Occupants claim “another repelled UAV attack”
After unmanned aerial vehicles first “cottoned on” the territory of the Russian Federation, the occupiers thought about what was wrong with their air defense and began to take measures to strengthen air defense. put on the roofs of buildings, including those of the Defense Ministry, with their Pantsir-S1 SAMs.
At the same time, the “strengthening of air defense” was, of course, not entirely uniform – in particular, in early May, Defense Express reported that to protect Moscow, the occupiers were redeploying forces from other areas – to “close” the sky over the capital, they were redeploying a hodgepodge of S-400s, Pantsirs, and Arctic vehicles.
But the “cotton” continues to find its targets in different parts of the Russian Federation – in particular, the governor of the Kursk region, Roman Starovoit, reported an attack by drones that were allegedly shot down by air defense at night.
And that, among other things, “as a result of the attack,” drones allegedly damaged the entrance to one of the high-rise buildings in the city of Kursk. However, judging by the photos and videos posted online, the entrance door was “attacked” not by mythical drones, but by a very real Pantsyr-S1 missile. “He walked right in the door,” one of the participants comments on the video.
Because if we compare the photo of the entrance above with the photo posted by the governor of the region, Starovoit, it turns out that the remains of the Pantsyr missile were located exactly near the entrance that was “hit” by the drone – while the occupiers have not yet published a photo of the UAV remains themselves.
Earlier this week, on May 30, there was an attack by mysterious drones in the Moscow region – and among other things, the drones attacked the most elite residence in the Russian Federation as a whole, the well-known Rublevka, and this attack may actually have strategic significance.