Russian High-Tech 'Forpost' Drone Worth $6M Destroyed in Strike: Ukraine

🎙️ Voice is AI-generated. Inconsistencies may occur.

Ukraine forces have reportedly destroyed a $6 million Russian drone in a recent strike.

According to a Wednesday Facebook post from the General Staff of the Ukraine Armed Forces, Ukrainian anti-air forces managed to destroy one of the invading country's $6 million Forpost drones amid a series of counterstrikes on the Russian position.

Newsweek has contacted the UAF for comment.

Drone
A Russian 'Forpost' drone pictured here with a Ukrainian-owned missile defense system. Newsweek Photo Illustration/Getty Images/Russian Ministry of Defense

One of the country's most expensive reconnaissance tools, Forpost drones first came to prominence in the 1980s as the default remote surveillance craft of the Israeli army before its export to a number of foreign powers across Asia and Europe.

While typically unarmed, Russia has used armed versions of the drone in combat operations in the past, though the drones are now primarily used for surveilling enemy positions on the battlefield.

The weapons have also been deployed in Syria, while YouTube videos published by the Russian Ministry of Defense at the war's start depicted an armed version of the Forpost-R Unmanned Aerial Vehicle in use during the destruction of a multiple launch rocket system operated by the Ukrainian army.

Wednesday's successful strike represents at least the third confirmed downing of a Russian-operated Forpost drone since the war's start, adding onto successful strikes in early July and early May.

Just last week, Ukrainian officials claimed to have destroyed 13 explosive-laden drones in a thwarted Russian assault on Kyiv, padding the nearly 150 documented unmanned aircraft losses Russia has experienced since the war's start, per the open source website Oryx.

But it also comes amid a series of successful ground-to-air operations by the Ukrainian military as the United States prepares to vote on $45 billion in additional aid for the Ukrainian military, alongside the recently-announced provision of the first U.S.-supplied Patriot Air Defense System of the war.

Once operational, the Patriot system is capable of bringing down not only cruise missiles but short-range ballistic missiles and aircraft at "a significantly higher ceiling" than previously provided air defense systems.

"The United States will continue to work closely with more than 50 allies and partners worldwide in support of the people of Ukraine as they defend their freedom and independence with extraordinary courage and boundless determination," U.S. Secretary of State Anthony Blinken said in a statement. "We will continue to support Ukraine for as long as it takes, so that Kyiv can continue to defend itself and be in the strongest possible position at the negotiating table when the time comes."

About the writer

Nick Reynolds is a senior politics reporter at Newsweek. A native of Central New York, he previously worked as a politics reporter at the Charleston Post & Courier in South Carolina and for the Casper Star-Tribune in Wyoming before joining the politics desk in 2022. His work has appeared in outlets like High Country News, CNN, the News Station, the Associated Press, NBC News, USA Today and the Washington Post. He currently lives in South Carolina. 


Nick Reynolds is a senior politics reporter at Newsweek. A native of Central New York, he previously worked as a ... Read more