
Russian drones used in Ukraine may include Western parts, ambassador says
CBC
The Russian ambassador to Canada said in an interview with CBC News that Western electronics might be found in Russian drones being used in Ukraine.
"It is possible," said ambassador Oleg Stepanov, when asked whether Canadian or other Western electronics could be found in Russia's prized Orlan-10 drones. "But not necessarily."
The Orlan-10 is one of Russia's most critical and widely used aerial assets in its war against Ukraine. The Russian military uses them to spy on the frontline Ukrainian targets it attacks with artillery barrages or missiles.
Last week, a CBC News investigation revealed that the St. Petersburg-based Special Technology Center (STC), a Russian arms maker that produces the Orlan-10 drone, is covertly targeting Canadian technologies to include in its products.
Two Quebec-based tech companies, EXFO and Aimtec, both had their products listed on STC supplier lists.
Stepanov cast doubt on the STC revelations, characterizing them as Ukrainian disinformation.
"Well, the information that was reported by CBC News," he said, "comes from Ukraine."
Since launching its full-scale invasion in 2022, the Kremlin and the Russian military-industrial complex have faced relentless sanctions from Canada and its allies, inhibiting their ability to purchase critical electronics for their weaponry.
But experts and Western leaders have warned that President Vladimir Putin's war machine has found ways to skirt those international efforts and obtain components like microchips through proxy companies and willing Chinese intermediaries.
In a speech earlier this year at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy called out Western sanctions as ineffective.
"In every Russian missile, there are critical components from Western countries," he said. "Dozens of components in every missile. And it's true. It's a fact."
The Ukrainian military has time and again deconstructed recovered Russian weapons, finding Western-made electronics inside missiles, drones, armoured vehicles and other tools in Russia's arsenal.
According to a Ukrainian drone operator who goes by the call sign VTOL, Russia now has the edge on Ukraine when it comes to drone warfare.
"Right now, Russia is taking over the drones," said VTOL from a drone training school in an undisclosed location in western Ukraine.

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