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Aerial War in Ukraine

A photo of the ill-fated Embraer 190AR, registration 4K-AZ65, taken in 2016 by Mehmet Mustafa Celik.


A Russian missile shot down a civilian aircraft. Again...

 Text: Miro Barič


The battles over Ukraine often involve friendly fire incidents. Russian air defense has already destroyed numerous Russian aircraft and helicopters. Similar incidents have occurred on the Ukrainian side. Several civilian aircraft have also been hit in Russia, though without fatal consequences—until now.

 On the morning of Wednesday, December 25, Azerbaijan Airlines flight 8243 took off from Baku, Azerbaijan. The Embraer 190AR, registered as 4K-AZ65, carried 62 passengers and five crew members. Its destination was Grozny, Chechnya, in southern Russia. However, 40 minutes into the flight, the aircraft's GPS and other navigation systems stopped functioning. It is likely that the aircraft fell victim to electronic GPS signal jamming, an action prohibited by international telecommunications and civil aviation organizations.

The Russians likely activated the jamming due to the presence of Ukrainian drones over Chechnya. The crew of flight 8243 requested guidance via radio. However, Grozny was covered in thick fog, and after three holding patterns, the pilots decided to return to Baku. As the aircraft departed Grozny, it was struck by a missile from a Russian Pantsir-S1 air defense system. The missile exploded near the rear left section of the aircraft, with shrapnel damaging mainly the tail surfaces.

As a result of the damage, the Embraer's hydraulic system failed, making it extremely difficult to control. Russian air traffic controllers denied it permission to land at Mineralnye Vody or Makhachkala airports due to bad weather. Instead, the crippled aircraft (while still experiencing GPS signal interference) was directed over the Caspian Sea toward Aktau, Kazakhstan. Available data show that the aircraft exhibited extreme altitude and course fluctuations. Despite this, the pilots managed to keep it airborne for one hour and 14 minutes after the missile strike.

During the attempt to land in Aktau, the aircraft crashed three kilometers from the airport. The crash was captured on video, showing the aircraft descending with its landing gear extended but tilting heavily to the right. The pilots were unable to correct the descent or the bank. The Embraer first struck the ground with its right wing, followed by the fuselage, which broke apart and exploded. The front section burned completely, while the rear section remained relatively intact, though overturned. This allowed 29 of the 67 people on board to survive, albeit with injuries. However, 38 people lost their lives, including both pilots and one flight attendant.

Posthumously, the two pilots and the deceased flight attendant were awarded the title of National Hero of Azerbaijan. Steward Zulfikar Asadov and flight attendant Aydan Rahimli, who survived with injuries, were honored with the Order of Courage First Class.

 The rear section of the Azerbaijani Embraer was riddled with shrapnel.

Photos of the wreckage were published by Kazakh rescue services


Heroes of Flight 8243

 Let’s take a moment to honor the heroes who fought until the very end to save the aircraft and its passengers. The captain was 62-year-old Igor Kshnyakin, an incredibly experienced pilot. He began his career in 1982 at the age of 20, flying the An-2 biplane. Over the years, he served as a co-pilot or captain on various aircraft, including the Yak-40, Tu-134, An-140, and ATR-42/72. In 2013, he became a captain on Embraer 170/190 aircraft for Azerbaijan Airlines. He accumulated 15,000 flight hours, with 11,200 as a captain. He is survived by two daughters. Seated beside him as the co-pilot was 32-year-old Aleksandr Kalyaninov. He successfully graduated in 2021 from the National Aviation University in Kyiv, Ukraine. The third crew member who lost her life was 33-year-old flight attendant Hokuma Aliyeva. Alongside her work, she was pursuing a law degree and was in the final year of her doctoral studies. She had planned to switch careers and become a lawyer, a dream that, unfortunately, she never got to fulfill. In her final moments, she tried to calm the passengers. All three were buried together in Baku at the Second Alley of Honor, a cemetery reserved for Azerbaijan’s most distinguished figures and heroes.

