Press "Enter" to skip to content

For the first time in war: Ukraine is hitting Russian rear harder than Russia is hitting Ukraine

#Kanal13​ #likekanal13​ #subscribekanal13 #warinukraine
https://www.youtube.com/user/kanal13az?sub_confirmation=1 – SUBSCRIBE TO US!

Ukraine is significantly intensifying long-range strikes on Russian rear areas, using domestically produced drones and missiles to target military infrastructure, airfields, and key oil logistics. Ukraine has escalated attacks on oil refineries, pipelines, and tankers, including vital Black Sea and Baltic ports, aiming to cripple Russia’s oil export revenues. Strikes are no longer confined to border regions but now hit deep inside Russia, including key logistics hubs in the Urals, stretching Russian air defense capabilities. These actions are designed to force Russia to move assets, disrupt supply lines for the invasion, and exert severe economic pressure, which Ukrainian officials say has caused more damage than Western sanctions. So, for the first time since the start of the full-scale invasion, Ukraine is hitting the Russian rear harder than Russia is hitting Ukraine. Outpacing the Russian war machine, near constant waves of Ukrainian drone strikes trigger all alarms across Russia and shatter the illusion of superiority, with analysts warning that this may just be the beginning, RFU News media outlet says. Ukraine crossed a critical turning point in March, launching more cross-border drone attacks into Russia than Russia into Ukraine. This is not just a symbolic victory marking a reversal in the war of attrition, but also the biggest strategic development, as Ukrainian strikes are systematically targeting Russia’s oil and gas infrastructure, military industrial base, and high-level logistics depots at an unprecedented scale. After the recent release of data, it can be seen that in just one week, Russia launched over two thousand eight hundred drones against Ukraine, while Kyiv responded with two thousand three hundred drones of its own. However, this data only counts Ukrainian strikes on key oil export infrastructure in the northwest, with many more drones hitting Russian facilities in the south, east, and central regions as well, RFU News says. Notably, one single wave against the Primorsk and Ust-Luga ports on March thirtieth saw around two hundred drones launched simultaneously, flying coordinated routes to overwhelm defenses and ensure the strike’s success. The scale of this shift becomes even clearer when looking at the broader statistics, as Russia claimed it intercepted seven thousand three hundred forty seven Ukrainian drones in March at an average of two hundred thirty seven per day, the highest figure ever recorded. At the same time, Ukraine reported facing six thousand four hundred sixty two Russian drones and one hundred thirty eight missiles throughout the month, intercepting around ninety percent of drones and nearly three-quarters of missiles. While Russia still maintains high strike volumes, the balance is no longer one-sided, as Ukraine is now matching and exceeding Russia’s ability to project force deep behind the frontline. This evolution reflects years of investment finally reaching maturity, as Ukraine expands not only long-range strikes but also mid-range operations targeting logistics hubs, command posts, and air defenses within twenty to three hundred kilometers behind the front, RFU News says. Inside Russia, this shift has triggered a visible alarm, as military analysts are increasingly vocal, pointing not just to Ukraine’s growing capabilities but to fundamental organizational differences. They highlight Ukraine’s rapid transition toward a decentralized, innovation-driven model of military development. Under new leadership, Ukrainian units, manufacturers, and even frontline formations can now independently upgrade systems by integrating new navigation tools, sensors, and communications within weeks rather than years. The full cycle from concept to battlefield deployment has been reduced to staggering thirty days in some cases. In contrast, Russian analysts openly criticize their own system as paralyzed by bureaucracy, where every improvement must pass through layers of approvals, testing, and risk-averse oversight, making innovations practically impossible to implement or delaying them beyond the point of making any difference. Russian analysts argue that this rigidity is crippling Russia’s ability to adapt, as even relatively simple ideas, such as modifying existing aircraft or integrating new weapons, are delayed by endless procedures, RFU News says. Meanwhile, Ukraine is experimenting, iterating, and deploying at speed, with Russians warning that this gap will only widen, with Ukraine continuing to introduce new solutions faster than Russia can respond.

Click here and just subscribe to Kanal13 – https://www.youtube.com/user/kanal13az?sub_confirmation=1

https://www.youtube.com/KANAL13AZ/join
*ATTENTION: If you woul like to contact with US please, write to +49176 75077516 WhatsApp

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x