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Search resuls for: "Kryukov"


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A challenge for Ukraine is that drone pilots often don't have the right gear to hit them though, a Ukrainian drone operator and a drone expert told Business Insider. But because operating drones in the dark requires more expensive equipment, Ukraine's options for striking during that time are limited. Drone pilots aren't equipped to hit themThere are a number of ways to hit the enemy at night, but cheap drones often aren't among the best options. Seeing at night requires Ukraine to use more expensive drone types or to put expensive upgrades on the cheaper, civilian drone types that many of its soldiers rely on. A Ukrainian drone operator recently told The Guardian there are so many drones over parts of Ukraine right now that soldiers on both sides don't know how to move forward.
Persons: , Vitaliy, They're, Vlada, Kryukov, James Patton Rogers, Samuel Bendett, Ozge Elif, Rogers Organizations: Service, Business, Adam Tactical, Ukrainian, Cornell Brooks Tech Policy Institute, Center for Naval, Getty, Guardian Locations: Ukraine, Ukrainian, Bakhmut, Russia, Kupiansk, Kharkiv, Anadolu
Vitaliy Kryukov, a loitering-munition commander for Ukraine's elite Adam Tactical Group, told Business Insider that fighting with drones in the winter comes with far more limitations. He compared it to what happens to cell phones in winter: "In the winter, you take your smartphone outside, and you'll notice that soon enough the battery will deplete much, much quicker." Upgrading drones to make them able to see at night, or simply using better-equipped drones, can be much more expensive. These drones are not the type that slam into targets and explode on impact, and there are fewer of them. AdvertisementHe said neither Russia or Ukraine is stopping their fight despite the conditions: "For sure Ukraine won't stop for the winter."
Persons: , Ignacio Marin, Vitaliy, Kryukov, James Patton Rogers, Rogers, Kostya Organizations: Service, Business, Anadolu, Getty, Adam Tactical, Cornell Brooks Tech Policy Institute Locations: Ukraine, Ukraine's Donetsk Oblast, Russia, Ukrainian, Bakhmut, Avdiivka
Western officials criticized Ukrainian counteroffensive tactics. Ukraine is making slow progress in its counteroffensive to drive back Russian forces. It also defended Ukrainian tactics on the southern front, where troops are trying to break through in the direction of occupied Melitopol. But as Ukraine struggles to make a decisive breakthrough, differences are emerging with Western allies over the tactics it's using. Some analysts believe that Ukraine has to achieve a decisive breakthrough in its counteroffensive soon, as a protracted conflict would be to Russia's advantage.
Persons: Vitaliy, Insider's Sinead Baker Organizations: Service, New York Times, Times, Adam Tactical Locations: Ukraine, Wall, Silicon, Russia, Washington, DC, Bakhmut, Ukrainian, Melitopol, Velyka, Crimea
Two Ukrainian soldiers pushed back against those claiming Ukraine's counteroffensive is too slow. The soldiers told Insider they're making progress despite Russia's better weapons and deep defenses. Two soldiers with units on the front lines of Ukraine's fight told Insider that any such criticism was unfair and ill-informed. Drone footage of the area Ukraine's troops moved through near Bakhmut in July, marked by artillery hits. But experts say they see Ukraine making progress in its fight all the same, and that it appears to have ramped up in the last two weeks.
Persons: Russia isn't, Ukraine's, Vitaliy, Adam, Kryukov, It's, Volodymyr Zelenskyy Organizations: Service, Adam Tactical, Bakhmut, Ukrainian Locations: Wall, Silicon, Russia, Ukraine, Bakhmut
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