Tag: Ukrainian drones

  • Ukraine intensifies its efforts to counter Russia’s electronic warfare

    Ukraine intensifies its efforts to counter Russia’s electronic warfare

    In early November, a video from a drone showed a bomb hitting and destroying three antennas on top of a building. The person in charge of the Ukrainian drones said they destroyed a Russian electronic warfare system near Donetsk in the eastern front.

    Ukraine is trying hard to keep up with Russia in electronic warfare.

    This attack also shows how quickly Kyiv is trying to destroy Moscow’s technology in battle – a sign of how crucial it could be for the future of the war.

    Electronic warfare, also known as EW, uses the electromagnetic spectrum for weapons and tactics. Both armies in this war are using it. It’s mainly electronic jammers that mess up GPS guided missiles, making them miss their targets.

    For nearly six months, Ukraine has been fighting back against Russia. Russia has not only strengthened its physical defenses but also its electronic ones. Ukrainian soldiers on the front lines have to adjust to this quickly.

    Pavlo Petrychenko, the leader of the group that flew the drones for Ukraine’s 59th Motorized Brigade, said it’s really important to destroy these systems in order to free up more land in Ukraine. The video he shared on social media is just one of many reports from Ukrainian military and media about successful attacks on Pole-21 systems in the past few months.

    “At first, they messed with our communication using electronic warfare. They disrupted our walkie-talkies, radios, phones, and drones,” he said in a video call to CNN from near Avdiivka, where some of the toughest fighting in the war is happening.

    “But when we got equipment from other countries, they used it to stop our weapons from working. ”

    Petrychenko said that Russia uses electronic warfare to defend against the US-provided HIMARS and Excalibur 155 because they are guided by satellites.

    And that’s why Ukraine has a problem. Russian jammers are causing problems for Ukraine by making their high-tech weapons from the West, which are guided by smart technology, less effective.

    Smart missiles and rocket launch systems like HIMARS are more easily affected by electronic warfare than unguided weapons because they need GPS to accurately hit their targets. In the past, Russia and Ukraine had a lot of unguided weapons.

    The Pole-21 system is made to block GPS signals and keep Russian things safe from drones and missiles. It’s just one part of Moscow’s increasing electronic weapons.

    Jamming and spoofing GPS are techniques the Kremlin uses to confuse enemy drones or missiles. It also messes up radar, radio, and cell communications.

    In September, the news agency TASS said that the Russian Prime Minister, Mikhail Mishustin, told a government meeting that they made twice as much military equipment, including EW, in the first eight months of the year.

    Professionals and Ukrainian authorities say Russia has completely combined electronic warfare with its soldiers.

    The top leader of Ukraine, Valery Zaluzhny, said in a recent essay that Russia is making a lot of “trench electronic warfare” equipment.

    “The Russian soldiers have a lot of this equipment at the tactical level, and even though they have lost some, Moscow still has a big advantage in electronic warfare,” Zaluzhny said.

    Zaluzhny said that American-made Excalibur shells have become less effective because the GPS targeting system can be easily affected by enemy electronic warfare.

    Pentagon spokesperson Major. Charlie Dietz said that Russian jamming has been noticed in some American systems, like HIMARS rocket launchers, but it hasn’t stopped these systems from working.

    Dietz said the department has made changes to make those weaknesses smaller. They are working hard to improve and update the systems. They are making the updates as fast as they can to fight against EW jamming.

    Ukraine said it can make a lot more drones in its country this year. This has changed the way battles are fought.

    The man leading this project is Ukraine’s minister of digital transformation, Mykhailo Fedorov. He wants to have the same success with electronic warfare as he did with drones, because drones are often targeted by electronic warfare.

    “We are not only increasing the production of UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles), but we are also increasing the production of electronic warfare equipment and changing the way we use it,” Fedorov said in an interview with CNN from Kyiv. “We are changing our strategy for using this technology. ”

    This means not only adding electronic warfare to protect the battlefield, but doing it cleverly.

    Fedorov says we shouldn’t have too many electronic warfare systems on the battlefield. Instead, he thinks we should make systems that can be controlled from far away and only target the enemy’s equipment.

    If you don’t be careful, electronic warfare systems could end up causing problems for you by taking down your own drones. Fedorov said this.

    In November 2022, a report from the British think tank Royal United Services Institute said that Russia had accidentally targeted their own forces in the early days of the war. This caused them to reduce their electronic warfare efforts to avoid disrupting their own battlefield communications.

    The most important thing right now, according to Fedorov, is for Ukraine to get the technology to program its drones to attack the enemy’s electronic warfare equipment on a big scale.

    This would change the game for drone operators like Petrychenko, who say they are trying to outsmart Russian equipment.

    At the moment, their best chance is for videos, like the one of his drone strike in early November, to become really popular, said Petrychenko. With many Ukrainian soldiers on social media, any popular video like this would help them spot Russian antennas on the battlefield.

    It’s obvious that this is making a big impact outside of Ukraine.

    “I believe the situation in Ukraine shows us what modern warfare looks like today,” said Kari Bingen, who works at a think tank and used to work at the Pentagon. It is a future where electronic warfare abilities and strategies are combined with regular military operations.

    Dietz, who speaks for the Pentagon, said the US is working on its strategies for electronic warfare and sees it as a very important part of today’s and future military battles.

    Fedorov said Ukraine is putting money into electronic warfare, and they are also encouraging their own companies to make drones.

    He openly says that Ukraine needs help from its Western allies for equipment and expertise.

    The West has all the technology that we need. The question might be about how to use it, and it’s a very important question. We need to think about the new technology we will use in the war.

