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Air War in Ukraine

A former Slovak MiG-29UBS number 1303 now in Ukrainian Air Force service.


Help is Finally on the Way

Text: Miro Barič

 

The most significant news of the observed period (from April 1 to April 30) was the approval of a large package of American military aid for Ukraine. The Republican Party had been blocking it in the US Congress for domestic political reasons since the fall. This delay put the Ukrainian armed forces into a difficult situation, unnecessarily losing territory and soldiers. Civilian suffering due to Russian air raids on Ukrainian cities was also unnecessary.


 The military aid was first approved by the House of Representatives, then by the Senate, and a few days later, on Wednesday, April 24, it was signed by US President Joe Biden. The US military had already indicated that it was ready to provide the most essential aid almost immediately. It began flowing into Ukraine through Poland right after the signing. The package includes $61 billion for Ukraine and $26.4 billion for Israel. This sum includes $9.1 billion in humanitarian aid for the Gaza Strip. An additional $8.1 billion will go to aid US allies in Asia, particularly Taiwan. Most of this aid will not be received by Ukraine directly in the form of funds but will be invested in American businesses. The Pentagon will purchase weapons from American companies for Ukraine for $14 billion. For another $23 billion, the US military will replenish its own stockpiles of weapons and ammunition, which can be later transferred to Ukraine as needed.

 A damaged component of the Patriot system, which had to be transported from Ukraine to the USA for repairs.


Help from Slovakia Too

 Amid the billions from the USA, the millions from Slovakia might seem insignificant. However, it's important that they were raised by the citizens. The new Slovak government refused to join the Czech government’s initiative to purchase critically needed ammunition for Ukraine. The Czech government is seeking artillery shells that can be immediately bought in various countries, especially outside the EU. More than 20 states have joined the Czech government, providing the necessary funds for ammunition procurement. However, the Slovak government publicly declined to participate. Instead, civil activists and non-governmental organizations took action. They launched a fundraiser under the slogan “If not the government, we send.”

 Several notable figures supported the collection, including former partisan and SNP participant Otto Šimko, who celebrates his hundredth birthday on June 1. Drawing from his World War II experience, he explains why he decided to contribute: “It was not possible to negotiate with aggressors; they had to be defeated.” The Slovak fundraiser “Ammunition for Ukraine” collected 4 million euros in the first three weeks, contributed by 65,000 donors. With this money, they purchased 2,692 artillery shells of 122 mm caliber, already manufactured by the Czech company STV Group. The ammunition was thus able to be sent to Ukraine immediately after payment. The collection continues.

 However, until the help from the USA and the Czech initiative reaches the front, the Ukrainian armed forces had to endure another tough month. Russia tried to take advantage of the time before the western aid materialized and attacked with full force on all fronts. At the end of April, the Russians exploited a poor rotation of Ukrainian units and captured the village of Ocheretyne near Avdiivka. It seemed they had driven a wedge into the Ukrainian defense and could create a breakthrough. However, the Ukrainian defense stopped them, and they did not advance further west from Ocheretyne over the next month. The occupiers also repeatedly announced the capture of the village of Robotyne in the southern Zaporizhzhia region and the settlement of Krynky on the left bank of the Dnipro in the Kherson region. Neither announcement was true.

  

Civilians Suffer

 The lack of air defense systems and missiles for them caused frontline defenders to face massive air raids throughout the observed period. Russian aviation did not only use glide bombs launched far from the front. Aircraft providing close air support, such as the Su-25, were moving directly over the combat area, likely for the first time since spring 2022.

 The Ukrainian interior also faced strong air attacks. Practically every night, the Russians sent small groups of drones to Ukrainian cities, which burdened the Ukrainian air defense. Occasionally, they launched larger attacks with missiles and cruise missiles. For example, on Thursday, April 11, the Russians launched a total of 82 projectiles—40 drones, six Kinzhals, 12 S-300 missiles, 20 Kh-101/555 missiles, and other rockets. The Ukrainian defense destroyed 57 of them, but they lacked the ammunition to intercept more. Due to the shortage of anti-aircraft missiles, even the Kyiv region was no longer as well protected as before.

 In this attack, the Trypilska thermal power plant, which supplied 50% of the electricity for the Kyiv, Cherkasy, and Zhytomyr regions, was completely destroyed. It was targeted by eleven missiles. The Ukrainian defense destroyed seven of them, but the remaining four scored the direct hits.

