Operation False Target: How Russia plotted to mix a deadly new weapon
among decoy drones in Ukraine
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[November 16, 2024]
By EMMA BURROWS, HANNA ARHIROVA and LORI HINNANT
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — At a secretive factory in Russia's central
grasslands, engineers are manufacturing hundreds of decoy drones meant
to overwhelm Ukrainian defenses as they try to protect against a
horrific new weapon, an Associated Press investigation has found.
The plant at Russia’s Alabuga Special Economic Zone recently started
churning out thermobaric drones alongside the decoys, the investigation
found. The thermobaric warheads create a vortex of high pressure and
heat that can penetrate thick walls. They suck out all the oxygen in
their path, and have a fearsome reputation because of the injuries
inflicted even outside the initial blast site: Collapsed lungs, crushed
eyeballs, brain damage.
Russia came up with the plan for decoys in late 2022 and codenamed it
Operation False Target, according to a person familiar with Russia’s
drone production who spoke on condition of anonymity because the
industry is highly sensitive. The idea was to launch armed drones along
with dozens of decoys, sometimes stuffed with rags or foam, and
indistinguishable on radar from those carrying real bombs. Ukrainian
forces must make split-second decisions about how to expend scarce
resources to save lives and preserve critical infrastructure.
“The idea was to make a drone which would create a feeling of complete
uncertainty for the enemy. So he doesn’t know whether it’s really a
deadly weapon ... or essentially a foam toy,” the person said. With the
thermobarics, there is now a “huge risk” an armed drone could deviate
from its course and end up in a residential area where the “damage will
be simply terrifying,” he said.
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Russia's drone factory
In recent weeks, decoys have filled Ukraine’s skies by the dozens, each
one appearing as an indistinguishable blip on military radar screens.
During the first weekend of November, the Kyiv region spent 20 hours
under air alert, and the sound of buzzing drones mingled with the boom
of air defenses and rifle shots.
Unarmed decoys now make up more than half the drones targeting Ukraine,
according to the person and Serhii Beskrestnov, a Ukrainian electronics
expert whose black military van is kitted out with electronic jammers to
down drones.
Both the unarmed decoys and the armed Iranian-designed Shahed drones are
being built at a factory in Russia’s Alabuga Special Economic Zone, an
industrial complex set up in 2006 about 1,000 kilometers (600 miles)
east of Moscow to attract businesses and investment to Tatarstan. It
expanded after the 2022 invasion of Ukraine and some sectors switched to
military production, adding new buildings and renovating existing sites,
according to satellite images analyzed by The Associated Press.
In social media videos, the factory promotes itself as an innovation
hub. But David Albright of the Washington-based Institute for Science
and International Security said Alabuga’s current purpose is purely to
produce and sell drones to Russia‘s Ministry of Defense. The videos and
other promotional media were taken down after an AP investigation found
that many of the African women recruited to fill labor shortages there
complained they were duped into taking jobs at the plant.
Russia and Iran signed a $1.7 billion deal for the Shaheds in 2022,
after President Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine, and Moscow began using
Iranian imports of the unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAVs, in battle
later that year. Soon after the deal was signed, production started in
Alabuga.
In October, Moscow attacked with at least 1,889 drones – 80% more than
in August, according to an AP analysis tracking the drones for months.
On Saturday, Russia launched 145 drones across Ukraine, just days after
the re-election of Donald Trump threw into doubt U.S. support for the
country.
Since summer, most drones crash, are shot down or are diverted by
electronic jamming, according to an AP analysis of Ukrainian military
briefings. Less than 6% hit a discernible target, according to the data
analyzed by AP since the end of July. But the sheer numbers mean a
handful can slip through every day – and that is enough to be deadly.
Daily drone swarms
The swarms have become a demoralizing fact of life for Ukrainians.
Russian drone tactics continue to evolve. Now, more powerful missiles
often follow close behind as air defenses are exhausted by the drones.
The most destructive are the ballistic and cruise missiles that fly many
times faster than the drones, which buzz loudly and can be tracked by
the naked eye.
Even the decoys can be useful to Russia. One decoy with a live-feed
camera allows the aircraft to geolocate Ukraine’s air defenses and relay
the information to Russia in the final moments of its mechanical life.
Night after night, Ukrainian sharpshooters spring into action to down
the drones with portable surface-to-air missiles.
One sharpshooter, who like most Ukrainian soldiers asked to be
identified by his call-sign Rosmaryn, said he’s shot down perhaps a
dozen drones in all over nearly two years and saw one that was stuffed
with rags and foam. Rosmaryn sees his adversary in almost human terms,
describing the aircraft’s quest to outwit his small unit.
