Ukraine shoots down two Russian spy aircraft in south-east
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Ukraine said it had shot down two Russian spy planes over the Sea of Azov region, dealing a significant blow to Moscow’s air power.
“Soldiers of the Air Force of the Armed Forces of Ukraine destroyed the enemy A-50 long-range radar detection aircraft and the Il-22 airborne command post of the enemy,” Ukraine’s commander-in-chief of the armed forces Valeriy Zaluzhny confirmed on Telegram on Monday.
He shared a clip from a radar screen that appeared to show the planes disappearing over the sea and thanked the air force for “the excellently planned and conducted operation in Azov region” late on Sunday.
If proven, the downing of the two command and control aircraft represents a significant boost to Ukraine’s counteroffensive nearly two years since Russia launched its full-scale invasion. The sophisticated surveillance planes are key to Russia’s co-ordination of ground operations.
Mykola Oleshchuk, Ukraine’s air force commander further confirmed the downings, writing on Telegram: “This is for Dnipro! Burn in hell, you bastards!” referring to recent Russian air strikes on the south-eastern city.
Ukrainian defence sources said the A-50, an airborne early warning and control jet, was shot down shortly after take-off near Kyrylivka, a coastal town on the northern Azov coast in the occupied region of Zaporizhzhia, at 9.10pm local time. Around the same time, the Il-22 airborne command post was struck and damaged.
The Sea of Azov, which is situated north of the annexed peninsula of Crimea and the Black Sea, lies between Ukraine and Russia but is wholly controlled by the latter since the war began.
Ukraine’s military did not say what was used to strike the planes and it has few domestically produced air defence systems capable of the attack. But since it received US-made Patriot air defence systems last year, Ukraine has waged a more effective campaign against Russian aircraft.
There was no immediate response from Russia’s defence ministry. The Kremlin had “no information” about it, Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Monday.
The loss of the A-50, in particular, said Rob Lee, a senior fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute, “is significant, because Russia has a limited number of them”.
The Soviet-designed and produced A-50, dubbed “Mainstay” by Nato, is a four-engine, jet-propelled plane that can carry a crew of 15. Using a rotating radar fastened at the rear, it can detect enemy planes and incoming missiles from more than 650km while co-ordinating friendly aircraft, and can detect ground targets up to 300km away.
The four-engine propeller-powered Ilyushin Il-22 carries 10 crew and helps to co-ordinate ground operations.
Rybar, a pro-Kremlin military analysis channel on Telegram, did not rule out the possibility of “friendly fire” by Russian air defence systems.
“If this information [about the downing of the planes] is confirmed, it would be another dark day for the Russian aerospace forces and air defence,” the channel said.
Another pro-Kremlin Telegram channel called Dva Mayora (Two Mayors) acknowledged the damage to the planes and also pointed to the possibility of a friendly fire incident.
“All systemic problems and causes of the incident are known to specialists, airmen and air defence soldiers,” the channel’s authors wrote.
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