 On the night of April 24-25, Russian missiles severely damaged four more power plants. Since the beginning of the war, the Russians have hit Ukrainian power plants 180 times. For example, the private company DTEK has lost 80% of its thermal plant capacities. It will take years to repairs some of the power plants.

 Other civilian targets were also hit, unfortunately with tragic consequences. In the morning of Wednesday, April 17, a missile struck an eight-story apartment building in Chernihiv. Four other apartment buildings, a hospital, and a school were damaged. Eighteen people died, and 78 were injured. At the end of April, a psychiatric hospital and a TV transmitter were hit in Kharkiv. The transmitter broke in half and collapsed. In Odesa, 22 residential buildings were hit during an air raid. Earlier, on Saturday, April 20, the port and an export terminal belonging to a Singaporean company were hit.

 Russia increasingly uses so-called double strikes, sending a second missile to the same place after a delay to kill rescuers clearing the aftermath of the first attack. This tactic was employed in Kharkiv and Zaporizhzhia at the beginning of the observed period. Russian double strikes have killed 91 rescuers and injured 348 others by April this year. Kharkiv was subjected to heavy shelling throughout the observed period. This was preparation for a ground attack, which will be discussed in the next part of this series, the end of which is unfortunately not in sight.

 

Russian Airports Under Fire

 The Ukrainian side also attacked Russian targets throughout the observed period. There is a stark contrast in target selection. Unlike the Russian targets, they did not primarily include hospitals or residential buildings.

 On the night of April 4-5, the Ukrainian armed forces, along with the SBU, launched a massive attack on Russian airfields. The bases attacked included Morozovsk, which houses Su-34 aircraft, Yeysk airport on the Russian coast of the Sea of Azov, home to Su-34 and Su-25 aircraft, the strategic bomber base Engels, and Kursk airport. The attack was extensive, with around 50 explosions reported at Morozovsk alone. The Ukrainian side estimated the destruction of several aircraft, but this was not immediately confirmed. Satellite images suggested that the drones landed far from the parked aircraft. This highlights the disadvantage of drones, as they cannot be controlled over long distances to select targets based on importance. They hit pre-programmed coordinates. A few days later, it was revealed that at least one aircraft at Yeysk airport, an amphibious jet Beriev Be-200, was seriously damaged. Part of its left wing was broken off, and a large puddle of leaked fluids, presumably fuel, was under the aircraft.

 At the beginning of the observed period, Ukrainian drones also repeatedly attacked Russian Tatarstan. This is significant for two reasons. Tatarstan is 1,300 km from the Ukrainian border, making it the farthest target the Ukrainians have hit. Video from the attack showed they used light sports aircraft modified into unmanned aerial vehicles. In this case, they served as kamikaze drones, but with a bomb mounted under the fuselage, they can be reused. In Tatarstan, a refinery, a drone assembly plant, and a factory producing Tu-22M and Tu-160M bombers were hit. The production hangar in the latter was reportedly hit, but the extent of the damage is unclear.

 During the observed period, Ukrainians also hit several refineries, fuel depots, and industrial facilities. They also used missiles to attack Russian command posts in occupied territories. Perhaps the largest attack was launched on Wednesday, April 17, in Crimea. The target was the Dzhankoy airbase on which the Ukrainians launched ATACMS long range missiles. Once the information puzzle was clarified, the destruction of an S-400 air defense system battery and presumably a missile storage site was confirmed. The destruction of aircraft and helicopters in this attack was not confirmed.

 The elimination of the S-400 battery at Dzhankoy airport allowed Ukrainians to conduct further attacks on Crimea. On Sunday, April 21, Neptune missiles targeted the port of Sevastopol, damaging the submarine support vessel Kommuna. This is the oldest active ship in the Russian fleet, commissioned during the Tsarist era in 1915. Despite its age, it is very important to the Russians. They have no similar vessel in the Black Sea. It is a catamaran with two hulls connected by a structure with cranes for lifting objects from the seabed. It can also launch its own deep-sea submersibles, which can be used to rescue sailors from trapped submarines. After the sinking of the cruiser Moskva in 2022, Kommuna retrieved various items from the wreck at a depth of 50 meters—weapons, secret documents, and presumably the bodies of crew members.

 A video footage capturing the impact of a sport aircraft converted into a drone, hitting a target in Tatarstan.

A refinery fire in Tatarstan.

A hit on the refinery in the city of Oriol.


