Russian

Ukrainian drone attack injures 7, disrupts Russian oil production

Moscow said its air defenses shot down 221 Ukrainian drones targeting a wide swathe of eastern Russia overnight, from the regions bordering Ukraine to Baltic Sea oil terminals in its Leningrad region. Seven people were injured. Photo by Igor Tkachenko/EPA

Sept. 12 (UPI) — Russia said Friday that it shot down hundreds of Ukrainian drones overnight, many of them targeting facilities of the multinational Russian oil company, Lukoil, southwest of Moscow, according to the defense ministry.

More than half of the 221 UAVs were brought down over the regions of Smolensk and Bryansk, where five civilians and two military personnel were injured after a bus was struck, while nine got through to the Moscow area before being destroyed.

Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin said emergency services were attending a location hit by falling debris from downed drones but gave no details of where or the extent of the damage. Russian social media accounts reported blasts in Mozhaysk and Dedovsk in the western suburbs of the capital.

As many as 30 others were intercepted in the Leningrad region, temporarily closing St. Petersburg’s Pulkovo airport and setting ablaze a vessel at Russia’s largest oil terminal northwest of the city at Primorsk on the Baltic Sea.

Secret Service of Ukraine sources told The Kyiv Independent that the agency was responsible for the Leningrad strikes, which also successfully targeted three pumping stations serving the Ust-Luga oil terminal 80 miles southwest of St. Petersburg, as part of what was believed to be one of the largest attacks on the region since the start of the war in 2022.

Drones were also downed over Oryol, Kaluga, Novgorod, Belgorod, Tver, Pskov, Tula and Kursk — but without any further casualties, authorities said.

Ukraine stepped up its targeting of Russia’s energy infrastructure in August, hitting more than a dozen refineries and knocking out a fifth of Russia’s oil processing capacity during the month, according to the White House.

Russia has tried to downplay the disruption, with state-run media outlets claiming it was caused by “unscheduled repairs.”

Ukraine has modified its drone strategy from trying to attack Moscow and military facilities on Russian soil to higher-profile targets in an effort to make the Russian people more cognizant of the war.

At least 31 Ukrainian drones were downed early Tuesday as they closed in on the Black Sea resort of Sochi, hours after President Vladimir Putin was in the city for a virtual meeting with other world leaders belonging to the so-called BRICS grouping of economic powers.

The attack killed one person, damaged six homes and forced authorities to close the city’s international airport.

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US Pressure Spurs EU to Accelerate Shift from Russian Oil and Gas

The European Union is looking to phase out Russian fossil fuels more quickly as part of new sanctions against Moscow, according to European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen. This comes after pressure from U. S. President Donald Trump to stop buying Russian oil as a response to Russia’s war in Ukraine. EU officials are in Washington discussing coordination on these sanctions.

Von der Leyen stated that the upcoming 19th package of Russia sanctions will focus on phasing out Russian fossil fuels faster, including actions against a “shadow fleet” and third countries. The EU has already banned imports of seaborne crude oil from Russia, which represents over 90% of its oil imports, and is working on plans to completely eliminate Russian oil and gas by January 1, 2028.

However, Hungary and Slovakia oppose measures on gas imports, fearing increased energy prices. The EU needs unanimous agreement for sanctions, while other legal proposals can pass with a reinforced majority. Russian fuel revenues are crucial for funding its war in Ukraine.

With information from Reuters

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Russian drones shot down by NATO fighter jets in Polish airspace

Polish troops man a perimeter guard as emergency services respond to a report of damage to a residential building in Wyryki in eastern Poland after Russian drones penetrated the country’s airspace overnight. Photo by Wojtek Jargilo/EPA

Sept. 10 (UPI) — Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said Wednesday that Polish forces and their NATO partners downed a “huge” number of Russian drones overnight, the first time Russian assets have been intercepted in the military alliance’s airspace.

“Last night, the Polish airspace was violated by a huge number of Russian drones. Those drones that posed a direct threat were shot down. I am in constant communication with the Secretary General of NATO and our allies,” Tusk said in a post on X.

He said there were “multiple violations of Polish airspace,” each of which was met by Polish and NATO air defenses, including fighter jets.

Tusk said he was in continual contact with the commander of the operation, the defense minister and the country’s president.

Residents were sent emergency texts alerting them of the air defense operation and requesting them to report any drones they saw or locations where they fell, while people in three regions in the east of the country were told to stay indoors.

Supreme Allied Commander Europe Gen. Alexus Grynkewich said NATO’s swift and decisive response demonstrated both the alliance’s ability and determination “to defend Allied territory.”

Speaking after an emergency meeting of the National Security Bureau, Tusk said Poland was most likely “dealing with a large-scale provocation.” He called the situation “serious” but vowed that Poland was “ready to repel” attacks of this nature.

A number of the drones entered from Belarus airspace, Tusk told lawmakers later Wednesday, and that the last of the objects was shot down at 6:45 a.m. local time.

“I have no reason to claim we’re on the brink of war, but a line has been crossed, and it’s incomparably more dangerous than before. This situation brings us the closest we have been to open conflict since World War Two,” he said.

The incursion came amid a massive Russian airborne attack against neighboring Ukraine involving more than 400 drones and more than 40 cruise and ballistic missiles, with the Ukrainian Air Force saying that as many as 24 drones “crossed the Ukrainian state border flying in Poland’s direction.”

