Veronica Prokhorenko09:27, 10.02.24
The first wave of drones was contained 100%, but then problems began. The second and third wave of Russian UAVs hit the port infrastructure.

Russia, as part of the launch of the second and third wave of drones in the south of Ukraine, hit the port infrastructure of the Odessa region.
This was reported by the Defense Forces of southern Ukraine. According to the Armed Forces of Ukraine, the occupiers launched Shahed-131/136 UAVs at intervals.
“In three waves lasting one and a half, two and a half and again one and a half hours, the enemy attacked the Odessa UAV of the Shahed-131/136 type,” they specified.
The defenders repulsed the first attack (9 UAVs) 100%. However, then a fragment of the UAV damaged the technical structure of the port infrastructure. An employee of the enterprise was injured.
Next, the enemy hit the port infrastructure of the Danube region with drones – he launched 12 UAVs.
“Enemy drones hit port facilities, three workers were injured,” the military confirmed.
At the same time, Izmail’s civilian infrastructure was damaged. The impact hit the technical premises of industrial and service facilities. The drones also destroyed the road and several cars. In several Ukrainian residential buildings, windows were broken, facades, roofs, etc. were damaged.
“In the Izmail district, as a result of the attack, the fall of debris from a downed drone caused a fire in a private house and garage. There were no reports of casualties,” the department summed up.
(C)UNIAN 2024

Not the same topic.
“The Russian Armed Forces are unpacking the Starlink satellite modem”
https://twitter.com/front_ukrainian/status/1756244969659019461
That bastard Elon Musk seems to have an immunity totem. He can interrupt Ukrainian military actions at the request of the Nazis in the Kremlin and provide logistics to the Red Army. Elon Musk, go burn in hell!
The ruSSians will continue until the air defense ran out of ammo.
Bastards! ☠️💀⚡⚡
https://dumskaya.net/pics/b4/picturepicture_170755093498480003439126_95336.jpg