Latest news with #droneoperation


Al Jazeera
7 hours ago
- Politics
- Al Jazeera
Russia's war on Ukraine intensifies as peace talks appear at dead end
Ukraine has destroyed Russian strategic bombers in an unprecedented undercover drone operation while Russia launched its biggest-yet air raid on Ukraine's cities and intensified attacks on its northern region of Sumy, when the two sides met for peace talks in Istanbul. The two respective drone operations were emblematic of how direct peace talks, which began on May 15, have not abated the intensity of the conflict and may have deepened it. Russian President Vladimir Putin has reportedly pledged a response. Russia's drone-and-missile attack on Saturday night involved 472 Shahed kamikaze drones, four cruise missiles and three ballistic missiles. Ukraine neutralised 385 aerial targets, its air force said, including three of the cruise missiles. Ukraine's operation Spiderweb came a day later, and hit the types of planes Russia has used to launch those cruise missiles – Tupolev-22M3, Tupolev-95 and Tupolev-160, among others. Spiderweb involved 117 drones smuggled into Russia and launched simultaneously near Russian airfields where the bombers were parked. Video released by Ukraine showed Tu-95s exploding in orange flames as the drones passed over them, demonstrating that their fuel tanks were full and they were in service. Ukraine's State Security Service (SBU), which carried out the operation, told Ukrainian media 41 planes were hit, which, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said, amounted to '34 percent of the strategic cruise missile carriers stationed at air bases'. The SBU estimated the damage at $7bn. Western military analysts and open-source media had not fully corroborated Ukraine's story by Wednesday, but fires and explosions were reported at five Russian bases. For the first time, Ukraine claimed to have hit the Olenya airbase in the Russian Arctic, almost 2,000km (1,240 miles) from Ukraine, where all Tu-95 bombers were reported destroyed. Also reportedly struck were the Belaya airbase in Irkutsk, more than 4,000km (2,500 miles) from Ukraine, where three Tu-95 strategic bombers were reported destroyed; the Dyagilevo airbase in Ryazan, only 175km (110 miles) from downtown Moscow; and the Ivanovo airfield, 250km (155 miles) northeast of the Russian capital, where at least one A-50 was destroyed – a $500m airborne radar Russia uses to identify Ukrainian air defence systems and coordinate Russian fighter jet targeting. Fire was reported at a fifth airfield, also near Moscow. Zelenskyy called it 'an absolutely brilliant result, an independent result of Ukraine', and said it had been 'a year, six months and nine days from the start of planning'. Russia's Ministry of Defence admitted that 'in Murmansk and Irkutsk Regions, as a result of [First Person View] drones launched from an area in close proximity to airfields, several aircraft caught fire,' but that similar attacks were repelled in Ivanovo, Ryazan and Amur. Russia also said 'some participants of the terrorist attacks were detained,' although Zelenskyy said 'our people who prepared the operation were withdrawn from Russian territory on time.' 'Russia regularly deploys Tu-95 and Tu-22M3 to launch … cruise missiles against Ukraine,' wrote the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), a Washington-based think tank, adding, 'The downing of Russian A-50 aircraft has previously temporarily constrained Russian aviation activities over Ukraine.' Russian pro-Kremlin Telegram channel Rybar and Ukrainian military observer Tatarigami said Russia no longer builds chassis for Tu-95s and Tu-22s, making them impossible to replace. Bloomberg reported that Russia's reliance on sanctioned Western components will keep it from putting even damaged aircraft back into service. The New York Times estimated Ukraine may have destroyed or damaged 20 aircraft, but it is possible that not all strike video has yet been posted on open-source media. 