Ukrainian soldiers dragged 40-kilo grenade launcher into Russia — and kept firing under guided bombs
They pieced together a heavy grenade launcher under enemy fire, on Russian territory. Ukrainian soldiers of the 39th Brigade assembled a heavy automatic UAG-40 grenade launcher on Russian soil to support an infantry assault in a bold operation.
The weapon is designed for engaging enemy personnel, light armored vehicles, and protective shelters at ranges up to 2,200 meters. It features a rate of fire of 360–400 rounds per minute, firing grenades from a belt-fed system using NATO-standard 40×53 mm grenades in metal link belts.
A Ukrainian defender from the brigade, known by the callsign Philosopher, says that a team of eight soldiers from the fire support company risked their lives to disassemble and transport the mobile grenade launcher.
Its ammunition was also taken into Russian territory, from the Sumy axis, to provide fire cover for advancing Ukrainian assault groups.
“We dragged the UAG-40… onto enemy territory and directly supported assault operations,” Philosopher recalls.
The team rotated positions during the mission. A single ammo box with 32 grenades weighed 15–16 kg, and they needed at least five boxes daily. The UAG-40 itself weighed another 40 kg.
Russian forces bombarded their position with guided air bombs, scoring four direct hits that destroyed their shelter, but the Ukrainians dug themselves out and kept firing.
“When we had to pull back, I gave the order to destroy the UAG so it wouldn’t fall into enemy hands. But they didn’t abandon it, they carried it out,” the defender says.
Today, the legendary launcher is kept with the brigade as a symbol of Ukrainian soldiers’ courage, skill, and tenacity.