Current:Home > ContactU.S. hardware helps Ukraine fend off increasingly heavy Russian missile and drone attacks -Blueprint Wealth Network
U.S. hardware helps Ukraine fend off increasingly heavy Russian missile and drone attacks
View
Date:2025-04-13 13:56:04
Kharkiv, Ukraine — Russia launched some of its heaviest air attacks to date targeting Ukraine's capital and other major cities overnight and into Monday morning. Videos posted online showed children and adults running for shelters as air raid sirens blared in Kyiv.
The head of Ukraine's armed forces said in a social media post that "up to 40 missiles" and "around 35 drones" were launched, of which virtually all were shot down by the country's air defenses. Emergency workers doused burning rocket debris that fell onto a road in northern Kyiv, and Mayor Vitaly Klitschko said fragments that fell in another district set a building alight, killing at least one person and injuring another.
Searchlights combed the night skies over Kyiv, hunting for exploding drones before they could hurtle into the ground. It was the second night in a row that swarms of the Iranian-made aircraft were sent buzzing over the capital's skies.
- Meet the armed Russian resistance fighting Putin on his own soil
Video captured the moment one of them was shot down near the northern city of Chernihiv. That city is only about 20 miles from the border with Belarus, an autocratic country whose dictator has let Vladimir Putin use its soil to launch attacks on Ukraine since the full-scale invasion began in February 2022.
Kyiv claimed that 58 out of the staggering 59 drones launched overnight were shot down. That success is thanks not only to the high-tech air defense systems that are forced into action almost nightly, but also by Ukrainians putting some good old-fashioned technology to use.
At an undisclosed military site, we watched as Ukrainian forces tested powerful new searchlights that help them locate those low-tech drones in the sky so they can be targeted from the ground.
But the other, more lethal threats flying at Ukraine require more advanced defenses. The arrival of American-made Patriot missile defense systems this spring has enabled the Ukrainians to intercept more powerful Russian missiles.
Oleksandr Ruvin, Kiyv's chief forensic investigator, showed us what was left of a Russian hypersonic "Kinzhal" missile. The Kremlin had boasted that the weapon was unstoppable, even untouchable given its speed and maneuverability.
"Thanks to our American partners, we can actually touch this missile," Ruvin told CBS News.
It now sits, along with the remains of other advanced ballistic missiles, in a growing graveyard of destroyed Russian munitions — evidence for the massive war crimes dossier Ruvin is helping compile.
He told CBS News that as Ukraine prepares for its looming counteroffensive, Russia appears to be targeting his country's air defense network, and those attacks have become more frequent.
Not all of Russia's missiles are stopped, and another one of its hypersonic rockets, an "Iskander," slipped though the net early Monday and hit an apartment building in Kharkiv, according to the region's governor. Governor Oleh Synehubov said six people, including two children and a pregnant woman, were injured in the strike, and he posted video online of the damaged building.
- In:
- Hypersonic Missiles
- Belarus
- War
- Ukraine
- Russia
- Drone
- War Crimes
- Missile Launch
- Vladimir Putin
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Residents worried after ceiling cracks appear following reroofing works at Jalan Tenaga HDB blocks
- Miranda Cosgrove Reveals Why She Doesn't Drink or Smoke
- Pistons are woefully bad. Their rebuild is failing, their future looks bleak. What gives?
- Sydney Sweeney Reflects on Tearful Aftermath of Euphoria Costar Angus Cloud's Death
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Judge weighs whether to block removal of Confederate memorial at Arlington Cemetery
- Pistons are woefully bad. Their rebuild is failing, their future looks bleak. What gives?
- 5 teens charged in violent beating at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Politicians, workers seek accountability after sudden closure of St. Louis nursing home
Ranking
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- Chileans eschew extremes in quest for new constitution and end up with the old one
- See inside the biggest Hamas tunnel Israel's military says it has found in Gaza
- Amy Robach says marriage to T.J. Holmes is 'on the table'
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Georgia man imprisoned for hiding death of Tara Grinstead pleads guilty in unrelated rape cases
- Judge orders release of over 150 names of people mentioned in Jeffrey Epstein lawsuit documents
- Publishers association struggled to find willing recipient of Freedom to Publish Award
Recommendation
NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
'Maestro' review: A sensational Bradley Cooper wields a mean baton as Leonard Bernstein
Madonna Reveals She Was in an Induced Coma From Bacterial Infection in New Health Update
Judge blocks removal of Confederate memorial from Arlington Cemetery, for now
Small twin
Egypt election results: No surprises as El-Sisi wins 3rd term with Israel-Hamas war raging on border
Cocoa grown illegally in a Nigerian rainforest heads to companies that supply major chocolate makers
Why a clip of a cat named Taters, beamed from space, is being called a milestone for NASA