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Ukrainian Intelligence Spectacularly Hit An Expensive Russian Compound In Occupied Crimea

Ukrainian Intelligence Spectacularly Hit An Expensive Russian Compound In Occupied Crimea

The Russians boasted that the Triumf could hit aerial targets on approach hundreds of kilometers away.

On the territory of the occupied Crimean peninsula, Ukrainian scouts have hit a Russian radar station (RLS) from the S-400 Triumf. This was reported by the Main Intelligence Directorate of the Ukrainian Defense Ministry.

"On the night of August 28, 2025, special forces of the Department of Active Actions of the Ukrainian Defense Ministry's Main Directorate of Intelligence hit an enemy high-value target on the territory of temporarily occupied Crimea - a Russian 91N6E radar system from the S-400 Triumf SAM system," the intelligence officers said.

The GSD adds: "Another "Triumph" of the invaders on the peninsula "went blind" - it seems to be a fiasco."

The report says that the demilitarization of the ARC continues.

What is known about the "Triumph"

According to open sources, the S-400 Triumph is a Russian anti-aircraft missile system (SAM), a long- and medium-range anti-aircraft missile system. It was adopted into service on April 28, 2007.

"Triumf" is the name of the export version. The contract value of one division of four vehicles of the S-400 anti-aircraft missile system is about 625 million dollars.

The early detection radar has an instrumented range of up to 600 kilometers. The complex can engage air targets with 40N6E ultra-long-range SAM missiles at a range of up to 380 kilometers, including on instructions from the A-50 airborne radar aircraft.

Western analysts say the S-400, along with systems such as Iskander and Bastion-class coastal anti-ship systems, plays a key role in the Russian Armed Forces' new concept, known in the West as the "Denial of Access Zone," which is that enemy troops cannot stay or move within range of A2/AD Denial Zone systems without risking unacceptable damage. According to the British weekly The Economist, the cost of a single C400 battery is approximately $200 million.

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