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NYT: Ukrainian Missile Blew Up Market, Killing 15 Civilians. It Wasn’t Russia.

The Sept. 6 missile strike on Kostiantynivka in eastern Ukraine was one of the deadliest in the country in months, killing at least 15 civilians and injuring more than 30 others. The weapon’s payload of metal fragments struck a market, piercing windows and walls and wounding some victims beyond recognition.

Less than two hours later, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy blamed Russian “terrorists” for the attack, and many media outlets followed suit. Throughout its invasion of Ukraine, Russia has repeatedly and systematically attacked civilians and struck schools, markets and residences as a deliberate tactic to instill fear in the populace. In Kostiantynivka in April, soldiers shelled homes and a preschool, killing six.

But evidence collected and analyzed by The New York Times, including missile fragments, satellite imagery, witness accounts and social media posts, strongly suggests the catastrophic strike was the result of an errant Ukrainian air defense missile fired by a Buk launch system.

The attack appears to have been a tragic mishap. Air defense experts say missiles like the one that hit the market can go off course for a variety of reasons, including an electronic malfunction or a guidance fin that is damaged or sheared off at the time of launch.

The likely missile failure happened amid the back-and-forth battles common in the surrounding area. Russian forces shelled Kostiantynivka the night before; Ukrainian artillery fire from the city was reported in a local Telegram group just minutes before the strike on the market.

A spokesperson for Ukraine’s armed forces said the country’s security service is investigating the incident and under national law can’t comment further.

Ukrainian authorities initially tried to prevent journalists with the Times from accessing the missile debris and impact area in the strike’s immediate aftermath. But the reporters were eventually able to get to the scene, interview witnesses and collect remnants of the weapon used.

The Strike

Security camera footage shows that the missile flew into Kostiantynivka from the direction of Ukrainian-held territory, not from behind Russian lines.

As the sound of the approaching missile is heard, at least four pedestrians appear to simultaneously turn their heads toward the incoming sound. They face the camera — in the direction of Ukrainian-held territory. Moments before it strikes, the missile’s reflection is visible as it passes over two parked cars, showing it traveling from the northwest.

The missile’s warhead detonates a few yards above the ground shortly before impact, blasting metal fragments outward. The resulting crater and damage extending from the point of detonation is consistent with a missile coming from a northwesterly route, according to an explosives expert and a Times analysis.

A Suspected Ukrainian Launch Site

Further evidence reveals that minutes before the strike, the Ukrainian military launched two surface-to-air missiles toward the Russian front line from the town of Druzhkivka, 10 miles northwest of Kostiantynivka.

Reporters with the Times were in Druzhkivka when they heard an outgoing missile launch at 2 p.m., followed a few minutes later by a second. By chance, one member of the team recorded the first launch in a voice message.

Residents in Druzhkivka also reported an outgoing launch at that time on a local Telegram group. “One more,” a post at 2:03 p.m. said, referring to a second missile launch. Locals near the launches described them as abnormally loud — beyond the sounds of war they have become accustomed to — which tracks with witness accounts of past Buk launches.

The timing of these launches is consistent with the time frame for the missile that struck the market in Kostiantynivka, around 2:04 p.m.

Additionally, two witnesses who spoke to the Times said they saw the missiles being fired from Druzhkivka in the direction of the Russian front line around the time of the strike; one of them said he saw the missiles going in the direction of Kostiantynivka. A Ukrainian soldier stationed in Druzhkivka, who asked to remain anonymous, also said he heard two missile launches around the same time.

One of the witnesses also said the missiles were launched from fields on the outskirts of the town, a place residents say is used by the Ukrainian military and from which they have previously seen air defense missiles.

Times reporters who visited the site saw indications that it had recently been used by the military, including trenches, trash pits and wide tracks consistent with a large military vehicle.

Another key indicator: scorch marks. Various ground-launched air defense missiles are fired from the rear of a large vehicle and burn the surrounding turf when they are fired. Analysis of before-and-after satellite imagery shows new scorch marks around the trenches on the day of the strike, possibly indicating that the site was used for launching missiles.

