The Daily - Inside Ukraine’s Drone Attacks on Russia
Episode Date: September 19, 2023As Ukraine’s counteroffensive grinds on, it’s increasingly turning to a secret drone program that is hitting targets deep inside Russian territory. At least three different Ukrainian-made drones h...ave been used in attacks inside Russia, including on Moscow, according to an analysis by The New York Times.Christiaan Triebert, a journalist on The Times’s Visual Investigations team, explains the origins of that program. We also speak to Serhiy Prytula, a former Ukrainian television host who is now a key force behind it.Guest: Christiaan Triebert, a journalist on The New York Times’s Visual Investigations team.Background reading: Officials in Ukraine rarely discuss attacks on targets inside Russia, including Moscow. But video evidence shows an increasing effort to launch long-range strikes inside the country.Moscow said Ukraine used drones to strike Novorossiysk, a Black Sea naval and shipping hub, and a port in occupied Crimea.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From The New York Times, I'm Sabrina Tavernisi, and this is The Daily.
As Ukraine's counteroffensive grinds on, it's increasingly turning to a secret drone program
that's hitting targets deep inside Russian territory.
Today, I talked to my colleague, Christian Trebert,
about the origins of that program,
and to Sergei Pritula,
a former television host in Ukraine,
who is now a key force behind it.
It's Tuesday, September 19th.
Christian, welcome to the show.
Thank you very much for having me, yeah.
So Christian, tell me about how you first came to investigate Ukraine's drone program.
So in early May, unverified footage appears to show an object flying toward the dome of the Kremlin before bursting into flames.
The whole world was in shock because these two drones attacked the Kremlin. Tonight, there's a mystery in Moscow.
The Kremlin accusing Ukraine of launching drone attacks,
aimed at killing President Vladimir Putin.
Ukraine denies it.
And it was kind of like unthinkable.
Of course, the Russian invasion, full-scale invasion of Ukraine
had been going on for over a year.
But suddenly like two drones exploding above the Kremlin was like,
wow, they're hitting where Putin is in the heart of Moscow.
It was wild.
Does Ukraine have drones that could reach the Kremlin five, six hundred miles from the Ukrainian border?
And it was surprising because Ukraine doesn't have equipment that does that.
Right. So it was sort of like, wait, is this someone inside Russia doing this, a Kremlin attack?
Who is this?
Exactly. And that was the big question, like, who is responsible for this? And how could they pull
of an attack like this? Because Moscow is hundreds of miles away from the Ukrainian border. So was
it someone inside Russia? Was it Ukraine with some secret weapon? So I'm part of a team called
Visual Investigations. And basically what we're doing is trying to find
any visual clue that we can find. Think of a satellite image, think of a TikTok video,
security camera footage, think of official statements, you name it,
to piece together what's going on. And we try to do that with this attack.
There was security camera footage of those drones, one exploding and one seemingly hitting one of the domes of the Kremlin.
So we're like, OK, it's kind of grainy footage, but frame by frame, can we measure the wingspan?
Can we match it to something that we have seen before?
And we couldn't really find a match.
It was a mystery.
It was an absolute mystery, yeah.
And so then what happened?
So as we're looking into this, me and my colleagues, right, I get a text message.
And it's like, hey, Christian, long time no speak.
Would you like to know more about these drones that hit the Kremlin?
Wait, who's the text message from?
It's a person that I've known for a long time, haven't been in contact for years.
Turns out to be this person that texted me
is in this homegrown, do-it-yourself, long-range drone program. Basically, a secret weapons program
that's building a drone that can hit the Kremlin. And I get a photo of a kind of like funky looking
drone. And I'm like, wow, this is interesting.
I gotta see what's this about.
So what did you do?
We started chatting.
We started talking mostly on Signal,
but it's very secretive, right?
Right.
And for that reason,
people are extremely careful to talk about it.
Right.
They don't want to become a target.
Exactly.
So it seemed the best way for me to better understand it
was to just go to Ukraine
to see some of these drones, to talk to the people involved in it in person.
