Ukraine Situation Report: Russian Navy Creating New Drone Regiments In Wake Of Enemy Successes
'The new units, which will be formed in all fleets, will perform reconnaissance and strike functions,' the official Russian Izvestia news outlet reported on Tuesday. 'According to experts, combining different types of drones will allow for effective reconnaissance, surveillance, and destruction of sea and coastal targets.'
Russian media reports that unmanned systems regiments are being created within the Russian Navy, and will include air, land and maraitime robotic systems. The new units, which will be formed in all Russian naval fleets, will perform reconnaissance and strike functions.… pic.twitter.com/t6dmHYgklq
— Samuel Bendett (@sambendett) May 13, 2025
There will be at least five of these regiments, military expert Dmitry Boltenkov told Izvestia.
'Three will be part of the fleets based in the European part of Russia, and two will be for the Pacific Fleet,' Boltenkov explained. 'There is a very large distance between Primorsky Krai and Kamchatka, and two regiments may be needed to control such remote regions.'
The Caspian and Dnieper flotillas may also receive the same units, Boltnekov suggested.
'The regiments will be armed with medium- and long-range devices – these are Orlans, Forposts, Lancet loitering munitions and more serious machines. FPV drones that solve tactical problems are logical to include in the units of water areas,' Boltnekov said. 'Unmanned boats (USVs) will also be responsible for monitoring the water area, reconnaissance, mine countermeasures, anti-submarine defense, and, if necessary, striking the enemy.'
Ukraine's use of USVs has also prompted the Russian Navy to create a course of study on these systems in the curriculum of its higher educational institutions.
'Now all cadets study the structure and characteristics of drones of various types and their use,' Izvestia pointed out. 'In the future, they will master the combat use of attack drones to destroy enemy UAVs, unmanned boats and saboteurs. Classes are taught by teachers who have experience working with drones in combat zones.'
'Units where robotic equipment will become the main type of weapon will operate an order of magnitude more effectively than those equipped with traditional equipment,' former deputy commander of the Pacific Fleet for armament, retired Rear Admiral Igor Korolev, told Izvestia. 'New equipment must be systematically used, studied, applied — and they will do this, without being afraid to understand the problems.'
This is a positive, but overly delayed development, a retired Russian Navy officer who uses the @Capt_Navy X handle told The War Zone.
'This is a good idea and I hope it will be implemented,' @Capt_Navy X noted. 'The creation of a separate unit will allow for better planning of its logistical support and combat use.'
As we have frequently reported, the Ukrainian development of USVs as weapons has destroyed several Russian vessels and aircraft, helping keep the Black Sea Fleet largely at bay. That lesson isn't lost on @Capt_navy.
'Action creates counteraction,' he stated. 'This should have been done at least a year ago.'
Russia's new Navy drone regiment plan is raising concerns in Kyiv.
'If it is true, some difficulties would be raised to the Ukrainian forces,' a retired high-ranking Ukrainian officer told us. 'There will be possibility to see more tensions and actions in Black Sea.'
'For now, the Russians don't have much to deter, prevent or disturb our maritime drone operations,' the retired officer added. 'They are trying to deter our sea drones operations by using areal assets, not maritime. With introduction of a naval drone command and having appropriate assets they could be more effective in countering our intentions, and create more difficulties in planning and conducting operations.'
On the battlefield, the eastern Ukrainian region of Donetsk continues to see the heaviest fighting, however, battles are raging across the 600 miles of front lines as well as the Russian regions of Kursk and Belgorod.
Here are the key takeaways from the latest Institute for the Study of War (ISW) assessment:
Belgorod: A Russian milblogger claimed on May 12 that Russian forces repelled a Ukrainian attack near Popovka (northwest of Belgorod City).
Kursk: The Ukrainian General Staff reported on May 12 that Russian forces conducted ground attacks in unspecified areas of Kursk Oblast while Russian milbloggers claimed that Ukrainian forces attacked near Tetkino and Novyi Put (both southwest of Glushkovo).
Sumy: Fighting continued along the international border in Sumy Oblast near Bilovody (north of Sumy City) on May 12 with no discernible gains or losses by either side.
Kharkiv: Russian forces continued offensive operations northeast of Kharkiv City on May 12 but did not advance.
Luhansk: Russian forces continued offensive operations in the Borova, Lyman and Kupyansk directions on May 12 but did not advance.
Donetsk: Russian forces recently advanced in the Novopavlivka and Pokrovsk directions. They continued offensive operations in the Chasiv Yar, Kurakhove, Siversk and Velyka Novosilka directions on May 12 but did not advance.
Zaphorizhzhia: Russian forces continued offensive operations in western Zaporizhia Oblast on May 12 but did not advance.
Kherson: Russian forces conducted limited offensive operations in the Kherson direction on May 11 and 12 but did not advance.
