Ukraine's FPV drones costing tens of thousands of dollars destroyed a Russian heavy flamethrower system, TOS-1A “Solntsepyok,” valued at over $10 million. The operation was carried out by fighters of the “Bulava” unmanned systems battalion of the 72nd Mechanized Brigade named after the Black Zaporozhians.
The strike was unprecedented: for the first time in history, the Russian system was hit directly on Russian territory, in Belgorod Oblast.
A weapon designed to burn all life
The TOS-1A was specifically designed to destroy fortified positions. Its elimination means saved lives of Ukrainian soldiers in potential areas where this system could have been deployed.
The effectiveness of Ukrainian unmanned units confirms that investments in drones and reconnaissance deliver immediate battlefield results, often much faster than the supply of traditional heavy equipment.
Night reconnaissance, and millions turned into scrap metal
Ukrainian aerial reconnaissance units have detected the Russian equipment at night. Then, two FPV drones were directed at the target, delivering precise strikes. Daytime follow-up reconnaissance confirmed that the expensive system had been destroyed.
“The TOS-1A is one of the most brutal examples of Russian weaponry. The system was created to destroy fortifications and manpower using thermobaric munitions,” the Bulava battalion notes.
Now this “machine of death” is nothing more than a pile of scrap metal, destroyed by Ukrainian FPV operators. As the military emphasizes, unmanned systems can and will punish the aggressor on its own soil.
Ukraine is not only defending itself but systematically depriving Russia of its most dangerous tools. The war is increasingly shifting toward a format in which adaptation, reconnaissance, and technology, not the mass of outdated heavy equipment, play the most decisive role.


