Russia Says It Is 'Studying' ATACMS' Navigation Systems

russia says it is 'studying' atacms' navigation systems

U.S. Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) and South Korea's missile system firing Hyunmu-2 firing a missile on July 29, 2017 in East Coast, South Korea. Russia is examining fragments of a U.S.-made long-range ATACMS missile operated by Ukrainian forces, Russian state media reported on Monday.

Russia is examining fragments of a U.S.-made long-range missile operated by Ukrainian forces, Moscow state media reported on Monday, shortly after it said a lethal ATACMS strike killed four people in western Crimea.

Russian state news agency, RIA Novosti, published footage on Monday of what it said was the first clip showing "the internal structure" of an ATACMS missile, also known as the Army Tactical Missile System. Newsweek could not independently verify the video.

"Russian specialists are studying the guidance and flight correction system of the American operational-tactical missile," the Kremlin-backed news agency reported. The report was then shared elsewhere by Russian state media.

Newsweek has reached out to the Russian Defense Ministry and the Ukrainian military for comment.

ATACMS are ground-launched missiles with a range of around 200 miles, provided by the United States to Ukraine for use against high-value Russian targets far behind the front lines in mainland Ukraine and on the annexed Crimean peninsula.

Kyiv has received several batches of ATACMS, including shorter-range cluster variants. Since Ukraine debuted its missiles last year, the Washington-donated weapons have been credited with several successful strikes on Russian bases and assets.

However, Kyiv is only permitted to use ATACMS against occupied or annexed areas, not territory internationally recognized as part of Russia. Crimea, which Moscow annexed from Ukraine in 2014, is considered a legitimate target for long-range, Western-supplied weapons by Kyiv's backers.

Russian authorities said that Ukrainian ATACMS strikes on Sevastopol, a key base for its Black Sea Fleet on the western edge of Moscow-controlled Crimea, at around midday local time on June 23 had killed four people, including two children, and injured more than 150 others.

Four cluster-variant ATACMS missiles were shot down by air defenses around the city, Russia's Defense Ministry said, and a fifth missile "deviated from the flight path and detonated the warhead in the air over the city territory."

Cluster munitions, often dubbed bomblets, fell toward the city, Moscow said.

Footage widely circulated online appeared to show Sevastopol beachgoers fleeing from the Uchkuyevka area of the coastline.

Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, said in a post to X on June 24 that Crimea was a "a large military camp and warehouse, with hundreds of direct military targets, which the Russians are cynically trying to hide and cover up with their own civilians.

"There are not and cannot be any 'beaches,' 'tourist zones' and other fictitious signs of 'peaceful life'" on the peninsula, he said.

Russia pointed the finger at the U.S. for the strikes, saying "responsibility for the deliberate missile attack on the civilians of Sevastopol lies primarily with Washington." A U.S. State Department spokesperson said Moscow's remarks were "ridiculous" and "hyperbolic."

Moscow's Defense Ministry separately claimed that "all flight missions for the American ATACMS operational-tactical missiles are entered by American specialists based on their own U.S. satellite intelligence data."

A spokesperson for the Pentagon said Kyiv "makes its own targeting decisions and conducts its own military operations."

An unnamed U.S. official said Ukraine was not zeroing in on civilians, but that an ATACMS missile appeared to be targeting a Russian missile launcher before it was intercepted and exploded, Reuters reported.

Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told the media that "the U.S.' direct involvement in combat which resulted in Russian civilians dying cannot go without any repercussions."

Start your unlimited Newsweek trial

OTHER NEWS

49 minutes ago

Joe Biden “Needs To Step Aside,” Netflix Co-Founder Reed Hastings Says In Latest MegaDonor Blow To POTUS

51 minutes ago

Video: Homeowner makes a VERY grisly discovery under her laundry room floor after a flood - as shock find forces her to phone the POLICE

53 minutes ago

This may end up the most damaging SCOTUS decision of the term. And it wasn't immunity.

53 minutes ago

Recordings Are Ruining Lives On The July 3 General Hospital

53 minutes ago

Online bookseller Booktopia collapses into voluntary administration

53 minutes ago

‘It’s like living in an open sewer’: How Britain’s prettiest village became its smelliest

53 minutes ago

Over a million South Koreans sign petition to impeach president Yoon Suk Yeol

53 minutes ago

China’s imports of commodities at all-time highs and likely to stay that way, JPM says

53 minutes ago

Is your antivirus "good enough"? New survey shows more and more are paying for protection — but many of us just don't seem to care

53 minutes ago

Payroll data shows 'concerning' concentrated job gains, says ADP's Nela Richardson

53 minutes ago

Jim Lebenthal expects a September Fed cut, but says he's nervous about the economy

53 minutes ago

This Solar Charger Promises to Let You Charge Your EV Anywhere

56 minutes ago

Records show at least 8 groups applied for permits to protest at DNC

58 minutes ago

Chelsea Wine store owner looks dapper in court appearance for allegedly stealing vintages from own shop

59 minutes ago

Delta flight diverts from Detroit to New York after passengers were served spoiled food

59 minutes ago

Fort Worth Botanic Garden celebrates turning 90 this year

59 minutes ago

Victoria and David Beckham re-wear purple wedding outfits to mark 25th anniversary

59 minutes ago

Red Wings sign 2-time Cup winner Vladimir Tarasenko to 2-year deal

59 minutes ago

Should Cowboys' Dak Prescott be the Highest-Paid QB?

59 minutes ago

Steven Van Zandt reflects on leaving Springsteen's E Street Band just before their breakthrough

59 minutes ago

Red Wings sign scorer Vladimir Tarasenko to two-year contract

59 minutes ago

Flyers re-sign young forward to a two-year contract

59 minutes ago

4-star ATH Zymear Smith decommits from Alabama

59 minutes ago

Look: RB Joe Mixon dons Texans' new uniform for the first time

59 minutes ago

NFL News: CeeDee Lamb is ready to leave Dallas Cowboys

59 minutes ago

€100m Euro 2024 star on Liverpool radar as Anfield goalkeeper uncertainty grows

59 minutes ago

This 1920s Palm Beach Home Is Full of Old-World Romance—but It's Far From Stuffy

59 minutes ago

C$ climbs to 8-day high as U.S. data pressures greenback

59 minutes ago

Zelenskiy Laughs Off Question About Biden's Age

59 minutes ago

‘Confident’ Maple Leaf Anthony Stolarz vows to support, but push, Joseph Woll

59 minutes ago

Chicago Bears let Caleb Williams face unnecessary risk this offseason, per NFL insider

59 minutes ago

Rutgers Football international prospect Jack Scullion

59 minutes ago

Pre-Hispanic Ball Court and Curious Circular Structure Discovered

59 minutes ago

Former NFL All-Pro makes bold prediction about Steelers QB Russell Wilson

1 hour ago

Winnipeg residents voice concerns over safety due to homeless encampments

1 hour ago

Want to help plan large Kelowna waterfront park?

1 hour ago

S&P 500, Nasdaq post record closing highs as data stokes hope for rate cut

1 hour ago

ATM cash withdrawals expected to reach £235million as voters go to polls

1 hour ago

‘Focused’ Toney ready to play his part as England prepare for Swiss

1 hour ago

Nvidia is starting to act like its own asset class