Insane moment Ukraine obliterates Russian armour as Putin loses ‘1,400 troops in one day

An aerial black and white image of a Russian tank with missile dropping onto it

The footage shows the power of relatively cheap drones against high tech conventional equipment. (Image: X: @DefenceU)

Drone footage posted online by shows the moment a Russian artillery weapon is destroyed by a Ukrainian drone.

The footage captured by the 412th UAS Regiment shows a missile falling on the Russian self-propelled cannon from above on a day which saw Putin’s forces lose a further 1400 soldiers.

The estimated 1,430 soldiers lost brings the total killed, wounded or missing to 803,100.

Intelligence analysis from the Ministry of Defence (MOD) shows that has been losing an average of 1,200 casualties for nearly a year as a desperate Kremlin runs through manpower at an astonishing rate in its pursuits to gain as much territory as possible before the inauguration of .

The president-elect has vowed to end the war on his first day in office. While the method remains unclear, many commentators believe that the two sides are working towards holding the strongest hand possible at any future negotiation.

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Earlier this week, President claimed had suffered almost 40,000 casualties in the region of Kursk since August, when staged an audacious offensive to capture the Russian territory.

James Black, assistant director of the Defence and Security research group at RAND Europe, has pointed out the danger of tolerating such significant casualties for such a long period, highlighting the swift downfall of Bashar Al-Assad in Syria as a case in point.

Mr Black said: “This is a highly significant year and both sides as trying to maximise their negotiating position and leverage ahead of any potential brokered or encouraged negotiations or even just a ceasefire.

“On the one hand, the Ukrainians are struggling militarily; they are pretty heavily stretched in the east of , where has been using superior numbers and their general greater weight of equipment and firepower to grind down Ukrainian positions in particularly in Donetsk and Luhansk.

“At the same time, is seeing its economy in an increasingly fragile position and is also seeing its stockpiles of military equipment starting to run out. So there is this kind of race between both sides to try and maximise their position.”

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UKRAINE KURSK

The Kursk region has seen bloody fighting in recent weeks as both sides launch offensives. (Image: Getty)

North Korean forces have recently bolstered the depleting Russian forces, with as many as 11,000 reportedly deployed to the area to aid Putin’s war effort.

Over 3,000 of these are believed to have already been killed or wounded after being deployed to ’s two main fronts in Kursk and Donetsk.

Mr Black added: “Clearly, the war has had a huge and horrific human toll on the Russian side.

“And obviously, many of the troops that have been sent in to fight for in have not done so terribly willingly – there are conscripts, or indeed, and some of them have come from prisons.

“We are starting to see the costs of the war adding up, and a vast proportion of the government spending in is going on the war and on the military more generally.

“This means less money for everything else, like public services, schools, hospitals and all the other ways that an authoritarian regime can keep people kind of broadly happy with.

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