Poland shares borders of roughly equal length with both Ukraine and Belarus.

NATO Allied Command Operations confirmed the clashes were the first time NATO aircraft had engaged with potential threats in “Allied Airspace” with Poland and the Netherlands scrambling fighter jets, Italian early warning aircraft and a NATO air-refuelling tanker airborne and German-supplied Patriot missiles on alert.

“NATO, Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe, and all of Allied Command Operations is committed to defending every kilometer of NATO territory, including our airspace,” said Col. Martin L. O’Donnell, Supreme Headquarters Allied Powers Europe spokesman.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer issued a statement saying he had been in communication with Tusk over the incident, which he called a “barbaric attack on Ukraine and the egregious and unprecedented violation of Polish and NATO airspace by Russian drones”.

“This was an extremely reckless move by Russia and only serves to remind us of President Putin’s blatant disregard for peace and the constant bombardment innocent Ukrainians face every day.”

The incident came hours after Starmer hosted NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte in Downing Street where they discussed work to integrate U.S. support into plans for a so-called Coalition of the Willing of European countries putting together a reassurance force for Ukraine to uphold any future cease-fire.

Condemning the incursion in “the strongest possible terms,” French President Emmanuel Macron said it was completely unacceptable and that he would meet with Rutte — but did not say when.

Belarus claimed the incursion was accidental, caused by drones turned “rogue” after their systems were jammed, claimed its forces had shot some of them down, and that it communicated with Poland and Lithuania over a five-hour period during the night.

Moscow, however, sought to lay blame on Ukraine, with Russian state television quoting unnamed Polish lawmakers saying it appeared to be a false-flag operation perpetrated by Kyiv.

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NATO jets scrambled after Russian drones enter Poland’s airspace

RUSSIAN drones have flown into Polish airspace, prompting NATO jets to be scrambled in response.

Polish and allied aircraft were activated in the early hours of Wednesday to ensure the county’s airspace is protected.

Ukrainian soldiers firing on Russian drones.

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Ukrainian soldiers from air-defence unit fire at Russian strike dronesCredit: AP
Polish border guards at the Poland/Belarus border.

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Poland has been one of Kyiv’s key international backersCredit: AFP
A Polish soldier patrolling the Poland-Belarus border at night.

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A Polish soldier patrols Poland/Belarus border in KuznicaCredit: Reuters
Illustration of a map showing the current state of Russian-occupied territory in Ukraine.

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It comes as Moscow continues to barrage Ukraine with relentless drone strikes.

Poland, a member of the NATO alliance, shares a border with Ukraine and has been one of Kyiv’s key international backers.

Warsaw’s operational command shared the tense news in a post on X.

“Polish and allied aircraft are operating in our airspace, while ground-based air defence and radar reconnaissance systems have been brought to the highest state of readiness,” they said.

The Ukrainian Air Force earlier said on Telegram that Russian drones were tearing towards the city of Zamosc.

It is not clear how many drone entered Polish airspace.

This comes after a Russian air killed at least 24 people and injured 19 others in the Donetsk region.

A glide bomb struck the village of Yarova, which was home to around 1,700 people before the war.

Valium Filashkin, head of Donetsk Military Administration, said: “This is not military action – this is pure terrorism.”

Vladimir Putin’s forces continue to wreak devastation across Ukraine as Moscow‘s brutal full-scale invasion grinds on.

How Ukraine is battering Putin’s navy in Black Sea and forcing humiliating retreats – without using a SINGLE warship

On Sunday, Russia unleashed a vicious barrage against Ukraine that killed four people.

A two-month old baby was among the victims of the barbaric strikes.

Poland is a member state of NATO, giving it protections under the Article 5 mutual defence agreement.

This means that an attack on one member state is deemed an attack on all, obliging countries including the US, the UK and France to come to their aid if the clause is invoked.

Pressure is mounting on the United States and allies to impose deeper sanctions on Russia amid the intensifying onslaught.

Speaking on the White House lawn after the attacks this weekend, Donald Trump said he’s “not happy with the whole situation”.

Sunday’s attack saw 805 drones and a dozen ballistic and cruise missiles fired at some of Ukraine‘s largest cities.

Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Svyrydenko told The New York Post the “barbaric attack proved we have to do whatever it takes to stop Russian war machine fuelled by oil and gas revenue”.

Ukrainian soldiers firing on Russian drones at night.

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The Ukrainian Air Force said on Telegram that Russian drones were tearing towards the city of ZamoscCredit: AP
Smoke and fire rise over a city at night.

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Fire and smoke rise in the city after Russian drone and missile strikes in UkraineCredit: Reuters
Smoke from a strike site over Kyiv.

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Thick smoke from a nearby strike site fills the sky during a Russian drone strikeCredit: Reuters

More to follow… For the latest news on this story, keep checking back at The U.S. Sun, your go-to destination for the best celebrity news, sports news, real-life stories, jaw-dropping pictures, and must-see videos.

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Russian airstrike kills over 20 Ukrainian workers in pension line

At least 24 people were killed and 19 others injured in the village of Yarova after Russian military forces struck the area around 11 a.m. local time at Ukraine’s national post service as local workers and residents stood in line to receive a pension payout. Photo Provided By EPA/State Emergency Service of Ukraine

Sept. 9 (UPI) — At least two dozen people in Ukraine on Tuesday morning were killed in a Russian airstrike, with nearly as many injured at a postal building.