'If even half the total claim of 41 aircraft damaged/destroyed is confirmed, it will have a significant impact on the capacity of the Russian Long Range Aviation force to keep up its regular large scale cruise missile salvoes against Ukrainian cities and infrastructure,' aviation expert Justin Bronk of the Royal United Services Institute told The New York Times. The operation 'will force Russian officials to consider redistributing Russia's air defence systems to cover a much wider range of territory', said the ISW. Ukraine's SBU struck again on June 3, damaging the Kerch Bridge, a vital Russian supply line to Crimea, for the third time during the war. Video showed an underwater explosion against one of the bridge's stanchions, suggesting Ukraine had used an underwater unmanned vehicle. Moscow denied there was any real damage. Marring Ukraine's success was the news of persistent Russian advances. The most alarming were near the northern city of Sumy, only 30km (20 miles) from the Russian border. Geolocated footage showed that Russian troops took the villages of Konstyantynivka on the border and Oleksiivka, 4km (2.5 miles) from the border, on Sunday. By Tuesday, Russian forces were close enough to launch rocket artillery into the city of Sumy, reportedly killing four people and wounding 30. 'Rocket artillery against an ordinary city – the Russians struck right on the street, hitting ordinary residential buildings. Sleazebags,' said Zelenskyy. On Sunday, Russian troops also appeared to have seized the settlements of Dyliivka and Zorya, north and west of Toretsk in Ukraine's east. Geolocated footage indicated that Russian troops had also advanced towards Lyman and Kurakhove, two other key targets in Ukraine's east. These gains were part of a slow advance that has gone on for more than a year, but they were signs of Putin's determination to complete his conquest of Ukraine's east. That determination was on display in Istanbul, where Ukrainian and Russian negotiators met on Monday for a second round of peace talks. Russia presented a ceasefire memorandum that demanded Ukraine formally cede all the territory Russia has taken in Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhia and Kherson, plus the parts of those regions it has not yet seized, which could take years to conquer and come at great cost. Syrskii said Russian casualties this year alone passed the 200,000 mark on Tuesday – a figure Al Jazeera is unable to independently verify. Russia's memorandum also demanded a limit to the size of Ukraine's armed forces, and a commitment that Ukraine will neither join foreign military alliances nor allow foreign troops on its soil. It also demanded a Ukrainian election within 100 days of signing the ceasefire agreement, underlining Moscow's desire to replace the pro-Western Zelenskyy in Kyiv. These demands are consistent with the terms Putin laid out in a speech in June 2024, and Ukrainian negotiators, who had not seen Russia's memorandum before arriving at the talks at 1pm on Monday, departed after little more than an hour. The two sides did agree to an exchange of at least 1,000 prisoners of war, and possibly as many as 1,200, prioritising the young (18-25) and wounded. They also agreed to an exchange of 6,000 bodies a side. They agreed to hold a third round of talks in the last 10 days of June, with Ukraine's defence minister, Rustem Umerov, suggesting it involve Putin and Zelenskyy, 'because decisions can only be made by those who really make decisions'. Some observers thought it was possible that the two leaders would meet at the first round of talks on May 15, but only Zelenskyy showed up. 'The Istanbul talks are not for striking a compromise peace on someone else's delusional terms but for ensuring our swift victory and the complete destruction of the neo-Nazi regime,' explained Dmitry Medvedev, the deputy chairman of Russia's Security Council, on his Telegram channel. 'Our army is pushing forward and will continue to advance. Everything that needs to be blown up will be blown up, and those who must be eliminated will be,' he concluded. United States President Donald Trump has refrained from imposing new sanctions on Moscow, but his stance is now losing supporters in the US Congress. Sidney Blumenthal, a former presidential adviser, and Lindsey Graham said they would this week table legislation imposing 500 percent tariffs on any country that imports oil, gas and uranium from Russia. Graham called it 'the most draconian bill I've ever seen in my life in the Senate.' They made the announcement after a weekend trip to Kyiv and a meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris. 'What I learned on this trip was he's preparing for more war,' Graham said of Putin. The bill would target China and India, which account for the bulk of Russian energy exports, totalling 233bn euros ($266bn) last year, according to a BBC investigation. But it could theoretically include European Union members, who spent a reported 23bn euros ($26bn) on Russian oil and gas last year. A number of EU members sought exceptions from Russian oil bans in early 2023, and the EU has never banned Russian gas, though it has almost completely stopped importing it.


