It also said it had reported the incident to the relevant authorities.
For Ukrainian observers, the whole operation, a year-and-a-half in the making, remains a marvel."This can be considered one of the most brilliant operations in our history," Roman Pohorlyi, founder of the DeepState, a group of Ukrainian military analysts, told me.
"We've shown that we can be strong, we can be creative and we can destroy our enemies no matter how far away they are."It's important to note that almost all the information that has emerged since Sunday has been released by the SBU itself.Flushed with its own success, it is keen to cast the operation in the best possible light. Its information campaign has been helped by the fact that the Kremlin has said almost nothing.
Speaking to the media on Wednesday after handing out medals to SBU officers involved in the operation, the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelensky repeated the claim that 41 aircraft had been damaged or destroyed."Half of them cannot be restored," he said, "and some will take years to repair, if they can be restored at all."
Had a ceasefire been in place, he added, Operation Spider's Web would not have happened.
The latest four-minute compilation released by the SBU shows a number of key details.M&S estimates it will reduce profits for the current year by around £300m.
On Monday, it revealed its chief executive's total pay packageto follow the world's top tech stories and trends.
Billions of pounds of investment in transport infrastructure in England have been announced by Chancellor Rachel Reeves.The money will be spent on tram, train and bus projects in mayoral authorities across the Midlands, the North and the West Country.