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June 22nd, 2025

Insight

Ukraine's drone attack was more than a morale booster, it showed the new face of modern war

Trudy Rubin

By Trudy Rubin Philadelphia Inquirer/(TNS)

Published June 9, 2024

Ukraine's drone attack was more than a morale booster, it showed the new face of modern war
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KIEV — As we sped along the highway from Odesa to Kiev on Sunday, one of the Ukrainian passengers in the car suddenly let out a shout. The car swerved into a roadside gas station where people were glued to their cell phones.

The news had just broken online about Ukraine's stunning drone assault on four Russian air bases — two of them thousands of miles inside Russia — which destroyed or damaged 40 strategic bombers used to carry cruise and ballistic missile attacks on Ukraine's infrastructure, possibly sidelining one-third of Russia's fleet.

Snarky memes started pouring onto the messaging app Telegram, ridiculing Vladimir Putin and his hapless air defense system. "The Russian army is now the second best in Europe," crowed one popular post. Another aimed its dart at President Donald Trump, proclaiming, "You said we had no cards, but we had the wild card."

This daring act of sabotage, 18 months in the planning, amounts to far more than a desperately needed morale boost for Ukrainians following Trump's effective defection to Putin's side.

Operation Spiderweb not only illustrated the brilliance of Ukraine's technological skills and the flaws of the Russian military, but it put the lie to Trump's claim that Russia is the war's inevitable winner (no wonder the president, as of Tuesday, has barely mentioned this stunning attack, and claimed he knew nothing beforehand).

The daring maneuver also demonstrates to the world how the use of drones and unmanned systems — with Ukraine now the global leader through its innovation and battlefield use — have become the new face of modern war.

A year ago, on my last visit to Ukraine, there was a shortage of artillery shells on the eastern front line after the GOP-led U.S. Congress cut military aid for six months. I watched determined soldiers fashion a few homemade shells using 3D printers and scrap metal filled with salvaged and melted explosive material pried from tank mines.

Such units turned, in desperation, to inexpensive first-person view (FPV) drones for surveillance and attack.

Starting with common, cheap Chinese Mavic drones, of the kind that Americans use for weddings and on vacation, frontline units ordered drones or parts on Amazon, or were gifted them by friends, family, and civilian volunteer organizations.

One year later, 80% of frontline "kills" of Russian soldiers and material come from drones carrying varying amounts of explosives and traveling increasingly long distances.

However, Ukrainians remain woefully short of air defenses that can repel cruise and ballistic missiles, especially given the failure of the U.S. and Europe to deliver the U.S. Patriot systems and interceptors that had been promised.

Ukraine begged former President Joe Biden and German leaders to no avail to provide long range missiles that could hit distant Russian aerodromes and eliminate strategic bombers at the source.

Exploiting this vulnerability, Putin has increased the number of strategic missiles aimed at civilian infrastructure, especially energy systems.

That is what makes Operation Spiderweb such a breathtaking combination of chutzpah and expertise.

Using 117 FPV drones, costing around $2,000 each, the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) claims to have wiped out $7 billion worth of strategic aircraft — a stunning cost-to-benefit ratio. Moreover, Russia no longer has the technology to make such planes, so they can't be replaced.

"Not everything can be revealed, but these are Ukrainian actions that will undoubtedly be in history books," President Volodymyr Zelenskyy noted.

Russian morale also took a hit, as military bloggers bemoaned the careless lack of security and underestimation of Ukrainian secret services.

Although all details are not yet confirmed, the SBU said the drones were smuggled into Russia, then hidden in the roofs of model vacation cabins, which were trucked on platforms to locations near the air bases by unwitting Russian drivers.

Then the roofs of the vacation homes retracted simultaneously by the four major air bases, releasing drones programmed to hit the fuel tanks of the planes, ensuring they would explode. The batteries of the drones were kept charged by putting solar panels on the roofs of the cabins, just above the hidden drones.

This sabotage attack can't be considered a total game changer since the drones never could have traveled thousands of miles inside Russia without the brilliant truck scheme.

However, as I was told by Sergii Kuzan, head of the Ukrainian Center for Security and Cooperation, Operation Spiderweb does reflect a "revolution in warfare because drones can replace the function of every type of equipment we now use for war, on sea, air and land." And, they can be manufactured for a fraction of the cost of the weapon and manpower they can destroy.

Moreover, Operation Spiderweb, conducted the day before the second round of Trump-driven "peace talks" between Russian and Ukrainian teams, has exposed the harsh truth about trying to woo Moscow toward peace by offering concession after concession up front.

Russia has not budged one inch from its demand for total capitulation and subservience from Kiev, and has only increased its missile barrage on Ukrainian cities. Yet Trump refuses to carry out his threat to impose new sanctions if Putin rejects a ceasefire.

Ukraine demonstrated clearly on Sunday that it won't play the Kremlin's cynical game. It will continue to show up for the useless talks to appease Trump, but it will pressure Moscow though Trump does not.

The day after Spiderweb, the SBU did a follow-up, conducting a third explosive hit on Putin's favorite Kerch Bridge, which links Crimea to the Russian mainland, hitting underwater supports.

These attacks landed severe psychological blows to Russia that Putin won't be able to shield the public from. And as I saw firsthand, Operation Spiderweb will bolster the will of hard-pressed Ukrainians to continue their existential fight.

Maria Savianenko, one of the Ukrainians traveling with me on Sunday, gave voice to those feelings: "Drones have changed the war, changed everything. A country without ships, drove out the Russian fleet with drones, and without planes, we destroyed their planes. We can't stop now because it is the only chance in our history to beat the Russians back."