NEW: Russian officials appear to be setting conditions for Russian President Vladimir Putin to reject Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky's invitation to meet on May 15 in Istanbul for bilateral ceasefire negotiations.
(1/2)Russia has reportedly deployed a largely… pic.twitter.com/FjpvXVXUAz
— Institute for the Study of War (@TheStudyofWar) May 12, 2025
While Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky says he would come to Turkey for potential peace negotiations, and U.S. President Donald Trump hinted that he might, Russian President Vladimir Putin has yet to commit and will likely not attend.
'The Kremlin has so far refused to say whether Putin – or anyone else – would travel to Turkey on Thursday, even though it was the Russian leader who initially proposed the talks,' CNN reported on Tuesday. 'Putin suggested the summit in response to the ceasefire-or-sanctions ultimatum given to Moscow by Ukraine's European allies on Saturday.'
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Tuesday that Putin would announce his decision in due course. 'As soon as the president considers it necessary, we will announce it,' Peskov said.
Zelensky 'will not meet with any other Russian representative in Istanbul, except Putin,' Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak told Reuters.
The Office of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has stated that he will only travel to Istanbul on Thursday to meet directly with Russian President Vladimir Putin, not any other high-ranking Russian official, adding that a meeting with anyone other than Putin would be… pic.twitter.com/mlR8cj8gG7
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) May 13, 2025
'Ukraine has always supported diplomacy. I am ready to come to Türkiye,' Zelensky proclaimed on X. 'Unfortunately, the world still has not received a clear response from Russia to the numerous proposals for a ceasefire. Russian shelling and assaults continue. Moscow has remained silent all day regarding the proposal for a direct meeting. A very strange silence.'
'One way or another, ' he added, 'Russia will have to end this war — and the sooner, the better. There is no sense in continuing the killing. President Erdoğan has expressed full readiness to host the meeting. It is important that President Trump fully supports the meeting, and we would like him to find an opportunity to come to Türkiye.'
Ukraine has always supported diplomacy. I am ready to come to Türkiye. Unfortunately, the world still has not received a clear response from Russia to the numerous proposals for a ceasefire.Russian shelling and assaults continue. Moscow has remained silent all day regarding the… pic.twitter.com/4AGiLX5Sdf
— Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Володимир Зеленський (@ZelenskyyUa) May 12, 2025
Ukrainian officials are painting Putin's reticence as a sign he is not interested in ending the war.
'If Vladimir Putin refuses to come to Turkey, it will be the final signal that Russia does not want to end this war, that Russia is not willing and not ready for any negotiations,' Zelensky's chief of staff, Andriy Yermak, said.
While Trump has suggested he might attend peace talks in Turkey, it is unclear at the moment if he will. Top Trump administration officials plan to be in Turkey this week, however, his attendance may largely be dictated by whether his Russian counterpart attends, a senior administration official told CNN.
The U.S. president is visiting the Gulf this week, making stops in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, for his first major overseas trip since the start of his second term, the network noted. Trump said he could detour to Turkey 'if I thought it would be helpful.'
'I think you may have a good result out of the Thursday meeting in Turkey between Russia and Ukraine,' Trump told reporters at the White House on Monday. 'I don't know where I'm going to be on Thursday, I've got so many meetings, but I was thinking about actually flying over there. There's a possibility of it, I guess, if I think things can happen.'
Trump could join Russia-Ukraine peace talks in Turkey via @FT https://t.co/M3If1QJReG
— Sir William Browder KCMG (@Billbrowder) May 13, 2025
Putin on Saturday proposed direct talks with Ukraine, after ignoring a Ukrainian proposal for an unconditional 30-day ceasefire, Reuters reported. Trump then publicly told Zelensky to accept.
'President Putin of Russia doesn't want to have a Cease Fire Agreement with Ukraine, but rather wants to meet on Thursday, in Turkey, to negotiate a possible end to the BLOODBATH,' Trump said Sunday on his Truth Social network. 'Ukraine should agree to this, IMMEDIATELY. At least they will be able to determine whether or not a deal is possible, and if it is not, European leaders, and the U.S., will know where everything stands, and can proceed accordingly! I'm starting to doubt that Ukraine will make a deal with Putin, who's too busy celebrating the Victory of World War ll, which could not have been won (not even close!) without the United States of America. HAVE THE MEETING, NOW!!!'
Ukrainian intelligence officials are also questioning Russia's intentions for ending the war.
They 'told the Financial Times that Russia appears to be gearing up for a larger offensive, moving forces to key hotspots on the battlefield, rather than signalling its readiness for peace talks.'
'Ukrainian intelligence officials told the Financial Times that Russia appears to be gearing up for a larger offensive, moving forces to key hotspots on the battlefield, rather than signalling its readiness for peace talks.' @ChristopherJM @polinaivanovva @laurapitel… pic.twitter.com/AA01VwumAU
— Rob Lee (@RALee85) May 13, 2025
In the background of the Turkey talks, the U.K. has postponed further measures against Russia that were due to be announced on Monday, The Guardian reported.