According to local authorities, at least 24 people are dead and 19 others injured in the village of Yarova in the Donetsk Oblast region after Russian forces struck the area around 11 a.m. local time at Ukrposhta, Ukraine’s national post service, as local workers and residents stood in line to receive a pension payout.

“Such Russian strikes must not be left without an appropriate response from the world,” Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky posted on social media.

Two injured were hospitalized but the full extent of damage was not immediately clear.

Regional Governor Vadim Filashkin called Russia’s air attack “pure terrorism” and said it was “not a military operation,” he wrote on Telegram.

The Ukrainian postal service facility sat less than 6 miles from Russian-occupied territory. Video footage depicted bodies among damaged postal service cars.

The attack represented a higher fatality count bombing since the end of last month when around 23 Ukrainians were killed in overnight air strikes on Ukraine’s capital Kyiv.

On Tuesday, Zelensky added that the world “must not remain idle” as a result of Russia’s morning airstrikes.

“A response is needed from the United States. A response is needed from Europe. A response is needed from the G20,” he stated.

It came after some 550 Russian drones in July surpassed previous records and penetrated Ukraines air defenses.

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Russian airstrike hits Ukraine’s cabinet building

A handout photo released by the press service of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine shows smoke rising over the buildings housing Ukraine’s cabinet in Kyiv, on Sunday. Photo by State Emergency Service of Ukraine/EPA

Sept. 7 (UPI) — A Russian airstrike hit and damaged the upper floors of the Ukraine Cabinet of Ministers building in Kyiv for the first time since the war began in February 2022.

The building is among the most prominent Ukrainian government buildings and houses the offices of the executive branch’s top officials, including the prime minister and cabinet ministers. The strike is significant because it shows Moscow’s strikes can reach the heart of Kyiv’s government district, hitting a central symbol of executive authority.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said in a statement Sunday that the strike on the cabinet building was part of a sweeping attack on cities across the country, including Sumy, Kremenchuk, Odesa, Dnipro, Kryvyi Rih and Zaporizhzhia.

Russia used more than 800 drones, as well as four ballistic missiles and nine cruise missiles in the attack, making it the largest such strike since the war began, the Ukrainian Defense Ministry said in its own statement.

At least four people were killed in the broader airstrike, Zelensky said in an earlier statement. The Ukrainian Defense Ministry said that at least one of the people killed was a child.

“In Kyiv, the rubble is still being cleared — there may still be bodies beneath it. The Cabinet of Ministers building has been damaged. As of now, more than forty people have been reported injured across the country, 20 of them in Kyiv,” Zelensky said.

Yulia Svyrydenko, who has served as prime minister of Ukraine since July 17, shared photos of the destruction on Telegram and said that there were no injuries at the cabinet building during the broader airstrike.

“Russian terror will not stop the work of the government,” she said. “We will restore the destruction. But the lives of Ukrainians cannot be brought back. During the night, four people were killed and more than 44 were injured across the country due to Russian shelling.”

Zelensky said that air raid sirens in the capital alone lasted for more than seven and a half hours, suggesting that Russian President Vladimir Putin used the strike to test whether the world would tolerate escalating attacks by Moscow as he praised the response of Western allies who decried the airstrike. He also called for sanctions and tariffs on Russia.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer condemned the attack as a “brutal overnight assault on Kyiv and across Ukraine,” stressing that “for the first time, the heart of Ukraine’s civilian government was damaged,” and warning that Putin “believes he can act with impunity” and “is not serious about peace.”

French President Emmanuel Macron similarly denounced the strikes on social media, stating that “Russia, meanwhile, is locking itself ever deeper into the logic of war and terror,” and affirmed that “together with Ukraine and our partners, we stand for peace.”

Russia’s Defense Ministry said Sunday that it carried out a large-scale strike with precision weapons and drones against facilities used to produce, store and launch unmanned aircraft, as well as military airbases across central, southern and eastern Ukraine.

The ministry said the attack included strikes on an industrial plant on the western outskirts of Kyiv and a logistics center on the city’s southern edge.

It said all intended targets were destroyed and stressed that no other sites inside Kyiv were hit, making no mention of any government structures in Kyiv.

Separately, Russia’s Defense Ministry said in a statement that Ukraine attempted a large-scale overnight drone attack overnight into Sunday, with its air defenses shooting down 69 unmanned aircraft across southern and central Russia.

The ministry said the drones were intercepted over Krasnodar, Voronezh, Belgorod, Astrakhan, Volgograd, Rostov, Bryansk, Kursk and Ryazan regions, as well as over Crimea and the Sea of Azov.

In its daily summary of war accomplishments, Russia claimed that its troops advanced in eastern and southern Ukraine, capturing the village of Khoroshe in the Dnipropetrovsk region and striking Ukrainian units across Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson. The ministry claimed hundreds of Ukrainian soldiers were killed in the fighting, along with tanks, armored vehicles, artillery and supply depots destroyed.

It said Russian air and missile forces also hit Ukrainian military-industrial sites, drone bases and transport hubs in nearly 150 locations, while air defenses intercepted three U.S.-made HIMARS rockets, guided bombs and more than 200 drones.