So I go to Ukraine, I meet my source, and I try to meet as many people more, like one leads to
another. And what I start to understand is that it's just not one person
or one company or one government agency building one single drone. It's multiple entities within
the government, outside of the government, private companies that are all kind of racing to build a
drone that can hit the Kremlin, that can cover that long distance. And we're talking here
about very specific type of drone. On the one hand, it's long range, so it can really cover
those long distances, for example, from the Ukrainian border, hundreds of miles to the
Russian capital, Moscow. And secondly, these drones are one way and one use, meaning they take off,
they fly towards their target, and then they explode on
target. And that's it. That's the lifespan of the drone. So kamikaze. Exactly. And this is a pretty
novel technology. Ukraine wasn't known to have this. Very little countries around the world
actually are known to have this technology because it's pretty hard, right? You need to build something that flies for hundreds of miles and can then also carry a payload and needs to navigate through
air defenses, electronic warfare, you name it. And what did you learn about how Ukraine managed
to develop this technology that so few countries have? I mean, I don't think of Ukraine as,
you know,
cutting-edge military technology place.
So it all started in mid-October last year.
And that's when Russia started hitting Kiev and other Ukrainian cities with Kamikaze drones
that they had bought from Iran.
Today we woke up to the sound of explosions in Kiev
as the Russians launched a massive drone attack against this city
Kiev says fragments of this drone, shot down in southern Ukraine
have Iranian as well as Russian markings
These are the type of weapons that the US and other western nations allied with Ukraine
are not willing to give to Kiev
because they're worried that Kiev
will use those weapons sooner or later to indeed strike inside Russia with whatever the consequences
may be if you use Western weapons to strike Moscow, for example. Right. The Americans don't
want to give the Ukrainians stuff to make these things because that could prompt Ukrainians
actually striking the Kremlin and the Kremlin pushing the nuclear button.
Right. So because of that worry, because the West not willing to give those weapons to Ukraine,
Ukrainians were like, OK, we'll have to build them ourselves. So they got together,
basically anyone that has some idea of like, how do we build a drone and scramble together to build this capacity themselves. But it takes, of course, some time.
And they start repurposing reconnaissance drones that are not intended to explode or to fly and hit a target. And it seems like they're just trying to reach Moscow because here and there,
we see like posts on Telegram and Russian small villages and communities where they just find
a drone, which we identified
as being Ukrainian made in a forest.
I was being told by one of the people involved in a drone program, you know, like, you know,
sometimes we hit a tree or a power line.
So it doesn't really work or has the intended effect yet.
But then they also start asking publicly for money.
Volunteer front racers start saying, hey, you know, we want
to raise money for a long range striking capability for Ukraine. Okay, so it wasn't actually going
that well. They're starting to repurpose things. The things hit trees, not going very far. They
need money. And it reaches this kind of fundraising stage. Right. But slowly but surely, it seems they're stepping up their game.
The Ukrainians are actually reaching a point where they can reach Moscow. And that's when
the strike on the Kremlin happens.
Right. The strike that launched you on this reporting journey in the first place.
That's right. And it was very clear it wasn't a lucky shot because that
same month, multiple drones hit Moscow. And what are we talking about, Christian, in terms of
the numbers of these strikes? What does your reporting say? Well, where we saw like just
like a handful in late 2022, late last year, we have seen the amount of attacks double in the
past three months alone.
Wow.
So it's really increasing a lot.
Like I talked to one of these drone developers and he sent me a video.
And this video shows one of the drones currently under production.
And it has these very like significant sound, like it's sometimes called like a flowing lawnmower.
It's very, like, the kind of scary sound.
I get that video and signal with the comment, this is going to be the number one hit track in Moscow this fall.
Yeah, I mean, that sound, right? It is terrifying.
I mean, I've been in conflict zones where I've heard the sound of a drone.
I didn't know what it was immediately, but I learned over time.
And it's this sound that makes you feel like you are a tiny ant and there is a foot above you about to crush you.
Yeah, and I think it's a big
part of why Ukraine is launching these long range drones into Russia, because indeed that sound,
imagine being woken up in Moscow and you hear that sound and you're not sure what's going on.
And it happens again and again and again. And someone told me, let them feel the war. If you
support the occupation and the invasion of Ukraine, you should not be able to feel safe.
