TechRussian military accidentally drops bombs on its own territory

Russian military accidentally drops bombs on its own territory

Su-27 - the prototype of modern Russian combat aircraft
Su-27 - the prototype of modern Russian combat aircraft
Images source: © Lic. CC BY-SA 4.0, Moonhunterofindia, Wikimedia Commons
Karolina Modzelewska

28 May 2024 08:43

The Defence Romania service, citing one of the independent Russian channels on Telegram called "Astra," reports that over the past three months, Russian military aviation has "dropped" at least 38 bombs on Russian territory and the occupied territories of Eastern Ukraine. This includes 500 kg FAB-500 aerial bombs. Let us recall what they are.

The Romanian military-themed service notes that information about the "dropped" bombs on 17 May was provided by several Russian and Ukrainian sources, as well as the Czech press agency ČTK. It also recalls that issues with the use of Russian aerial bombs were recently signalled by British military intelligence.

Russian airplanes are losing bombs

According to Defence Romania, three 500 kg FAB-500 aerial bombs fell on 15 May in various parts of the Belgorod region. There were no casualties in these incidents, but Russian sources report that a similar incident on 4 May, when a FAB-500 aerial bomb fell directly on the city of Belgorod from a Russian aeroplane, caused damage to 31 houses and 10 cars and injured 7 people.

FAB-500 bombs belong to the family of general-purpose FAB aerial bombs. They can destroy military objects, railway junctions, lightly armoured targets, manpower, or military field fortifications. The bomb weighs 500 kg, with 300 kilograms constituting the explosive material. The FAB-500 was developed in the Soviet Union, and its first use took place on 28 April 1943, when the Red Army dropped the bomb on German coastal fortifications near Königsberg.

After being dropped and hitting the target, the FAB-500 can cause severe destruction. Typically, its explosion creates a crater with a diameter of 8 to 12 metres and a depth of up to 4 metres. Currently, the Russians are using several types of modified FAB-500s. Among them are, for example, the FAB-500 M-54 bomb, which is adapted for carriage by most combat aircraft, and the FAB-500 M-62T, which moves at high speeds. The second type is often carried by Russians using Su-27 fighters or MiG-25s.

This is not the first time Russians have lost bombs. At the beginning of 2024, the "Astra" channel reported the "dropping" of FAB-250 bombs also on the Belgorod region. At that time, The Moscow Times reported that this was at least the eighth such incident.

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