“It was part of a swarm, flying as one of the last ones,” he said. “When
it’s in the sky, we can’t tell what kind it is, because everything is
inside the drone. We only find out after it’s shot down.”
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A Ukrainian officer shows a thermobaric charge of a downed Shahed
drone launched by Russia in a research laboratory in an undisclosed
location in Ukraine Thursday, Nov. 14, 2024. (AP Photo/Efrem
Lukatsky)
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Many fly at 2,000 to 3,000 meters (6,500 feet to around 10,000 feet)
before dropping to lower altitudes on their final approach, Rosmaryn
said. Leaked videos suggest Ukraine is now using helicopters to
shoot down the high-altitude drones.
Three decoys of Russian origin have crashed in Moldova in the past
week, authorities there said.
Thanks to optical trickery, radar can’t distinguish a drone armed
with a Shahed’s usual 50-kilogram payload of explosives or with a
thermobaric weapon – also known as a vacuum bomb – from those
without a warhead or topped with live-feed surveillance cameras.
There are also other even rougher-quality drones, armed and unarmed,
but in fewer quantities than the Shahed-style unmanned aircraft.
That’s why, even knowing that decoys now make up most of an incoming
swarm, Ukraine can’t afford to let anything through.
“For us, it’s just a point on the radar … It has speed, direction,
and altitude,” said Col. Yurii Ihnat, an Air Force spokesman. “We
have no way of identifying the exact target during flight, so we
have to either jam them with electronic warfare or use firepower to
neutralize them. The enemy uses these to scatter our attention.”
The engines and electronics for the armed Shaheds and decoys are a
mix of Chinese and Western imports, according to fragments seen by
The Associated Press at a Ukrainian military lab. Without them, the
drones can’t fly. Despite nearly three years of sanctions, Moscow
can still source the parts – largely from China and via third
countries in Central Asia and the Middle East.
Halfway through the series of air alerts on Nov. 2, Ukrainian
President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the swarms of Shaheds, which he
put at 2,000 for the month of October alone, were made possible by
Western technology slipping through sanctions.
“Included in this many Shaheds are more than 170,000 components that
should have been blocked for delivery to Russia. Microcircuits,
microcontrollers, processors, many different parts, without which
this terror would simply be impossible,” Zelenskyy said.
The joint manufacturing of the drones — some to carry bombs, others
to divert attention — is saving Russia's military money. Production
of the decoys started earlier this year and now the plant turns out
about 40 of the cheaper unarmed drones a day and around 10 armed
ones, which cost an estimated $50,000 and take longer to produce,
according to the person with knowledge of Russian drone production.
The Russian news outlet Izvestia in late October said the aim of the
decoy is to ”weaken” the enemy by forcing it to waste ammunition
before sending in armed Shaheds.
Both Beskrestnov and the person familiar with Russian drone
production said engineers at Alabuga are also constantly
experimenting, putting Moscow at the cutting edge of drone
production. To make electronic interference harder, they add
Ukrainian SIM cards, roaming SIMS, Starlinks, fiberoptics – and can
sometimes receive real-time feedback before the drones are jammed,
downed or run out of fuel. Sometimes they attach a silver-painted
foam ball to make the drone seem larger on a radar.
But the latest thermobaric variant is causing new anguish in
Ukraine.
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Thermobaric fears
From a military point of view, thermobarics are ideal for going
after targets that are either inside fortified buildings or deep
underground.
Alabuga’s thermobaric drones are particularly destructive when they
strike buildings, because they are also loaded with ball bearings to
cause maximum damage even beyond the superheated blast, said
Albright.
Beskrestnov, who is more widely known as Flash and whose black
military van is kitted out with electronic jammers to down drones,
said the thermobarics were first used over the summer and estimated
they now make up between 3% and 5% of all drones.
“This type of warhead has the possibility to destroy a huge
building, especially block flats. And it’s very effective if the
Russian Federation tries to attack our power plants,” he said.
They have a fearsome reputation because of the physical effects even
on people caught outside the initial blast site, said Arthur van
Coller, an expert in international humanitarian law at South
Africa’s University of Fort Hare.
“With a thermobaric explosion, because of the cloud it would create,
everything in its radius would be affected,” he said. “It creates
massive fear in the civilian population. Thermobaric weapons have
created this idea that they are really horrible weapons and that
creates fear.”
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Burrows reported from Washington D.C. Stephen McGrath contributed
from Sighisoara, Romania.
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