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A Russian short-range ballistic missile, believed to be an unexploded Iskander missile, was found near Kramatorsk, Ukraine.
A Russian short-range ballistic missile, believed to be an unexploded Iskander missile, was found near Kramatorsk, Ukraine.National Guard of Ukraine/Reuters
  • decoys are meant to trick air-defense radars.

  • American intelligence officials say they are about a foot long and have an orange tail.

  • The discovery of these decoys was called an intelligence bonanza by one expert.

Russia has deployed a mystery munition in Ukraine.

The New York Times reported that the decoys are meant to trick air-defense radars and heat-seeking missiles. American intelligence officials say they are about a foot long and have an orange tail.

The devices produce radio signals to confuse enemy radars and they also have a heat source to attract other missiles.

—CAT-UXO (@CAT_UXO) March 5, 2022

John Ismay, a US Navy veteran who was qualified in bomb disposal, told the Times that experts were confused by the munitions, which began circulating on social media a few weeks ago. They are similar to decoys that were used in the Cold War to reach their targets.

The Iskander is a short-range missile system that has a range of more than 400 km.

Jeffrey Lewis, a nonproliferation professor at the Middlebury Institute of International Studies in Monterey, California, called the discovery of these munitions an intelligence bonanza for the West. He said that it is rare to see technical information about adversaries, as their effectiveness is reduced when their secrecy is compromised.

Decoys like this can be effective in fooling radars, but they need to be kept secret.

Lewis thinks that Russia would use decoys against Ukraine because they don't have the military skills to shoot down Iskander missiles.

He said that the Russians were compromising their ability to defeat missile defenses by using decoys.

The original article is on Business Insider.

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