Malyuk's Web: What Is Known About The SBU's Impressive Special Operation
27- 1.06.2025, 18:16
- 36,616

Drones from vans have struck more than 40 Russian planes.
On June 1, the SBU conducted a scale operation to destroy Russian aircraft. According to NV sources, more than 40 planes that Russia used to attack Ukrainian cities were hit, including the A-50, Tu-95 and Tu-22 M3.
NV tells you what you need to know about the SBU special operation that will go down in history and follows new details of the attack.
Drones from trucks
In the middle of the day on June 1, Russian Telegram channels began reporting that Olenya airfield was attacked by drones that were brought to Olenegorsk on a lorry and flew straight out of it. Subscribers to Russian Telegram channels said that the lorry from which the drones were flying out was parked at a Rosneft gas station.
According to Russian publics, the driver of the lorry was detained, but he probably could have been unaware of the cargo.
Drones flew out of another lorry attacking the Belaya airfield in Russia's Irkutsk region. This was confirmed in his Telegram channel by its governor Igor Kobzev
"The source from where the drones were released has already been blocked. It's a truck," Kobzev wrote in his Telegram channel.
Russian Telegram channel Supernova+ published a video of a man's body, noting that it was the driver of the truck from which the drones flew and that he was allegedly strangled.
Another video published by this Telegram channel shows a woman filming the truck from which the drones flew out and a man being taken somewhere, who she says is the driver of the truck.
The video of the dead driver was allegedly taken near Belaya airfield, and the video of the driver being detained near Olenya.
Russian Telegram channel Mash published a video of one of the drones taking off from a truck in the Irkutsk region.
Special Operation Pautina
NV sources in the security services said that on June 1, Russian airfields were hit by more than 40 planes that attack Ukrainian cities every night, including A-50s, Tu-95s and Tu-22 M3s. The special operation has been dubbed Spider's Web.
NV interlocutors said $2 billion worth of damage was done to Russian aircraft.
NV has also obtained videos that show Russian planes burning on airfields. In one of them, the voice of SBU chief Vasily Malyuk can be heard saying. "This is how beautiful the Belaya airfield looks now. Strategic enemy aviation," Malyuk says in this video.
Later, NV sources in the security services specified that 41 Russian strategic aviation planes were hit as a result of the special operation. According to them, the operation was controlled personally by the President of Ukraine, Supreme Commander-in-Chief Volodymyr Zelensky, and implemented by the head of the SBU Vasyl Malyuk and the staff of the Service.
The NV sources emphasized that from a logistical point of view, the operation was ultra-complicated, it was prepared for more than a year and a half. First, the SBU transported FPV drones to Russia, and then mobile wooden houses, under the roofs of which the drones were hidden, when the houses were already on trucks. At the right moment, the roofs of the houses were remotely opened and the drones flew to hit Russian bombers.
SBU sources also noted that the people who took part in this historic special operation have long been in Ukraine, so if the Russian authorities detain someone for show, it will be a staging.
NV sources also provided photos of the preparatory stage of the special operation Pautina.




Report of explosion in Severomorsk
On June 1, there was also a powerful explosion in Severomorsk in Russia's Murmansk region, home to Russia's largest nuclear submarine base.
Russian Telegram channel Astra published a video of the explosion allegedly in Severomorsk, but later clarified that the video showed Olenegorsk, not Severomorsk.
The head of the closed administrative-territorial formation Severomorsk, Vladimir Yevmenkov, said in his Telegram channel that the information about the explosion was allegedly untrue.