New Russian Sarmat-3 armored vehicle destroyed days after first deployment
It hit a mine in Russia's Kursk Oblast area, resulting in one death and one injury, shortly after its first battlefield appearance.
A newly deployed Russian armored all-terrain vehicle, the LSTS-1944 “Sarmat-3,” has been destroyed in Kursk Oblast just days after its first appearance on the battlefield, Defence Blog and Defense Express report.
The incident occurred in Glushkovo, located in Russia’s Kursk Oblast less than 10 km from the Ukrainian border. The vehicle was reportedly destroyed in a mine explosion that killed one occupant and left another severely wounded.
The loss came to light after Russian media circulated images of the destroyed vehicle. Several photos and a video were shared on the Telegram channel lost_warinua, indicating that the incident occurred on 23 October. A Russian commentator in the original video misidentified the destroyed vehicles as “a Ukrainian armored vehicle” of a sabotage group that allegedly tried to break through to Russian-controlled Glushkovo. Later, it was confirmed to be the rare Sarmat-3, a recent addition to Russia’s light-armored fleet.
About a week earlier, a Russian media outlet published a photo of the same vehicle, providing rare confirmation that Sarmat-3, typically used by special and air assault forces, is deployed against Ukraine.
Defense Blog notes that the destruction of this advanced vehicle highlights the continuing vulnerability of modern armored vehicles to conventional battlefield hazards such as mines and improvised explosive devices, particularly in cross-border operation zones.
Related:
- Ukrainian FPV drones destroy rare Russian self-propelled artillery and mortar system
- Some 450 foreign-made microelectronic components identified in Russian weapons recovered in Ukraine – RUSI
- Ukrainian defenders receive American-made Cougar MRAP armored vehicles
- Ukraine approves Swedish PbV 302 armored vehicle for military use
- Frontline report: Ukraine launches cross-border “counter-counter-offensive” towards Russia’s Glushkovo
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