Watch dramatic moment Ukrainian gunship helicopter blasts Putin’s deadly Shahed kamikaze drone out of the sky

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DRAMATIC footage has captured the moment a Ukrainian attack helicopter shoots a Russian drone out of the sky.

The chopper chases down a Shahed-136, known as a kamikaze drone, as the gunman tracks its path.

a plane is flying in the sky with a camera attached to itA machine gun operator starts shooting the drone from the chopper
a plane is flying over a body of water with a mountain in the distanceThe drone is struck and emits a thick trail of smoke
a plane is flying over a large body of waterDestroyed, it starts to plummet
a large body of water with the words t.me/exilenova_plus on the bottomA different angle shows it explode when it plunges to the ground

Gaining a clear line of sight, the Kyiv troop then opens fire with the helicopter’s machine gun.

The drone immediately starts emitting a thick trail of smoke as a barrage of bullets blast into it.

Within eight seconds, it starts to plunge from the skies.

Other angles of the attack show the drone plummeting to the ground before it blows up on impact.

A cloud of smoke rises into the air in a Ukrainian triumph.

Shahed drones, designed and built in Iran, are flown in the air to attack ground targets from a distance.

Russia has commonly used them in its invasion, particularly to target important infrastructure.

The US has previously accused Iran of gifting Vlad hundreds of them for his cruel attack on Ukraine.

In May, the Wall Street Journal reported that according to Ukrainian Air Force data, Russia had launched 2,628 Shahed drones in just six months.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in 2022 labelled Vlad’s use of Iranian-made drones “a collaboration with evil”.

Vlad launched a major attack on Ukraine overnight – for the second night running – unleashing hundreds of drones and missiles.

Fifteen regions were hit and at least seven were killed.

Authorities said a hotel was blown away in the central city of Kryvyi, killing two, with two more dying in drone attacks in the embattled Zaporizhzhia in the country’s southeast.

Ukraine was also forced to intercept strikes bound for capital city Kyiv.

Fierce fighting boils on in Pokrovsk in Ukraine’s east as Vlad vies to take the high-priority Donetsk town.

It is being hotly fought over because it sits in vicinity of Ukrainian supply lines.

The Kremlin’s deadly strikes are set to keep igniting debate over whether Kyiv should be allowed to use Western weapons to strike deep within Russia, where they say attacks are being launched from.

US President Joe Biden moved to assure Zelensky that their bond was “unshakeable” in the wake of the attacks.

a map showing ukraine 's ambush with kyiv 's forces claimed the crucial town of sudzha

He added: “Ukrainian officials report that this outrageous attack resulted in the deaths of Ukrainian civilians and targeted more than two dozen critical energy sites.

“Let me be clear: Russia will never succeed in Ukraine, and the spirit of the Ukrainian people will never be broken.”

A Ukrainian MP from Kharkiv told Sky News it appeared the bombardments were designed to crush the spirit of the people.

UK Foreign Secretary David Lammy took to X to slam the Kremlin for the attacks.

He said: “The UK utterly condemns Russia’s cowardly missile and drone attacks on civilian infrastructure across Ukraine today.

“These assaults are in flagrant violation of international law and those responsible must be brought to justice.”

Lammy also lamented the death of Brit Ryan Evans, who was working for news agency Reuters when a missile hit his hotel in Kramatorsk on Saturday.

Meanwhile, Ukraine’s counter-attack into the Russian region of Kursk continues.

There are also reports of troops trying to break through the border in the neighbouring Belgorod region.

Zelensky says his forces continue to seize more enemy soil as an angry Vlad batters Ukrainian territory in response.

a plane is flying in the sky above the words всевидящее окоThe helicopter is seen approaching the deadly drone (top right)
The machine gun used to blast it from the sky
This handout photograph taken and released by the Ukrainian Emergency Service on August 27, 2024 shows rescuers in action on a site of a heavily damaged hotel following an air attack in Kryvyi Rig. Ukraine said on August 27, 2024, that its air defence systems had downed five missiles and 60 attack drones in a second night of Russian aerial bombardments that killed four. The overnight attacks came one day after the Kremlin launched one of its largest-ever aerial attacks on Ukraine that battered energy facilities and left several dead. (Photo by Handout / UKRAINIAN EMERGENCY SERVICE / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / HANDOUT / UKRAINIAN EMERGENCY SERVICE" - NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS (Photo by HANDOUT/UKRAINIAN EMERGENCY SERVICE/AFP via Getty Images)The remains of a Kryvyi hotel after Russia’s overnight air attackHANDOUT/UKRAINIAN EMERGENCY SERVICE/AFP
TOPSHOT - People look at burnt-out trucks on a site following an air attack, in the Odesa region, on August 26, 2024, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Russian drones and missiles on August 26, 2024 targeted 15 regions across Ukraine in an overnight barrage aimed mainly at energy infrastructure, Ukrainian Prime Minister Denys Shmygal said. (Photo by Oleksandr GIMANOV / AFP) (Photo by OLEKSANDR GIMANOV/AFP via Getty Images)Civilians come to terms with the fallout from an air attack in the Odesa regionOLEKSANDR GIMANOV/AFP via Getty Images
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