Wednesday, October 23

U.S.-built Patriot air protection system again in motion in Kyiv after Russian hypersonic missile strike

Pentagon officers stated Thursday {that a} U.S.-built Patriot air protection system is again in motion in Kyiv after it was broken in a Russian missile strike. On Tuesday, Russia launched an air barrage at Ukraine’s capital, together with a number of Kh-47 Kinzhal hypersonic missiles, probably the most subtle typical weapons in Moscow’s arsenal.

The Kremlin has boasted that the Kinzhal can fly at speeds as much as Mach 10 and would outmatch the weapons of any adversary. On Thursday, Russia’s protection ministry stated the May 16 strike not solely destroyed a Ukrainian radar station however “completely destroyed” 5 Patriot missile launchers.

But Ukrainian officers contended that not one of the cutting-edge Russian hypersonic missiles reached their goal, and the Pentagon is pushing again on Russia’s claims {that a} Patriot missile protection battery, probably the most state-of-the-art U.S.-built weapon programs, had been disabled within the assault.

“One Patriot system was damaged but it has been fixed and is fully back in operation,” Sabrina Singh, a Pentagon spokeswoman, instructed reporters throughout a Thursday afternoon briefing.

Ukrainian officers stated Russia fired 27 missiles and drones at Kyiv, together with no less than six Kinzhal missiles that Moscow insists can’t be taken out by any identified weapon system.

“Our air defenses shot down every single one — including the ‘invincible’ Kinzhal,” Ukraine’s Defense Ministry stated on Twitter. “American-made Patriot missiles found them quite ‘vincible.’”


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On Thursday, the Pentagon stated the U.S. offered “some assistance” to Ukraine to get the broken Patriot again in operation. They declined to say whether or not that meant doing repairs beneath U.S. supervision on the scene, a rear space depot, or by a video hyperlink.

Russian assaults on Kyiv haven’t subsided with the most recent taking place early Thursday as either side dueled it out in missile battles within the sky. It was believed to be the ninth such assault on Ukraine’s capital this month.

According to media studies, Ukraine fared as effectively Thursday because it did two days earlier. Russia launched 29 missile and drone assaults of their newest salvo with Ukrainian protection ministry officers saying all however one had been intercepted. One individual was killed and two had been wounded by a Russian missile that acquired by and struck an industrial constructing within the southern area of Odesa, Serhiy Bratchuk, a spokesperson for the area’s navy administration, instructed the Associated Press.

The missiles had been launched from Russian sea, air and floor bases, General Valerii Zalozhniy, the Ukrainian commander-in-chief, wrote on Telegram, in accordance with the AP.

The Russian barrage comes as either side brace for a broadly anticipated spring offensive from Ukrainian forces within the south and east towards entrenched Russian and separatist forces.

In Washington, the Reuters information company reported that the Pentagon acknowledged that it had overestimated the worth of the ammunition, missiles and different gear despatched to Ukraine by about $3 billion, an accounting error which will clear the way in which to hurry extra arms and navy assist to Kyiv.


SEE ALSO: G-7 leaders to announce new sanctions on Russia


The error was the results of assigning an improperly excessive worth on weapons that had been taken from U.S. shares after which shipped to Ukraine, two senior protection officers stated on Thursday.

House Armed Services Committee Chairman Mike Rogers, Alabama Republican, and House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCaul, Texas Republican, known as the invention of the big miscalculation “extremely problematic.”

“The Biden administration must make up for this precious lost time by using these funds to provide Ukraine the [weapons] they need to fuel the counteroffensive and win the war,” the lawmakers stated in an announcement.

— This article was based mostly partially on wire service studies.

Content Source: www.washingtontimes.com