Russia Strips Arctic Air Defenses As Ukraine War Strains Military

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Key military sites in Russia’s far north appear to have been deprived of their air defense assets, recent satellite images show, as the Kremlin attempts to counter an increasingly damaging Ukrainian drone campaign targeting sites elsewhere in the country.

Satellite images sourced by RFE/RL show the Kremlin has shuffled units from several strategic sites once heavily protected by S-300 and S-400 missile systems, leaving little apparent air defense in place.

A missile base near the Rogachevo airfield seen in September 2019 (left), when multiple launch vehicles and radars were in place, and July 2026.

Around the Rogachevo air base in the Novaya Zemlya archipelago of Russia’s Arctic region, a missile base that has been in place since at least August 2015 has had most of its air defense assets removed, a July 6 image shows.

Katarzyna Zysk, a professor with the Norwegian Institute for Defense Studies told RFE/RL that the apparent disappearance of many air defense assets from Russia’s far north represents “a growing mismatch between the targets Russia must protect and its available launchers, interceptors, and trained personnel.”

A missile battery that stood to the south of the Rogachevo air base, seen in July 2022 (top) and July 2026.

Zysk stresses that the apparent emptying of longstanding missile sites does not indicate Russian strategic sites are now entirely without air defense cover. But she says “it suggests that Russia does not anticipate an imminent large-scale attack in the [far north] region and judges that it can reduce protection there without incurring unacceptable risk.”

Kyiv’s drone campaign has largely targeted sites directly linked to Russia’s ongoing war on Ukraine, such as airfields used for bombing runs, and the invading country’s energy infrastructure.

A fleet of missile transporter vehicles and a missile storage revetment seen in July 2022 (left) and in the latest imagery available on Google Earth, from August 2025.

Open source investigations have estimated that some 60 percent of Russia’s S-300 and more modern S-400 air defense systems have been moved away from sites where they were stationed before the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. Air defense systems have largely remained in place around Russia’s nuclear missile silos, and strategic bomber airfields.

An air defense site near Severodvinsk that appears to have been recently stripped of its missile systems.

In Severodvinsk, a city on the White Sea where Russia’s nuclear submarines are built and repaired, several sites where air defense systems have stood for decades to guard the strategically vital site are now empty. Some two dozen S-300 and S-400 systems have disappeared from apparently purpose-built locations around the city, recent images show.

A 2018 file photo of S-400 missile launcher vehicles.

According to The Barents Observer, the whereabouts of one missile system moved out of Severodvinsk was traceable to the combat death of a commander of an S-400 missile system. Lieutenant Colonel Vladimir Spiridonov was killed in Crimea in April 2024 and his remains returned to the far northern city for burial.

A field near the Saratov oil refinery that has been populated by an air defense battery. The photos were made in May 2023 (top) and August 2025.

As systems disappear from the far north, others have appeared alongside more likely targets for Ukraine’s drone attacks. The above image, showing multiple launch vehicles with their missile tubes elevated, was made near the Saratov oil refinery in southwestern Russia. The site has been hit by drones multiple times since early 2025. Other locations, including city parks in Moscow, have been commandeered for S-400 batteries in recent weeks.

Norwegian analyst Zysk says with the current conflict demonstrating that “fixed positions are acutely vulnerable to drones and saturation attack,” it remains to be seen whether the eventual wind-down of the Ukraine war will see Russia's air defense batteries return to the same concentrated sites they have been moved from, or if the Kremlin will adopt "a more dispersed, layered posture."

Norwegian analyst Zysk says the current conflict has demonstrated that “fixed positions are acutely vulnerable to drones and saturation attack,” raising questions about whether Russia will return its air defense batteries to the concentrated sites from which they were moved if the war in Ukraine eventually winds down, or instead adopt “a more dispersed, layered posture.”

 
Russia Strips Arctic Air Defenses As Ukraine War Strains Military

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  • Amos Chapple

    Amos Chapple is a New Zealand-born writer and visual journalist with a particular interest in the former U.S.S.R.

  • Mark Krutov

    Mark Krutov is a correspondent for RFE/RL's Russian Service and one of the leading investigative journalists in Russia. He has been instrumental in the production of dozens of in-depth reports, exposing corruption among Russia's political elite and revealing the murky operations behind Kremlin-led secret services. Krutov joined RFE/RL in 2003 and has extensive experience as both a correspondent and a TV host.

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