The new strategy of attacks of Ukraine has discovered Achilles Fifth of the Russian Army - Newsweek
In July, The Kyiv Independent wrote that the drones had struck a large composition of ammunition in the village of Sergiyivka, Voronezh region of the Russian Federation. The Main Directorate of Intelligence of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, which is often behind long -range attacks in the Russian Federation, said that its operatives undermined a large composition of ammunition in Voronezh.
It stored more than 5,000 tons of ammunition-artillery and tank shells, as well as launchers "Earth-Air". In early September, Ukraine also attacked the composition of ammunition near the village of Soldativska Voronezh region. As a result, the ammunition, staged by North Korea, was destroyed. Defense Express also called the ammunition composition in Karachev, the Bryansk region, the probable purpose of the new Dron "Palyanitsa" in mid -September.
In Ukraine, there are fewer ammunition, compared to the Russian Federation, this is the obvious goal of long -range blows, says Newsweek. It is important for Ukraine to carry out such attacks for military purposes, the People's Deputy from the European Solidarity faction Alexei Goncharenko said in a comment to reporters. But despite the positive signals last month that restrictions on long -range strikes in the Russian Federation can still be removed, they still remain.
"We are waiting for our partners permission to strike for Russian military purposes set weapons," Goncharenko said. Such permission would "change the rules of the game", according to the former employee of the NSDC Andriy Zyuza, who holds the position of head of the technology department in the London company Prevail.
There are a lot more near the front line of ammunition warehouses and they are more tightly, said William Freere, a national security researcher in the Council of Geostrategy of the British Analytical Center. "For Ukraine, larger ammunition depots, further from the front line, provide better opportunities for the destruction of more Russian shells," said William Freere, a researcher at the British Analytical Center Council on Geostrategy.