05.06.2025.
8:37
Zelensky, your nose will grow; The Americans discovered what really happened in Operation "Spider's Web" VIDEO
Two U.S. officials said the U.S. estimated Ukraine shot down up to 20 Russian military aircraft in drone strikes last weekend, destroying about 10, half the number previously reported by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.

Still, US officials described the attack as extremely significant, with one caveat that it could prompt Moscow to take a much tougher line in US-brokered talks aimed at ending the more than three-year-old war.
Russian President Vladimir Putin told US President Donald Trump in a phone call on Wednesday that Moscow would have to respond to the attack.
Ukraine claims to have targeted four military air bases across Russia using 117 drones in an operation codenamed "Spider's Web".
On Wednesday, footage was released showing Ukrainian drones hitting Russian strategic bombers and landing on the antennas of two A-50 military spy planes, of which Russia only has a few.
American officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, estimate that about ten and up to 20 Russian military aircraft were destroyed in the Ukrainian attacks.
That estimate is significantly lower than the one Zelensky presented to reporters in Kyiv earlier on Wednesday. He said half of the 41 Russian planes hit were too damaged to be repaired.
The Russian Ministry of Defense confirmed that Ukraine targeted airfields in Murmansk, Irkutsk, Ivanovo, Ryazan and Amur regions and that attacks on the last three locations were repelled. It was also reported that several planes caught fire in the Murmansk and Irkutsk regions.
Trump's envoy to Ukraine said that the risk of an escalation of the war in Ukraine "significantly increases", especially since Kyiv hit one part of Russia's "nuclear triad", that is, weapons on land, in the air and at sea.
"In the national security space, when you attack part of the national survival system, which is their triad, the nuclear triad, that means the level of nuclear conflict is rising because you don't know what the other side is going to do," Trump envoy Keith Kellogg told Fox News on Tuesday.
Reuters could not independently confirm the figures from Kyiv and Washington.
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