'However, the EU is continuing with its plans for another package of sanctions later this month,' the publication noted. 'A German government spokesperson said on Monday that the EU would begin working on the sanctions if there was not a ceasefire by the end of the day. But extra US action would be a gamechanger and the Republican senator Lindsey Graham has prepared a sanctions package that has broad congressional support.'
Peskov was dismissive of those efforts.
Peskov commented on Europe's statement to impose new sanctions if Moscow does not declare a ceasefire today:"Before this warning, we had already heard the warning the day before yesterday, if you remember. They were also voiced in a rather ultimatum form. Such ultimatum… https://t.co/CitcybUcmU pic.twitter.com/waYuLhaEs1
— Anton Gerashchenko (@Gerashchenko_en) May 12, 2025
China says it supports all efforts aimed at a political settlement of what it calls the 'Ukrainian crisis,' including the 30-day ceasefire proposed by Ukraine, its European partners and the United States.
'Regarding the Ukrainian crisis, China's position is consistent and clear. We believe that all efforts should be aimed at achieving peace,' Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian told the Ukrainian Ukrinform news outlet.
According to Lin, Beijing hopes that the parties to the conflict will be able to continue dialogue and negotiations to reach a fair, long-term and binding peace agreement acceptable to all parties, and ultimately achieve a political settlement of the crisis. Ukrinform added.
China supports the 30-day ceasefire proposed by Ukraine, Europe, and the United States, — Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Lin Jian. pic.twitter.com/7Tfa8Ux39x
—
MilitaryNewsUA
(@front_ukrainian) May 12, 2025
Allies in Europe have collectively given about half of the estimated $130 billion in military support provided to Ukraine since Russia invaded in 2022, The New York Times reported. The United States sent the rest.
On Friday, a congressional official told the Times that the United States had approved Germany's transfer of 125 long-range artillery rockets and 100 Patriot air-defense missiles to Ukraine. The critically needed weapons are made in the United States and cannot be exported — even if another country owns them — without American government approval.
While European leaders and investors appear willing to pump more money into weapons production, industry executives and experts predict it will take a decade to get assembly lines up to speed.
'Europe is trying to replace the assistance that we lost from the United States, but unfortunately, they don't have the capacity to do this,' Yehor Chernev, the deputy chair of the Ukrainian parliament's committee on national security, defense and intelligence, told the publication. 'It takes time between the decision and the real assistance.'
According to a congressional official who spoke to the New York Times, the United States has approved the transfer of 125 long-range artillery rockets, likely including M31 GMLRS for use by the Ukrainian Armed Force's M270 and M142 HIMARS, as well as 100 'Patriot' air-defense… pic.twitter.com/CjNwthigwC
— OSINTdefender (@sentdefender) May 12, 2025
The European Union will allocate an additional €900 million ($998 million) from frozen Russian assets for the purchase of weapons and ammunition for Ukraine, Charles Fries, Deputy Secretary General of the European External Action Service, said during the opening of the second Ukraine–EU Defence Industry Forum.
The move will increase the EU's recent total support for Ukraine's defence industry to €3.3 billion ($3.66 billion), he added.
EU to allocate €900 million from frozen
Russian assets for the purchase of weapons and ammunition for
Ukraine — EU External Action Service Deputy Secretary General Fries"In total, the EU has allocated €3.3 billion to support Ukraine and its defense industry," he said. pic.twitter.com/TkYHt9qiX4
—
MilitaryNewsUA
(@front_ukrainian) May 12, 2025
Iran is preparing to soon deliver launchers for short-range ballistic missiles that the U.S. said Tehran sent to Russia last year for use against Ukraine, Reuters reported, citing two Western security officials and a regional official.
Delivery of the Fath-360 launchers -with a range of about 75 miles – would help support Russia's grinding assault on its neighbor and reaffirm the deepening security ties between Moscow and Tehran.
The U.S. last September said that Iran delivered the missiles to Russia on nine Russian-flagged ships – which it sanctioned – and three sources told Reuters at that time that the launchers were not included.
Iran's permanent mission to the United Nations dismissed what it called 'baseless allegations' against Tehran.
'So long as conflict persists between the parties, Iran will abstain from rendering any form of military assistance to either side,' it told the wire service in an emailed statement.
We raised the issue of Iran supplying launchers back in 2022, but that never transpired. Having Iranian launchers would give Russia additional mobility for these missiles, while being fairly easy to maintain and operate, and would not have to be deeply integrated with Russian vehicles.