Al Jazeera
8 hours ago
- Politics
- Al Jazeera
Ukraine war intensifies as peace talks appear at dead end
Ukraine has destroyed Russian strategic bombers in an unprecedented undercover drone operation while Russia launched its biggest-yet air raid on Ukraine's cities and intensified attacks on its northern region of Sumy, when the two sides met for peace talks in Istanbul. The two respective drone operations were emblematic of how direct peace talks, which began on May 15, have not abated the intensity of the conflict and may have deepened it. Russian President Vladimir Putin has reportedly pledged a response. Russia's drone-and-missile attack on Saturday night involved 472 Shahed kamikaze drones, four cruise missiles and three ballistic missiles. Ukraine neutralised 385 aerial targets, its air force said, including three of the cruise missiles. Ukraine's operation Spiderweb came a day later, and hit the types of planes Russia has used to launch those cruise missiles – Tupolev-22M3, Tupolev-95 and Tupolev-160, among others. Spiderweb involved 117 drones smuggled into Russia and launched simultaneously near Russian airfields where the bombers were parked. Video released by Ukraine showed Tu-95s exploding in orange flames as the drones passed over them, demonstrating that their fuel tanks were full and they were in service. Ukraine's State Security Service (SBU), which carried out the operation, told Ukrainian media 41 planes were hit, which, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said, amounted to '34 percent of the strategic cruise missile carriers stationed at air bases'. The SBU estimated the damage at $7bn. Western military analysts and open-source media had not fully corroborated Ukraine's story by Wednesday, but fires and explosions were reported at five Russian bases. For the first time, Ukraine claimed to have hit the Olenya airbase in the Russian Arctic, almost 2,000km (1,240 miles) from Ukraine, where all Tu-95 bombers were reported destroyed. Also reportedly struck were the Belaya airbase in Irkutsk, more than 4,000km (2,500 miles) from Ukraine, where three Tu-95 strategic bombers were reported destroyed; the Dyagilevo airbase in Ryazan, only 175km (110 miles) from downtown Moscow; and the Ivanovo airfield, 250km (155 miles) northeast of the Russian capital, where at least one A-50 was destroyed – a $500m airborne radar Russia uses to identify Ukrainian air defence systems and coordinate Russian fighter jet targeting. Fire was reported at a fifth airfield, also near Moscow. Zelenskyy called it 'an absolutely brilliant result, an independent result of Ukraine', and said it had been 'a year, six months and nine days from the start of planning'. Russia's Ministry of Defence admitted that 'in Murmansk and Irkutsk Regions, as a result of [First Person View] drones launched from an area in close proximity to airfields, several aircraft caught fire,' but that similar attacks were repelled in Ivanovo, Ryazan and Amur. Russia also said 'some participants of the terrorist attacks were detained,' although Zelenskyy said 'our people who prepared the operation were withdrawn from Russian territory on time.' 'Russia regularly deploys Tu-95 and Tu-22M3 to launch … cruise missiles against Ukraine,' wrote the Institute for the Study of War (ISW), a Washington-based think tank, adding, 'The downing of Russian A-50 aircraft has previously temporarily constrained Russian aviation activities over Ukraine.' Russian pro-Kremlin Telegram channel Rybar and Ukrainian military observer Tatarigami said Russia no longer builds chassis for Tu-95s and Tu-22s, making them impossible to replace. Bloomberg reported that Russia's reliance on sanctioned Western components will keep it from putting even damaged aircraft back into service. The New York Times estimated Ukraine may have destroyed or damaged 20 aircraft, but it is possible that not all strike video has yet been posted on open-source media. 