War in Ukraine

Chronicles of Ukraine’s Fight and Resistance

November 25 Massive Strike on Ukraine

November 25 Massive Strike on Ukraine

The November 25 massive strike on Ukraine is still ongoing, but its main phase is most likely over. The enemy used the entire arsenal of aerial weapons — from Shaheds to Kinzhals. Everything flew at the capital. At this moment, we confirm several hits on residential buildings. Unfortunately, two people have already died in a high-rise building in Rusanivka. Kyiv residents and those who know the city well understand that Rusanivka is a place where there are no military or infrastructure facilities whatsoever. In other words, there’s simply nothing to attack there except residential buildings, but that’s exactly where it hit last night.

The drones flew very low, below the rooftops of high-rise buildings — this is a personal observation, not a retelling of what the media writes. After the air defense finishes its work, there will be more detailed information about how much and what flew, but at this moment we can only say that drones, cruise missiles, ballistics, and aeroballistics flew at Kyiv. This set always flies when the bald bastard from Kremlin is especially nervous or freaking out.

Map of November 25 Massive Strike on Ukraine
Map of November 25 Massive Strike on Ukraine

However, no matter how the raid on Ukraine ends, it hasn’t gone unanswered. Our good birds were actively cheering up the enemy in temporarily occupied Crimea, Krasnodar region, and Rostov region. So far, only fragments of information are available about where it flew and where it was “hot.”

Air Force Reports the Scale

As of 10:00 AM, the enemy’s air attack is almost completely over. Only individual drones are still recorded, and they no longer pose any particular danger. Well, the entire attack, in which the enemy invested quite significant means, looks like this according to Air Force data:

Air Force data for November 25
Air Force data for November 25

Statistics (intercepted/launched):

– 438/464 strike UAVs type Shahed
– 1/4 aeroballistic missiles Kh-47M2 Kinzhal
– 5/8 cruise missiles Kalibr
– 3/3 ballistic missiles Iskander-M/KN-23
– 5/7 cruise missiles Iskander-K

As you can see, the enemy deployed a significant number of strike weapons, but the set listed in these statistics completely lacks air-launched cruise missiles. Let’s recall that although ballistics and aeroballistics have high kinetic impact energy, air-launched cruise missiles like the Kh-101 carry the most massive warheads — up to one ton. Some specimens have cluster warheads. Therefore, they represent no less, and perhaps even more dangerous ammunition than the missiles mentioned above. This is despite the fact that our air defense systems intercept cruise missiles over most of Ukraine’s territory, and this happens with much greater efficiency than intercepting ballistics or aeroballistics.

Why No Heavy Cruise Missiles?

One can assume that the absence of air-launched cruise missiles in the set of strike weapons used that night indicates that the old judoka had his roof and bottom blown off simultaneously. If it were possible, heavy Kh-101 missiles would undoubtedly have been added to this set, but here’s the nuance. Now the enemy is demonstrating standard tactics for using heavy bombers like the Tu-95. Their main base became the Ukrainka airbase in the Far East, and this isn’t from the good life. After the successful attack on heavy aviation bases located in the European part of the chicken coop, and especially on the Engels-2 airbase, he simply had to remove the rather few heavy bombers several thousand kilometers beyond the Urals.

The Bomber Shuffle Game

During strike preparation, several aircraft are redeployed to the Engels-2 airbase, which has equipment for equipping and loading cruise missiles onto carriers. But all this happens in the shortest possible time so that equipped aircraft don’t sit idle at this airfield. The relative proximity to Ukraine’s border makes them extremely vulnerable. Therefore, already equipped aircraft redeploy to the Olenya airbase in Murmansk region. There they remain awaiting the command to launch missiles. Having received it, they return to the skies of Saratov or Volgograd regions. From there, they launch missiles at Ukraine and again fly off to Ukrainka airbase to avoid getting hit. At each phase of the flight from Ukrainka or back, Il-78 air tankers support bombers for in-flight refueling.

Thus, the Tu-95 cannot be deployed to combat readiness in a few hours, but the rest of the carriers used that night can be. That’s exactly why it flew in the night literally a few hours after receiving the order. The order was received from pootin, who’s freaking out over his “peace plan” transmitted to Trump.

Pootin’s Tantrum Over Trump

The old senile bastard reflexes every time something collapses in his “cunning” plans. But probably many Ukrainians have seen or personally heard Khuilo’s* reflexes. I’ll note that the number of our dead is growing, and in the second half of the day, the final picture in this regard will become known. And I’ll remind you that the losses in Ternopil, initially stated as up to 11 people killed, eventually tripled. Something similar will happen in Kyiv after this November 25 massive strike.

*Khuilo – the most popular nickname for Russian dictator V. Putin. First used during the 2014 invasion, and since 2022 most Ukrainians call him only that. See more on Wikipedia.

Rate this post
Support us by sharing — your click makes a difference.

Related posts:

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

War in Ukraine 2014-2025