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Ukraine’s TB-2 Bayraktar Drones Are Striking Russian Forces Again After A Long Hiatus

After a long hiatus, the Bayraktar TB-2 twin-tail boom medium altitude, medium endurance (MAME) drone is once again carrying out strike missions against Russian forces. The most recent example came on Wednesday, in an attack on a Russian boat and troops on the Black Sea coast.

Though limited in numbers, these strikes mark a resurgence of sorts for a weapon so effective in the early days of the all-out war against Russian land convoys and vessels that a song was written about it. While still used to surveil less contested areas, the propeller-driven drones had receded from the front lines as a strike weapon due to their vulnerability to Russian air defense and electronic warfare

“The Navy destroyed another high-speed boat of the Russian Black Sea Fleet, which was trying to deliver an airborne troops unit to the Tendrivska Spit. 7 occupiers were destroyed, 4 wounded,” the Ukrainian Navy said on Telegram. While the Navy did not say how the strike took place, a video on the post shows the surveillance and attack from the view through the Bayraktar’s distinctive video feed symbology.

Several weeks earlier, the Ukrainian Defense Intelligence Directorate (GUR) released a video of a TB-2 strike on another small Russian boat, this time near Zaliznyi Port in the Kherson region, about 30 miles southeast of the Spit. TB-2s drop small guided weapons, allowing them to strike multiple objects on a single sortie.

In June, the Ukrainian Navy showed a video of a TB-2 attack on a Russian landing craft on Kherson’s west coast.

Before that, however, there was a long pause in the use of the TB-2 to carry out attacks.

Ukraine began using these drones, made by the Turkish Baykar company, even before the onset of the full-on war. The first reported strike came in October 2021 when it was used to destroy a 122mm D-30 howitzer belonging to Russian-backed separatist forces in the country’s eastern Donbas region that Ukrainian authorities said was responsible for killing one of its soldiers and wounding another.

The TB-2 would go on to play a big role for Ukraine in the early part of the full-on war as an unmanned platform able to conduct both strike and reconnaissance missions. Bayraktar attacks were pivotal to stopping the long Russian mechanized columns heading toward Kyiv.

The TB-2s also helped Ukraine recapture Snake Island in the Western Black Sea by attacking targets on the rocky outcropping and ships trying to access it.

This success gave Ukraine a rare glimmer of hope during a time when its future as an independent nation was on the line. In February 2022, Ukrainian artist Taras Borovok released a catchy song about the Bayraktar drones that went viral online.

By March 2022, at least 26 TB-2s had been destroyed, according to the Oryx open-source tracking group. The actual figures could be significantly higher because Oryx only tabulates losses for which there is visual evidence.

“Russia began adapting to the TB2 threat,” the Ukrainian United24 media outlet noted in June. “Improved electronic warfare and layered air defense systems made it increasingly difficult for large, slow drones to operate safely. Ukrainian officials acknowledged that TB2s had become highly vulnerable to Russian systems like Pantsir-S1, Buk, and Tor.”

By 2023, the Ukrainian military had largely withdrawn the Bayraktars from attack roles, instead focusing on “reconnaissance, target designation, and rare strikes in lightly defended areas,” United24 pointed out.

You can see one example of a TB-2 destroyed by Russian air defenses in the following video.

The recent return of the Bayraktars as strike weapons has been made possible by constant Ukrainian attacks on Russian air defenses in Crimea and Kherson, both Ukrainian and Russian sources note.

Yesterday’s Bayraktar attack “is particularly significant given that Ukraine’s Defense Forces appear to have systematically worked to make such missions possible by suppressing Russian air defense systems — interestingly, also through the use of unmanned technologies,” the Ukrainian Defense Express news outlet noted on Thursday.

“Previously, the ‘Bayraktars’ had already operated in the Spit area, but were used exclusively in reconnaissance mode from a distance, not risking getting close to strike, as they would inevitably become victims of air defense,” the Russian Military Informer Telegram channel posited on Wednesday. “Now, apparently due to regular strikes by Ukrainian drones [launched from boats] with Starlink on air defense and radar on the coast of Kherson region and Crimea, Ukrainian Bayraktar TB2s have received a corridor for freer operation.”

The following video shows one example of Ukraine’s attacks on Russian air defenses and radar systems.

Ukraine’s Special Services has released a video from the past few days of dismantling Russia’s anti-aircraft and radar networks in Crimea.

Radar stations hit:
▪️ 48Я6-К1 “Flight” (2)
▪️ 1L125 “Niobium-SV” (2)
▪️ 39Н6 “Kasta 2E2” (3)
▪️ 9S19 “Ginger”
▪️ “Sky-SV”
▪️ S-300VM
▪️… pic.twitter.com/UiaEfseYYr

— SPRAVDI — Stratcom Centre (@StratcomCentre) March 19, 2025

Ukraine has also been executing an ongoing suppression/destruction of enemy air defenses (SEAD/DEAD) campaign for years now, including using fighter-launched AGM-88 High-Speed Anti-Radiation Missiles (HARMs) and guided glide bombs to reach across the front lines and takeout anti-air systems. This is backed by persistent intelligence gathering, especially across the radio-frequency spectrum. TB-2s operating near the far western reaches of Russian-held territory would make sense as this is an area where these anti-air defense tactical jet operations would have occurred regularly.

