Extract from ABC News
A satellite image captured on June 2, 2025, of the Belaya airfield after a Ukrainian drone attack. (Reuters: Capella Space/Handout)
In short:
Images that show the damage caused by Ukraine's drone attack in Russia are beginning to emerge.
A satellite image appears to show the remnants of destroyed Tu-22M3 bombers and destroyed or severely damaged Tu-95MS bombers.
There are also reports of unreleased footage showing a rare A-50 surveillance plane being damaged.
Satellite company Capella Space also supplied Reuters with an image of one of those airfields, in the Siberian region of Irkutsk, taken on June 2 — the day after Spider's Web.
Captured using synthetic aperture radar (SAR) satellites, it appears to show the debris of several aircraft along the runway of the Belaya military air base or parked in protective revetments nearby.
Ukraine claims it struck Russian Tu-95MS bombers. (Wikimedia Commons: Marina Lysteva)
Open-source analysts examine images
John Ford, a research associate at the California-based James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, told Reuters the image showed what appeared to be the remnants of two destroyed Tu-22M3 bombers.
These are long-range, supersonic strategic bombers that have been used to launch missile strikes against Ukraine.
The SAR image, as well as drone footage of the strikes posted on social media, also indicated four strategic Tu-95MS heavy bombers were destroyed or severely damaged, Mr Ford said.
The New York Times said its open-source analysis had also confirmed "at least a dozen" aircraft were damaged, including Tu-95MS bombers.
Open-source intelligence analyst Brady Africk agreed the imagery showed several Tu-95MS and Tu-22M3 aircraft had been destroyed and damaged.
However, he told Reuters more imagery was needed to properly assess the impact.
"But it is clear that the attack on this air base was very successful,"he said.
Unreleased footage purportedly shows damaged A-50
The Telegraph says it has also seen unreleased footage of Ukraine successfully damaging a rare A-50 surveillance plane.
This is an early warning and control aircraft, which helped Moscow locate Ukrainian air defences and coordinate attacks with bombers and fighter jets.
Unreleased footage purportedly shows Ukraine successfully damaging a rare A-50 surveillance plane. (Reuters: Alexander Zemlianichenko)
The Russian military reportedly has fewer than 10 — possibly as few as six — in use.
Reuters says it has not yet obtained SAR imagery of the Olenya airfield, a base in Murmansk in Russia's far north-west that was also attacked.
But drone video footage of Olenya base — provided by Ukrainian authorities and verified by Reuters — showed two burning bombers that appeared to be Tu-95MSs and a third, also a Tu-95MS, being hit by a large explosion.
This video purportedly shows Tu-95 strategic bombers exploding.
Shortly after the attack, the Russian Defence Ministry said Ukraine had targeted military airfields in the Murmansk, Irkutsk, Ivanovo, Ryazan, and Amur regions.
The ministry said their air defences repelled assaults in all the regions except Murmansk and Irkutsk, where several aircraft caught fire.
ABC/Reuters
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