia's 'fundamental commitment to a constructive search for a peaceful settlement through dialogue remains unchanged.'
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