We gained exclusive access to Ukrainian cyberwarfare specialists and front line intelligence officers for our new @thetimes documentary, The Starlink Hack That Fooled Russian Forces... 1/
Tens of thousands of Starlink satellite receivers have been smuggled into Russia via Central Asia, Turkey and the Middle East. Russian soldiers were able to use them to increase the range of their attack drones, as well as make them more accurate and difficult to jam... 2/
When @elonmusk and @SpaceX agreed to introduce a registration requirement for any Starlink on Ukrainian territory, the Russians were suddenly blinded. Desperate soldiers sought Ukrainians willing to register their Starlinks for cash. @256CyberAssault spotted an opportunity. 3/
Acting like IT support, they used an AI chatbot to gather data from the Russians in stages, starting with innocuous requests for serial numbers and culminating in a request for the Starlink’s GPS co-ordinates. 4/
The co-ordinates revealed Russian headquarters, command posts and drone pilot positions. The hackers turned them over to Ukraine’s Ministry of Defence, or gave them directly to Ukrainian brigades they knew were fighting near by... 5/
One such brigade was 128th Heavy Mechanised Brigade, which is fighting Russian forces in the village of Plavni. When we visited, the pace of attacks was relentless, with new intelligence coming in daily and the brigade’s drone teams striking target after target... 6/
Russian strikes on the brigade's lines have fallen 45 per cent thanks to the shutdown of @Starlink terminals and strikes enabled by obtaining co-ordinates of Russian positions, said Yaro, an intel officer for the 128th. 7/ You can watch the full film here:
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In Kyiv for @thetimes, I spoke to a Russian drone operator who walked six miles through a battlefield to defect to Ukraine.
Not just any soldier — a member of Russia’s elite Rubicon drone unit. For weeks, he had been secretly talking to Ukrainian intelligence. 🧵 1/
Novosibirsk estate agent Miroslav Simonov says he was detained in Moscow aged 22 for not fulfilling his national service. He was promised a logistics posting if he signed a contract. Instead, he says he was sent to a combat unit and eventually deployed to occupied Ukraine. 2/
He describes brutal conditions in regular Russian units:
Training “for show”. Unsanitary camps. Soldiers tortured for complaining. “There were two kinds of soldiers,” he told me. “The condemned men and the patriotic dogs.” 3/
I spent the week with Ukraine's "Search and Destroy" group as they pulled off an incredible victory against the odds at Kupiansk, embarrassing President Putin. Below are extracts from my dispatch, which you can read in full in @thetimes. 1/
The colonel looked at his command screen to see a Russian soldier slide across a frozen stretch of water, then fall through the ice. As the infantryman clambered out, the drone hovering above him dropped a grenade. 2/
A junior officer cycled through drone feeds, each showing Russian infantrymen dead or dying, bright red pools on snow-white Ukrainian ground. “That’s enough,” Colonel Serhiy Sidorin said with a grimace. 3/
EXCLUSIVE: Ukraine’s 1st Army Corps has encircled hundreds of Russian troops in three pockets after they broke through Ukrainian lines around the town of Pokrovsk, and are methodically wiping them out. Extracts from today’s report in @thetimes below: 1/
Inside the underground headquarters of Ukraine’s 1st Azov Army Corps, its chief of staff rolls up secret battle plans from the table, then gestures to a large screen with a digital map that details the fight for Pokrovsk in real time. 2/
“Here, here and here we cut them off, they are tactically encircled,” says Lieutenant Colonel “Lemko”, gesturing to a point where the Russians broke through to the town’s northeast last month. His map shows the Russian infantry cut off in three pockets by Ukrainian forces… 3/
Putin installed his cousin as deputy defence minister and her husband as energy minister because he no longer trusts Russian officials to prosecute his war on Ukraine, according to an intelligence assessment shared with me for @thetimes…. 1
The assessment concludes a 21-page dossier on Anna Tsivileva (née Putina) authored by Ukraine’s military intelligence service, HUR, which routinely compiles research into top enemy officials in order to inform military plans... 2/
The authors believe she reports corruption and disloyalty directly to Putin. Although he consolidated power through a corrupt system to distribute wealth among elites in the security services, he has realised the level of graft is inimical to winning the war, the dossier says. 3/
Over three days I embedded for @thetimes with a Ukrainian female fighting force shooting Russian drones over Kyiv and training to meet Putin's summer offensive head on. 1/6
We saw how Russia's war has turned suburban mums into warriors. These women have so much to lose, so I wanted to understand what motivates them to risk their lives. 2/6
At a time when the US is pulling women back from combat, Ukraine wants more ready to join units on the frontlines. So what really drives these women soldiers, what makes them ready to kill and be killed? 3/6
On assignment for @thetimes in Donbas, I met recon teams from Ukraine’s Black Forest Brigade, who call in Storm Shadow and HIMARS strikes deep behind enemy lines. Although the Russians are still driving forward here, the brigade is making them pay a heavy price… 1/
Lt Kostyantin is a Black Forest platoon commander, using UK and Ukrainian unmanned aircraft to hunt targets. On discovery, they pass the target co-ordinates back to other units equipped with UK and US long-range missiles launched by jets or multiple launch rocket systems. 2/
His teams are equipped with Tekever AR3 reconnaissance drones, supplied by Britain, which are catapulted into the air for take-off and can stay in the sky for up to 16 hours. Often their search areas are determined by the provision of western intelligence. 3/