How glide bombs will shape the future of the war in Ukraine

Russian glide bombs killed two people and injured at least 15 others in an attack on the southeast Ukrainian city of Zaporizhzhia on Tuesday, authorities said.
Regional governor Ivan Fedorov, writing on the Telegram messaging app, said Russian forces had launched seven bombs at the city over a 90-minute period.
In Zaporizhzhia and across Ukraine as a whole, these strikes have increasingly come from glide bombs – the low-cost ordnance that experts say are reshaping the war in Ukraine.
Weighing between several hundred and a few thousand kilograms, these ordinary bombs fitted with wings and a guidance system have been among Russia’s most formidable weapons since its 2022 full-scale invasion of Ukraine.
They have become especially deadly of late, with thousands launched in recent months.
Their capacity to devastate an apartment block in Zaporizhzhia or Kherson with a single strike from dozens of miles away inside Russia and beyond Ukrainian air defences has tormented Ukrainian commanders.
That is, until May this year, when Ukraine announced it had developed its own.
Although Western allies had supplied Ukraine with glide bombs, Kyiv had grown impatient with their unwillingness to supply enough and so spent 17 months domestically producing the Vyrivniuvach, or “Equaliser”.
“For a significant period, there was very little practical defence against Russian glide bombs, and that contributed significantly to heavy Ukrainian casualties along the front line,” said Keir Giles, an associate fellow of Chatham House’s Russia and Eurasia Programme and the author of Who Will Defend Europe.
Although inexpensive and highly reliable, the turn for both sides was largely motivated by necessity, with traditional forms of artillery rendered out of action.
Across the modern battlefields of Ukraine, drones have hunted and destroyed the vast majority of each side’s howitzers, according to Military Balance website.
Their artillery pieces depleted, Moscow and Kyiv saw “stand-off” ordnances like glide bombs as the solution, capable of delivering high explosives from dozens of miles away.
Recently, their adoption has been accelerated, with Russia reportedly launching more than 1,800 glide bombs in the first week of June alone, according to Forbes.
Much like the off-the-shelf drones and inexpensive Bayraktar and Shaheeds which have dominated the war, however, Russian and Ukrainian glide bombs are low-cost and easily engineered.
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