Tag: Ukrainian Air Force

  • “We shot down Russian spy plane” – Ukraine

    “We shot down Russian spy plane” – Ukraine

    Ukraine’s military shot down a Russian spy plane over the Sea of Azov. This is bad news for Russia’s air force.

    General Valerii Zaluzhnyi, leader of the army, said the air force “destroyed” a long range radar detection plane and an air control center.

    The A-50 finds enemy air defenses and helps Russian jets know where to attack.

    Ukraine has had a hard time making progress against Russian forces in the southeast.

    Russian officials said they didn’t know about the attacks, but important Russian people who support war said that losing an A-50 would be a big deal.

    A well-known military channel, Rybar, said that if Ukraine’s report about the Russian losses was true, it would be a very bad day for the Russian air force.

    Another channel reported that the Il-22 command center was hit by Russian “friendly fire”.

    Gen Zaluzhnyi said on the internet that Ukraine’s air force did a very good job with a plan in the Azov region, which is in the south-east part of Ukraine.

    Mykola Oleshchuk, who is in charge of the Ukrainian Air Force, talked about the airplane crash in a message on the app Telegram, but didn’t give any specific information.

    Justin Bronk, who knows a lot about air wars, said to the BBC that if it’s true that Russia lost an A-50, it would be a really big and embarrassing loss for their air force.

    He said the A-50 is an important plane that helps Russian aircraft and missiles get early warning and information about low-flying Ukrainian planes.

    He said there are only a few of these planes in the Russian air force and not many trained crews. If one is lost, it would be a big problem.

    He said if it’s approved, it would be a very far-reaching attack for Ukrainian Patriot air defense missiles, pushing the weapon to its limits.

    Frank Gardner, who reports on security for the BBC, said it’s a small piece of good news for Ukraine in the middle of a lot of bad news.

    He said things are not going well for Ukraine. They don’t have enough ammunition, their soldiers are not feeling good, and Russia keeps attacking their infrastructure.

  • Ukraine issues missile warning to Russia after drone attacks

    Ukraine issues missile warning to Russia after drone attacks

    Ukraine’s capital Kyiv has become the target of new Russian drone attacks, with authorities also warning of missile attacks from Moscow.

    Kyiv Mayor Vitaliy Klitschko said explosions were heard in the city on Tuesday morning and that drone debris caused a fire in the Desnianskyi district near the center. Aerial warnings also took place in other cities, including Kherson and Mykolaiv.

    Recent days have been marked by significant air strikes from both sides. Klitschko said drone debris caused a fire in the Desnianskyi district and emergency services were at the scene.

    The mayor of Mykolaiv in southern Ukraine said air defense forces shot down a drone in the town, its debris causing a fire.

    The Ukrainian Air Force said on Telegram that it shot down all 35 unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) launched by Russia on Monday night.

    However, after these attacks, many missiles were fired from Russia towards areas such as Kyiv, Cherkasy and Kirovohrad.

    He asked people to listen for air raid sirens and go to shelters.

    This follows multiple attacks from both sides in recent days, with Russia responding to a Ukrainian attack on the Russian border town of Belgorod on Saturday that left at least 25 people dead and more than 100 injured person.

    According to officials installed by Moscow, Ukraine bombed the Russian-controlled city of Donetsk on New Year’s Eve (Sunday), killing four people and wounding 13 others, while Ukraine said the attacks by a Russian drone killed one person and injured nine in Odessa.

    On New Year’s Day (Monday), six civilians were killed by Russian attacks in various Ukrainian cities.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin said his forces will increase attacks on military targets in Ukraine in response to the attack in Belgorod.

    Putin also said Western rhetoric about the war is starting to change as they begin to realize that it cannot “destroy” Russia.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky dismissed these claims in an interview with The Economist, saying that Putin’s suggestion that Russia was winning the war was just a “feeling”.

    He highlighted the number of Russian casualties in Ukraine and said opposition forces had not captured a single major city in 2023.

    Mr Zelensky also expressed frustration with Kiev’s Western allies, saying they had lost a sense of urgency.

  • Why Kyiv would still face big hurdles in using the US-made fighter jets

    Why Kyiv would still face big hurdles in using the US-made fighter jets

    Ukraine’s quest for US-made F-16 fighter jets received a big boost over the weekend when US President Joe Biden gave his backing for Kyiv’s pilots to be trained to fly them.

    Biden’s comments at a summit with G7 leaders in Japan came days after Britain and the Netherlands said they were building an “international coalition” to help Ukraine procure F-16s as it seeks to improve its defenses against Russian air attacks.