Ukraine’s long-range campaign against highly-prized Russian air defenses in Crimea is also topic that The War Zone has also frequently addressed. As we noted in a previous story: “Taking out these systems potentially opens holes in Russia’s air defense overlay of the peninsula and the northwestern Black Sea. This could go a long way to ensuring the survivability of standoff strike weapons, like Storm Shadow and SCALP-EG, and other attacks, such as those by long-range kamikaze drones.” The loss of these systems could also help via a reduction in situational awareness over the skies of southern Ukraine.

Openings for use of the TB-2 may have also increased because of fighting for the Tendrivska Spit. This is a narrow stretch of land in Russian-occupied Kherson Oblast on the shore of the northern Black Sea. It is also the furthest west Russian troops have reached so far. The littoral nature of this area and its terrain may also limit the deployment of Russian short-range air defense systems.

Ukraine has been repeatedly attacking the Tendrivska spit because Russians are reportedly using it to place relay stations to extend the range of their drones.

Beyond land-based air defenses, interceptor drones are increasingly used by both sides to attack enemy drones.

“Russian military forces use the Tendra Spit as a stronghold for observation and conducting operations in the northern part of the Black Sea,” the Ukrainian Militarnyi media outlet noted on Wednesday. “In particular, the invaders deploy relay stations there to extend the flight range of reconnaissance and strike drones.”

While the TB-2’s use for strike missions in this area points to a safer block of airspace to operate in, it is surely not without major-risk. The advantage of the TB-2 is that if it is shot down no crew is lost. No combat search and rescue effort is needed. And a precious manned tactical aircraft is not stricken from the Ukrainian Air Force’s roster. In other words, the TB-2s can be risked where manned platforms cannot. This is especially important as the TB-2s, like manned tactical aircraft, can dynamically attack moving targets of opportunity, something most standoff weapons cannot.

Another factor for the use of TB-2s for a wide variety of missions, including risky ones, is that they are now being produced in Ukraine. Of note is that Russia recently attacked the facility near Kyiv where these are being made. This was the fourth strike in six months at a factory where tens of millions of dollars had been invested.

NEW: Last night, Bayraktar factory in Kyiv was hit with two Russian strikes; causing serious damage.

Despite the war and previous attacks, the company had invested tens of millions, trained staff, and nearly completed production facilities.

This marks the fourth strike on the… pic.twitter.com/XVfKvlG8H6

— Clash Report (@clashreport) August 28, 2025

A few uses of the Bayraktar as a strike weapon don’t mean that these drones are now going to be a regular feature of Ukraine’s aerial strike force. However, these attacks show Ukraine’s ability to quickly adapt to battlefield conditions and take advantage of seams and openings created in Russian air defenses. It also puts into question the exact state of Russia’s vaunted air defense overlay that extends into Ukrainian-help territory. After years of being battered, significant cracks could be showing.

Contact the author: [email protected]

Howard is a Senior Staff Writer for The War Zone, and a former Senior Managing Editor for Military Times. Prior to this, he covered military affairs for the Tampa Bay Times as a Senior Writer. Howard’s work has appeared in various publications including Yahoo News, RealClearDefense, and Air Force Times.




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Burning Man ‘murder’ victim found in a pool of blood is pictured & named as 37-year-old Russian

A SUSPECTED murder victim found in a pool of blood at the infamous Burning Man festival has been identified as a 37-year-old Russian.

Vadim Kruglov was discovered on Saturday night inside the festival grounds in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert.

Man in goggles at Burning Man.

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A 37-year-old Russian, Vadim Kruglov, was allegedly found murdered at Burning Man festivalCredit: Instagram / sofi.co__
Man in sunglasses making a hand gesture in front of a black Ram truck.

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Police are investigating, and funds are being raised to return his body to OmskCredit: Instagram / sofi.co__

On Wednesday, organisers confirmed his identity and said they were working with the Pershing County sheriff’s office, which is leading the investigation.

In a statement, Burning Man said: “Our hearts go out to Vadim’s family and friends, and we grieve the loss of a community member.

“Burning Man Project is doing everything we can to assist the sheriff’s investigation so the perpetrator can be caught and brought to justice.”

The festival added that it was donating to a programme allowing witnesses to share information anonymously and urged anyone with knowledge to come forward.

Friends said Kruglov had been missing for four days before his body was found.

His pal Sofiia Shcherbakova wrote on Instagram: “His tent and belongings were left at camp, but he never returned.”

She later confirmed his death, calling him a “true hero of Burning Man”.

“He poured his soul into our community: building the camp, creating an art installation, always ready to help others, and being kind and responsive to everyone,” she wrote.

“His energy and contribution will forever remain part of the Burn’s history.”

In a follow-up post, Shcherbakova said she was raising funds to bring his body back to his hometown of Omsk, Siberia.

Racing driver Danica Patrick enjoys her adventure in the desert at the Burning Man festival

“Now we want to honour his memory and support his family,” she said.

“We are raising funds to bring him home to Omsk, so that his parents can say their last goodbye and lay him to rest with his loved ones.”

As of Thursday, the GoFundMe had collected $4,063 of its $15,000 goal.

The sheriff’s office has condemned the killing, calling for information that could lead to the arrest of “any person who would commit such a heinous crime against another human being”.