Okay, so it's scary.
It might be rattling people in Russia, but is it meaningful militarily?
Like, has this program claimed credit for significant damages or killed anyone in Russian territory?
So far, it hasn't killed anyone yet.
But I think we shouldn't underestimate
what those drones have already done and could do in the future. Because we have seen in Pskov,
which is pretty far away from Ukraine, at a military airbase, they were able to destroy
two very expensive cargo aircraft of the Russian Air Force and damage two others.
And besides hitting military targets like that, they've also
hit infrastructure like oil depots, oil storage sites. And this, of course, could affect the
Russian military logistically when they're sending new troops into Ukraine. But besides that,
Russia also needs to make decisions. Hey, are we going to place our fancy air defense unit in the suburbs of Moscow and replace it from
Ukraine? And these are strategic decisions Russia needs to make. And that could affect also the
battlefield in Ukraine, of course. Oh, interesting. So we have this fancy air defense stuff. It's in
Ukraine now. That's where we're fighting the war. But whoa, maybe we need to bring it to Russia,
which in itself would be an acknowledgement that, holy fighting the war. But, whoa, maybe we need to bring it to Russia,
which in itself would be an acknowledgement that,
holy moly, something's going wrong, right?
Absolutely. Because it is a hard choice for Russia probably to make, right?
Because are you going to defend your capital city,
including the House of the President,
and including a very important military airbase that clearly right now don't have full protection from these drones?
Or are you going to leave it in Ukraine?
What I understand from talking with sources in Ukraine's military intelligence agency,
this is indeed what they're hoping to do,
force Russia to make hard decisions where to deploy their air defenses.
And Christian, what's the big picture here?
Like, what do we think the ultimate effect is?
I mean, I remember our colleague Mike Schwartz,
you know, I called him when I first started seeing these drones
and I said, what's going on here?
I mean, is this important?
And he said, you know, one thing is for sure,
this war will not end until it reaches Moscow.
Is that what we're looking at here?
Time will tell.
But I think it's such a new thing to see that these Ukrainian drones are hitting Moscow,
hitting Moscow now repeatedly and hitting military targets repeatedly.
And with it seemingly only to increase, we may seem that there is more pressure on russian
civilians but also on russian elites that are still close to putin that will feel worried like
wait can it hit my house would they target my house and I think instilling that fear may create some change around people that are closer to Putin.
So you went to Ukraine.
You found this nascent drone program that was largely built from scratch.
And you watched as it became more and more effective.
And it's all based on this ingenuity and scrappiness that the Ukrainians have really
by dint of necessity, right? That's all they got. But of course, that same scrappiness comes with
its own risk. You know, when a program like this is cobbled together, totally ad hoc, using private
donations, individual donations, funneled through multiple channels, things can get pretty messy pretty quickly.
Like, you know, maybe the money stops flowing.
Maybe people get greedy.
There's a lot that can go wrong.
How do you see the program at this point?
Yeah, I think there's these different kind of groups that are all building different drones.
And they're even maybe competing a little
bit with each other sometime. There are two intelligence agencies in Ukraine. We know the
military intelligence agency launches their drone into Russia. But now the internal intelligence
agency also announced they have a long range drone. So the equivalent of the Ukrainian FBI
is developing its own program, even though the CIA already has one that hit Russia. of each other what they're doing. And production needs to be ramped up if they really want to
continuously hit Russia, because Russia is adapting. Each time one of those drones is down,
Russia can look at the technology inside and say, OK, we need to make maybe adaptations in
our air defense here and there. So each time Ukraine needs to step up their game and they need to basically have a larger capacity of these drones.
And the question will be, are they able to ramp up production like that?
And what is that a question of?
It's mostly, it seems, a question of money.
And right now, most of that money is coming from this hodgepodge group of volunteer fundraisers.
People that had little, if anything, to do with the military before the war started.
Social media influencers, comics.
People who had basically zero idea of what a kamikaze drone was.
And now they're at the center of this drone war.
After the break, we talked to one of the main figures behind Ukraine's emerging drone program. Hi.
Hi, all.
You hear me?
You see me?
Hi.
Everything fine, right?
