
Seven months ago, enterprising Ukrainian engineers in the mix made a mixture of R-73 air sensors and infrared-guided missiles borrowed from the Ukrainian Air Force and set up the resulting formula on some of the Magura V5 attack ships of the Directorate of Ukrainian Intelligence Directorate.
In recent days, one of the 18 feet of Magura V5S has been fighting with a Russian helicopter a thousand Mi-8 Russian Gun, and demolished the MI-8. It is the first aerial death through an unmanned surface vehicle and an omen of a new era in the naval war. “Historical history,” the Intelligence Directorate sang while throwing photographs of the commitment.
The drone boats for Ukrainian use, Magura V5 and the baby’s seas have wreaked havoc on the russian mistreatment of the Black Sea this year. In separate raids on Crimean anchors in February, May and June, USVs explosives, explosives, sink a Corvette, a touchdown ship. , a patrol boat and a tugboat.
After those shipwrecks, the Black Sea fleet is not due to more than two thirds of its force prior to war.
Determined to the remainder of the fleet, the Russian military attacks the defenses around the naval bases in Crimea and in southern Russia. The approaches to those bases are now patrolled through helicopters and rapt patrols, among other active people.
To give satellite-guided baby seafarers and Magura V5 a fighting chance against those defenses, the Ukrainians began upgrading their USV in the spring. Some were operated remotely for heavy device weapons. Others won treatment with R-73.
The latter deployed for the first time in May, and elicited a surprised reaction from befuddled Russian aircrew. “The Ukrainians were able to somehow connect the [R-73] rocket with the USV’s telecontrol systems,” the Fighterbomber Telegram channel mused.
The babies in the Armed Sea were operating through Ukraine’s Federal Security Service in action for the first time in early December, and even did a few kicks in the mid-8 that will be encountered the most, damaging at least one helicopter. Members of the team were killed and injured aboard the helicopter, the security service said.
But the helicopter itself survived the engagement. It would take some another 3 weeks before a Magura V got rid of its first target in the air. “This is an unprecedented occasion with vital implications for Russia’s operations in the Black Sea,” said Finnish analyst Joni Askola.
It’s also possible the Ukrainians could add the same sensors and missiles to ground robots. “If Ukraine can replicate this achievement at a low cost using unmanned ground vehicles,” Askola pointed out, “it could enhance Ukraine’s short-range air defense capabilities.”
Sources:
1. Main Ukrainian Intelligence Directorate
2. Fighterbomber
3. Security Service of Ukraine
4. Joni Askola
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