Ukrainian forces have knocked out a Russian long-range radar system outside of the country's borders, according to Ukrainian media. The attack is the latest of Ukraine's reported strikes on Moscow ...
Soldiers of the Defence Intelligence of Ukraine (DIU) have successfully hit the Russian 48Y6 K-1 Podlyot radar system. Details: The radar system was successfully hit by a DIU group together with the ...
Ukraine's armed forces have released video they say shows the destruction of a Russian Podlyot radar system. More Oleksii Samsonov/Getty Images Drone footage shows the Ukrainian strike on the ...
Citing an unnamed source from the Security Service of Ukraine, or the SBU, The Kyiv Independent and Ukrainska Pravda reported that the Russian system was a Nebo-U radar complex stationed in ...
Ukraine’s military intelligence agency (HUR) and the 15th Separate Artillery Reconnaissance Brigade struck a Russian Podlet-K1 radar station, HUR reported on April 27. The Podlet-K1, also known ...
A £6million Russian radar complex has been knocked out by a ... by a Polish-made Warmate drone operated by Ukrainians. Ukraine's GUR military intelligence released a statement following the ...
A second clip pictured another drone flying into the power station thought to be fuelling the radar system, reports MailOnilne. The Ukraine Defense Ministry wrote: "Successful fire damage was ...
The Nebo-U long-range radar system sits in Bryansk Oblast, about 40km from the Ukrainian border, and is capable of aerial monitoring up to 700km deep into Ukraine. Russian troops were able to ...
Ukraine destroyed several units of military equipment in an attack on a Russian military airfield in Dzhankoi in occupied Crimea on April 17, Ukraine's military intelligence (HUR) reported.
The success of ballistic missile defences facing their first complex, high-stakes combat scenarios in Israel, the Red Sea and ...
Ukraine said on Tuesday that it used seven exploding drones to destroy a Russian radar system. Ukrainian media reported that the system was a Nebo-U, which monitors hundreds of miles of airspace.