- Ukrainian troops intercepted a newly fielded Russian Zala KUB 10E strike drone on the Pokrovsk axis, according to the Sternenko Community foundation.
- The KUB 10E is a loitering-attack UAV developed by the Kalashnikov Concern with an 11-kilogram explosive warhead and was only recently introduced into Russian service.
Ukrainian troops have intercepted a newly fielded Russian Zala KUB 10E strike drone on the Pokrovsk axis, according to a statement from the Sternenko Community charitable foundation, which supplies interceptor drones to front-line units.
The group released video footage that it says shows the moment the drone was neutralized.
In a statement, the foundation said: “On the Pokrovsk axis, soldiers of the 5th Separate Assault Brigade shot down the newest Zala KUB 10E strike UAV. This drone carries an 11-kilogram fragmentation-high explosive warhead. This is one of the first documented shootdowns of this dangerous drone.”
The Zala KUB 10E is a new tactical loitering-attack unmanned system developed by specialists at the Kalashnikov Concern.
According to the manufacturer’s published technical description, the drone is intended to strike military vehicles, armored personnel carriers, command posts, air-defense and missile-defense assets, electronic warfare stations, and reconnaissance equipment. The system uses a catapult-launch method and performs a one-way strike.
Kalashnikov describes the platform as having a cruise speed of around 100 km/h and an operational altitude range of 100 to 2,500 meters. The drone’s approximate 11-kilogram warhead allows it to damage light armored targets, equipment, and personnel shelters. The system only entered public trials in late 2024 and has only recently begun appearing in Russian field formations.

The foundation did not specify the exact countermeasure used to intercept the drone, but front-line Ukrainian units have increasingly relied on drone-on-drone intercept tactics, short-range air defense systems, visual spotters, and rapid cueing networks to counter Russian loitering munitions. The 5th Separate Assault Brigade has been active along contested sectors where Russian forces routinely employ glide bombs, guided drones, and one-way attack UAVs.
The shootdown represents one of the first documented defeats of this newly introduced Russian drone. It also highlights the speed with which Ukrainian units and volunteer-supported intercept teams are adapting to emerging UAV threats on the battlefield.
The Sternenko Community emphasized the practical importance of such interceptions, saying: “Every downed strike drone is saved lives. Our task is to give soldiers the tools to stop them in time.” The group noted that their role is to rapidly supply interceptor platforms and detection equipment directly to front-line units without long procurement delays.
The appearance of the KUB-10E in combat underscores a broader dynamic in the war: Russia is accelerating new unmanned strike systems into field use, while Ukraine is developing layered, decentralized countermeasures, often supported by volunteer networks. This constant adaptation cycle is shaping the tactical environment along the front.

