Russia’s ferocious glide-bomb campaign
For now, Ukraine has no answer to it
FOR THE past year, Russia has been stepping up its use of glide bombs. In recent months both the size of the bombs and the rate at which they are launched have increased sharply. So far they have mainly been used against Ukrainian troops on the front line. They demonstrated their effectiveness in February by bringing to an end Ukraine’s stubborn defence of Avdiivka, a coking town in the east. But they are now also being used to add a new dimension to Russia’s strategic air campaign, supplementing its limited supply of air-launched cruise missiles.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Europe section of the print edition under the headline “Cheap and nasty”
Europe April 13th 2024
More from Europe
Will a new “pact” of ten laws help Europe ease its migrant woes?
It will require an extraordinary number of institutions to work together
Amid the bombs, Ukrainians rediscover the beach
Odessa gives itself permission to tan again
Who was behind the arson attacks on railways before the Olympics?
With thousands stranded, suspicion falls on Russia or Iran
Italian right-wingers have renamed Milan’s airport after Silvio Berlusconi
A finger in the eye of those who detested the late populist leader
European countries are banding together on missile defence
The Ukraine war shows how dangerously few interceptors they have
Peter Magyar is reinvigorating Hungary’s struggling opposition
Attacking Viktor Orban’s corruption wins votes for a political newcomer