When she attended the memorial service Wednesday for a friend killed in direct combat on the front, she said that she would consider that every plane destroyed by Operation Spiderweb was "done in his name."

(COMMENT, BELOW)

Trudy Rubin
Philadelphia Inquirer
(TNS)

Previously:

06/05/24: US, allies must stop playing 'Patriot games' with Ukraine

05/15/24: The biggest story last week was not Stormy Daniels or campus protests

11/20/23: Documentary sheds light on Putin's mass murder in Ukraine

11/16/23: Even Tlaib should know better

9/22/23: Russia's kidnapping of Ukrainian children under the spotlight at United Nations

9/22/23: Biden should resolve the blockage of visas for Iraqis and Afghans who helped our troops

9/11/23: Even on vacation, there's no escaping Putin's murderous intentions

08/18/23: With new weapons slow to arrive from NATO allies, Ukraine surprises Putin with sea drones

08/09/23: Lessons from a military funeral in Ukraine

07/28/23: As Russian missiles again rain down on Odesa, Putin sneers at the UN and NATO allies

07/24/23: Putin is playing a game of food blackmail. The West can't let him win

07/19/23: Can Ukraine win the war against Russia? I'm traveling there to find out

07/17/23: From hell to Harvard: One Ukrainian's escape and how you can help fulfill her dreams

07/11/23: At the NATO summit in Vilnius: Will Biden seize or squander the chance to end Putin's war on Ukraine?

04/21/23: The Pentagon documents leak will embolden Putin as he tries to outlast Ukraine

03/22/23: The Russian attack on a U.S. MQ-9 Reaper drone underlines why we must help Ukraine win

03/15/23: Will the White House have the courage to propel a Ukrainian victory this year?

02/21/23: On the first anniversary of Putin's invasion, Ukraine fights on for its independence and for the security of the West

02/17/23: A former Pakistani leader's death, and his wise peace plan that failed

02/09/23: Earthquakes killed nearly 12,000 people this week. Three men are partly to blame

01/24/23: As Russia murders civilians in Dnipro, why won't NATO send weapons that could end the war?

12/28/22: What Zelensky worried about when he addressed a cheering Congress

12/13/22: The US-China conflict to watch is the Chip War --- which centers on Taiwan

09/14/22: Ukraine scores sudden breakthrough that should energize Western support

09/09/22: Queen Elizabeth's death deprives Britain and the world of a rock of stability

09/08/22: After Gorbachev's death, Putin wants the world to know he is the 'anti-Gorbi'

08/26/22: 6 months after Russia's war vs. Ukraine began, the West still won't give Kiev the weapons to win

08/15/22: Ukraine's civilian volunteers work to give aid and rebuild, even as Russia continues to bomb them

08/08/22: A trip near the front lines finds Ukrainian troops ready for a battle that could decide the war

06/13/22: The critical battles for Ukraine and for America are being fought right here, right now

05/02/22: Save Odesa to save the world from hunger and high food prices

05/02/22: Bloodless Ukrainian War, not utopian fantasy says one-time largest foreign investor in Russia

04/11/22: The only way to end Putin's war crimes

03/28/22: Don't let Putin's nuclear and chemical threats stop us from giving Ukraine what it needs

03/24/22: An elegy for Mariupol, where I walked six weeks ago. Now razed by Russian bombs

03/18/22: Zelensky's brilliant speech should impel Biden and Congress to protect Ukrainian skies

03/11/22: Mariupol's bombed maternity hospital exemplifies why NATO should protect Ukraine's skies

03/10/22: No 'no-fly zone'? Then NATO must find another way to protect Ukraine's skies

03/07/22: The third World War has already started in Ukraine. Europe and the US should wake up

03/04/22:Putin must be stopped from turning Kiev into Aleppo

03/02/22:Why is Belarus helping Russia invade Ukraine? An explainer on the latest in the conflict

02/25/22: What the UN should finally do about Russia

02/24/22: Why Putin's Ukraine aggression will change the world --- an explainer on how we got here

02/10/22: Ukrainian civilians train for war with cardboard guns: 'We are scared but we are ready

01/13/22:Putin wants to reestablish the Russian empire. Can NATO stop him without war?

12/10/21: Can Biden and NATO prevent Putin from invading Ukraine? Summit puts it to the test

12/02/21: Boris Johnson stirs up new Irish Troubles for his own personal political gains

11/22/21: Xi Jinping thinks America is on the rocks. Is he correct?

08/18/21: President Biden, get our Afghan allies on evacuation planes

08/18/21:The horror of Afghan women abandoned by Biden's troop pullout

08/09/21:China is pushing a big COVID-19 lie that makes a new pandemic harder to prevent

05/27/21: Punish Belarus leader for Ryanair hijacking before air piracy becomes dictators' new tool

04/14/21: Can Beethoven temper the political tensions between US and China?

06/01/20: US must stand with Hong Kong against Beijing's efforts to crush its freedoms

05/20/20: COVID-19 offers a chance to halt Iran's hostage diplomacy

05/21/14: Newscycle spurs visit to country my family fled

04/21/14: Blind to Putin's strategy?

12/24/13: Obama's Syrian indifference has led to more death and destruction. Meet some real heroes

12/13/13: Where liberals have come to love the military

12/09/13: The China strategy

11/05/13: Return to Iraq is worth a close look

10/01/13: Obama's call to Iran: Who was really on the line?

09/11/13: How Obama got Syria so wrong

07/24/13: It's time for Obama to tell Putin 'nyet'

05/15/13: What Russia gave Kerry on Syria --- very little


Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial-board member for the Philadelphia Inquirer.