بعد مرور نحو أسبوع على عملية «شبكة العنكبوت»، ردت روسيا على الهجوم الأوكراني الذي استهدف 4 مطارات عسكرية اليوم (السبت) بحملة قصف عنيفة استهدفت خاركيف، ثاني أكبر مدن أوكرانيا. ووصف رئيس بلدية المدينة إيهور تيريخوف الهجوم بأنه «الأعنف منذ بداية الحرب».
وأكد في منشور عبر تطبيق تيليغرام مقتل 3 أشخاص، وإصابة 17، وأعلن أن خاركيف تعرضت للقصف بـ48 مُسيرة من طراز شاهد، وصاروخين، و4 قنابل موجهة.
وتقع منطقة خاركيف على حدود خط الجبهة من الشرق، والحدود الروسية من الشمال، وغالباً ما تكون هدفاً للهجمات الروسية.
من جانبه، كشف الرئيس الأوكراني فولوديمير زيلينسكي تفاصيل هجوم «شبكة العنكبوت». وقال في مقابلة مع شبكة «إي بي سي نيوز» الأمريكية تبث غداً (الأحد) إن «سائقي الشاحنات الروس الذين نقلوا ما شكل منصاتٍ للهجوم الأوكراني المفاجئ واسع النطاق بطائرات مسيّرة على الطائرات الحربية الروسية، فعلوا ذلك عن غير قصد».
ولفت إلى أن الطائرات المسيّرة المستخدمة في الهجوم كانت مُخبأة في ما يشبه «المنازل المتنقلة» ذات أسقف قابلة للطي، حُمِّلت على الشاحنات ثم فُتحت عن بُعد لتنفيذ العملية. وأضاف زيلينسكي «لم يكن السائقون على درايةٍ بأي شيء بل قاموا بعملهم فحسب».
وأفاد بأن السائقين لم يدركوا أن الحاويات التي نقلوها كانت مجهزة سراً بطائرات بدون طيار من شأنها مهاجمة المطارات الروسية وإتلاف معدات عسكرية بمليارات الدولارات. وأكد أن أجهزة المخابرات الأوكرانية «استخدمت أسلحتها فقط» ولم تستعمل أي معدات من ترسانة الحلفاء.
في المقابل، اعتبر الرئيس الأمريكي دونالد ترمب أن الأوكرانيين «أعطوا بوتين سبباً لقصفهم بشدة». وشنت روسيا أمس (الجمعة) هجوماً واسعاً بالمسيرات والصواريخ نحو الأراضي الأوكرانية، مشيرة إلى أنه رد على قصف مطاراتها.
وكانت أوكرانيا أعلنت سابقاً أنها ألحقت أضراراً بأكثر من 40 قاذفة روسية في الهجوم المذكور الذي أطلقت عليه عملية «شبكة العنكبوت»، وهو ما يعادل نحو ثلث أسطول القاذفات الاستراتيجية الروسية.
وأقرت وزارة الدفاع الروسية باندلاع النيران في طائرات عدة بعد إطلاق مسيّرات «في منطقتي مورمانسك وإيركوتسك الواقعتين على التوالي في القطب الشمالي الروسي وشرق سيبيريا». وأفادت بأن الهجوم استهدف عدة مطارات أخرى، من بينها مطارات في مناطق إيفانوفو وريازان وأمور، عند الحدود مع الصين في أقصى شرق روسيا، لكن تم صدها.
ما مفاجأة زيلينسكي عن هجوم «شبكة العنكبوت» ؟
روسيا تشن أعنف هجوم على خاركيف
7 يونيو 2025 - 14:25
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آخر تحديث 7 يونيو 2025 - 14:25
آثار الهجوم الروسي العنيف على خاركيف.
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About a week after the "Spider Web" operation, Russia responded to the Ukrainian attack that targeted four military airports today (Saturday) with a violent bombing campaign aimed at Kharkiv, Ukraine's second-largest city. The city's mayor, Ihor Terekhov, described the attack as "the most intense since the beginning of the war."
He confirmed in a post on the Telegram app that three people were killed and 17 injured, announcing that Kharkiv was bombed with 48 Shahed drones, two missiles, and four guided bombs.
The Kharkiv region is located on the front line to the east and the Russian border to the north, and is often targeted by Russian attacks.
For his part, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky revealed details of the "Spider Web" attack. In an interview with the American network ABC News, which will be broadcast tomorrow (Sunday), he stated that "the Russian truck drivers who transported what formed platforms for the large-scale surprise Ukrainian drone attack on Russian warplanes did so unintentionally."
He pointed out that the drones used in the attack were hidden in what resembled "mobile homes" with foldable roofs, loaded onto trucks, and then opened remotely to carry out the operation. Zelensky added, "The drivers were unaware of anything; they were just doing their job."
He reported that the drivers did not realize that the containers they transported were secretly equipped with drones that would attack Russian airports and damage military equipment worth billions of dollars. He confirmed that Ukrainian intelligence "only used its own weapons" and did not use any equipment from the allies' arsenal.
In contrast, U.S. President Donald Trump considered that the Ukrainians "gave Putin a reason to bomb them heavily." Russia launched a large-scale drone and missile attack on Ukrainian territory yesterday (Friday), indicating that it was a response to the bombing of its airports.
Ukraine had previously announced that it had inflicted damage on more than 40 Russian bombers in the aforementioned attack, which it called the "Spider Web" operation, equivalent to about one-third of the Russian strategic bomber fleet.
The Russian Ministry of Defense acknowledged that fires broke out in several aircraft after launching drones "in the regions of Murmansk and Irkutsk, located respectively in the Russian Arctic and eastern Siberia." It reported that the attack targeted several other airports, including airports in the Ivanovo, Ryazan, and Amur regions, at the border with China in the far east of Russia, but they were repelled.
He confirmed in a post on the Telegram app that three people were killed and 17 injured, announcing that Kharkiv was bombed with 48 Shahed drones, two missiles, and four guided bombs.
The Kharkiv region is located on the front line to the east and the Russian border to the north, and is often targeted by Russian attacks.
For his part, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky revealed details of the "Spider Web" attack. In an interview with the American network ABC News, which will be broadcast tomorrow (Sunday), he stated that "the Russian truck drivers who transported what formed platforms for the large-scale surprise Ukrainian drone attack on Russian warplanes did so unintentionally."
He pointed out that the drones used in the attack were hidden in what resembled "mobile homes" with foldable roofs, loaded onto trucks, and then opened remotely to carry out the operation. Zelensky added, "The drivers were unaware of anything; they were just doing their job."
He reported that the drivers did not realize that the containers they transported were secretly equipped with drones that would attack Russian airports and damage military equipment worth billions of dollars. He confirmed that Ukrainian intelligence "only used its own weapons" and did not use any equipment from the allies' arsenal.
In contrast, U.S. President Donald Trump considered that the Ukrainians "gave Putin a reason to bomb them heavily." Russia launched a large-scale drone and missile attack on Ukrainian territory yesterday (Friday), indicating that it was a response to the bombing of its airports.
Ukraine had previously announced that it had inflicted damage on more than 40 Russian bombers in the aforementioned attack, which it called the "Spider Web" operation, equivalent to about one-third of the Russian strategic bomber fleet.
The Russian Ministry of Defense acknowledged that fires broke out in several aircraft after launching drones "in the regions of Murmansk and Irkutsk, located respectively in the Russian Arctic and eastern Siberia." It reported that the attack targeted several other airports, including airports in the Ivanovo, Ryazan, and Amur regions, at the border with China in the far east of Russia, but they were repelled.