Drone Strike On Russian Airfield Ignites Ammo Storage, Blows Roofs Off Base Homes
The Ukrainian attack on the Engels air base - the third in ten weeks - triggered explosions so violent that the roofs of nearby homes were blown off and massive fires are still burning.
The Engels base is home to Russia's strategic bombers. Attacking the base to destroy planes, missiles and other ammunition is easier than trying to intercept Russian attacks, so a smart strategic decision It also appears to underscore the ongoing weakness of Russia's air defenses. JL
David Axe reports in Forbes:
It's easier to prevent a Russian bombing raid than to intercept it. The drone raidon the Russian air force’s Engels bomber base in southern Russia, 300 miles from the front line in Ukraine, ignited the sprawling base’s huge stock of munitions and triggereda succession of explosions that blew the roofs off of homes in the surrounding community. The devastating raid, the third in a 10-week series targeting Engels and its bomber regiments, destroyed some of the cruise missiles that Russian bombers—including Tupolev Tu-95s and Tu-160s—fire at Ukrainian cities. More Ukrainian drone and missile strikes are targetingdrone factories, munitions warehouses and aviation fuel depots on Russian soil.
The overnight drone raid on the Russian air force’s Engels bomber base in southern Russia, 300 miles from the front line in Ukraine, apparently ignited the sprawling base’s huge stock of munitions and triggered a succession of explosions that blew the roofs off of homes in the surrounding community.
The devastating raid, the third in a 10-week series targeting Engels and its bomber regiments, may have destroyed some of the cruise missiles that Russian bombers—including Tupolev Tu-95s and Tu-160s—routinely fire at Ukrainian cities.
In that sense, the Engels raids represent yet another attempt by Ukrainian forces to get “left of the boom,” to borrow U.S. Army slang. To prevent roadside bomb ambushes in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Americans learned to get ahead of the problem and hunt down the men who built and distributed the bombs. They aimed to get “left” of an attack on a left-to-right timeline.
Struggling to intercept Russian bombs, missiles and drones in the moments before they strike—in part due to a shortage of the best American- and European-made air-defense missiles—the Ukrainians are also aiming left of the boom. More Ukrainian drone and missile strikes are targeting drone factories, munitions warehouses and aviation fuel depots on Russian soil.
On or just before March 13, long-range attack drones belonging to the Ukrainian defense intelligence agency struck a hidden drone manufacturing facility in Obukhovo, just outside Moscow 300 miles from the border with Ukraine. And in April, Ukraine sortied one of its then-new Aeroprakt A-22 sport plane drones to strike a drone plant in Yelabuga, 550 miles east of Moscow.
The apparent target: ammo stores at Engels.
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Where are the air defenses?
The utter failure of Russian air defenses to adapt to the threat from small drones makes Ukraine’s preemptive strikes possible. What appeared to be an eight-foot-long UkrSpecSystems PD-1 drone was spotted flying low over Saratov just before or after Engels exploded.
The PD-1 may have delivered a small explosive payload as part of the strike. Or it may have conducted surveillance on behalf of the attack drone crews. Either way, it motored unmolested over one of the Russian air force’s most important bases.
Gaps in Russian and Ukrainian air defenses are the untold story behind Russia’s ongoing bombardment of Ukrainian cities and Ukraine’s left-of-boom drone raids meant to blunt the bombardment.
With just six U.S.-made Patriot surface-to-air missile batteries and two European-made SAMP/T batteries, Ukraine can’t protect all of its population centers. It has no choice but to target the Russian bombers’ fuel and munitions. But the air base raids are only as successful as Russia’s own air defenses are unsuccessful.
As a Partner and Co-Founder of Predictiv and PredictivAsia, Jon specializes in management performance and organizational effectiveness for both domestic and international clients. He is an editor and author whose works include Invisible Advantage: How Intangilbles are Driving Business Performance. Learn more...
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