A dramatic pursuit by two anti-drone teams from the BULAVA Battalion as they track and intercept an enemy Shahed UAV, captured as frontline monitoring and war documentation from the situation on the ground. The chase, guided by precise drone observation and high situational awareness, ends with a direct hit and an explosive finale, offering a clear battlefield overview of coordinated air defense and modern drone warfare.
Eesti ettevõte Frankenburg Technologies on edukalt katsetanud oma Mark I tõrjeraketti sihtmärgi vastu, mis imiteeris Shahed-tüüpi drooni.
Süsteem on mõeldud sihtmärkide tabamiseks kuni 2 km kauguselt. Rakett saavutab lõppfaasis kuni 1000 km/h kiiruse ning on märgatavalt odavam võrreldes sarnaste süsteemidega.
More than three FP-2 drones struck the oil loading standers at the pier, which had previously suffered damage from drone operations. The attack caused infrastructure damage and impacted the civilian environment in the urban frontline area, disrupting ongoing field operations. Coordinates: 45.11880656223428, 36.66596402129856.
The port is one of the largest in the Black Sea region, handling shipments of oil, gas, and ammonia. The attack caused significant infrastructure damage at the berths and to several storage tanks containing vacuum gas oil and fuel oil, impacting the civilian environment and affected communities. Petroleum products leaked and ignited, with the fire spreading across an area of about 7,000 m², complicating ongoing field operations and recovery efforts. Estimated losses are approximately $50 million USD, highlighting the conflict impact on cities and critical field infrastructure in the region.
Long-range strikes by the SBU’s Special Operations Center “Alpha” caused major losses to Russia’s layered air defense network, with destroyed and disabled assets estimated at $4 billion over the past year. This military situation update represents significant war documentation of Ukraine’s deep-strike campaign.
Confirmed targets include S-300 / S-350 / S-400, Buk-M1/M2, Pantsir-S1/S2, and Tor-M1/M2/M3 systems, along with critical radar and targeting assets such as Nebo-U/M, Podlyot, Niobiy, Kasta-2E2, Gamma-D, Protivnik-GE, and the 92N6 radar. These operations function as a strategic conflict zone update, breaching Russian air defenses and shaping the battlefield overview.
As a result, corridors were opened through layered air defenses, enabling Ukrainian long-range drones to penetrate deep into enemy territory. The strikes reflect the evolving situation on the ground and ongoing conflict monitoring, allowing attacks on military bases, depots, airfields, and other high-value targets far behind the front line.
This time off the coast of Senegal. The incident signals a growing escalation at sea, raising concerns that such strikes could become routine unless major powers like Russia and China take decisive action to respond or deter further attacks.
Operators of the 1st Separate Center of the Unmanned Systems Forces carried out mid-range strikes against enemy targets on temporarily occupied territory of Ukraine. In Donetsk Oblast, a command post and a deployment site of special forces from Russia’s 14th GRU Brigade, as well as warehouses and a military vehicle repair base, were hit. Additionally, a Nebo radar station and a deployment area of high-speed landing craft of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet were struck in temporarily occupied Crimea.
The explosion caused critical damage, effectively putting the submarine out of action.
A Varshavyanka-class submarine is valued at approximately $400 million.
The submarine carried four launchers for Kalibr cruise missiles, which Russia uses to strike targets across Ukraine.
The strike was a joint operation by the SBU’s 13th Main Directorate of Military Counterintelligence and the Ukrainian Navy.
Due to international sanctions, building a similar submarine today could cost up to $500 million. This class is also known as the “Black Hole” because its hull absorbs sound and remains difficult to detect by sonar.
The damaged submarine had been forced to stay in the port of Novorossiysk following successful operations by Sea Baby surface naval drones, which pushed Russian ships and submarines out of Sevastopol Bay in occupied Crimea.