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Who is supplying Russia with drones?

According to Ukraine, Russia this week, for the first time, used Iranian suicide drones to attack the capital Kyiv.

Who is supplying Russia with drones?
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The unmanned combat drone can carry a payload of up to 40 kilograms (88 pounds) at speeds up to 200 kph

They are demoralising and deadly — and Russia is using them in its war against Ukraine: drones, likely from abroad. They can fly at speeds of up to 200 kph and make so much noise doing so that they can be heard long before they strike.

According to Ukraine, Russia this week, for the first time, used Iranian suicide drones to attack the capital Kyiv.

Writing on the messaging service Telegram, the region’s governor, Oleksiy Kuleba, claimed that six explosions were registered as the drones impacted near the city late Tuesday night. He said a total of 12 drones had been dispatched with the aim of destroying infrastructure.

According to the website Military Factory, suicide drones, or loitering munitions, are unmanned combat aerial vehicles (UCAVs) loaded with explosives. The Ukrainian military claims that it shot down the first such Iranian UCAV in mid-September.

Since then, military spokeswoman Natalia Humeniuk told AFP news agency, roughly two dozen further Iranian UCAVs have been spotted in southern Ukraine. Half of them were shot down. Most suicide drone attacks she said, targeted the sea port of Odesa, in Ukraine’s south, where they killed civilians.

Suspicions that Iran may be supplying Russia with drones were voiced months ago. In late August, the US government cited intelligence suggesting that Moscow was trying to acquire Iranian drones for its war in Ukraine — especially because Russia was no longer able to produce its own as a result of Western sanctions, which made the acquisition of key components extremely difficult.

According to AFP, Russia has now acquired Iranian Qods Mohajer-6 drones. The unmanned combat drone can carry a payload of up to 40 kilograms (88 pounds) at speeds up to 200 kph. Beyond that, smaller HESA Shahed 136 suicide drones with a range of up to 2,500 kilometres (1,554 miles) have also been purchased. Iran has officially denied deliveries.

Even though drone attacks have repeatedly resulted in deaths, experts say they are not very effective. Jeremy Binnie of the British defence analysis company Jane’s Defence Weekly told AFP that they are not very reliable because they are not particularly well made. Moreover, their explosive payload is also “relatively meagre.” In his estimation, the weapons will not have much of an effect on the course of the conflict.

What’s fatal, however, is the fact that they are very difficult to detect with radar, as a Ukrainian officer told the US online news site Politico. She told the outlet that her unit in Kherson recently lost two fully manned tanks after they came under attack.

Military spokeswoman Natalia Humenuik said that they also put more “psychological pressure” on the civilian population. The sound of the drones, she said, often triggers fear among already agitated civilians.

This summer, Moscow also signalled interest in acquiring Turkish combat drones. But manufacturer Bayraktar made it clear in August that it would not sell to the Kremlin.

“No matter how much money they offer, it is out of the question for us to give them drones in this situation. At the moment we are clearly and wholly supporting the Ukrainian side,” Haluk Bayraktar, CEO of the Turkish arms manufacturer, told the BBC.

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DW Bureau
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