A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Feb 24, 2024

Ukraine Shoots Down 2nd A-50 Russian Long Range Radar Plane In 1 Month

Russia only had six of them. Now 33% of their fleet has been shot down by Ukraine, limiting Russia's ability to coordinate air attacks and sense Ukraine's air defenses. JL 

Phelan Chatterjee reports in the BBC:

Ukraine has downed a Russian A-50 military a long-range radar detection spy plane - the second in just over a month. The plane was hit between the Russian cities of Rostov-on-Don and Krasnodar, over 200km (124 miles) from the front line. Video shared online shows the moment the plane appears to be shot down in the air, as well as huge flames and thick, dark smoke seemingly rising after the crash. Ukraine last shot down an A-50 on 14 January. The plane, which detects air defences and co-ordinates targets for Russian jets,  hundreds of millions of dollars to build.

Ukraine says it has downed a Russian A-50 military spy plane - the second such claim in just over a month.

The plane was hit between the Russian cities of Rostov-on-Don and Krasnodar, Ukrainian military sources said, over 200km (124 miles) from the front line.

Emergency services reportedly found plane fragments in Kanevskoy district and put out a raging fire.

Russia has not commented on the claim. Saturday marks two years since Russia launched a full-scale invasion.

The head of Ukraine's Air Force Mykola Oleshchuk thanked his service and military intelligence for helping to bring down the plane - a long-range radar detection aircraft - on Friday and noted the incident coincided with a key Russian military holiday.

"Congratulations to the occupiers on the Defender of the Fatherland Day," he said on Telegram.

Video shared online shows the moment the plane appears to be shot down in the air, as well as huge flames and thick, dark smoke seemingly rising after the crash.Krasnodar's emergency authorities later said an aircraft had crashed near the Trudovaya Armenia village, Kanevskoy district, and a fire was later extinguished. It provided no further details.

Meanwhile, at least one Russian military-aligned Telegram channel suggested the plane may have come down as a result of friendly fire. Fighterbomber wrote: "At the moment it is unknown who shot it down."

Ukraine last claimed to have shot down an A-50 on 14 January.

A previous briefing from the UK's ministry of defence said that Russia probably had six operational A-50s in service.

The plane, which detects air defences and co-ordinates targets for Russian jets, can cost hundreds of millions of dollars to build.

Ukraine has struggled to make significant advances against Russian forces in the south-east recently.

In last month's incident, Ukrainian army officials said an Il-22 control centre plane was destroyed as well as the A-50.

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