Military drone from Ukraine war crashes into Croatian capital Zagreb
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The Ukrainian defence ministry adviser, Markian Lubkivskiy, was quoted by the Interfax news agency as denying the drone was Ukrainian. He put the blame for the incident on Russia.
“This drone did not have Ukrainian markings,” he was quoted as saying. “There were red stars on it” – a symbol of the Russian military.
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Ukraine was the only known operator of the Tu-141
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The Russian embassy in Zagreb said the drone was made in Ukraine and that Russian forces had stopped using Tu-141s since the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1991.
IMO the explosive payload is the self-destruct for this vehicle, those were not designed to land (they were from before remote control capability or sophisticated enough autopilot). Obviously it failed to self-destruct before impacting the ground.
Tupolev Tu-141Quote:
The Tu-141 was in Soviet service from 1979 to 1989, mostly on the western borders of the Soviet Union.
It was pressed back into service by the Ukrainian Air Force for the War in Donbas.
On 8 March 2022, a Tu-141 reconnaissance drone was reported crashed in Ukraine. On 10 March 2022, during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, a Tu-141 crashed in front of a student campus in Zagreb, Croatia, over 550 kilometres (340 mi) from Ukraine, after flying over Romania and Hungary. There were no casualties. The Ukrainian Air Force, which according to The War Zone magazine is the only known operator of the vehicle, said that the drone did not belong to them. The Russian Embassy in Zagreb stated that Russian forces have not had such drones in their arsenal since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. The Croatian president, Zoran Milanović, said it was clear the drone came from the direction of Ukraine, entering Croatia after flying over Hungary.
Considering other resources like satellites I find it highly unlikely these could be in use by the Russians. Ukraine, however, is the prime place for a deployment and stockpile of these things as they were meant to fly to the west of the Soviet Union.
This would certainly call into question the credibility of any past, current, or future statements made by the Ukrainian government, especially regarding denial of incidents. Let's see what happens next.