• Ukraine claims it damaged prized Russian jets using 'cardboard' drones

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Tue Aug 29 08:43:57 2023
    XPost: sci.military.naval, soc.history.war.misc, alt.economics

    from https://www.businessinsider.in/international/news/ukraine-claims-it-damaged-prized-russian-jets-using-cardboard-drones-from-australia-in-a-daring-raid/articleshow/103178331.cms

    Ukraine claims it damaged prized Russian jets using 'cardboard' drones
    from Australia in a daring raid
    MIA JANKOWICZAUG 29, 2023, 18:39 IST

    Ukraine claims it damaged prized Russian jets using 'cardboard' drones
    from Australia in a daring raid
    SYPAQ's Corvo PPDS droneSYPAQ

    Ukraine claims it used cardboard drones from Australia to strike five
    jets at a Russian air field.
    Russia has made no mention of damage at the airfield but reported
    strikes in the area.
    Ukraine claimed that an attack that damaged five fighter planes at a
    Russian airfield was carried out using "cardboard" drones from Australia.

    Ukraine's Security Service (SBU) told the Kyiv Post on Saturday that it
    had struck a MiG-29 four Su-30 fighter jets at Kursk airfield in western Russia.

    As well as the planes, the drones damaged two Pantsir missile launchers
    and part of an S-300 air defense system, the SBU told the outlet.

    According to prominent pro-Russian blogger @fighterbomber, which closely follows the Russian air force, the attack was the first use of Australian-provided delivery drones made of cardboard.

    Insider could not independently confirm the claim, but on Tuesday
    Ukraine's ambassador to Australia Vasyl Mryoshnychenko vouched for it,
    saying in a post on X: "Cardboard drones from Australia used in attack
    on Russian airfield."

    The claim is not as wild as it sounds. In March, Australian defense manufacturer SYPAQ announced it had secured a $700,000 contract with the Australian government to produce its Corvo Precision Payload Delivery
    System drones for Ukraine.

    The Corvo drones are described by SYPAQ as "the cardboard plane," but
    per an earlier company press release they're made from waxed foamboard.
    They come flat-packed and can fly up to 75 miles — putting Kursk just
    within reach of the borders of Ukraine.

    Ukraine claims it damaged prized Russian jets using 'cardboard' drones
    from Australia in a daring raid
    SYPAQ's Corvo PPDS droneSYPAQ
    They are designed for reconnaissance or delivery rather than for
    carrying explosives.

    It's unclear how exactly they would have been used as part of the latest attack. Per @fighterbomber's claim, the attack combined explosive drones
    with empty ones, suggesting the Corvo's lightweight board construction
    would help the overall group evade radar.

    Former Australian general Mick Ryan told The Age that it would be simple
    to adapt the Corvo to carry explosives. SYPAQ declined to comment to the
    paper on how the drones were used.

    In a post about the drone attack, the Russian MoD's description of the
    drones over Kursk said they were aircraft-style, which corresponds with
    the Corvo design.

    The strike would be a cost-effective way to take out exorbitant Russian
    planes: A Su-30 is estimated to cost tens of millions of dollars to manufacture.

    The Russian MoD made no mention of damage at the airfield, simply saying
    it had shot down two drones over Kursk and in Bryansk, around 150 miles
    away. Meanwhile, Kursk's governor, Roman Starovoyt said that a drone had damaged an apartment block.

    Explosions were caught on camera near Kursk railway station that night, Ukrainian outlet RBC reported.

    The ambassador told the Sydney Morning Herald that the airfield is a "legitimate target" because Russia uses it as a base to launch attacks
    on Ukraine.

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