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The war in Ukraine shows no sign of abating. After a few weeks of a lull in the fighting, the war - ongoing for the last eight months - gained steam after an attack on the Kerch Bridge, which connects Russia to the strategic Crimean peninsula.
Moscow is said to have fired over 80 cruise missiles into Ukraine in the immediate aftermath of the attack.
As Russian President Vladimir Putin steps up his war efforts, one of the deadliest weapons allegedly used by the Kremlin against Kyiv is the Iranian-made kamikaze drone.
Ukrainian officials said that the weapon was used by Russian troops on Monday, 17 October, causing four explosions in Kyiv.
Such drones have allegedly been used sporadically by Moscow over the last few months. On 14 October, three of the drones had blasted the small town of Makariv, located to the west of Kyiv, as per AFP.
Kamikaze drones can be described as "loitering" missiles as they have the ability to wait for some time in an area identified as a potential target, and strike only when the enemy is identified.
They are small, portable and easy to launch. Perhaps their greatest advantage is that they are hard to detect and can even be fired from a distance.
Similarly, these drones are disposable and destroyed when they attack a target, unlike the traditional military drones that return after releasing missiles. Hence, they are also referred to as "suicide drones".
On 7 October, Russia reportedly used the kamikaze drones, termed as Shahed-136, to hit Ukraine's Zaporizhzhia, which is the largest nuclear power plant in Europe, The Guardian reported.
Ukraine has been using RAM II kamikaze drones against Russia. The drones were developed by a consortium of Ukrainian firms with money crowdfunded by ordinary citizens, according to CNN.
Ukraine has also been relying on and requesting its western allies for more drone supplies.
There are two such Switchblade drones in Ukraine's possession: the Switchblade 300 and the Switchblade 600. While the former can hit targets up to around 10 kilometres away, the latter has a wider range of 32 kilometres.
In May, the US had also reportedly supplied Kyiv with "phoenix ghost" drones. However, little is known about their tactical capabilities.
Kyiv has also been using the 850 hand-launched Black Hornet micro-drones, which is a loitering munition supplied by Britain, and the Turkey-made Bayraktar TB2 drone.
In September, Ukraine said that it had downgraded its diplomatic ties with Iran and dismissed its ambassador over Tehran's "unfriendly" decision to supply the Kremlin with kamikaze drones.
However, Iran has denied supplying weapons to either side in the war. The country's foreign minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian had asserted that Tehran "has not and will not" supply any weapon to be used in the ongoing war.
"We believe that the arming of each side of the crisis will prolong the war, so we have not considered and do not consider war to be the right way either in Ukraine, Afghanistan, Syria or Yemen," Amir-Abdollahian had said.
(With inputs from AFP, The Guardian, and CNN.)
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