San Diego Union-Tribune

OFFICIAL: RUSSIAN AIRSTRIKES STRETCHING UKRAINE’S DEFENSES

- KYIV, Ukraine

Russia’s recent escalation of missile and drone attacks is stretching Ukraine’s air defense resources, a Ukrainian air force official said Tuesday, leaving the country vulnerable in the 22-month war unless it can secure further weapons supplies.

“Intense Russian air attacks force us to use a correspond­ing amount of air defense means,” air force spokespers­on Yurii Ihnat told national television. “That’s why we need more of them, as Russia keeps increasing its (air) attack capabiliti­es.”

As soldiers on both sides fight from largely static positions along the roughly 930mile front line, recent Russian attacks have used large numbers of various types of missiles in an apparent effort to saturate air defense systems and find gaps in Ukraine’s defenses.

The massive barrages — more than 500 drones and missiles were fired between Dec. 29 and Jan. 2, according to officials in Kyiv — are also using up Ukraine’s weapons stockpiles.

Ukraine uses weapons from the Soviet era and more modern ones provided by its Western allies. Authoritie­s want to build up the country’s own weapons manufactur­ing capabiliti­es, and analysts say those plants are among Russia’s recent targets.

“At the moment, we are completely dependent on the supply of guided air defense missiles, for both Soviet and Western systems,” Ihnat said.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said on Sunday that “we lack a very concrete and understand­able thing, that is air defense systems,” to protect civilian areas and troop positions.

“We lack (air defense systems) both on the battlefiel­d and in our cities,” he told a Swedish defense conference.

Speaking at a meeting with the Russian military brass, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu declared that Kyiv’s efforts to bolster its firepower “won’t change the situation on the line of contact and will only drag out the military conflict.”

“We retain the strategic initiative along the entire line of contact,” Shoigu said. “We will consistent­ly continue to achieve the objectives of the special military operation” — the Kremlin’s language for the war in Ukraine.

It was not possible to verify either side’s battlefiel­d claims.

Ukraine, meanwhile, has increasing­ly targeted Moscow-occupied Crimea and Russian border regions with long-range strikes.

In the latest strike, two drones fell on the premises of a fuel and energy facility Tuesday in the Russian city of Orlov, about 150 miles from the Ukraine border, Gov. Andrei Klychkov said.

Three people were injured and a fire broke out but was quickly extinguish­ed, Klychkov said.

Meanwhile, the Kremlin’s forces show no signs of easing off their winter campaign. In what officials called the biggest aerial barrage of the war, Russia launched 122 missiles and dozens of drones on Dec. 29, killing 62 civilians across the country. On Jan. 1, Russia launched a record 90 Shahedtype drones across Ukraine.

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