'Iran is preparing to deliver in the near future launchers for short-range ballistic missiles that the U.S. said Tehran sent to Russia last year for use against Ukraine, according to two Western security officials and a regional official.The delivery of the Fath-360 launchers -… pic.twitter.com/94vmz48E85
— Rob Lee (@RALee85) May 9, 2025
As part of an effort to condemn Iran for contributing to conflicts the world over, a Shahed-136 drone was recently displayed in the U.S. Capitol.
The Iranian-made drone, which has been used to devastating effect by Russia, was captured in Ukraine and brought to the United States via Poland, according to the Kyiv Post.
'The weapon was displayed during an event inside the U.S. Congress's Cannon Office Building organized by United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI), a nonprofit organization that focuses on countering threats posed by the Islamic regime, including its nuclear program and military actions,' the publication noted.
Downed Russian Shahed-136 attack drone in the US Capitol today as lawmakers push for harder sanctions on the original manufacturer, and key Russian backer; Iran. pic.twitter.com/Gbt8gzBgLE
— OSINTtechnical (@Osinttechnical) May 8, 2025
The prominent Russian nationalist ex-militia commander Igor Girkin (also known as Strelkov), a now jailed former FSB agent, again blasted Putin and Russia's military leadership for failing to properly prepare for war.
Igor Girkin (Strelkov), in his letters, continues to harshly criticize the authorities and President Putin personally for their failure to prepare the country for war, the collapse of military modernization, and their belief in the possibility of reaching agreements with the… pic.twitter.com/3jMv2wGJWt
— WarTranslated (@wartranslated) May 13, 2025
The absolute horror of modern war is captured in the terrifying, piercing whine of Ukrainian drones attacking a Russian trench.
'Several of our dugouts were burned. I passed by – I saw these pits filled with ash and burnt metal. Now we are huddled in other places, not so comfortable and, literally, almost on top of each other,' the Russian Groundhog Day Telegram channel reported. 'Several people were buried under the thickness of the earth during this time and only three survived and dug out … If someone could predict the weather – maybe there would be no yesterday. Three of us went for food in the morning – two returned in the evening, one of us had his spine damaged by shrapnel. The most offensive thing is an accidental short-range, an accidental shrapnel that flew under a bulletproof vest … And an hour and a half of hell for all of us – to pull out, provide assistance, wait for evacuation and hide, hide, hide from the omnipresent eyes of the enemy. To shrink into a green lump soaked in adrenaline in the bushes under the nasty ringing of kamikaze drones screwing into your ears…'
1/ The screech of drones (sound on) has become the defining sound of the Russia-Ukraine war. Two Russian commentaries describe what it's like in an environment where, according to Russian sources, Ukrainian drones outnumber Russian by seven to one.
pic.twitter.com/B3HkrZDbA4
— ChrisO_wiki (@ChrisO_wiki) May 12, 2025
The value of donated U.S. armor was again proven on the battlefield. The crew of a Ukrainian M113 armored personnel carrier (APC) explained how they were saved in one despite being hit by a Russian RPG. Of the more than 900 of these APCs provided by the U.S., Ukraine has lost at least 337, according to the Oryx open source tracking group. There were at least 238 destroyed, 11 damaged, 50 damaged and abandoned and 38 captured. Those figures could be higher because Oryx only tabulates losses for which it has visual identification.
The aftermath of an RPG hit on an M113. The Ukrainian crew was extremely lucky. pic.twitter.com/YLzRwp4alV
— WarTranslated (@wartranslated) May 12, 2025
A Ukrainian drone strike has destroyed a newly built workshop at the Scheglovsky Val plant in Tula, Russia, a facility known for manufacturing the Pantsir-S1 air defense system.
The strike took place on May 7, according to the open-source intelligence community CyberBoroshno.
Satellite imagery reviewed by the group reportedly showed that the workshop, completed in March as part of the plant's production expansion, was destroyed.
On May 7, a UAV(?) attack destroyed a newly constructed facility at the
Shcheglovsky Val plant, which was only completed in March of this year.This facility produces key Russian weapons systems, such as the Pantsir-S/S1 SAM, the Bakhcha-U and Berezhok combat modules, and… pic.twitter.com/EO9ZYfobMP
—
MilitaryNewsUA
(@front_ukrainian) May 11, 2025
Ukraine took another step in the ever-evolving drone war, attaching a so-called cope cage to one of its drones to protect against Russian first-person view (FPV) drones. The following video shows a Ukrainian drone kitted out with a metal mesh square on top designed to defeat Russian FPV interceptors. It is unclear from the video whether this has provided the desired protection.
It was… 'inetvitable'A Ukrainian drone with a cage to protect itself from Russian FPV interceptors. pic.twitter.com/XhUmTX6i2p
— CJ (@CasualArtyFan) May 13, 2025
The Ukrainian Wild Hornets drone developers claimed 'the first combat use of a drone with a grenade launcher in the Armed Forces of Ukraine.'