Russia has not admitted to shooting down the aircraft, even a month after the incident. Initially, Moscow outright denied any involvement, and Russian propaganda channels spread multiple alternative theories about what might have happened. For instance, they claimed that the shrapnel holes visible in the intact rear section of the aircraft were caused by gravel upon impact with the ground. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev, just days after the tragedy, stated that preliminary investigation results indicated Russian air defense was responsible. He acknowledged that the shootdown was likely unintentional but accused Moscow of attempting a cover-up. Aliyev demanded an admission of guilt, punishment for those responsible, and compensation for the victims' families. However, none of these demands had been met a month after the tragedy. Azerbaijani officials also pointed out that Russia’s refusal to allow the damaged aircraft to land at any Russian airport, instead directing it toward Aktau, may have been an attempt to erase evidence. Simply put, they may have been hoping the aircraft would crash into the Caspian Sea…

 The three deceased crew members were buried as heroes—from left to right, the coffins of Aleksandr Kalyaninov, Igor Kshnyakin, and Hokuma Aliyeva. The photo from the farewell ceremony was published by the office of the President of Azerbaijan.


Revived Memories of flight MH17

 The downing of the Azerbaijani civilian aircraft has revived memories of the tragedy which took place on July 27, 2014. On that day, Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 crashed near Hrabove in Ukraine’s Donetsk region. The Boeing 777, registered as 9M-MRD, was en route from Amsterdam to Kuala Lumpur but never reached its destination. At the time, Russia had provoked an uprising in eastern Ukraine and was supplying the separatists with heavy weaponry. Among the equipment transferred was a Buk surface-to-air missile system from the 53rd Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade, based in Kursk. This system was secretly moved into Russian-controlled territory in eastern Ukraine. Mistaking the target for a Ukrainian military aircraft, the crew launched a missile at the civilian flight MH17. The Boeing 777 was cruising at 33,000 feet (10,060 meters) at a speed of 915 km/h when the warhead of the radar-guided missile exploded just above its cockpit. Shrapnel instantly killed the flight crew and tore through the fuselage, causing it to break apart just behind the cockpit. The aircraft went into a steep dive, and aerodynamic forces completely disintegrated it before impact. The fall lasted a minute and a half, scattering debris across 50 square kilometers. All 298 people on board perished—15 crew members and 283 passengers. Two-thirds of the victims were Dutch citizens, including 80 children under the age of 18. Once Russian forces realized what they had done, the Buk system was quietly transported back across the Russian border, and multiple conflicting versions of events were spread. This tactic—immediately flooding the public with contradictory explanations—is a hallmark of Russian propaganda, designed to dilute and obscure the truth. The MH17 case was no exception, with one absurd theory following another.

One claim suggested that a Ukrainian Su-25 attack aircraft had shot down the Boeing. However, anyone with basic aviation knowledge knows that the Su-25 lacks the speed, altitude capability, and weaponry to accomplish such a feat. Another false narrative involved a supposedly "authentic" satellite image showing a Ukrainian Su-27 firing a missile at MH17 at close range. The image was, in reality, a crude forgery. The most bizarre theory suggested that the entire event was staged and that the plane had been filled with corpses that had already been dead for some time.

Multiple Western investigative teams, however, concluded—based on substantial evidence—that MH17 was hit by a missile from a Buk system fired from Russian-controlled territory. They also identified the Russian military unit responsible: the same 53rd Anti-Aircraft Missile Brigade. These findings were confirmed by a Dutch court, which, in November 2022, sentenced three men—Igor Girkin, Sergey Dubinsky, and Leonid Kharchenko—to life in prison for their roles in the downing of MH17. All were sentenced in absentia, as Russia refused to hand them over.

Ironically, only one of them, Igor Girkin, is currently in a Russian prison—not for the deaths of 298 innocent people, but for "extremism." His crime? Insulting Vladimir Putin, whom he accused of weak and incompetent leadership in the war against Ukraine.

Girkin, also known as Strelkov, was a Russian intelligence operative who played a key role in igniting the separatist conflict in eastern Ukraine. He once boasted that without him, there would have been no war in Donbas, as the local population had little interest in taking up arms. This statement alone undermines the Kremlin's long-standing narrative that the conflict was a "civil war" rather than Russian aggression.

