A senior Russian missile developer has been eliminated in Moscow region during a special operation by Ukraine's military intelligence, a defense source told Liga. According to Liga's source in Ukraine's Defense Forces, Mikhail Shatsky, deputy chief designer and head of the software department at Moscow's Mars design bureau, was shot in Kuzminki forest park near Kotelniki, Moscow Oblast.
Militarnyi reports that this information correlates with local media reports about the shooting and killing of a middle-aged man on 11 December in the same area.
Liga's source told that Shatsky was involved in modernizing Russian cruise missiles. He was working on upgrading Kh-59 cruise missiles to Kh-69 standard and developing new drones.
The source noted that Shatsky's colleagues considered him the chief ideologist for implementing artificial intelligence in drones and other Russian aircraft and spacecraft.
The source of the Liga reportedly concluded that any person involved in developing Russia's military-industrial complex and thus supporting Russian aggression against Ukraine is a legitimate target for Ukraine's Defense Forces.
According to Militarnyi, the Kh-69 missile was developed after Russia's full-scale invasion and was first used to strike Ukrainian cities in October 2024.
Related:
- UK intel: Russia’s Oreshnik missile likely deployed for strategic messaging
- Russian Black Sea Fleet missile ships commander killed in Sevastopol car bombing, source says
- Russian bomber pilot linked to missile strikes on civilians killed with hammer in Russia
- Russian colonel linked to military intelligence shot dead near Moscow – Ukraine silent
- Russia’s security chief at occupied Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant dies in car blast
- Resistance movement kills top Russian drone chief in Moscow Oblast
Read Also
-
Russian MoD claims it shot down nearly 40,000 Ukrainian long-range drones over Russia and Crimea
-
Crimea isolation: SBU hits two Russian spy ships and an S-400 in occupied Kerch as 2,760 cars piled up trying to get off the peninsula
-
Trade, banks, energy, crypto—the EU keeps its full Russia economic sanctions wall standing to 2027






