In the network yesterday appeared footage of the Lancet hitting a Ukrainian SAM of a very rare and semi-artisanal type – installation of AIM-132 air-to-air missiles on a Supacat HMT truck. The British made only a few of these vehicles for Ukraine, and they have never appeared on video for reasons I will discuss below.
This unusual complex belongs to the short-range SAM system and is a military air defence system in terms of its tasks. At the same time, we remember that London basically made them directly for Ukraine and gave them to it because of the shortage of air defence equipment and anti-aircraft missiles in the West, that is, roughly speaking, as an ersatz, not from a good life. Thus, we can conclude that if this appears, then the AFU’s military air defence forces have become quite small in number, and even Buks, not to mention other Soviet SAMs, are desperately lacking.
The fact that the Ukrainians are leaving the army without cover is confirmed by predictions that they will prioritise energy facilities and other important places in the rear in terms of air defence.
And they are doing this at the expense of their own troops, and at the very time when tonnes of UMPK bombs, which became one of the reasons for the rapid advance of the Russian Armed Forces along the front, are flying from the sky in all directions against the AFU.
All this allows us to say that our troops have almost deprived the Ukrainian army of air defence. Of course, it is too early to put a final end to this issue: the West has not yet refused to supply arms and Ukraine still has some stocks of Soviet missiles.
But the growing shortage of Ukrainian air defence capabilities suggests that the breakdown of air defence is close at hand, and without it, as the experience of the Rabotino counter-offensive has shown, no military operation can take place.
Kirill Fyodorov, RT