  • Russia accuses Ukraine over explosive drone 50-foot hole in the town

    Russia accuses Ukraine over explosive drone 50-foot hole in the town

    Video has shown the destruction caused when a drone carrying explosives struck the center of a Russian town.

    After flying over Kireyevsk in the central Tula region and damaging residences and injuring three people, the drone created a sizable crater.

    According to a law enforcement source cited by the Russian news agency TASS, Ukrainian soldiers used the drone.

    On Sunday, the device struck Kireyevsk, which is located around 180 kilometers from the border between Russia and Ukraine.

    Kyiv has yet to comment, but has previously rebuffed claims by the Kremlin that Ukrainian drones have flown into its territory and caused damage to civilian infrastructure.

    The footage, which appears to have been captured on a mobile phone, pans around the crater, reported to measure 15 meters (50 ft) in diameter and five meters deep (16 ft), showing how properties have been reduced to rubble.

    A person can be heard saying ‘There is nothing left of the house, everything is smashed.

    ‘And the crater is so f******g huge, this is awful’.

    This handout photo released by Ostorozhno Novosti reportedly shows a crater of about 15 meters (50 feet) in diameter and five meters deep (16 feet), after an explosion that according to Russian authorities was caused by a Ukrainian drone in Kireyevsk, Tula region, Russia, Sunday, March 26, 2023. (Ostorozhno Novosti via AP)
    The crater after a drone reportedly hit the Russian town of Kireyevsk (Picture: AP)
    An investigator works at the accident scene following what Russia's Defence Ministry said to be the explosion of a halted Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) in the town of Kireyevsk in the Tula region, Russia, March 27, 2023. REUTERS/REUTERS PHOTOGRAPHER
    An investigator pictured in the town of Kireyevsk (Picture: REUTERS)

    A voice adds: ‘The main thing is we are alive’ before speculation that the explosion ‘must have been a drone’.

    The blast lays bare the carnage caused by Vladimir Putin’s war on Ukraine – as the Kremlin today said it had plans to base submarines with ‘super torpedoes’ in the Pacific Ocean by early next year.

    Moscow said it had produced the first set of Poseidon missiles – said to be a cross between a torpedo and a drone, launched from a nuclear submarine – in January.

    The decision was made in response to the West increasing military support for Ukraine, Mr Putin said.

    Service members inspect the accident scene following what Russia's Defence Ministry said to be the explosion of a halted Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) in the town of Kireyevsk in the Tula region, Russia, March 27, 2023. REUTERS/REUTERS PHOTOGRAPHER
    The drone explosion reduced homes to rubble and left two people injured (Picture: REUTERS)

    NATO on Sunday criticised the Russian president for what it branded his ‘dangerous and irresponsible’ nuclear rhetoric.

    It follows Mr Putin’s announcement on Saturday that tactical nuclear weapons would be stationed in Belarus – which has been taken ‘hostage’ by its ally, according to a top Ukrainian security official.

    Mr Putin likened the move to the US stationing weapons in Europe and vowed Russia would not violate its nuclear non-proliferation promises.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) meets with his Belarusian counterpart Alexander Lukashenko at the Novo-Ogaryovo state residence, outside Moscow, on February 17, 2023. (Photo by Vladimir Astapkovich / SPUTNIK / AFP) (Photo by VLADIMIR ASTAPKOVICH/SPUTNIK/AFP via Getty Images)
    Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko pictured with Vladimir Putin in February (Picture: AFP)

    But a NATO spokesperson said Russia’s reference to NATO nuclear sharing was ‘totally misleading’, adding: ‘NATO allies act with full respect to their international commitments’.

    The announcement is said to represent one of Russia’s most pronounced nuclear signals since the invasion began in February last year, with Kyiv calling for a UN Security Council meeting in response.

    Ukraine’s foreign ministry called on the international community to take ‘decisive action’.

    ‘Russia once again confirms its chronic inability to be a responsible steward of nuclear weapons as a means of deterrence and prevention of war, not as a tool of threats and intimidation,’ it said.

    Russia-Ukraine war: Everything you need to know

    Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began on February 24, the country has suffered widespread damages and loss of life amid a major bombing campaign.

    Millions of people have fled the country, with thousands of British people opening up their homes to Ukrainian refugees.

    During the course of the war, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has remained in Kyiv, despite the Ukrainian capital being subjected to a barrage of bombing.

    Zelensky has continuously pushed for aid and support from world leaders, as well as pressing for fast-tracked NATO membership.

    Meanwhile, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin has been widely condemned for his attack on Ukraine.

    His actions have been met by harsh economic sanctions, bans from competing in major sporting events, and countries moving away from using Russian oil.

    • When did Russia invade Ukraine? A war timeline of important events
    • How can I house a Ukrainian refugee or family?
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    • When did President Vladimir Putin come to power?
    • Who is Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky?
    • What is Ukraine’s currency, language, and what does its flag symbolise?
    • Does Russia have any allies and what have they said about Ukraine?
    • What is NATO and which countries are members?
    • How to talk to children about what’s happening in Ukraine
    • How to cope with World War Three anxiety

    However, a senior advisor to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said Mr Putin’s statement was ‘too predictable’.

    ‘Making a statement about tactical nuclear weapons in Belarus, he admits that he is afraid of losing & all he can do is scare with tactics,’ Mykhailo Podolyak wrote on Twitter.

    But in Washington, the Republican chair of the US House of Representatives foreign affairs committee, Michael McCaul, said he regarded Russia’s plans to store tactical weapons in Belarus as ‘disturbing’.

    And the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons warned: ‘In the context of the war in Ukraine, the likelihood of miscalculation or misinterpretation is extremely high.

    ‘Sharing nuclear weapons makes the situation much worse and risks catastrophic humanitarian consequences,’ it said on Twitter.