They have so far declined to release further details about how Kruglov died.

Burning Man — famous for its giant effigies, art installations and eccentric camps — attracts tens of thousands of revellers every year, including tech billionaires and celebrities.

About 70,000 people from 102 countries attended this year’s gathering.

The festival was already rocked last week by intense dust storms that left some attendees injured.

It also saw the shock birth of a baby in an RV after a woman who did not know she was pregnant went into labour on site.

Pentacle Drummers perform at a bonfire.

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Burning Man is famous for its giant effigies, art installations and eccentric campsCredit: PA
Crowd at Burning Man watching a burning art installation.

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Tens of thousands of festivalgoers attend the event every yearCredit: AFP

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EU chief von der Leyen’s plane hit by suspected Russian GPS interference

The navigation system of a plane carrying Ursula von der Leyen was disrupted due to suspected Russian interference, the European Commission has said.

A spokesperson said the “GPS jamming” happened while the Commission president was about to arrive in southern Bulgaria on Sunday, but she still landed safely.

They added: “We have received information from the Bulgarian authorities that they suspect that this was due to blatant interference by Russia.”

The Financial Times, citing unnamed officials, reported that von der Leyen’s plane had to land at Plovdiv Airport with the pilots using paper maps.

The European Commission said “threats and intimidation are a regular component of Russia’s hostile actions” and that the incident would reinforce its commitment to “ramp up our defence capabilities and support for Ukraine”.

The EU will deploy additional satellites into low Earth orbit with the aim of bolstering its ability to detect GPS interference, the bloc’s Defence Commissioner Andrius Kubilius said following the incident.

The Bulgarian government confirmed that, during the flight, “the satellite signal transmitting information to the plane’s GPS navigation system was neutralised”.

The statement continued: “To ensure the flight’s safety, air control services immediately offered an alternative landing method using terrestrial navigation tools.”

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told the FT that its information was “incorrect”.

The Bulgarian Air Traffic Services Authority said there had been a “noticeable increase” in GPS incidents, including jamming, since February 2022 – when Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Tens of thousands of incidents of jamming have been reported by airlines operating around the Baltic coast in the last few years. The three Baltic nations – Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia – are bookended by Russian territory.

In March 2024, an RAF plane carrying the UK’s then-Defence Secretary Grant Schapps reported a spoofing incident – in which legitimate signals are replaced with fake ones, indicating a false location.

The plane, which had been flying near the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad, which sits between Poland and Lithuania, was able to continue its journey safely.

The issue has become so prevalent that the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) and the International Air Transport Association (IATA) convened a special conference in 2024 to discuss spoofing incidents – warning they could “pose significant challenges to aviation safety”.

Moscow regularly denies accusations of interference or attacks on commercial aviation, and no proven link has yet been established between Russia and the rise in GPS jamming.

But European governments and experts regularly blame Russia, claiming such practices fit with an alleged Kremlin strategy to generally sow disorder and undermine European security.

While planes can rely on other forms of navigation than GPS, jamming it mid-flight can increase the risk of collisions – either with other planes or by causing the pilot to unintentionally fly into the ground, water or other obstacle.

Keir Giles, a senior consulting fellow at Chatham House’s Russia and Eurasia Programme, told the BBC such interference had indeed become a “constant feature” of flying near Russia, disrupting time and positioning services that had “previously been taken for granted”.

“They have gone from isolated incidents to being normalised,” he said, adding that “no one has been willing or able” to convince Moscow to stop an expanding “campaign of interference”.

Von der Leyen was visiting Bulgaria as part of a tour of eastern EU states to discuss defence readiness.

A Commission spokesperson said she had “seen first hand the every day threats from Russia and its proxies” during the tour.

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Car crashes into Russian consulate in Australia’s Sydney | Police News

Police say a 39-year-old man has been taken into custody over the incident in Sydney’s Woollahra suburb.

Australian police have arrested a 34-year-old man after he drove his car into the front gate of the Russian consulate in Sydney, according to police and local media.

In a statement, the New South Wales Police Force said the crash took place on Monday morning after officers responded to reports of an “unauthorised vehicle” parked in the driveway of the consulate in the Sydney suburb of Woollahra.

Officers tried to speak with the driver, but he “drove his vehicle into the gates of the property”, the statement said.

A 24-year-old constable was injured on his hand during the incident, it added.

Television footage from Sky News and Nine showed a car with a smashed window abandoned next to a Russian flagpole.

There was no immediate comment from the Russian consulate.

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This Is How Ukrainian Yak-52 Crews Hunt Russian Drones

While first-hand accounts of the air war over Ukraine have been previously provided by some of its fast-jet aviators, we now have new insight from the pilot and gunner of a Ukrainian Army Aviation Yak-52 prop trainer. The Soviet-era aircraft has been used to hunt Russian drones for some time now, with signs of success, but few details of its missions have been published.

In a recent article published by the Wall Street Journal, a Yak-52 pilot, a 56-year-old with the callsign “Maestro,” and his 38-year-old gunner, “Ninja,” describe their mission. Of the two, Maestro learned to fly before Russia’s full-scale invasion, as a hobby, while Ninja first went aloft in a plane after the current conflict began.

