
According to report, US official who spoke with Reuters on the condition of anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the information revealed that US intelligence shows Russia's day-to-day missile
failure rate sometimes exceeded 50% for certain types of precision-guided munitions. Two other officials said the failure rate was sometimes as high as 60%.Russia has
fired off more than 1,100 missiles in its ongoing war with Ukraine, according
to a US defense official, and over 2,100, according to Ukraine, but many of
Russia's missiles have apparently either failed on launch, malfunctioned in
flight, or missed their targets, according to officials familiar with the
intelligence.
And an
anonymous US Defense Intelligence Agency official told Newsweek that the US
assesses Russian missile success to be at just under 40% overall.
The
official told Newsweek that two to three out of every ten missiles that the
Russian military fires either fail to launch or fail to reach their targets.
Two out of ten experience technical problems in flight, and two to three miss
their targets. And some missiles are shot down.
"If
you look at the launches overall," the senior DIA official said, "we
are talking well under half of all Russian missiles hitting their aim
points."
For
air-launched cruise missiles in particular, US intelligence indicates the
failure rate on any given day ranges from 20% to 60%. Experts told Reuters that
anything over 20% is cause for concern.
Newer,
more advanced Russian missile systems are also not performing effectively in
Ukraine, US Northern Command chief Air Force Gen. Glen VanHerck recently told
the Senate Armed Services strategic forces subcommittee, according to USNI
News.
VanHerck
told the panel that Russia has "had challenges with some of their hypersonic
missiles as far as accuracy," adding that they have had specific issues
with the operational effectiveness of their cruise missiles.
Missile
strikes against Ukraine have become a key and devastating feature of Russia's
brutal assault on its neighbour. Last week, Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelensky said "the Russian bombing of Ukraine does not cease day or
night."
Relentless missile strikes have hit residential areas in Ukrainian cities, including in Kharkiv, where missile strikes have escalated this week.
Kharkiv's
regional governor, Oleh Synyehubov, told residents to take shelter and said
that nine people were killed this week in missile strikes in the region.
"The
enemy is once again insidiously terrorizing the civilian population,"
Synyehubov said in a post on Telegram. "It is too early to relax."
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