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Ukrainian drone destroys Russian supersonic bomber

A Flagship Russian long-range bomber has been destroyed in a Ukrainian drone strike, according to reports.

Images posted on social media and analysed by BBC Verify show a Tupolev Tu-22 on fire at Soltsy-2 airbase, south of St Petersburg.

Moscow said that a drone was hit by small-arms fire but managed to “damage” a plane. Ukraine has not commented.

The Tu-22 can travel at twice the speed of sound and has been used extensively by Russia to attack cities in Ukraine.

The Russian Ministry of Defence said in a statement that an attack by a “copter-type UAV” took place at around 10:00 Moscow time (08:00 BST).

It stated the location as “a military airfield in the Novgorod region”, where Soltsy-2 is situated.

“The UAV was detected by the airfield’s observation outpost and was hit with small-arms fire,” the ministry said.

“One airplane was damaged; there were no casualties as a result of the terrorist act.”

The statement also said a fire which broke out in the airfield park­ing lot was quickly extinguished.

However, images posted on the social media platform, Telegram, showed a large fire engulfing a jet with the distinctive nose cone of the Tu-22. BBC Verify analysed the images and believes them to be credible.

While the destruction of a single aircraft will have little effect on the potency of Moscow’s current 60-strong fleet, the operation high­lights Kyiv’s growing ability to strike targets deep inside Russian territory.

Kyiv has over recent months launched dozens of fixed-wing unmanned aircraft to attack Moscow, a journey of several hundred miles. Soltsy-2 is around 400 miles (650km) from the Ukraine border.

However, the Russian MoD’s description of the drone as a “copter-type UAV” suggests a cheap, commercially available device launched at short range.

The Tu-22 is a Cold War-era, swing-wing supersonic bomber, codenamed “Backfire” by Nato, which has been used extensively in attacks on Ukrainian cities.

Modern versions, such as the Tu-22M3, can reach speeds of Mach 2 (2,300km/h or 1,430mp/h) and can carry up to 24,000kg of weapons, in­cluding “dumb bombs” and homing missiles.

They have been used in conflicts in Syria, Chechnya, and Georgia and most recently in Ukraine. —BBC

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