 A 2014 image of Russian fighters posing with the wreckage of the downed MH17 flight.


Ukrainian Losses

 During the observed period, from December 1 to December 31, military aircraft, helicopters, and unmanned aerial vehicles were continuously conducting operations. Consequently, losses were suuffere. However, the shooting down of a civilian aircraft is such an exceptional event that most of this report was dedicated to it. The only confirmed loss of Ukrainian equipment occurred on Saturday, December 14, in the Kherson region. A Russian S-400 air defense system hit a Su-25 from the 299th Tactical Aviation Brigade. Its pilot, Captain Vladyslav Solop, was killed. Another casualty was Captain Mykola Karpov, a ground aviation technician from the 40th Tactical Aviation Brigade. He was killed on Tuesday, December 31, during a Russian missile attack on Vasylkiv Air Base in the Kyiv region. The extent of the damage to the base is not yet known. Karpov was posthumously promoted to the rank of Major.

 

Russian Losses

 The first confirmed Russian loss during the observed period also occurred on Saturday, December 14, at Krymsk Air Base in the Krasnodar region. Ukrainian military intelligence set fire to and damaged a Su-27P with a bort number "Red 16" and registration RF-92406, which belonged to the 3rd Mixed Aviation Regiment. On Friday, December 20, Ukrainian intelligence reported damage to another aircraft—a military transport An-72—at an airfield near Moscow. On Wednesday, December 18, a Kamov Ka-52 helicopter was hit and shot down by friendly fire. Both Russian pilots were killed. The helicopter commander was Lieutenant Daniil Chepurnov. His obituary mentioned only that he died while carrying out a combat mission in the "special military operation" zone.

 An image of a Ka-52 helicopter, published by the Russian Ministry of Defense. Since the beginning of the war, Russia has lost at least 63 helicopters of this type. One was also lost in December 2024, as covered in this latest update of the series.

On December 14, the Ukrainian military intelligence set fire to a Su-27P at the Krymsk base 

A few days later, Russia released an image of the same aircraft. The photo was taken from an angle that conceals possible damage to the rear section, where the fire occurred.

Images appeared on social media showing a Russian Su-25SM3 that collided mid-air with a Zala reconnaissance drone.

A Russian Mi-24 helicopter got stuck in the mud, presumably at an advanced base. The photo surfaced during the monitoring period, but details remain unknown.


Naval Drones Strike Back

 The worst day for Russian aviation came at the very end of the month. On Tuesday, December 31, Ukrainian Magura V5 naval drones were operating in the Black Sea. Russia has long deployed helicopters and aircraft against them, so Ukraine has started equipping these unmanned boats with anti-aircraft weapons. Ukraine claims to have hit several helicopters in the past, but until now, no confirmed kills had been recorded. Near the Tarkhankut Peninsula in western Crimea, Ukrainian drones hit two Mi-8 helicopters with R-73 missiles. According to Ukraine, one crashed immediately, while the other was damaged and attempted to return to the shore. Later, Russia confirmed that the second helicopter also crashed. Each helicopter carried eight personnel, and none survived. This indicates that, in addition to the standard crew of three aviators, each aircraft also carried five additional soldiers—machine gunners and electronic systems operators. During December, a video emerged showing Ukrainian naval drones firing machine guns at helicopters (and even a Sukhoi fighter jet). At least one helicopter was seriously damaged by gunfire, but a confirmed kill was only reported later with the use of R-73 missiles. Additionally, footage surfaced of an incident in which a Russian Su-25SM3 collided mid-flight with a Zala reconnaissance drone. The aircraft, with bort number "Red 07" and registration RF-94678, suffered significant damage to the front fuselage and shattered side cockpit glass. Despite this, the pilot managed to land the plane at its base. The collision reportedly occurred somewhere in the Donetsk region, though the exact date remains unknown.

 A still from a video showing a Ukrainian Sea Baby naval drone firing a machine gun at a Russian Mi-8 helicopter.

A Ukrainian naval drone also dared to fire a machine gun at a fighter jet.

