Russia says it will repair warplanes damaged by Ukraine’s drones

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FILE PHOTO: A satellite view shows military aircraft, some sitting destroyed, at the Belaya air base, near Stepnoy, Irkutsk region, Russia, June 4, 2025, after Ukraine launched a drone attack, dubbed \"Operation Spider's Web\", targeting Russian strategic bombers during Russia's ongoing invasion of Ukraine. 2025 Planet Labs PBC/Handout via REUTERS    THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY. MANDATORY CREDIT/File Photo

A satellite view shows military aircraft, some sitting destroyed, at the Belaya air base in Russia.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Russian warplanes were damaged but not destroyed in a June 1 attack by Ukraine, and they will be restored, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov has said.

Ukrainian strikes targeted airfields

in Siberia and the far north where Russia houses heavy bombers that form part of its strategic nuclear forces.

The United States assesses that up to 20 warplanes were hit and around 10 were destroyed, a figure that is about

half the number estimated

by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

But Mr Ryabkov, who oversees arms control diplomacy, told state news agency Tass: “The equipment in question, as was also stated by representatives of the Ministry of Defence, was not destroyed but damaged. It will be restored.”

It was not immediately clear how swiftly Russia could repair or replace the damaged aircraft – if at all – given the complexity of the technology, the age of some of the Soviet-era planes, and Western sanctions that restrict Russian imports of sensitive components.

Commercial satellite imagery taken after the Ukrainian drone attack shows what experts told Reuters appear to be damaged Russian Tu-95 strategic bombers and Tu-22 Backfire long-range bombers that Russia has used to launch missile strikes against Ukraine.

Russian President Vladimir Putin told US President Donald Trump in a telephone conversation on June 4 that Moscow

would have to respond

to the attacks.

Russia has an estimated fleet of 67 strategic bombers, including 52 Tu-95s, known as Bear-H by Nato, and 15 Tu-160s, known as Blackjacks, of which about 58 are thought to be deployed, according to the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.

In addition, it has 289 non-strategic fighters and bombers, including Tu-22s, Su-24s, Su-34s and MiG-31s, according to the Bulletin.

Russia has given no detail about which aircraft were damaged but said that Ukraine targeted five airbases. REUTERS

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