The Missile

In the aftermath of the attack, Ukrainian authorities said Russian forces used a missile fired by an S-300 air defense system, which Russia has used both to intercept aircraft and strike targets on the ground. But an S-300 missile carries a different warhead from the one that exploded in Kostiantynivka.

The metal facades of buildings closest to the explosion were perforated with hundreds of square or rectangular holes, probably made by cubelike objects blown outward from the missile.

Measurements of the holes — and fragments found at the scene — are consistent in size and shape with one weapon in particular: the 9M38 missile, which is fired by the mobile Buk anti-aircraft vehicle. Ukraine is known to use the Buk system, as is Russia.

Some of the holes are less than 10 millimeters in width, while others are slightly larger. The 9M38 contains two different sizes of solid-metal cubic fragments: 8 millimeters and 13 millimeters across.

A Times reporter also reviewed other missile fragments recovered from multiple locations in Ukraine that had been fired by Russian S-300, S-400 and Buk air defense systems, as well as two different U.S. air defense systems. Their shapes and measurements show that the damage at the market site was most likely caused by an 9M38.

Two independent military bomb-disposal experts, who asked to remain anonymous so they could speak candidly, came to the same conclusion and said that the fragments and damage at the strike site are most consistent with an 9M38.

Several witnesses either heard or saw Ukrainian forces firing surface-to-air missiles from Druzhkivka toward Kostiantynivka at the time of the market strike. And evidence collected at the market shows that the missile came from that direction.

Why the missile, which has a maximum range of just over 17 miles, may have landed in Kostiantynivka is unclear — although it’s possible it malfunctioned and crashed before hitting its intended target.

In any case, at such a short range — less than 10 miles — the missile is most likely to have landed with unspent fuel in its rocket motor, which would detonate or burn upon impact, offering a possible explanation for the widespread scorch marks at the market.

READ 20 COMMENTS
  • Tamirose170 says:

    Same type Missile & System that shot down a scheduled commercial flight of Malysia Airline Flight #17 carrying and killed 298 innocent people in 2014 – it seems as if whomever runs Ukrainians Missile Dept needs more training & education. Russians sure have thick skin, as that clearly is the Country & President that gets blamed for anything to goes wrong.

  • Ricky says:

    Just more lies from the Biden/ Ukraine and always blaming somebody else. It’s nothing to kill their own people and blame Russia for more taxpayers money.

  • Sam says:

    Wow! Do some of you jump to conclusions much? I guess Zelenskyy & Putin tried to shoot down Apollo 13 too. Sounds like everyone has never heard of or considered equipment malfunction. The sort that sinks nuclear subs, crashes F-35’s, etc, etc. If you can climb OFF the rage boosted panic button(s) for a few minutes, you’ll see this for what it is. A tragedy. My most sincere condolences to the families and victims.

    • Art LaPella says:

      Yup, accidentally killing your own people (friendly fire) has always been part of war. It’s as old as the Bible (Judges 7:22) or the U.S. Civil War (Stonewall Jackson). It’s more common in modern war because you can’t always see who you’re killing, and one estimate is 2% of all casualties are friendly fire. Being reluctant to admit friendly fire incidents isn’t new either – being told your countrymen were killed by that kind of accident is bad for morale. That’s a lot more plausible than what you’re reading here, and we can be pretty sure at least some of the comments are from the Russian FSB.

  • Ivan markovenko says:

    I am Russian and my wife is from Ukraine. Most of the so-called Russian missles and damage are not Russian but from Zelensky’s side. They fire on our Ukrainian people and say it was Russia that did that. Biden sending money and arms to Ukraine is psychotic. Zelensky and his band of crooks take the money sent to them and keep it. They are now all billionaires. They take the arms and sell most of them to Iran. Zelensky’s neo-nazi government is so corrupt and we send American money to them. Secondly why are we sending by far the greatest amount of arms and money to help him and Nato sends maybe 10%. Insanity!..

  • TD says:

    The scum Ukraine and the United States has been doing this to Ukraine Citizens since 2014, That is why Russia is there now, I hope they scum get it big time for this one

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