Kiyv Shoots Down Volley of Russian Hypersonic Missiles
Ukraine said on Tuesday it had shot down six Russian hypersonic Kinzhal missiles in a single night, thwarting a superweapon Moscow had previously touted as all but unstoppable.
It was the first time Ukraine had claimed to have struck an entire volley of multiple hypersonic missiles, and if confirmed, it would be a dramatic demonstration of the effectiveness of newly deployed Western air defences.
“The six Kinzhals, ballistic missiles which travel at up to 10 times the speed of sound, were among a volley of 18 missiles Russia launched at Ukraine overnight, lighting up Kyiv with flashes and raining debris after they were blasted from the sky.”
The commander-in-chief of Ukraine’s armed forces, Valeriy Zaluzhnyi, said all had been ‘successfully intercepted.’ There was no immediate comment from Russia.
City authorities in the Ukrainian capital said three people were wounded by falling debris.
“It was exceptional in its density – the maximum number of attack missiles in the shortest period of time,” Serhiy Popko, head of Kyiv’s city military administration, said on the Telegram messaging app.
Zaluzhnyi said his forces had intercepted the six Kinzhals launched from aircraft, as well as nine Kalibr cruise missiles from ships in the Black Sea and three Iskanders fired from land.
Earlier this month, Ukraine claimed to have shot down a single Kinzhal missile over Kyiv for the first time, using a newly deployed U.S. Patriot air defence system.
Previously, the ability of Patriots to intercept Kinzhal missiles was only theoretical. “Hitting six at once would suggest it could be a reliable defence rather than a lucky shot.”
President Vladimir Putin, who unveiled the Kinzhal as one of six “next generation” weapons in 2018, has frequently touted it as proof of world-beating Russian military hardware, capable of taking on NATO.
BBC/Shakirat Sadiq