'Pilots of the BULAVA unit from the B. Khmelnytsky Independent Brigade installed a Hornet grenade launcher on the Korolev drone and successfully used it against enemy infantry,' the group claimed on Telegram.
Wild Hornets published a video purporting to show successful attacks against Russian forces.
The first combat use of a
Ukrainian drone with a grenade launcher against
Russian infantry. pic.twitter.com/4VVTeaLxwu
—
MilitaryNewsUA
(@front_ukrainian) May 13, 2025
Images emerged on social media of what Russian sources claim is a new Ukrainian long-range attack drone, dubbed the FP-1.
'The experts studied UAV wreckage that was found after recent massive attacks on Russian territories,' the Russian Paratrooper's Diary Telegram channel stated. 'Most of the components of the attack drone are from foreign suppliers, so during the initial inspection, it was discovered that the manufacturer indicated on the engines is Germany.'
'The warhead weighing 60-120 kg (130 to 260 pounds) mainly consists of OFB-60-UYa, KZ-6 and TNT blocks,' the Telegram channel claimed. 'The flight range of this drone is up to 1,600 km (about 994 miles).'
Russian base in Luhansk was targeted today by FP-1 drones. According to Russian sources, three Ukrainian fixed-wing strike UAVs targeted an asphalt concrete plant in Luhansk. The area has reportedly been attacked multiple times before, as it is believed that Russian forces are… https://t.co/vbicLU73EL pic.twitter.com/RFS3ph3oS1
— Special Kherson Cat
(@bayraktar_1love) May 13, 2025
The Ukrainian Defense Ministry (MoD) released video it says showed one of its first-person view (FPV) drones flying into a hangar full of Russian armor. The MoD claims that it destroyed $4 million worth of equipment, including a T-72 tank and a BMD-2 infantry fighting vehicle (IFV). The War Zone cannot verify the full extent of that claim based on what is seen on the video.
Ukrainian warriors destroyed a hangar with russian armored equipment worth $4 million. Among the burned targets—a T-72 tank and a BMD-2 IFV.
: 225th Assault Regiment pic.twitter.com/tN854Xm4ay
— Defense of Ukraine (@DefenceU) May 12, 2025
The MoD also released a video of its troops preparing one of its long-range AN-196 Liuty drones for a mission. Dubbed the 'Ukrainian Shahed, the Liuty is equipped with a 75-kilogram (about 165 pounds) warhead with a range of more than 1,000 km (about 620 miles).
Ukrainian 'Lutyi' kamikaze drones being prepped for a combat mission. pic.twitter.com/5tcmfiVY1n
— Special Kherson Cat
(@bayraktar_1love) May 13, 2025
Russia continues its struggle to produce 'heavy' bomber drones at scale, so individual units are fashioning their own. The following video shows one McGuyvered out of several first-person view (FPV) drones.A Russian 'Vobla' improvised heavy drone is presented.Russia has failed to deliver equivalents of Ukraine's 'Baba Yaga' drones, so Russian units desperate for heavy lift have resorted to building their own using FPVs as motors. https://t.co/GZj2N7D2Ne pic.twitter.com/XYS09MEhrM
— Roy
(@GrandpaRoy2) May 12, 2025
A Russian S-400 surface-to-air (SAM) air defense system's radar on Crimea was damaged in an April 25 Ukrainian drone attack, according to the Russian Spy Dossier Telegram channel. The attack took place near the village of Saki.
Spy Dossier posted images of the damaged radar, which you can see below.
You can see a Russian Msta-S self-propelled 152mm howitzer absolutely destroyed by a Ukrainian FPV drone in the following video. Russia has lost at least 124 of these vehicles, according to Oryx. At least 73 were destroyed, 15 damaged, one damaged and abandoned and 35 captured by Ukrainian forces.
Say goodbye to Russia's Msta-S https://t.co/PNogzKd87Hpic.twitter.com/cTcnQJU8gY
— Special Kherson Cat
(@bayraktar_1love) May 6, 2025
While drones are ubiquitous weapons of war for both sides, Ukraine has done a better job of streamlining its efforts, the Russian Evil Sailor Telegram channel bemoaned.
'The enemy divides pilots in their squads by functionality: kamikazes, miners, repeaters, reconnaissance, bombers, wing hunters, fighters, etc. We also have such pilots, but the non-brothers are one step ahead,' Evil Sailor posited. '…Observing the skies of war with my [electronic warfare] EW eyes, I come to the conclusion that the enemy has a much better organization of UAV operations.'
