Soldiers of the 108th Territorial Defense Brigade were the masterminds of the attack, which took place somewhere in Zaporizhzhia but other reports suggest may have occurred in Donetsk.
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“The No Chance Сompany of Strike Drones used a drone with an unusual warhead to burn down a position in a forest belt located on the front line,” Militarnyi reported.
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The video of the attack shows what happened from the perspective of the drone used in the assault, as well as from another drone that captured the power of the new weapons from afar as the attack drone swept across the forested Russian position dropping molten thermite.
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Large plums of smoke developed where the thermite mixture was dropped and fire in those areas ignited almost immediately before intensifying and quickly growing larger.
How the attack may have affected Russian troops manning their defensive positions is not known but the thermite drone assault appeared to be very effective at burning the area.
Newsweek reported that when thermite is ignited it can get hot enough to melt through steel but added that the risk to soldiers from the mixture is minimal if they don’t look up.
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“Thermite has limitations as an incendiary weapon due to its small area of effect. Unlike other incendiaries that burn instantly, a thermite reaction heats a small area,” reported Newsweek.
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The real risk for soldiers in a thermite attack comes from the fires that the metal ignites because they can be hard to put out due to the temperatures at which the metal burns.
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Fires can force soldiers out of their positions and this new tactic could prove very helpful in the dense treelines that now harbor defensive positions and break up large and open fields all across the flat eastern regions of Ukraine.
“These tree lines offer essential cover in a conflict constantly monitored by drones, with the Russian army fortifying its forward defenses along these natural barriers,” Newsweek’s Jesus Mesa explained.
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“The use of thermite-dispensing drones has shown to be effective in military applications, though incendiary weapons [pose] significant risks if deployed near civilian populations,” Mesa added.
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