Yes.
Okay.
So I'm Maria.
Nice to...
Hi, Maria.
Nice to meet you.
So he will be here like in a couple of minutes, like two minutes, okay?
He just went for for i don't know
some quick call okay so uh we are now in our main office where all the meetings all the like
fundraising activities are happening great with a beautiful map of ukraine uh a small tour of our
museum oh look at the museum yeah this is called Russian Corner. What is it?
Hi.
You know this guy, right?
Hi, guys.
Hi, nice to meet you.
So we go into the room in a couple of minutes and we'll start, okay?
Great, great.
Okay.
My name is Serhii Pertula.
I'm 42 years. I'm staying in Kyiv right now. And I'm an owner of one of the biggest charity foundations in Ukraine.
Your colleague Maria was just showing me around and she showed me a corner where there were some weapons collected there. Tell me about that. To show you a Russian corner, we call him.
That's like a little museum that we have here in our office.
That's the place with a lot of trophies
that our military bring to our foundation.
Trophies like downed pieces of Russian planes?
Pieces of Russian jets and Russian helicopters.
We have some devices from tanks
like to say thank you for your help, guys. Right. So that's your Russian corner.
Tell me what's on your T-shirt. I'm not sure that it's a good idea to answer your question
because that means some bad words. It's like we wish them to die.
Sergei, let me go back for a minute.
All right.
Where did you grow up?
Where was that?
What was it like?
I was born in Soviet Union.
I grew up in 1980s
in a small village
in the west part of Ukraine.
And that was time when we had no FM radio stations, when we had no YouTube, we had no Spotify or something like that. But
that was time when in Soviet Union was not popular to speak Ukrainian language,
because that's the language of village people. Right. It was seen as not a very prestigious thing,
fancy thing to be speaking Ukrainian, right?
Russian was the language everybody should be speaking in Ukraine.
If you wanted to build a good career, you need to speak Russian language.
So I'm thankful to my grandma and my grandpa
who teach me to read, to write, to count, and also to sing Ukrainian songs.
And after that, Soviet Union collapsed when I was 10 years old.
I started to be a student in 1997 in Ternopil,
and I started to work on radio station when I was 17 years old.
That was what I loved so much.
And after that, we had the Orange Revolution in Kyiv, in our capital.
Hundreds of thousands of pro-democracy Ukrainians
in the streets today protested against the results
of the presidential election.
And I moved to capital on this revolution.
This was time that I loved because many people
start to speak Ukrainian, you know?
And they start to love this city more and more.
Я український, знаєш? І я почав любити цю місто більше і більше.
І я знайшов тут кілька друзів,
і вони запитували мене працювати на Біг Тві Чанелі.
І я почав бути представником раннього шоу на Тві Шоу. What was that TV show called?
Wake Up.
Appropriately named.
Yep.
That was my time of rising when everybody in Ukraine started to know who I am
because I was those
guys who helped them to wake up every day and who told them that you are the best people
in the world and I wish you good luck.
But I was a TV presenter in dozens of different shows.
Like maybe you have also in the United States,
we call it Battle of Sexes.
Mm-hmm.
But not today.
The team, on stage!
I was one of the most popular Ukrainian-speaking TV hosts
in time when mostly managers on TV channels,
they were looking for Russian speaking presenters.
And that's why I created my own comedy show, Varyaty Show.
That was first 100% Ukrainian speaking comedy show in Ukraine. And my son, when he was maybe six years old,
he asked me once,
Dad, do you have some superpower?
Because he was a fan of Iron Man.
And I started to understand that now is a serious situation.
I don't want to disappoint my son.
And I said to my son, I have a superpower.
And I want to show you my superpower.
And I take my son with me to other city where I have my show with my colleagues.
And I told my son, look, what do you see?
He said, many people.
I said, yes, there's more than a thousand people.
And they all are
different. Men, women, young, old, rich, poor, with good education, without education. Some of them
drive cars. Some of them take bus to be on our show. But now I want to show you my superpower.
And I made some jokes and one thousand different people start to laughing in one moment. Но сейчас я хочу показать вам мою супер-силу. И я сделал несколько шуток, и тысячи разных людей начали смеяться в один момент.