'If even half the total claim of 41 aircraft damaged/destroyed is confirmed, it will have a significant impact on the capacity of the Russian Long Range Aviation force to keep up its regular large scale cruise missile salvoes against Ukrainian cities and infrastructure,' aviation expert Justin Bronk of the Royal United Services Institute told The New York Times. The operation 'will force Russian officials to consider redistributing Russia's air defence systems to cover a much wider range of territory', said the ISW. Ukraine's SBU struck again on June 3, damaging the Kerch Bridge, a vital Russian supply line to Crimea, for the third time during the war. Video showed an underwater explosion against one of the bridge's stanchions, suggesting Ukraine had used an underwater unmanned vehicle. Moscow denied there was any real damage. Marring Ukraine's success was the news of persistent Russian advances. The most alarming were near the northern city of Sumy, only 30km (20 miles) from the Russian border. Geolocated footage showed that Russian troops took the villages of Konstyantynivka on the border and Oleksiivka, 4km (2.5 miles) from the border, on Sunday. By Tuesday, Russian forces were close enough to launch rocket artillery into the city of Sumy, reportedly killing four people and wounding 30. 'Rocket artillery against an ordinary city – the Russians struck right on the street, hitting ordinary residential buildings. Sleazebags,' said Zelenskyy. On Sunday, Russian troops also appeared to have seized the settlements of Dyliivka and Zorya, north and west of Toretsk in Ukraine's east. Geolocated footage indicated that Russian troops had also advanced towards Lyman and Kurakhove, two other key targets in Ukraine's east. These gains were part of a slow advance that has gone on for more than a year, but they were signs of Putin's determination to complete his conquest of Ukraine's east. That determination was on display in Istanbul, where Ukrainian and Russian negotiators met on Monday for a second round of peace talks. Russia presented a ceasefire memorandum that demanded Ukraine formally cede all the territory Russia has taken in Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhia and Kherson, plus the parts of those regions it has not yet seized, which could take years to conquer and come at great cost. Syrskii said Russian casualties this year alone passed the 200,000 mark on Tuesday – a figure Al Jazeera is unable to independently verify. Russia's memorandum also demanded a limit to the size of Ukraine's armed forces, and a commitment that Ukraine will neither join foreign military alliances nor allow foreign troops on its soil. It also demanded a Ukrainian election within 100 days of signing the ceasefire agreement, underlining Moscow's desire to replace the pro-Western Zelenskyy in Kyiv. These demands are consistent with the terms Putin laid out in a speech in June 2024, and Ukrainian negotiators, who had not seen Russia's memorandum before arriving at the talks at 1pm on Monday, departed after little more than an hour. The two sides did agree to an exchange of at least 1,000 prisoners of war, and possibly as many as 1,200, prioritising the young (18-25) and wounded. They also agreed to an exchange of 6,000 bodies a side. They agreed to hold a third round of talks in the last 10 days of June, with Ukraine's defence minister, Rustem Umerov, suggesting it involve Putin and Zelenskyy, 'because decisions can only be made by those who really make decisions'. Some observers thought it was possible that the two leaders would meet at the first round of talks on May 15, but only Zelenskyy showed up. 'The Istanbul talks are not for striking a compromise peace on someone else's delusional terms but for ensuring our swift victory and the complete destruction of the neo-Nazi regime,' explained Dmitry Medvedev, the deputy chairman of Russia's Security Council, on his Telegram channel. 'Our army is pushing forward and will continue to advance. Everything that needs to be blown up will be blown up, and those who must be eliminated will be,' he concluded. United States President Donald Trump has refrained from imposing new sanctions on Moscow, but his stance is now losing supporters in the US Congress. Sidney Blumenthal, a former presidential adviser, and Lindsey Graham said they would this week table legislation imposing 500 percent tariffs on any country that imports oil, gas and uranium from Russia. Graham called it 'the most draconian bill I've ever seen in my life in the Senate.' They made the announcement after a weekend trip to Kyiv and a meeting with French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris. 'What I learned on this trip was he's preparing for more war,' Graham said of Putin. The bill would target China and India, which account for the bulk of Russian energy exports, totalling 233bn euros ($266bn) last year, according to a BBC investigation. But it could theoretically include European Union members, who spent a reported 23bn euros ($26bn) on Russian oil and gas last year. A number of EU members sought exceptions from Russian oil bans in early 2023, and the EU has never banned Russian gas, though it has almost completely stopped importing it.
