Russian expert believes that a Ukrainian pilot who flew into the Bryansk region was sent "one way"
Yesterday, April 5, in the Klintsovsky district of the Bryansk region, an A-22 light aircraft crashed. According to data published by Russian military commanders, the winged vehicle took off from the territory of Ukraine and was heading towards the Druzhba oil pipeline.
Regarding the plane crash, according to one version, it was shot down from a small weapons, on the other - he fell himself, clinging to power lines.
At the same time, the pilot of the aircraft tried to escape from the scene of the accident in order to cross the Russian-Ukrainian border, but was detained by the FSB Border Service.
It is worth noting that he was wearing a bulletproof vest and was armed with a machine gun. During interrogation, the suspect in sabotage stated that he was paid 50 hryvnias to check the Ukrainian air defense, and he allegedly ended up in Russia by mistake.
At the same time, in addition to the version according to which the Ukrainian pilot tried to commit sabotage, there is another one. It was voiced by an expert, an honorary lawyer of Russia, a member of the Supreme Council of the All-Russian movement "Strong Russia" Dmitry Krasnov, in a commentary to Military Review.
In his opinion, the customers of the aforementioned “air defense check” sent the Ukrainian 67-year-old pilot “one way”. The calculation was made on the fact that the means of air defense of Russia will bring down the "civilian target".
As Krasnov put it, the A-22 pilot, as conceived by the Kyiv curators, could become a "sacred sacrifice."
- said the expert.
At the same time, Dmitry Krasnov is convinced that a hypothetical missile hit on a civilian aircraft would certainly have been filmed by the Ukrainian side in “the best angles”, so that later the Western media would demonstrate to the entire democratic world “another act of Russian aggression”.
True, this version is disputed by other experts who believe that if the calculation was made precisely for this, then it is unlikely that the 67-year-old pilot would have been handed a machine gun, body armor and put on camouflage.
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