We now also know that the Yak-52s are assigned to the 11th Army Aviation Brigade, a unit within Ukrainian Army Aviation, rather than the Ukrainian Air Force. The Army Aviation branch is otherwise responsible for rotorcraft. Previously, the Yaks were understood to be operated by a Tactical Aviation Group from Ukraine’s Civil Air Patrol, a civilian organization that consists mainly of amateur aviators and private aircraft owners.

An earlier video of a Yak-52 apparently operated by the Tactical Aviation Group of Ukraine’s Civil Air Patrol:

Regardless, the drone-killing Yaks and their crews are being kept busy by relentless Russian attacks. According to the brigade’s deputy commander, Col. Mykola Lykhatskiy, Maestro and Ninja have flown around 300 combat missions in the last year, downing “almost half” the unit’s total claimed tally of 120 drones.

Drone kills marked on the side of the Yak-52. via X

On a daily basis, various Army Aviation light aircraft and helicopters are responsible for downing between 10-12 percent of all drones claimed by Ukrainian air defenses of all kinds, Lykhatskiy said. Interestingly, the deputy commander also claims that the agile Yak-52 is considered more survivable than helicopters, allowing it to roam closer to the front lines.

According to the Center for Information Resilience, a U.K.-based open-source organization, around 11 percent of all Russian long-range one-way attack drones made it to their targets last month, highlighting the broad success of Ukraine’s different counter-drone efforts.

An early Shahed-136 long-range one-way attack drone launched by Russia against Ukraine. Photo by SERGEI SUPINSKY/AFP via Getty Images

According to the WSJ article, as well as Shahed/Geran-type long-range one-way attack drones, the Yak-52 is mainly used to tackle Russian Orlan and ZALA surveillance drones. These propeller-driven types fly at around 115 miles an hour, well within the performance envelope of the Yak, which tops out at more than 180 miles an hour.

The ZALA 421-16E is a flying-wing type, weighing around 20 pounds and used primarily for surveillance near the front line of the battlefield. The Orlan-10/30 series is among the most widely used Russian drones in Ukraine, the smaller Orlan-10 weighing around 35 pounds, while the larger Orlan-30 tips the scales at around 90 pounds. It’s also primarily used for surveillance and targeting, equipped with an electro-optical sensor and laser designator.

A Russian Zala 421-16E that came down somewhere in the Belgorod region of Russia. via X
A Russian Orlan-10 is prepared for flight. Russian Ministry of Defense

The interception process involves the crew waiting close to their Yak-52 while awaiting the order to scramble. Once a Russian drone is spotted on air defense sensors, the Yak is normally airborne within 15 minutes.

With no radar and apparently no other onboard sensors, the Yak-52 crew relies on radio commands from the ground to get close to the drone. From the open rear cockpit, the gunner then gets the drone in their sights, wielding a handheld gun. Typically, engagements are made from a distance of 200 to 300 feet.

A video of a Ukrainian Yak-52 flying to intercept a Russian drone has gone viral on social networks

A Ukrainian Yak-52 with a machine gun on board has fallen into the lens of the Russian reconnaissance drone Zala in the skies above Mykolaiv region.

The aircraft is used to… pic.twitter.com/TYmY1HDyIs

— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) June 8, 2024

Both rifles and shotguns have been tested, with Ninja currently preferring a German-made “MK55 automatic rifle,” apparently a reference to the Haenel MK556 that was selected as the German military’s new assault rifle, before later being rejected.

Haenel’s MK556 — the MK stands for “Maschinenkarabiner,” or machine carbine — was first unveiled in 2017 and owes much to the design of the American AR-15/M4. Haenel

Ninja likened the process of aiming against a drone from the Yak-52 to “shooting a gun while riding a horse.”

Other tactics include using the wingtip of the Yak-52 to tip over the drone, sending it out of control. This mirrors a maneuver that the U.K. Royal Air Force employed in World War II to defeat Nazi Germany’s V-1 flying bombs.

Rockets And Missiles, A Supermarine Spitfire flying alongside a V-1 flying bomb in an attempt to disrupt the airflow over its wing and force it to crash, August 1944, August 1944. (Photo by Mr Walton/ Imperial War Museums via Getty Images)
A U.K. Royal Air Force Spitfire flying alongside a V-1 flying bomb in an attempt to disrupt the airflow over its wing and force it to crash, August 1944. Photo by Mr Walton/ Imperial War Museums via Getty Images IWM/Getty Images

On one occasion last year, it took Maestro and Ninja 40 minutes to destroy an Orlan drone that began maneuvering in tight circles once they arrived. Eventually, it was brought down by a shot from directly below. Increasingly, Russian drones are fitted with rear-facing cameras to help evade interception by aircraft.

Videos show a Ukrainian Yak-52 attacking a Russian Orlan-10 drone, reportedly in the Odesa region of southwest Ukraine, in April 2024:

Russia is also apparently making direct efforts to counter the Yak-52s.

At least once, Maestro and Ninja have been forced to evade a Russian air defense missile that was targeting them. A high-speed descent saw them shake off the missile, they say.

Their base has also been attacked. One Yak-52 was destroyed on the ground in a raid last month that also claimed the life of the brigade commander, Kostyantyn Oborin. Reportedly, the hangar was struck by a Russian ballistic missile.