Footage from another video capturing the shootdown of a Russian Mi-8 helicopter with an R-73 missile launched from a Magura V5 naval drone.


Attacks During Christmas

 Russian airstrikes on Ukrainian cities continued almost every night. Here are a few notable incidents: On the night of Thursday, December 12, to Friday, December 13, a massive attack targeted Ukraine’s energy infrastructure. Four regions, including Kyiv, were hit, and two experienced power outages—an act which, in winter, translates into terrorizing the civilians. Russia launched a total of 192 kamikaze drones and 94 missiles, including cruise missiles. Ukrainian defenses shot down 80 drones, while another 105 were disabled by electronic warfare systems. Additionally, 81 cruise missiles were destroyed, 11 of which were taken down by Ukrainian fighter jets. One pilot, in particular, distinguished himself by shooting down six missiles: two with long-range AMRAAM missiles, two with short-range Sidewinder missiles, and the last two with his onboard cannon after running out of missiles. This highlights the advantage of the F-16 over older Soviet-made jets previously used by Ukraine. Thanks to its advanced sensors and electronic systems, an F-16 pilot has better situational awareness and can identify and engage multiple targets more quickly and efficiently, even in high-density combat environments. Another major attack occurred cynically on Christmas itself, from the night of Tuesday, December 24, to Wednesday, December 25. Most Ukrainians now celebrate Christmas on the same date as the Western world, rather than according to the Orthodox calendar. On this holiday, Russia launched 106 kamikaze drones and 78 missiles, including cruise missiles, at Ukraine. Ukrainian defenses intercepted 59 missiles and 54 drones, while electronic warfare systems disabled another 52 drones. Despite these efforts, nearly 20 missiles broke through the defenses. Kharkiv alone reported 11 explosions. In one of the targeted power plants, a civilian technician was killed, and half a million people were left without heating on Christmas. The city of Kherson, located directly on the front line, faces terrifying attacks daily. Russian drone operators engage in what they themselves describe as "human safari"—targeting individual civilians, civilian vehicles, and public transport with drones, boasting about it afterward. Amid this brutal routine, one attack stood out even more: just before Christmas, Russian airstrikes hit an oncology clinic—and then bragged about it.

 The aftermath of a massive Russian attack on Ukrainian cities during Christmas.

The disabling of Russian projectiles that missed their targets.


A Ukrainian Connection in Syria?

 Finally, a brief mention of an event that is only indirectly related to the war in Ukraine. In Syria, after 13 years, the bloody civil war has come to an end. As recently as mid-November, there was no indication of an imminent conclusion. However, in just 12 days of offensive operations, the rebel coalition known as CMO seized Damascus, the capital, on the night of Saturday, December 7, to Sunday, December 8—virtually without a fight. The Syrian government army collapsed along with the regime it was meant to protect. Why mention this in connection with Ukraine? Aside from Iran, Bashar al-Assad’s regime was primarily supported by Russia, which had deployed both troops and air forces to Syria. However, after the start of the war in Ukraine, Russia had to weaken its Syrian military presence. Rumors suggest that Ukraine aided the CMO rebels by supplying them with FPV drones, along with a small number of operators (reportedly around 20). At the beginning of the offensive, these drones targeted and eliminated key Syrian government army personnel and objectives. As for Assad, the fallen Syrian dictator has fled to Russia, where he and his family have been granted asylum.

Ukrainian bomb disposal specialists recovered a Russian drone that had been trapped in a tree.

Ukraine’s 40th Tactical Aviation Brigade released a series of photos of MiG-29 fighter jets.

02/2025
Info EDUARD 02/2025

INFO Eduard is a monthly scale model-historical magazine published in Czech and English by Eduard Model Accessories since 2010. The magazine is available for free on the Triobo platform and can be downloaded in PDF format. Eduard is a manufacturer of plastic models and accessories with over 30 years of tradition. Throughout its history in the plastic modeling industry, Eduard has become one of the world's leaders. Further details about the company and its product range can be found at www.eduard.com. You can subscribe to the INFO magazine and receive product information for free at: https://www.eduard.com/cs/info-eduard/

 

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