Is Ukraine Using Chinese Drones Bought on Alibaba for Kamikaze Missions against Putin’s Russian Army

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Is Ukraine Using Chinese Drones Bought on Alibaba for Kamikaze Missions against Putin’s Russian Army

According to reports, on August 20, Ukraine attacked the Russian Black Sea naval headquarters in Sevastopol using a Chinese drone it had purchased from Alibaba. According to reports, a UAV modified with a big warhead was flown by Ukrainian Special Operation Forces and struck the building's roof directly. According to reports, the drone depicted in the video could be the Skyeye 5000mm, offered on the website of Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba.
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Hello, guys. Welcome back to the War News channel. In today’s video, we will talk about “Ukraine used Chinese Drone against the Russian army.” Here we also talk about whether is china supporting Ukraine. To know all about watch the video till the end!
Soon after the incident, it came to light that they had bought the drone for about $8,000 from Chinese e-commerce company Alibaba. The UAV was equipped with a sizable warhead, and the Ukrainian Special Operations Forces used it to hit the building's roof directly. The twin-tail-boom set drone passed overhead as a smoke cloud rose from the fleet's command post. According to Russian officials, the drone was shot down, who downplayed the incident and claimed there were no deaths at the scene.
In less than a month, there have been two verified drone attacks on the command center of the Black Sea Fleet. At least once, a drone attacked a Russian target hiding behind enemy lines with a one-way 'kamikaze' hit. At the time, an apparent weaponized unmanned aerial vehicle struck a plant in the Rostov region of Russia, not far from the Ukrainian border. One day after the Sevastopol attack, Lieutenant General Igor Konashenkov, a spokesman for the Russian Defense Ministry, said that Russian air defense systems had shot down nine Ukrainian drones and intercepted one missile launched from the Olkha multiple rocket launchers.
The weapons employed in this most recent attack on the base of the Black Sea Fleet are crucial. It is proof that Ukraine is using homemade long-range suicide drones to attack vital targets, much as it did in a successful attack on an oil complex in Novoshakhtinsk last June, far outside the Ukrainian-Russian boundary.
In essence, it's a Chinese-made fixed-wing aircraft that can travel great distances while carrying a considerable payload, effectively transforming it into a sluggish cruise missile. For many years, The War Zone has issued warnings regarding precisely these weapons and their shallow entry barrier. It is evident that Ukraine, driven by need, has transformed these commercial drones, which cost between $5,000 and $10,000, into something resembling a cross between an improvised precision-guided missile and a vengeance weapon.
These modified drones are still the most likely to blame for the recent attacks deep inside Russian-controlled territory, despite the suspicion of special operations raids, small lingering munitions, espionage, modified missile systems, and short-range ballistic missiles. Combining them with other talents, such as short-range loitering weapons or armed drones, is also conceivable.
These weaponized unmanned aircraft might aim at a GPS coordinate as best they can. Still, navigating to a target area on their own is feasible before being "picked up" and directed on their terminal attack run by a nearby man-in-the-loop operator, which would offer greater flexibility and precision. Most of these inexplicable attacks have taken place, including the most recent one in Sevastopol, where drone use in broad daylight could make sense if the attackers are employing a primary camera that is not well adapted for nighttime operations for terminal guidance.

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