Russian strikes kill 3 people in Ukraine
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Russia launched a series of massive air attacks on Kyiv and other parts of Ukraine, knocking out power to hundreds of thousands with the country already reeling from a political scandal that has reached the upper echelons of power.
According to the post F-16s have intercepted more than 1,300 airborne threats since entering service. During a major Russian barrage on November 19, pilots flying F-16s and French-built Mirage-2000s reportedly destroyed at least 10 cruise missiles. The information has not been independently verified.
The rates of interception of both Russian drones and missiles fired into Ukraine through October slipped as Moscow continued its long-range bombardment of Ukrainian cities and critical infrastructure, Ukrainian air force data analyzed by ABC News showed.
The Ukrainian military shared dramatic video of a military strike appearing to decimate Russian air-defense and military assets. The elite “Ghosts” unit carried out several successful attacks targeting key components of the Russia defenses in the contested Crimea region, the Kyiv Post reported.
A short video circulating online this month appears to show a Russian mounted patrol being struck by a Ukrainian drone near Donetsk in eastern Ukraine — an unusual sight in a war dominated by both modern unmanned systems and primitive trench networks. The clip, released Oct. 4 by Ukrainian sources on Telegram and shared by several accounts, shows at least two soldiers with their mount moving ...
In recent months, Israel has faced increased criticism from several European countries over its conduct in the war in the Gaza Strip. Nevertheless, that hasn’t stopped some European countries, including g Germany, from purchasing Israel’s battle-tested ...
Ukraine will purchase “up to 100” French-made Rafale fighter jets as well as anti-air defenses and drones from France, the Elysee Palace confirmed, as Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visited Paris Monday.
The US and Ukraine have drafted a new 19-point peace deal but left the most politically sensitive elements to be decided by the countries’ presidents, according to Ukraine’s first deputy foreign minister Sergiy Kyslytsya.