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BumRushDaShow

(157,514 posts)
Sun Jul 27, 2025, 04:33 PM Jul 27

Ukrainian drones target St Petersburg as Putin attends scaled-down Navy Day

Source: Reuters

July 27, 2025 11:37 AM EDT Updated 4 hours ago


MOSCOW, July 27 (Reuters) - Ukrainian drones targeted St. Petersburg on Sunday, Russian authorities said, forcing the airport to close for five hours as Vladimir Putin marked Russia's Navy Day in the city, despite the earlier cancellation of its naval parade due to security concerns.

St. Petersburg usually holds a large-scale, televised navy parade on Navy Day, which features a flotilla of warships and military vessels sailing down the Neva River and is attended by Putin. Last year, Russia suspected a Ukrainian plan to attack the city's parade, according to state television.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov confirmed on Sunday that this year's parade had been cancelled for security reasons, following first reports of its cancellation in early July. Putin arrived at the city's historic naval headquarters on Sunday by patrol speed boat, from where he followed drills involving more than 150 vessels and 15,000 military personnel in the Pacific and Arctic Oceans and Baltic and Caspian Seas.

"Today we are marking this holiday in a working setting, we are inspecting the combat readiness of the fleet," Putin said in a video address. The Russian Defence Ministry said air defence units downed a total of 291 Ukrainian fixed-wing drones on Sunday, below a record 524 drones downed in attacks on May 7, ahead of Russia's Victory Day parade on May 9.

Read more: https://www.reuters.com/world/ukrainian-drones-target-st-petersburg-putin-attends-scaled-down-navy-day-2025-07-27/

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Lovie777

(19,487 posts)
2. President Z is the leader the free world needs...............
Sun Jul 27, 2025, 05:33 PM
Jul 27

a expensive suit does not make a person special nor outstanding, it's the action and what comes from the heart.

Are there spies in Russia, yes. Even the USA have them, hell, they are in the current administration and parties right now.

mitch96

(15,349 posts)
4. To me that's a given... Just like ruzzia has a contract out on Zelensky ... It 's the way they roll...nt
Sun Jul 27, 2025, 06:31 PM
Jul 27

MuseRider

(34,872 posts)
7. I was just going to post that.
Sun Jul 27, 2025, 08:07 PM
Jul 27

I have not been a lot of places but I can say that was the most beautiful museum I ever saw. I saw my first Rembrandt there, stunning. We spent several days just looking around it. Of all those museums, please not that one.

ancianita

(41,192 posts)
6. This week's New Yorker lays out the growth of Ukraine's drone power.
Sun Jul 27, 2025, 07:54 PM
Jul 27
https://archive.ph/SdTVv

This is a long and wide ranging, but worthwhile read about our national security future.

One lesson for the US Military from the Russia/Ukraine war:
our military's defense-industrial base has to be transformed beyond being, as Jake Sullivan said, "a generational project."
Palmer Luckey's company, Anduril, is helping with that so our military procurement/contracting can be faster.

... At the beginning of the war, Ukraine used drones mostly for reconnaissance. But, as they showed their worth as weapons, their use expanded. Last year, by some estimates, Ukraine’s factories turned out more than three million drones. The key to successful operations, TAF workers told me, was that the manufacturers of the drones and the soldiers using them were in the same place, allowing the software and components to be continually tweaked. The drones that I examined were remarkably simple: a lightweight square frame, four propellers, a video camera, a battery-powered motor, and room for a bomb. The attack drones, known as F.P.V.s, for “first-person view,” are guided by an operator watching a video screen that shows what the drone is seeing; other members of the unit monitor feeds from reconnaissance drones. Yakovenko described a recent attack in which a Ukrainian pilot crashed his drone into a Russian tank, forcing the crew inside to flee. Other F.P.V. drones chased down the Russian soldiers. “We killed all of them,” he said...

...The recent Ukrainian drone attacks on the Russian warplanes marked a striking advance in the arms race: a combination of human subterfuge and precise tech work. More than a hundred drones were smuggled into Russia in pieces and assembled there. A phony businessman arranged for them to be loaded onto cargo trucks, without the drivers’ knowledge. Deep inside Russian territory—as far as twenty-five hundred miles from the border—the drones flew out and struck.

The effects were devastating, crippling about a dozen long-range bombers that were equipped to carry nuclear weapons. Borovyk, whose company made the drones, told me that the key was the element of surprise. Russia hadn’t anticipated drone strikes so far from the border, and had no time to put jamming systems into place. “They were not prepared for that type of attack,” Borovyk said.

Ukraine’s fighters have not yet been able to regularly deploy autonomous drones—the kind that can find targets without human help—but they are getting closer. Some of Borovyk’s drones were steered manually, but others were equipped with A.I. technology that could help them find their marks. According to reports in the Ukrainian press, the A.I. had been trained to recognize targets using images of old Soviet warplanes on display in an aviation museum east of Kyiv...



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