    The F-16s would be an upgrade to the largely Soviet-era aircraft currently in Ukraine’s fleet. President Volodymyr Zelensky welcomed Biden’s decision, saying in a tweet, “this will greatly enhance our army in the sky.”

    But analysts cautioned that the jets aren’t a cure-all and have vulnerabilities that Moscow would be well aware of and could exploit.

    In fact, one active duty F-16 pilot told CNN that expectations may be way too high.

    “To your question about the F-16 being a difference maker. It’s not,” said the pilot, who requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the subject.

    Here’s what you need to know about the F-16.

    F-16s are single-engine, multirole jet aircraft, meaning they can be used in air-to-air or ground-attack missions.

    The US Air Force calls the F-16, which first flew in the 1970s, a “relatively low-cost, high-performance weapon system.”

    Thousands of the jets have been built over the decades, and hundreds have been exported around the world.

    According to Flight Global’s World Air Forces directory, almost 2,200 F-16s are active worldwide this year, making it the single most popular combat aircraft across the planet with 15% of the world’s fleet.

    F-16s for Ukraine are expected to be older versions that have been in the fleets of US allies, especially those in Western Europe.

    Analysts say the F-16s Ukraine would receive are not the oldest ones out there, but aircraft that have undergone what are called “mid-life upgrades,” meaning they’ve gotten improvements to avionics and software.

    Ukraine has said it needs about 200 F-16s, so the numbers would work out.

    “There is a surplus of F-16s in Western nations, offering immediate availability and a well-established logistics trail,” said Robert Hopkins, a military aviation author and former US Air Force pilot.

    “There are other aircraft more capable than the F-16, but they are fewer in number and are not available to transfer,” Hopkins added.

    Those more-capable aircraft are probably ones that you commonly hear about, US-made F-35s and F/A-18s or French Rafales, for instance.

    And there are others that are lesser known.

    “The best aircraft technically would arguably be the Swedish Grippen because of its combat capabilities, ability to operate from austere bases and easier maintenance,” said Peter Layton, a fellow at the Griffith Asia Institute and former Royal Australian Air Force officer. “However, their annual production rate is low and there are none available off the shelf.”

    Layton gives the Netherlands as a prime example of how the F-16 might be the easiest answer for Ukraine.

    “The Dutch (have) about 40 F-16s on hand. These Dutch aircraft have been progressively upgraded, have relatively modern radars and avionics, and are able to use advanced weapons,” Layton said.

    The analysts say the sheer numbers of F-16s active around the world means they have an established logistics trail and a good number of spare parts available – important components to keep the jets combat capable.

    But they also note that for a modern fighter jet like the F-16, training maintenance personnel can take longer than training pilots.

    “I think it’s possible to teach a Ukrainian pilot to fly an F-16 in three months,” Layton said.

    But “training maintenance personnel can take months or years, depending on the desired level of proficiency,” according to a March report on the possible F-16 transfers from the Congressional Research Service (CRS).

    Even after undergoing up to 133 days of schooling, a US Air Force maintainer gains a year of on-the-job experience to become fully qualified, the CRS report says.

    And the report notes that there can be a numbers problem. F-16s need a lot of maintenance; 16 hours per hour of flying time, it says.

    As for pilot training, Layton and the active F-16 pilot who spoke to CNN both say three months of training is for the basics – getting the plane up in the air, keeping it there and landing it safely. Combat roles become much more complex, however.

    F-16s are easy to learn how to fly, but employing them effectively in “a dynamic threat environment” could take years, according to the pilot.

    “Learning to fly an F-16 is only one part of the battle. American pilots first learn to fly, then they learn how to lead two F-16s, then four F-16s. This is a multi-year process, and that’s just for the basic tactical unit of employment,” the F-16 pilot said.

    Layton said Ukraine’s current jet fighter pilots have proven adept, and could “learn on the job” in the F-16s if confining themselves to air defense, shooting down intruding Russian aircraft or missiles, in the short term.

    “My logic falls away if trying to teach them low altitude night/all-weather ground attack using infrared systems and laser guided bombs; this would take longer,” Layton said.

    Then there is the question of where Ukrainian F-16s would be based.

    “F-16s do best on long, pristine runways. They could face difficulties on the rougher, former Soviet ones dispersed across Ukraine,” RAND Corp. analysts John Hoehn and William Courtney wrote in a blog post earlier this month.

    “To bring in Western aircraft, Ukraine might need to repave and potentially extend a number of runways, a process which Russia would likely detect. If only a few airfields were suitable and in known locations, focused Russian attacks could impede Ukrainian F-16s from flying,” they wrote.