Yahoo
4 days ago
- Politics
- Yahoo
Ukraine has proved it doesn't need Trump
Donald Trump has repeatedly claimed that Ukraine holds 'no cards in this war'. Well, they just played one hell of a hand. On Sunday, a clandestine drone operation hit as many as five different airfields deep inside Russian territory, striking at least eight and possibly dozens of Soviet-era nuclear-capable heavy bombers, which are today impossible to remanufacture. And the way Ukraine did so is worthy of a Robert Ludlam thriller. Its domestic security service smuggled in 150 First Person View (FPV) drones in concealed compartments on the top of multiple shipping containers, undetected by Russia's own sprawling counterintelligence organs, which were then loaded on the backs of articulated lorries and driven to within striking distance of their targets. At the push of a button, the tops of the containers popped off, allowing a swarm of lethal unmanned aerial vehicles to ascend which then struck their unsuspecting targets; lines of Russian bombers fully fueled and awaiting takeoff. The timing of this kinetic covert operation could not have been better from the Ukrainian perspective. Peace negotiations begin again in Istanbul with the Russians on Monday, even as Moscow continues to make clear it isn't interested in a 30-day ceasefire. Trump is said to be exasperated that a suddenly 'crazy' Putin won't end the war as a 'personal favour' to him and is growing weary of engaging in pointless diplomacy. But the US president has also made no statements about future security assistance to Ukraine, which badly needs three things only the US military-industrial complex can provide at scale: ballistic missile defence, GMLRS rocket artillery and howitzer ammunition. So Ukraine, it seems, is imposing its own bespoke penalties on Russia, hitting its adversary on supposedly impregnable ground and eliminating a good percentage of its irreplaceable bomber fleet. CBS News and Axios have reported that Kyiv did not inform the Trump administration of its plans, which took 18 months to pull together. This means that when Zelensky sat through that Two Minutes of Hate session delivered jointly by Trump and JD Vance in the Oval Office last February, he had this secret caper bouncing about in the back of his head. It's worth re-watching that confrontation in light of what just happened. Now, Ukraine has a much needed morale boost at a time when the war has ground down into one of attrition and Russia has launched its now annual summer offensive, which is making costly but consistent progress in the eastern Ukrainian region of Donetsk. Ukraine's capacity to bring the war home to Russia in such a bold fashion is also likely to encourage pro-Ukrainian Republicans who are growing anxious and impatient with Trump's dithering. Lindsay Graham, the Trump-whisperer senator from South Carolina who has drawn up a range of sanctions against Russia for Mr Trump to sign off, said: 'The ever-resourceful Ukraine used creative drone warfare tactics to successfully attack Russian bombers and military assets used to kill Ukrainian citizens and destroy their country.' This operation has demonstrated that Ukraine is very much still in the fight, whatever dour statements emerge from the White House. Mr Trump, easily distracted and unfocused on his best days, has told big and small lies about the war since the beginning of his second term, all damaging to the reality and perception that Ukraine is holding its own. He has said, for instance, that 'thousands of Ukrainian troops were surrounded' in Kursk when they were not, and claimed that Russia would have taken Kyiv in 'five hours' had Russian tanks not got 'stuck in the mud'. Ukraine's drone escapades have embarrassed Mr Trump, as well as Mr Putin, it seems. Ukraine's home-grown munitions are not only changing the nature of this war, but the nature of all future wars fought in the 21st century. A nation regarded for its IT and engineering sectors has adapted ingeniously to being outgunned and outmanned by an invading army. A few hundred thousand dollars worth of FPV drones have just eliminated approximately $7 billion of Russian kit, according to the SBU. No shambolic mineral or rare earths deals had to be struck for that to happen. Ukraine is mass producing its own variegated fleet of drones at scale using both its own coffers and money from seventeen Western countries – the UK among them – part of a 'drone coalition.' Tulsi Gabbard, Trump's director of national intelligence, is said to be mulling replacing the presidential daily briefings with video segments similar to those of Fox News, in a desperate effort to get the commander-in-chief to follow along with his own nationals security prerogatives. Russian nuclear bombers burning on the tarmac is surely one way to get even his attention.


