Almost
all Tu-95MS bombers from Olenya took part in Sunday morning attack on Ukraine
17
November 2024 - 08:45
Nine or ten strategic bombers from
Olenya airbase in Murmansk region participated in the massive strike against
the energy grid in multiple regions in Ukraine overnight on November 17.
Ukraine’s Air
Force reports that 16 Tu-95MS bombers were active, of which nine or ten came
from Russia’s northern airfield in Olenya in the Murmansk region.
The
bombers flew into positions in far distance from the border with Ukraine, over
the Saratov region and Caspian Sea region, from where they launched multiple
Kh-101/55 cruise missiles in the morning on Sunday.
Explosions
were recorded in major Ukrainian cities, among them Odesa and Kyiv.
Journalists
with the Kyiv
Independent reported
about multiple explosions in the capital between 6:30 and 7:15 a.m. local
time.
Missiles
and drones came in from different directions, including sea-launched Caliber
cruise missiles from the Black Sea.
Targeting energy grid
Russia
has targeted “power generation and transmission facilities throughout Ukraine,”
the Kyiv Independent quoted energy minister Herman Halushchenko saying.
President
Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed:
"The
enemy’s target was our energy infrastructure across Ukraine. Unfortunately,
some facilities sustained damage from direct hits and falling debris,"
Zelensky wrote on X.
Damages
to the energy system cause a growing risk of troubled electricity and heat as
the winter starts.
Also
apartment blocks and other civilian targets are hit in what seems to be one of
the largest attacks on Ukraine since the start of the full-scale invasion in
February 2022.
120
cruise missiles and 90 drones were detected incoming across Ukraine, according
to Zelensky.
Covered with tires
Russia’s
strategic air forces relocated more than 10 Tu-95MS and
Tu-160 long-range bombers to Olenya in spring 2023. Located 1,800 km north of the border
with Ukraine, the bombers were supposed to be out of reach from Ukrainian
drones. That, however, didn’t last long.
Several
drone attacks towards Olenya airbase were reported in July, August and September this year.
The Barents Observer recently reported about how
Russia in recent months has enforced its air defense systems around
Olenya.
Also,
the bombers themself are nowadays seen by satellite images with tires on the
wings, allegedly aimed to confuse image-matching navigation systems used by
incoming drones.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.