A Ukrainian bomber drone went out for a strike mission. It returned impaled by a crude trident, photos show.

Business Insider

A Ukrainian bomber drone went out for a strike mission. It returned impaled by a crude trident, photos show.

Jake Epstein
3 min read

  • A Ukrainian bomber drone went out for a mission last month to strike Russian targets.

  • When it returned, soldiers were surprised to find it had been impaled by a crude-looking trident.

  • It looks like a rough air defense approach in a war defined by a mix of makeshift weapons and technological innovation.

A Ukrainian drone flew a strike mission against Russian targets late last month, and when it returned to base, operators found the aircraft had been impaled by a crude trident made of nails and thin steel rods, the commander told Business Insider.

Alex Eine, a unit commander in Ukraine’s embattled northeastern Kharkiv region, said that the trident was “definitely” launched from another drone as opposed to a soldier on the ground. The Ukrainian Backfire bomber was cruising above 800 meters (2,600 feet) when it was apparently struck from above in a blind spot without cameras.

Advertisement

The highly unusual incident appears to be the first reported case of a trident being used to try to intercept a drone. It is a rudimentary air defense approach in a war defined by both makeshift improvisations and technological innovation.

When the drone first returned, the Ukrainian soldiers thought it was part of an antenna, but a closer look at the projectile protruding from the fuselage of the fixed-wing heavy bomber revealed something far more improvised. The object was about 60 centimeters (roughly two feet) long.

Photos that the unit shared exclusively with Business Insider show the trident clearly.

A trident impaled in a Ukrainian drone.
The trident stuck in the fuselage of the Backfire drone.Courtesy of Alex Eine
A trident that was found in a Ukrainian bomber drone.
The trident is made of nails and steel rods.Courtesy of Alex Eine

Eine said that the unit is unsure exactly how or when the drone was struck during the mission. There are spots on a telemetry log that might mark the moment of impact, but wind gusts can have the same effect. It is ultimately inconclusive. Eine said they ruled out friendly fire as a possibility due to high levels of coordination.

Advertisement

The Backfire drone sustained some additional scratches, but overall, it managed to survive the shocking interception attempt. Eine credited its survival to the sturdiness of the airframe.

Other drones, he said, might be more susceptible to this kind of counter-drone weapon, as crude as it is. Eine said a projectile like the trident could be effective against heavy quadcopter drones. Anything that comes into contact with the propellers could completely disable it.

The Backfire fixed-wing heavy bomber drone is seen on display.
The Backfire fixed-wing heavy bomber drone.Courtesy of Ukrainian manufacturer ZLi Ptakhy

Eine said this is the first time he’s heard of a drone using a trident for air defense. Russia has outfitted some of its strike drones with air-to-air missiles, but Ukrainian officials have said that those are primarily used to combat helicopters and aircraft.

Neither Russia’s defense ministry nor its US embassy responded to a query about the tactic.

Advertisement

Drones have undergone other unprecedented modifications for air defense purposes as well. Ukraine, for instance, has armed its naval drones with surface-to-air missiles to shoot down Russian aircraft flying combat patrols above the Black Sea.

More in World

North Korea says Israeli attacks and US military operation against Iran are ‘illegal aggression’

Reuters

2.2K

Ahmadinejad killed in strike on Tehran

The Telegraph

502

Iranian Kamikaze Drone Boat Makes First Successful Strike Of War

THE WARZONE

345

The trident strike underscores the demand for any kind of air defense available amid a high saturation of uncrewed aircraft that constantly buzz over the battlefield. Drones are responsible for the majority of battlefield kills at this point in the four-year-old conflict.

Ukraine, for its part, has invested heavily in the development of low-cost interceptor drones, which are armed with small warheads and fly directly into their targets or explode nearby to destroy them midair.

These interceptor drones emerged as a top defense priority last year. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in January that local companies are producing around 1,000 a day, a goal he set over the summer.

Read the original article on Business Insider

OpenAI will amend Defense Department deal to prevent mass surveillance in the US
Engadget
What an extended war with Iran could mean for prices at the gas pump
Yahoo Personal Finance
Wordle hints today for #1,718: Clues and answer for Tuesday, March 3
Yahoo Tech
Why did Trump attack Iran? Is the U.S. at war now? How long will this last? A complete FAQ on the new Mideast conflict.
Yahoo News
2026 ACC women’s basketball tournament bracket, schedule, how to watch: Duke holds No. 1 seed as Louisville, UNC loom
Yahoo Sports
Former NATO commander on how Operation Epic Fury shows the role of AI
Yahoo Finance
Wonder Oven Pro review: We got our hands on the newest launch from Selena Gomez’s favorite cookware brand
Yahoo Shopping
Spring swap: 7 trends we’re skipping and what we’re buying instead
Yahoo Shopping
Call of Duty will add Black Ops Royale, a new free game mode coming March 13
Engadget
We tested dozens of gadgets last month — here are the ones we loved
Yahoo Tech

Powered by WPeMatico