И я просто подвел голову к моему сыну и спросил,
«И вы понимаете, какую супер-силу у меня есть?» and asked him, so do you understand which superpower I have? And he was so impressed that his father can do some magic
with thousands of different people.
I can do in one moment altogether.
But it was enough for me that I'm also a cool man like Iron Man.
Yep, yep, I try my best for my kids.
They are also a big motivation for me to do my job here in our foundation better every day
because I really miss them
and I want them to come back to Kyiv,
to our apartments,
where I feel myself absolutely broken
because I'm alone.
Where are they now, Sergey?
In a more safe place.
In a more safe place.
Yeah.
And also I understand that our foundation,
all work that we do here to support our military,
that it makes Russian secret services also not happy.
Right.
Interested in your location and your foundation, right?
Yes.
And that's why it's also about to protect my kids
because it's really dangerous for them to stay with me in Kiev.
Sergey, tell me about Russia and your relationship with Russia.
One year and a half ago, when Russia started a full-scale invasion, I shot a video
where I called to Russian TV stars, pop stars, Всем привет! Меня зовут Сергей Притула. Я звонил русским телевизорам, поп-старам, потому что я знаю десятки и десятки их сам.
Я сказал, пожалуйста, у вас миллионы и миллионы подписчиков в вашей социальной медиа.
У вас десятки миллионов людей из вашей ауди людей, которые любят вас и верят в вас.
И ваша армия убивает вашу аудиторию в Украине.
Люди, которые дают вам деньги, люди, которые аплодируют за вас на ваших шоу.
И если вы позвоните вашим людям, чтобы остановить эту инвазию.
Или заткнитесь.
this invasion.
Or shut up.
But no one said
stop this war.
And what did you
make of that?
Just forget about them and start to do
my job what I can do better.
I like to unite
people, to try to
organize people with some crowdfunding campaigns to raise money and to help destroy Russian troops.
And the motto of our foundation is Invincible When United.
So you set up a foundation.
Can you tell me about the moment that you started raising money for the drones?
Okay, so there was a situation in October last year.
My wife visited me in Kiev, and in the window of our apartments,
she just watched like Russian missile destroyed house
200 meters from our home.
And she was afraid, and we ran to the bomb shelter and I was sitting there
and I read in Facebook and in Twitter thousands and thousands Ukrainians they were in fury because
Russia attacked Ukraine with dozens and dozens missiles missiles. That was a terrible day in our history.
And people were so angry with this Russian attack.
What were you feeling?
That's a hard question because many different things you think during missiles destroyed your city.
Because one missile was exactly a few meters from kindergarten where my daughter was.
God bless, not at this moment, but she will never visit this kindergarten.
It's destroyed.
moment but she will never visit this kindergarten is destroyed so that's yeah that's some some emotions like of course you're afraid because i want to be sincere with you it's really
it's really bad emotion when you understand that next missile can can kill you and your wife
The next missile can kill you and your wife.
And of course, I was angry with myself because you can do nothing.
You have no power to protect your city.
Your family. Yes.
And you're angry also with all our partners from abroad because they are so slowly with air defense systems.
And our partners support us and we're really thankful for all help that we have.
Thanks for all tanks, APCs, guns, everything else, artillery systems, but it's not enough.
Because we have a war with Russia.
So after that, you're trying to find some way how to, what you can do at this moment.
So we start crowdfunding campaign.
And how did you do it?
Was it just something you put on Facebook or what was it?
Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube.
And we raised a little bit less, 10 million USD in one day.
You raised 10 million US dollars in one day.
A little bit less, maybe 9.6.
And we call this campaign For Revenge.
For Revenge.
Yes.
We tell people that we will find some way how to revenge.
And that's why we choose drones with long range. Thank you for the donation. We're working on it.
Glory to Ukraine. We choose drones with long range. And we bought big UAVs, kamikaze also.
There's like one-way ticket to Russians.
Did you have any previous experience with drones, Sergey?
Anything in your normal civilian life that would have brought you in contact with him?
Of course not.
Of course not.
No, no, no, no.
Sorry.
