Himars have ‘changed everything’: weapons destroy 50 Russian ammunition depots in one month

A Himars missile rocket is fired from a truck during combat training in the US - Tony Overman /The Olympian
A Himars missile rocket is fired from a truck during combat training in the US - Tony Overman /The Olympian

American-supplied Himars missile launchers have destroyed more than 50 Russian ammunition dumps since they arrived on the battlefield last month, Ukraine’s defence minister said.

Oleksiy Reznikov told Ukrainian television that the “scalpel”-like accuracy of the missiles had significantly eroded Russia’s supply chains and its ability to conduct “active fighting and cover our armed forces with heavy shelling”.

“We are talking about 50 sites in terms of ammunition storage locations alone,” he told Ukrainian television.

“Our gunners use Himars very precisely – like a surgeon with a scalpel,” he told Ukrainian television.

“And you can even see this in the photos of some bridge crossings where [the shells] are very accurately placed in the area of the seams of the bridge connections.”

He did not give specific details but Ukraine has struck three bridges across the Dnieper in Russian-occupied Kherson in recent days.

Those strikes appear to be designed to isolate Russian units on the right bank of the Dnieper as a Ukrainian counter-offensive with the aim of taking back control of Kherson picks up steam.

Russia’s defence ministry on Monday said it destroyed a Ukrainian depot containing Himars ammunition.

The United States has sent Ukraine eight High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems since late June, with another four promised. Pentagon officials said last week they would send four more, bringing the total to 16.

The truck-borne rocket launchers are longer range and more accurate than the Soviet-era artillery Ukraine has previously relied on.

They can also fire and move in just two minutes, making them difficult for Russian forces to find or hit with counter-battery fire.

Rather than strike Russian front-line units, the Ukrainians have used the weapons to target command posts and large ammunition depots in the hope of disrupting command and control and starving Russia’s artillery of shells.

Russia’s two-month offensive in the Donbas was heavily dependent on overwhelming artillery fire.

Mr Reznikov’s remarks are the first time a Ukrainian official has put a number on the Russian targets destroyed by that campaign.

Ukrainian troops have reported a sharp drop-off in shelling and casualties in the east of the country.

Front-line shelling ‘10x less than before’

Bogdan Dmitruk, a battalion commander in Ukraine’s 93rd mechanised brigade, told the Washington Post on Saturday that shelling on the front line near Izyum is now “10 times less” than before.

Data from Nasa’s FIRMS fire-monitoring service also shows a significant drop in blazes along the line of contact over the past two weeks, suggesting a reduction in shelling.

Russia said on Monday it had destroyed a Ukrainian warehouse holding ammunition for the system in the Khmelnytskyi region in western Ukraine.

It has previously claimed to have destroyed a number of the Himars launchers, a claim Ukraine and the United States have denied.

US troops stand beside a Himars missile system during Saudi Arabias first World Defense Show in March 2022 - FAYEZ NURELDINE
US troops stand beside a Himars missile system during Saudi Arabias first World Defense Show in March 2022 - FAYEZ NURELDINE

The Himars have become a bete noire of Russian military bloggers, many of whom have reported heavy casualties from the strikes and expressed frustration at the army’s inability to respond.

Several have publicly urged commanders to camouflage targets and reform logistics to make ammunition dumps more difficult to find and hit.

The Institute for the Study of War, a US think tank, said on Sunday that there was evidence such mitigation tactics had been adopted, but that they “are impeding Russian forces from conducting the massive artillery barrages that they have widely employed over the course of the war.”

Moscow Calling, a pro-Russian Telegram channel, wrote on Sunday that the Himars had “changed everything” and its arrival marked a new stage of the war in which Russia’s “operation situation will invariably worsen.”

Pro-Russian Telegram channels on Monday widely shared another post arguing that Himars were not the problem so much as systemic failures in the Russian military-industrial complex.

The Ukrainian Himars are firing rockets with a maximum range of 53 miles. The White House last week ruled out sending the systems ATACMS rockets which have a range of 190 miles.

On Monday Slovakia signalled it could donate its fleet of 11 Soviet-era MiG-29 fighter jets to Ukraine to help bolster its forces. Bratislava is asking for financial compensation from Western allies for the jets, which cost €35 million each.