Russian blogger 'Evil Sailor' believes that Ukraine is much better organized for drone warfare.'AND WE HAVE TRAFFIC JAMS IN THE AIR!The number of FPVs in the sky, on both sides, is only growing.The enemy divides pilots in their squads by functionality: …1/ https://t.co/JczQf8SmNw pic.twitter.com/irfBOOHPCN
— Roy
(@GrandpaRoy2) May 12, 2025
U.K. officials say that Ukraine has downed nearly 300 Russian Shahed-136 drones with the Raven surface-to-air missile system. The Raven is a so-called FrankenSAM system, cobbled together using existing vehicles and launchers and aerial munitions. Though we didn't have the name at the time, we first wrote about this system in 2023.
Raven 'is based around a Supercat HMT 600 all-terrain vehicle – the same platform used for the British Army's Coyote,' according to the British Forces Broadcasting Service (BFBS). 'On the back engineers mounted a missile launcher, fitted with rails taken from retired RAF Tornado, Hawk and Jaguar jets.'
Those rails 'enable the system to fire ASRAAMs – Advanced Short Range Air-to-Air missiles – the infra-red guided weapons usually fitted to British fighter jets like the Typhoon and F-35 for use in dogfights,' BFBS reported. 'The UK has sent hundreds of ASRAAMs to Ukraine, mostly missiles that are nearing the end of their shelf life.'
Since it was first sent in early 2023, 'Raven has been fired 400 times by Ukrainian forces, mainly against the waves of Iranian-designed Shahed 136 one-way drones that Russia has launched with devastating effect against Ukrainian cities,' BFBS explained. 'Ukraine claims it has a 70 per cent success rate, and the MOD says there are now plans to send an additional five systems to Ukraine, to bolster the eight Britain has already supplied.'
The UK has officially revealed the Raven SAM system supplied to Ukraine, a low-cost mobile ASRAAM launcher that has downed nearly 300 Russian drones.'We went from a concept to a capability in 3 months.' Ukraine has received 8 units, with 5 more on the way. pic.twitter.com/QDy9sN1f0h
— OSINTtechnical (@Osinttechnical) May 10, 2025
Newly released image showing 5 new UK-built Raven SAM systems ready for delivery to Ukraine.The vehicles will be supplied over the next few weeks, nearly doubling Ukraine's fleet of the low-cost, ASRAAM slinging launchers. pic.twitter.com/7GCebHpIVo
— OSINTtechnical (@Osinttechnical) May 10, 2025
And finally, The U.K. has banned the export of video game controllers to Russia, claiming the devices are being repurposed to pilot drones on the front lines in Ukraine, C4ISR reported.
'The new trade restriction comes alongside a list of other items now immediately prohibited for export to Russia, including software for oil exploitation, specific chemicals and a range of electronic devices,' the outlet explained. 'A total of about 150 new line items were added to the already extensive list of British export prohibitions.'
'Gaming consoles will no longer be repurposed to kill in Ukraine,' said Foreign Office minister Stephen Doughty of the new list's most headline-grabbing item. The goal is to reduce Russia's strike capabilities.
The UK banned sending game controllers to Russia. What's the point? https://t.co/zur1CGWpMz
— C4ISRNET (@C4ISRNET) May 11, 2025
That's it for now.
Contact the author: howard@thewarzone.com
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- Time Magazine
Trump Admin Revokes Security Clearances of These Officials
The Trump Administration has revoked the security clearances of 37 current and former U.S. government officials. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard publicly shared a memo confirming the revocation and the reasoning behind it, stating that it was carried out under the direction of President Donald Trump. According to Gabbard, the officials in question are 'intelligence professionals who have abused the public trust by politicizing and manipulating intelligence, leaking classified intelligence without authorization, and/or committing intentional egregious violations of tradecraft standards.' She did not provide evidence pertaining to this, nor did the memo. 'All personnel are reminded that holding a clearance is a privilege, not a right, and this privilege is contingent upon continued adherence to the principles and responsibilities of our profession,' read the memo. The officials, listed in the memo, will no longer have access to 'classified systems, facilities, materials, and information.' Furthermore, any 'contracts or employment' between the individuals and the U.S. government have been terminated. Some of the officials were involved in gathering information and making assessments on Russia's efforts to interfere in the 2016 U.S. election. Meanwhile, others had signed a public letter during Trump's first term, supporting calls for an impeachment inquiry into the President. Read More: Breaking Down Trump's Public Rebuke of Tulsi Gabbard's Statement on Iran There has been much conversation about purging staffers who are not deemed to be loyal to Trump. Far-right political activist and Trump ally Laura Loomer recently set up a 'tip line' whereby she asked her followers to contact her if they 'know an Obama-Biden holdover inside the Trump Admin who needs to be exposed for their misdeeds.' 'Laura Loomer is a great patriot. She's a very strong person,' Trump told reporters in April, amid questions as to the influence she may have after National Security Council staffers were fired after Loomer met with the President. 'She makes recommendations on things and people, and sometimes I listen to those recommendations, like I do with everybody. I listen to everybody, and then I make a decision.' Meanwhile, in an interview with Fox News on Tuesday, Gabbard claimed she had unclassified 'hundreds of pages' of documents detailing the 'creation of Russia-gate, this manufactured intelligence assessment that essentially had the intent of undermining the voices and votes of the American people who elected Donald Trump.' Vinh X. Nguyen, the National Security Agency's chief responsible AI officer, was among those to have his clearance revoked. The NSA official previously worked as the national intelligence officer for cyber issues during investigations into allegations of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election. Mark Zaid, a lawyer who often represents former and current government intelligence officials, has responded publicly to the Gabbard memo.'The vast majority of these individuals are not household names and are dedicated public servants who have worked across multiple presidential Administrations,' he said. 