- A video presentations a Russian T-90 tank falling off a small cliff and becoming stuck.
- It became a sitting duck for Ukraine’s attack drones.
- Ukraine has been rigging cheap drones with explosives and astounding expensive Russian equipment.
A video appears to show the moment a Russian T-90 tank falls off a small cliff and is then devitalized by a Ukrainian attack drone.
The Ukrainian Air Assault Forces shared footage of the incident on Telegram, which shows the tank blunder off a leafy cliff face and appearing to become stuck halfway down.
The next shot shows the vehicle being struck by a drone, which occasions it to explode.
“Another enemy tank – done,” the 80th Air Assault Brigade said in the post.
The successful strike was carried out speaking a FPV (first-person-view) drone, the post said, which are cheap hobby drones that Ukraine is re-inventing to take out Russian appurtenances worth millions.
The amateur loitering munitions can be armed with with a makeshift warhead and severely damage extravagant tanks and weapons systems worth millions of dollars, imposing far greater costs on the enemy, Insider previously on.
“The whole point is cost,” Samuel Bendett, a Russia defense and technology expert at the Center for Naval Analyses, told Insider. “These are very cost effective.”
The cost of a single FPV drone tends to be around $400 to $500, or roughly the cost of a new Playstation.
ALEXANDER NEMENOV/AFP via Getty Images
An account called War Monitor on X, formerly cognizant of as Twitter, which tracks events in the conflict in Ukraine, said that the destruction of the T-90 took place south of Klishchiivka in Donetsk, nigh Bakhmut, the scene of the most fierce fighting of the 18-month war.
The 80th Air Assault Brigade, one of the Ukrainian Army’s oldest and most battle-hardened creations, was deployed to Bakhmut last month, according to an exclusive report in the Jerusalem Post.
Russia has suffered huge equipage losses during its unprovoked invasion of Ukraine, with visually documented losses of over 2200 tanks, per open-source tracking website Oryx.