 Russia says it snagged the intact parts of a storm shadow missile and can now study this munition. Russia claimed that it secured the intact parts of a storm shadow missile brought down in Zaporizia which could possibly provide Moscow insight into a British-made weapon devastating its forces in Ukraine. The storm shadow missile shot down by Russian forces in the Zaporizia region was brought to Moscow for study. Russian state news agency TASS reported describing the missile as a trophy TASS wrote that Russian authorities had already received the storm shadow parts and are inspecting them. The outlet reported that the materials were obtained by Dmitry Rogozin the former head of the Russian space agency Roscosmos who now runs a science and technology center attached to forces deployed in Ukraine. Rogozin's telegram channel released a video of Russian troops loading a vehicle with munition parts that resemble those of a storm shadow missile. While the missile was clearly damaged its components appear to be largely intact according to insider media outlet. Storm shadow missiles provided by Kyiv by the UK Ministry of Defense have a range of more than 155 miles and can evade detection from air defense systems by flying low. They are typically fired from an aircraft. Ukraine launches them from SU-24 FENSA jets.