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Long-Range Strikes Continue 04/18 06:27
Russian and Ukraine have kept up long-range strikes that have featured
heavily in what has largely become a war of attrition.
(AP) -- Russian air defenses downed what authorities described as five
Ukrainian balloons overnight, the defense ministry in Moscow said Thursday, as
the sides kept up long-range strikes that have featured heavily in what has
largely become a war of attrition.
Neither Russian nor Ukrainian officials have provided details about the
secretive balloons, which Moscow authorities and media have reported on the
battlefield in recent weeks. Ukraine's military has been driving innovation
since the war began in February 2022, notably adapting drones for wide use
against the bigger Kremlin forces.
According to Russian news reports, the Ukrainian balloons are equipped with
a GPS module and carry explosives. They reportedly are harder to detect and
could carry a bigger payload than more common small drones. It is not clear if
they are helium or hot air or another type of balloon.
The balloons aren't able to maneuver in the air. The GPS module is likely
used to coordinate the release of explosives if the balloon floats over a
specific area, with the aim of sowing panic on the ground and distracting
Russian air defense assets.
Three Ukrainian balloons and one drone were downed over the Voronezh region,
which borders the Moscow-occupied Luhansk region of Ukraine, and two balloons
were intercepted in the Belgorod region of Russia next to Ukraine, the Russian
defense ministry said.
As well as the balloons, Russia claimed it intercepted two Ukrainian
tactical missiles, 19 rockets fired from multiple rocket launchers and 16
drones during the night.
The defense ministry also said that three drones were destroyed over the
Rostov region, both in southern Russia.
Balloons brought down by Russian air defenses earlier this week in the
Lipetsk and Kursk regions carried mortar mines, Russian news reports said.
Ukraine is encountering difficulties on the battlefield against a bigger and
better-equipped army as key Western military support for Kyiv has tapered off.
Crucially, further U.S. aid is stalled in Congress, just as Ukraine braces for
a major Russian offensive that could come as early as next month.
Ukraine has increasingly aimed at distant targets behind the front line,
striking Russian rear bases and infrastructure.
But Kyiv officials are pleading with the country's Western partners to send
more air defense systems as Russian missile and drone attacks pummel urban
areas and the power grid.
The death toll from a Russian missile attack on a downtown area of the
northern Ukrainian city of Chernihiv on Wednesday rose to 18, with 78 people
injured, authorities said Thursday.
Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskyy appealed late Wednesday to European
Union leaders for more air defense equipment, and Foreign Minister Dmytro
Kuleba told a meeting of G7 foreign ministers in Italy on Thursday that "the
one and the only issue on my agenda here ... is air defense."
Ukraine's air force said it downed all 13 Shahed drones launched by Russia
at Ukraine overnight.
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