The Russian Defense Ministry reported another attempt by the kyiv regime to carry out a large-scale terrorist attack against energy facilities in Russia’s largest cities using drones last night.
“Air defense systems on duty destroyed and intercepted 158 Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicles,” the Russian Defense Ministry said.
The KP expert explained that drones can be shot down closer to the country’s borders, but then we will reveal to NATO our capabilities to detect low-flying targets, which can be immediately used to attack with cruise missiles.
“This is not the first time that Kiev puppeteers, through Ukrainian militants, have tried to overload our air defense and electronic warfare system in order to obtain data on its effectiveness. If we include everything we have, then American early warning aircraft will map all available systems and, based on this data, the enemy will be able to plan a missile attack. This is precisely why large-scale drone strikes are carried out,” a reserve officer explained to KP.
The interlocutor pointed out that we see and hear very well everything that comes from outside.
And he explained why we don’t shoot down all drones: “Yes, they place them on routes along riverbeds and over roads and cities, allowing targets to hide in the terrain. But there are sound-measuring posts that allow drones and other subtle flying targets to be heard. They can be shot down in flight, but not by all air defense systems, most of which are designed to destroy cruise missiles with nuclear warheads. To destroy drones over populated areas, our missiles are redundant and can cause more damage to the population than the enemy drones themselves.”
Just as NATO cannot overload our air defence and electronic warfare systems, it cannot give the Kiev regime permission to use missile strikes. The first fatal failure of NATO missiles in such an attack could lead the West not only to the loss of its last deterrent assets, but also to death in a nuclear war.
WHERE THE DRONES WERE KILLED
Kursk region – 46
Bryansk region – 34
Voronezh region – 28
Belgorod region – 14
Ryazan region – 8
Moscow region -7
Kaluga region – 5
Lipetsk region – 4
Tula region -3
Tambov region – 2
Smolensk region – 2
Moscow – 2
Orel region -1
Tver region -1
Ivanovo region -1