Downed Bomber

 During the observed period, Russia lost two aircraft in the air. On Wednesday, April 10, a Mi-24 helicopter crashed into the Black Sea off the western coast of Crimea, likely shot down by friendly fire. All four aviators onboard—Ivan Stepin, Aziz Shayakhmetov, Nikita Tokarchuk from the 396th Mixed Aviation Regiment, and Alexander Solovey from the 318th Independent Mixed Aviation Regiment—did not survive.

 A significant event was the downing of a strategic bomber, the Tu-22M3, on Friday, April 19. The aircraft crashed near Bogomolova in the Russian Stavropol region. The Russian side claimed it was due to a technical malfunction, but there were reports of friendly fire. The Ukrainian side asserted that the bomber was hit and damaged by a modernized S-200 missile with a range of 350 km. After being damaged, the Tu-22M3 attempted to return to base but crashed later. Ukrainians also reported that another bomber turned back without releasing its deadly payload after the first aircraft was hit. Video evidence shows the burning bomber spiraling to the ground. All four crew members ejected, but two did not survive: Captain Andrey Kononov and Lieutenant Andrey Grushanin, both from the 52nd Heavy Bomber Regiment.

  The crash of a Russian Tu-22M3 bomber on April 19 in the Stavropol region.

Debris of a Tu-22M3.

Two crew members died in the Tu-22M3 crash, one of them was Captain Andrey Kononov.

Another casualty of the Tu-22M3 crash was Lieutenant Andrey Grushanin.


Destroyed on the Ground 

At the end of the observed period, photos of the dismantled wreck of a Russian Mi-8MTPR-1 helicopter were published. It is likely the same aircraft with tail number "Yellow 81," which was lightly damaged in March 2023 after hitting power lines. The exact cause of its recent, much more severe damage is unknown.

 Russia also lost two more helicopters to sabotage on its territory. On Wednesday, April 17, a Mi-8 helicopter burned at Kryazh Airport in Samara, and on Friday, April 26, a civilian firefighting helicopter Kamov Ka-32 was damaged by fire at Ostafyevo Airport in the Moscow region.

 On the Ukrainian side, unlike the previous month, no aircraft or helicopters were shot down. However, planes at Dnipro Airport were hit by Russian Iskander missiles with cluster munitions on Thursday, April 18. According to available information, three MiG-29 fighters and four civilian Yak-40 transport aircraft were damaged. It is unclear if the fighters were operational or just derelict. The Yak-40s were definitely long-retired and had been parked there since 2010. A few days later, on Saturday, April 20, Dnipro Airport was targeted again, and this time an operational MiG-29 was confirmed destroyed. The jet caught fire, indicating it was fueled.

 The dismantled wreck of a Russian Mi-8MTPR-1 helicopter with tail number "Yellow 81".

Three MiG-29s and four Yak-40s were damaged on April 18 during an Iskander missile attack on Dnipro Airport. However, the Yak-40s had been parked there since 2010, and at least one MiG had also been immobile for several months, likely a non-operational aircraft.

Another attack on Dnipro Airport on April 20 destroyed one MiG-29.


Dogfights Reminiscent of World War I

 Russian reconnaissance drones enable attacks on Ukrainian airfields and other targets. Ukraine is combating these drones with all possible means. Besides ground-based anti-aircraft systems, such as mobile machine guns, they have deployed modified training aircraft. This has led to air battles over Ukraine reminiscent of World War I dogfights. The use of propeller-driven Yak-52 aircraft is improvised but far more suitable than jet fighters, which are too fast compared to slow drones. The Yak-52 has a maximum speed of 285 km/h, making it better suited to match the speed of drones, such as the Orlan-10 (maximum 150 km/h) and the Shahed-136 kamikaze drone (185 km/h). In its original training version, the Yak-52 has no armament. It appears the Ukrainians modified it so that the second crew member operates a movable machine gun from the rear cockpit. During the observed period, a video surfaced showing a training Yak-52 shooting down a Russian reconnaissance drone.

A Yak-52 training aircraft used by Ukrainians against Russian drones. The side of the fuselage has a checkered area likely indicating a machine gun operated by the second crew member from the rear cockpit.

Ukrainian Su-25 in a low level flight.

Launchers for American and Soviet unguided rockets side by side under the wing of a Ukrainian Su-25.

Ukrainian Mi-8 and Mi-24 helicopters.

A Mi-24 helicopter maintenance.

Defense against Shahed drones, which attack almost every night.


06/2024
Info EDUARD 06/2024

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/

6/1/2024

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