    Assuming Ukraine can overcome logistics and maintenance hurdles, and find secure runways from which to fly F-16s, they still need the right armaments to be effective against the key fighter jets Russia is using, like the Su-25 and MiG-31, analysts say.

    “The advantages of transferring advanced western fighter jets in seeking air superiority are likely to be realized only if paired with large quantities of western-manufactured munitions,” the CRS report says.

    Advanced western armaments for the F-16s would be expensive.

    For instance, a single Advanced Medium Range Air-to-Air Missile (AMRAAM) costs about $1.2 million, CRS says, adding that it takes about two years to make one.

    The US could provide AMRAAMs and other arms from its stockpile, but with the long manufacturing times, it runs the risk of its own inventories being depleted if needed in a conflict directly involving US forces, the CRS says.

    Despite all the possible drawbacks to F-16s, Hopkins said a political war is being fought, and victories are needed in that battlespace.

    Getting F-16s to Ukraine would demonstrate “a powerful political and diplomatic collaboration across multiple Western (and especially NATO) countries,” he said.

    Layton said Ukraine needs to take a long view, too.

    Hear Biden official’s response to admin’s pivot on F-16s

    Kyiv is not going to be able to get replacements for its current Soviet-era aircraft as they wear out or are lost in combat, he said

    “Over time, there will be no combat-effective Ukrainian air force. They need new aircraft for future air defense tasks,” he said.

    Transitioning to a Western-made fleet now makes sense, he said.

    But the war in Ukraine shows no sign of ending soon, and the current F-16 pilot doesn’t see the planes hastening the end of it.

    “Getting the Ukranians F-16s will be a morale boost and add some limited combat capability, that’s all,” the pilot said.

    “It might do a couple of strikes over the next year and have some wins, but no one airplane will change the course of the war.”

  • We utilized a Patriot system manufactured in the US to stop a Russian hypersonic missile – Ukraine

    We utilized a Patriot system manufactured in the US to stop a Russian hypersonic missile – Ukraine

    Ukraine claims to have successfully intercepted a Russian hypersonic missile using a Patriot air defense system for the first time.

    The commander of the Ukrainian Air Force, Mykola Oleshchuk, posted on Telegram on Saturday, “Yes, we have intercepted the ‘unmatched’ Kinzhal,’” adding an emoji of the Ukrainian flag.

    Oleshchuk said the interception had place on May 4 during a nighttime raid over Kyiv.

    Hypersonic ballistic missile Kh-47 Kinzhal. It is challenging to intercept since it moves at a speed ten times that of sound and can be shot from a distance away from the battlefield.

    Ukraine has received at least two Patriot systems, one from the United States and one from Germany, to enhance its air defenses, which have previously been unable to intercept more modern Russian missiles such as the Kinzhal.

    If it is confirmed that Ukraine successfully shot down Kinzhal it raises questions about Russian capabilities.

    Ukrainian air force spokesman Yurii Inhat said Saturday that the Russians said “the Patriot is an outdated American weapon, and Russian weapons are the best in the world.”

    “Well, there is confirmation that it effectively works against even a super hypersonic missile,” Ihnat said, adding that intercepting the Kinzhal is “a slap in the face for Russia.”

    Last month Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov said that Patriots would be critical in defending Ukrainian infrastructure against ballistic missiles.

    “Building a multi-level air and missile defense system as soon as possible is our priority,” he declared. “This is to protect peaceful cities, critical infrastructure, and our people in the rear and at the front. Patriot systems create a capability that did not exist before – to defeat ballistic targets.”

  • Ukrainian Air Force claims to have shot down 18 Russian drones

    Ukrainian Air Force claims to have shot down 18 Russian drones

    In a statement released early on Thursday, the Ukrainian Air Force said that 18 of the 24 drones fired by Russia on Wednesday night had been destroyed.

    “On (Wednesday night), the enemy again attacked with Shaheds from the north (Bryansk region) and from the south – the eastern coast of the Azov Sea,” the statement read. This time, the Air Force destroyed 18 attack UAVs in collaboration with other Ukrainian Defense Forces components’ air defense.

    Explosions were heard in the capital Kyiv and Odesa early Thursday morning, with air defenses activated and people told to stay in safe places until air alerts stopped ringing, according to Ukrainian officials.

    The capital region’s military chief said Ukrainian air defenses withstood Russia’s most intense air attack on Kyiv since the start of the year overnight and into Thursday morning, and destroyed all Russian missiles and drones.

    There were no civilian casualties or damage to residential buildings and infrastructure, he added.