The Fencer was long rumored to be the Ukrainian aircraft of choice for using the British-supplied cruise missile.
Two weeks after the announcement of the delivery of Storm Shadow cruise missiles to Ukraine, we have now confirmation that the British-supplied weapons are carried in combat by the Su-24 Fencer. The photo, shown on Twitter by Ukraineโs Minister of Defence Oleksii Reznikov, was presented to UKโs Secretary of Defence Ben Wallace as he visited Kyiv.
Wallace visited Kyiv on May 24 to discuss priorities for increasing Ukraineโs defense capabilities, particularly providing long-range weapons, as well as the countryโs NATO adhesion and future plans. The Secretary of Defence also signed the photo with the caption โTo all the brave โfewโ who risk all for the glory of Ukraineโ.
I was glad to host my great friend Ben Wallace, @BWallaceMP, in Kyiv.
We had a very meaningful discussion focused on priorities for increasing Ukraineโs defense capabilities, particularly providing long-range weapons such as Storm Shadow.
We also discussed prospects forโฆ pic.twitter.com/kVEo8dtFMc
โ Oleksii Reznikov (@oleksiireznikov) May 24, 2023
The aircraft in the photo appears to be the Su-24MR โYellow 60โ assigned to the 7th Tactical Aviation Brigade, which operates both the standard Su-24M โFencer Dโ and the MR โFencer Eโ recon variant. Although the MR variant is not equipped with air-to-ground weapons, it appears to have been modified to carry the missiles on the pylons usually loaded with the external fuel tanks.
#Ukraine: We obtained the first ever HQ image of the ๐ฌ๐งStorm Shadow missile used by the Ukrainian Air Force, carried by Su-24MR “Yellow 60” of the 7th Tactical Aviation Brigade.
This aircraft, refurbed in 2018, was originally a reconnaissance model-until recently of limited use. pic.twitter.com/4TXIVAHIgG
โ ๐บ๐ฆ Ukraine Weapons Tracker (@UAWeapons) May 24, 2023
The Su-24, which in the photo is carrying two Storm Shadow missiles (one clearly visible, the other can be recognized by its outline on the other wing), has always been considered the most likely candidate to employ the cruise missile. In fact, the MiG-29 and Su-27 were considered unlikely as their heaviest loading hardpoints are certified for up to 1,000 kg (although some sources say the Flanker might be able to carry it under the fuselage but with heavy limitations), while the Storm Shadow weights 1,300 kg.

As we reported, the missile has already been employed against Russian targets few days after the delivery was announced. The info, first emerged online after debris traceable to the Storm Shadow were found near air strikesโ targets in the Russian occupied areas, was later confirmed also by the UKโs Secretary of Defence last week.
In the meanwhile, the delivery of other long-range weapons is being discussed. Among those are the Storm Shadowโs French variant, the SCALP, and the German equivalent, the Taurus KEPD 350.