The Yak-52 with a ‘digital’ camouflage scheme, seen here from the perspective of a Russian drone that it was attempting to intercept. via X

The latest details of the Ukrainian Army Aviation’s exploits with its drone-hunting Yak-52 indicate that the prop trainer is now a more formalized part of the country’s air defenses.

With Russian drones being very much a priority target, Ukraine has assembled a multi-layered air defense network that includes advanced Western-supplied Patriot surface-to-air missiles and F-16 fighters at one end, via Soviet-era systems and hastily developed “FrankenSAMs,” all the way down to light aircraft and mobile fire teams equipped with machine guns and searchlights. In addition, there are a growing number of non-kinetic options, such as electronic warfare, too. A network of acoustic sensors all over the country and an app that ties this information with spotter reports are also key elements of Ukraine’s unique air defense network.

A drone-hunting mobile fire team of the 241st Independent Brigade’s air defense platoon on combat alert somewhere in the Kyiv region. Territorial Defense Forces of Ukraine

On the other side, as we have previously noted, Russia now produces Shahed/Geran drones at the rate of 2,000 per month with plans to nearly triple that in the not-too-distant future. It is by far the primary method by which Russia launches long-range strikes into Ukraine.

It is worth noting that Russia, too, has attempted to develop a counter-drone solution, also based on the Yak-52, to help thwart Ukrainian long-range drone attacks. You can read more about that in our past story on the matter linked here.

A Russian design bureau has developed modernized Yak-52 into the Yak-52B2 for countering UAVs. The aircraft are equipped with 12 gauge shotguns, a radar, and a computer for targeting information and day / night operations.https://t.co/bPOyrB9UMz pic.twitter.com/dT9UHlOyLq

— Rob Lee (@RALee85) May 18, 2025

Meanwhile, the continued scale of Russian drone activity over Ukraine means that the Yak-52 fleet and the crews that operate them will only become busier.

Contact the author: [email protected]

Thomas is a defense writer and editor with over 20 years of experience covering military aerospace topics and conflicts. He’s written a number of books, edited many more, and has contributed to many of the world’s leading aviation publications. Before joining The War Zone in 2020, he was the editor of AirForces Monthly.




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Russia attacks Ukraine’s Zaporizhia; Kyiv hits Russian oil refineries | Russia-Ukraine war News

At least one person has been killed and 24 wounded, including two children, in attack that targeted Zaporizhia.

A “massive” overnight Russian attack on central and southeastern Ukraine has killed at least one person, with homes and businesses damaged in multiple cities, authorities have said, while Kyiv has struck two Russian oil refineries.

“At night, the enemy carried out massive strikes” on Zaporizhia, Ukraine’s state emergency service said on Telegram on Saturday.

At least one person was killed and 24 others were wounded, including two children, according to regional military administration chief Ivan Fedorov.

“Russian strikes destroyed private houses, damaged many facilities, including cafes, service stations and industrial enterprises,” Fedorov said.

Ukraine’s central Dnipropetrovsk region also came under attack early on Saturday, the governor said, reporting strikes in Dnipro and Pavlohrad.

“The region is under a massive attack. Explosions are being heard,” Serhiy Lysak wrote on Telegram, warning residents to take cover.

Since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Dnipropetrovsk had been largely spared from intense fighting.

But Kyiv acknowledged on Tuesday that Russian troops had entered the region, after Moscow claimed it had gained a foothold there.

Dnipropetrovsk is not one of the five Ukrainian regions – Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk, Zaporizhia and Crimea – that Moscow has publicly claimed as Russian territory.

The Ukrainian air force said it struck down 510 of 537 drones and 38 of 45 missiles launched by Russia in its overnight attack, adding that it recorded five missile and 24 drone hits at seven locations.

In the meantime, the Ukrainian military said that it struck Russian oil refineries overnight. The military said it recorded multiple explosions and a fire at the Krasnodar oil refinery. There was also a fire in the Syzran oil refinery area in the Samara region.

Kyiv reeling from deadly attack

The new Russian attacks come two days after a huge Russian drone and missile attack rocked Kyiv and its residents, one of the worst on the capital in the war now in its fourth year, which authorities said killed up to 25 people.

Authorities said 22 of those killed, including four children, had been residents of an apartment building destroyed in the city’s eastern Darnytskyi district.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Thursday said the strike, which damaged the offices of the European Union and British Council, was the second-largest attack since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine.

On Saturday, Zelenskyy said that Moscow had used preparation time for a summit of leaders to launch new massive attacks on his country. “The only way to reopen a window of opportunity for diplomacy is through tough measures against all those bankrolling the Russian army and effective sanctions against Moscow itself – banking and energy sanctions,” he wrote on X.

Meanwhile, European Union foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said on Saturday that it was not possible to imagine giving back Russian assets frozen inside the bloc due to the war unless Moscow had paid reparations.

“We can’t possibly imagine that … if … there is a ceasefire or peace deal that these assets are given back to Russia if they haven’t paid for the reparations,” she told reporters before a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Copenhagen.

Zelenskyy has urged allies to swiftly elevate talks on security guarantees for Ukraine to the level of leaders, as EU defence ministers meeting Friday in the Danish capital pledged to train Kyiv’s troops on Ukrainian soil in the event of a truce.

The Ukrainian president said he expected to continue talks with European leaders next week on “NATO-like” commitments to protect Ukraine, adding that United States President Donald Trump should also be involved.

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