'Pure politicization of security clearance process. These are unlawful decisions that deviate from decades of precedent.' Gabbard announced in July that she was turning over evidence of an 'Obama Administration conspiracy to subvert Trump's 2016 victory and presidency' to the Department of Justice 'for criminal referral.' 'Obama himself manufactured the Russia, Russia, Russia hoax. Crooked Hillary [Clinton], Sleepy Joe [Biden], and numerous others participated in this, the crime of the century!. Irrefutable evidence.,' Trump claimed via Truth Social in the days after Gabbard's announcement. Attorney General Pam Bondi then directed the Department of Justice on Aug. 5 to probe into the origins of the investigations into Russian interference in favor of Trump during both the 2016 and 2020 elections. Read More: Trump Revokes Security Clearances for Biden, Harris, and More. Here's the Full List and What That Means In March, Trump revoked security clearances for former President Joe Biden, as well as members of the Biden family. Other high-profile Democrats, including former presidential candidate Kamala Harris, Hillary Clinton, former Secretary of State Antony Blinken, former National Security Advisor Jacob Sullivan, and former Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco also had their privileges rescinded. The President said it was 'no longer in the national interest' for these individuals to have security clearances. 'I hereby direct every executive department and agency head to take all additional action as necessary and consistent with existing law to revoke any active security clearances held by the aforementioned individuals and to immediately rescind their access to classified information,' he said in his directive.


Newsweek
26 minutes ago
- Newsweek
Trump's Tariffs Shock India, With New Delhi Weighing Its Options
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. A decades-long partnership between the United States and India has come under sudden strain, as President Donald Trump's new wave of tariffs on Indian exports left officials in New Delhi caught off guard and scrambling for answers. Trump's decision to impose a 25 percent duty on Indian goods earlier this month—with plans to double it to 50 percent next week over India's continued purchases of Russian oil—landed with little warning and no clear path forward. It marked a stunning public rupture between two countries that have for years portrayed themselves as close strategic partners in the Indo-Pacific and beyond. "This is the worst downturn since 2013 or 2014," Shajak Sengupta, a senior research associate at Columbia University's Center on Global Energy Policy, told Newsweek. "What makes it more serious is how public and high-level the criticism has been. This didn't come through backchannels—it came straight from the president." Sengupta cited multiple tensions behind the rift beyond Russian oil, including India's rejection of Trump's claims to have mediated a cease-fire with Pakistan, stalled trade talks on agriculture, and a broader desire to pressure Moscow. US President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi hold a joint press conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on February 13, 2025. US President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi hold a joint press conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on February 13, 2025. Photo by Jim WATSON / AFP) (Photo by JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images "But when all of those issues get bundled into tariffs, with no signaling beforehand, that's when it becomes a structural problem," he said. Modi's Bet on Trump Falters Just months before the tariff shock, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi stood shoulder to shoulder with President Trump in Washington, declaring a new phase in the U.S.-India strategic relationship. "We're going to open up India like never before," Trump said during a joint press appearance at the White House, where he announced a target of expanding bilateral trade to $500 billion by 2030. Modi, in turn, called the U.S. "India's most trusted partner" and said he expected the "big deal" to be finalized "within months." "In the language of America, it's 'Make India Great Again' — MIGA," Modi said as Trump smiled along. "When America and India work together, this MAGA plus MIGA becomes a 'mega partnership for prosperity." Their February meeting was cast as a breakthrough moment: both leaders praised each other's vision, committed to deepening defense and economic cooperation, and previewed a bilateral trade agreement that was, by all public accounts, nearing completion. WASHINGTON, DC - FEBRUARY 13: U.S. President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi meet in the Oval Office at the White House on February 13, 2025 in Washington, DC. WASHINGTON, DC - FEBRUARY 13: U.S. President Donald Trump and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi meet in the Oval Office at the White House on February 13, 2025 in Washington, optimism has since collapsed under the weight of Trump's August tariff orders, with the South Asian giant facing a penalty higher than that imposed on China, long cast as America's chief economic rival. "It's a lesson in the limits of chemistry," said Chietigj Bajpaee, senior research fellow for South Asia in the Asia-Pacific Programme at Chatham House. That breakdown in personal diplomacy has quickly translated into real economic costs. The new tariffs, now among the steepest levied by the U.S. on any trading partner, strike directly at sectors central to India's