Russia is using its full conventional arsenal against Ukraine - including modern guided rockets, such as this that fell in Ukraine-controlled Pokrovsk, Donetsk region, damaging a house.
The nose canards match a guided rocket for Russia's "Tornado-S" MLRS.
One of the rocket's fragments has a 9Б706 (9B706) marking - which suggests it is a control unit installed in this type of rocket. newstula.ru/fn_654486.html
There is evidence that Russia is operating Tornado-S MLRS in the Donbas.
This MLRS convoy, seen in Russia close to Donbas shortly before the war, is likely from the Southern Military District's 439th Brigade, which operates Tornado-S
The characteristic remains also suggest that the rocket was a cluster munition. Using these in populated areas is a potential war crime due to their indiscriminate nature.
Our colleagues at @bellingcat track cluster munition use in civilian areas:
The Russian Air Force has lost a Su-25SM ground attack jet, photo by Ukrainian journalist Andriy Tsaplienko shows.
The plane was quickly purged from Russian air spotter databases, but an archived photo clearly shows a Su-25SM with the same registration number as on the remains.
According to archived database data, this plane was part of the 18th Close Air Support Air Regiment, based in Chernigovka in the Russian Far East.
Jets from this regiment were reportedly flown to Belarus as part of "Allied Resolve-2022" exercise
As Russia reverts to the familiar tactics of area bombings, non-military objects are hit across Ukraine - like a hospital in Kharkiv, an apartment block in Borodyanka, and even Kyiv's Babyn Yar, the area of Nazi shootings of Jews.
It also killed five people, including, per @den_kazansky, a family that was just passing by.
We geolocated the attack area next to the Kyiv TV tower, that, per @mod_russia, was the target of the strike.
Per this map, the missile hit closest to the area where Kyiv's Jews were stripped of their clothes before being led to the ravines for execution. kby.kiev.ua/komitet/ua/res…
Incidentally, investigations have shown that army catering has been handled for years by "Putin's chef" Evgeny Prigozhin, and apparently the situation has improved little since the oligarch lost those contracts a few years ago.
More and more evidence is emerging that the Russian forces rely on civilian radios and mobile phones for their communications. Our source in one invading unit confirms this.
This photograph is said to show a civilian radio captured by Ukrainians.
The Mykolaiv regional administration even reported that the Russians resort to signal flares to coordinate their advances, but we have been unable to independently confirm this.
Some Russian troops do carry military radios, like an airborne troops convoy destroyed NW of Kyiv.
The reliance on civilian means of communication means even you can eavesdrop on Russian communications.
This morning, the Russian forces attempted incursions into Kharkiv and Irpin SW of Kyiv using lighter vehicles like Tigr and Typhoon-K armored cars and BMD light armored vehicles
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In a curious "exchange", BMDs in Irpin fired at an Afghanistan veteran memorial in Irpin, probably mistaking a BRDM atop of it for an enemy vehicle