Telegraph
4 days ago
- Politics
- Telegraph
Ukraine has proved it doesn't need Trump
Donald Trump has repeatedly claimed that Ukraine holds 'no cards in this war'. Well, they just played one hell of a hand. On Sunday, a clandestine drone operation hit as many as five different airfields deep inside Russian territory, striking at least eight and possibly dozens of Soviet-era nuclear-capable heavy bombers, which are today impossible to remanufacture. And the way Ukraine did so is worthy of a Robert Ludlam thriller. Its domestic security service smuggled in 150 First Person View (FPV) drones in concealed compartments on the top of multiple shipping containers, undetected by Russia's own sprawling counterintelligence organs, which were then loaded on the backs of articulated lorries and driven to within striking distance of their targets. At the push of a button, the tops of the containers popped off, allowing a swarm of lethal unmanned aerial vehicles to ascend which then struck their unsuspecting targets; lines of Russian bombers fully fueled and awaiting takeoff. The timing of this kinetic covert operation could not have been better from the Ukrainian perspective. Peace negotiations begin again in Istanbul with the Russians on Monday, even as Moscow continues to make clear it isn't interested in a 30-day ceasefire. Trump is said to be exasperated that a suddenly 'crazy' Putin won't end the war as a 'personal favour' to him and is growing weary of engaging in pointless diplomacy. But the US president has also made no statements about future security assistance to Ukraine, which badly needs three things only the US military-industrial complex can provide at scale: ballistic missile defence, GMLRS rocket artillery and howitzer ammunition. So Ukraine, it seems, is imposing its own bespoke penalties on Russia, hitting its adversary on supposedly impregnable ground and eliminating a good percentage of its irreplaceable bomber fleet. CBS News and Axios have reported that Kyiv did not inform the Trump administration of its plans, which took 18 months to pull together. This means that when Zelensky sat through that Two Minutes of Hate session delivered jointly by Trump and JD Vance in the Oval Office last February, he had this secret caper bouncing about in the back of his head. It's worth re-watching that confrontation in light of what just happened. Now, Ukraine has a much needed morale boost at a time when the war has ground down into one of attrition and Russia has launched its now annual summer offensive, which is making costly but consistent progress in the eastern Ukrainian region of Donetsk. Ukraine's capacity to bring the war home to Russia in such a bold fashion is also likely to encourage pro-Ukrainian Republicans who are growing anxious and impatient with Trump's dithering. Lindsay Graham, the Trump-whisperer senator from South Carolina who has drawn up a range of sanctions against Russia for Mr Trump to sign off, said: 'The ever-resourceful Ukraine used creative drone warfare tactics to successfully attack Russian bombers and military assets used to kill Ukrainian citizens and destroy their country.' This operation has demonstrated that Ukraine is very much still in the fight, whatever dour statements emerge from the White House. Mr Trump, easily distracted and unfocused on his best days, has told big and small lies about the war since the beginning of his second term, all damaging to the reality and perception that Ukraine is holding its own. He has said, for instance, that 'thousands of Ukrainian troops were surrounded' in Kursk when they were not, and claimed that Russia would have taken Kyiv in 'five hours' had Russian tanks not got 'stuck in the mud'. Ukraine's drone escapades have embarrassed Mr Trump, as well as Mr Putin, it seems. Ukraine's home-grown munitions are not only changing the nature of this war, but the nature of all future wars fought in the 21st century. A nation regarded for its IT and engineering sectors has adapted ingeniously to being outgunned and outmanned by an invading army. A few hundred thousand dollars worth of FPV drones have just eliminated approximately $7 billion of Russian kit, according to the SBU. No shambolic mineral or rare earths deals had to be struck for that to happen. Ukraine is mass producing its own variegated fleet of drones at scale using both its own coffers and money from seventeen Western countries – the UK among them – part of a 'drone coalition.' Tulsi Gabbard, Trump's director of national intelligence, is said to be mulling replacing the presidential daily briefings with video segments similar to those of Fox News, in a desperate effort to get the commander-in-chief to follow along with his own nationals security prerogatives. Russian nuclear bombers burning on the tarmac is surely one way to get even his attention.