export economy such as textiles and leather goods, which together accounted for $18.3 billion of exports to the U.S. in 2024. "With Trump, everything is leverage," Bajpaee said. "What seemed like alignment in February turned out to be a setup for pressure in August." Trade Fallout Spills Into Strategy What began as a trade dispute has quickly widened into a broader geopolitical reckoning. Indian officials are said to be furious at what they view as scapegoating by Washington. "It is extremely unfortunate that the U.S. should choose to impose additional tariffs on India for actions that several other countries are also taking in their own national interest," the Indian Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement. "We reiterate that these actions are unfair, unjustified and unreasonable." The fallout comes at a time of renewed alignment among BRICS nations—Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa—all of whom are facing pressure from Washington on various fronts. Modi is expected to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin later this year, following a planned BRICS summit in China that Modi will attend. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, left, Russian President Vladimir Putin, center, and Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, at a BRICS summit, on October 23, 2024, in Kazan, Russia. Russia hopes to revive a three-way bloc... Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, left, Russian President Vladimir Putin, center, and Chinese President Xi Jinping, right, at a BRICS summit, on October 23, 2024, in Kazan, Russia. Russia hopes to revive a three-way bloc with India and China."This has renewed the convergence of interests between India, Russia and China," Bajpaee said. "But India still seeks to project a benign worldview—non-Western, but not anti-Western. And the long-term rationale for working with the U.S. hasn't changed." Inside the White House, however, officials have sharpened their tone. "India portrays itself as being one of our closest friends in the world, but they don't accept our products. They impose massive tariffs on us," said Stephen Miller, deputy chief of staff, in a Fox News interview. "They're taking advantage of us on trade and underwriting Putin's war effort." Stephen Miller: "India portrays itself as being one of our closest friends in the world; but they don't accept our products, they impose massive tariffs on us, we also know they engage in a lot of cheating on immigration policy." — captive dreamer (@avaricum777) August 4, 2025 Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent added fuel to that fire on CNBC Tuesday, accusing New Delhi of "profiteering" from the war by purchasing Russian oil at a steep discount, refining it, and selling it back on the open market while pocketing the profit. "This opportunistic arbitrage is unacceptable," the former hedge-fund manager said. The strategic cost of the rift could be significant. "India shares America's view that China poses the world's most significant strategic threat," Richard Rossow, a senior adviser at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told Newsweek. "A strong trade agreement would accelerate this growing partnership and bolster military cooperation—both bilaterally and through forums like the Quad," an informal diplomatic working group made up of Australia, India, Japan, and the United States and designed to counter China's influence in the Indo-Pacific. Alyssa Ayres, a former senior State Department official and now a professor at George Washington University, told Newsweek the downturn signals a shift in the president's focus during his second term. "In Trump's first term, he emphasized India's market access issues, but also worked to deepen the broader relationship," she said. "Now it looks like trade concerns are crowding everything else out." What Comes Next? Despite the tensions, both sides have reason to tread carefully. India remains the United States' ninth‑largest trading partner, while the U.S. is India's top export destination, importing over $86 billion in goods last year. "India is one of our ten largest goods‑trading partners and a key supplier of offshore IT‑enabled services," said Rossow. "And to India, the U.S. is easily the most significant economic partner—the largest destination for its goods and services exports, and the largest source of inbound foreign investment." Calls for diplomacy have grown louder. "The U.S. and Indian governments need to talk to each other in private and resolve their differences," Ambassador Atul Keshap, president of the U.S.–India Business Council, told Newsweek. "Washington and Delhi have proven they can have difficult conversations that address problems and keep 25 years of partnership on track. Business needs predictability and clear signals of continued technology and supply chain collaboration. Substantial investments in both directions create jobs and shared prosperity in both America and India—and are worth sustaining." Sengupta warned the standoff may already be taking a toll, with tariffs and uncertainty already slowing investment and economic activity in both countries. Indian firms have invested more than $40 billion in the U.S., supporting nearly 425,000 American jobs—a sharp increase from $22 billion and 125,000 jobs in 2020, according to industry data. "If ties continue to sour, you could see a plateauing or even decline in trade and investment—the kind of flows needed not just to fuel India's development, but also the U.S. strategy to reduce dependence on China." Former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley reinforced the warning in a Newsweek opinion column published Wednesday, urging the administration not to lose sight of the larger picture. "Scuttling 25 years of momentum with the only country that can serve as a counterweight to Chinese dominance in Asia would be a strategic disaster," she wrote. Haley called for direct talks between Trump and Modi and said India should be treated "like the prized free and democratic partner that it is—not an adversary like China."