Once, once during my wedding, there was like cameraman, but not with camera, but with drone.
So he filmed our wedding party with drone.
So that was only one of my experience.
That was your experience.
Yes.
But if you want to survive, you will develop your
skills. No one here in my foundation had no such experience like we start to have after full-scale
invasion. I have architectures here. I have guys from IT business also. I'm a TV presenter. I didn't
know one year and a half ago that I will raise more than $130 million in next one year and a half.
But that's a total war and we need to do everything we can to support our soldiers.
Suki, I guess I'm curious what you think is the most important role that long-range drones are playing right now.
important role that long-range drones are playing right now? Like, is the objective to destroy buildings or even kill people? Mostly drones don't kill people. They destroy
some infrastructure buildings or some military objects. I heard, maybe you heard also a few days ago in Russian city Pskov, four big Russian jets
were burning. I don't know how it happened. Maybe someone smoked in the not right place.
But some people told me that maybe, maybe it was happened because of drones attack.
Yes. I myself, Sergei, wrote a news headline about that.
And the news headline I wrote was that drones struck in many regions of Russia overnight,
hitting and destroying four large aircraft in the Pskov region. So we said it was underscoring
the Ukrainians' ability to reach deep inside Russia with the war effort.
Deeper and deeper.
It's really very important for Russians to start feeling the same emotions like Ukrainians.
If you will stay in Bob's shelter every night with your kids,
maybe you will ask some questions to your government.
Maybe.
So is part of the power of these long-range drones
that you're able to take this war to Russia
and possibly awaken them to this war,
as you were unsuccessfully trying to do
when you were trying to appeal to Russian celebrities?
Yep.
To send the message to Russian society that two can play this game.
Have you seen any signs that it's working, that the drones are breaking through to Russians in this way? Yes, of course. We are searching Russian media or Telegram channels, and we find information that everything works.
Everything works, meaning the drones that you funded hit their targets?
Yes, ma'am.
The drones that hit in Pskov, were those the drones that you funded?
Were those the drones that you funded?
I didn't tell you nothing about Pskov and about our drones.
But just believe me that I'm happy how our military used our drones that we bought after the crowdfunding campaign for revenge.
Look, I'm a citizen of Ukraine.
I want to live in a better country.
I want to come back to my previous life.
I want my family back to Ukraine.
I want my people to stop dying with this war.
That's why that's not my choice.
That's not my choice.
That's my duty to do everything that I can do till the victory day.
And I will do it.
People will fight.
This unity is still strong.
That's Ukrainian superpower to organize ourselves.
And we will never forget and never forgive.
Ukraine's President Vladimir Zelensky visits the United States this week,
his second trip since Russia invaded last year. He will attend
the UN General Assembly in New York on Tuesday, and then will travel to Washington, where he will
meet with congressional leaders and with President Biden to lobby for military aid.
We'll be right back.
Here's what else you should know today.
On Monday, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said that, quote,
agents of the government of India carried out the killing of a Sikh community leader in British Columbia in June. The leader, Hardeep Singh Nijjar, a strong supporter
of an independent Sikh homeland, was gunned down on June 18th outside a Sikh cultural center.
Speaking in the House of Commons, Trudeau said that he raised India's involvement directly
with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at the Group of 20 summit earlier this month.
He said the allegation was based on intelligence gathered by the Canadian government.
And five Americans who'd been imprisoned in Iran were allowed to leave the country on Monday after two years of high-stakes negotiations.
In exchange, the United States agreed to unfreeze $6 billion in Iranian oil revenue and to dismiss
federal charges against five Iranians accused of violating U.S. sanctions. The announcement came
as President Joe Biden and President Ebrahim Raisi of Iran were scheduled to attend the annual U.N. General Assembly meeting of world leaders on Tuesday.
Today's episode was produced by Lindsay Garrison, Mary Wilson, and Claire Tennis-Sketter.
Lindsay Garrison, Mary Wilson, and Claire Tennis-Sketter. It was edited by Liz O'Balin and Michael Benoit, contains original music by Marian Lozano, Dan Powell, and Rowan Nemisto,
and was engineered by Chris Wood. Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Sabrina Tavernisi.
See you tomorrow.