wanttaja
En-Route
Haven't heard exactly where the explosion occurred. May have been beyond visual range of any shore-based cameras. If drones were involved in the strike (like one previous poster claimed) some of them might have been sending signals back. However, the Russians claimed the Moskva sank due to bad weather while it was being towed...which may imply that getting video might have been difficult.“Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence.”
With that caveat, is it not notable that no video has surfaced of the missile attack on the Moskva. The Ukrainians have not been shy about publishing videos of other successful attacks up to this point.
They have the resolution, but probably not the combination of resolution and coverage. Most imaging satellites are in low Earth orbit, and only cross over a given target area ~four times a day, above the horizon only 15 minutes or so...and half the passes are in the dark. Typically, imaging satellites are in sun-synchronous orbits to provide consistent lighting, so they're coming over around 10 AM or 2 PM, local time. Imaging satellites are strategic, not tactical, despite what the movies show.Do our spy satellites have the resolution to have caught the event?
What MIGHT provide more information are Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) and Communications Intelligence (COMINT) assets, of which the US has good orbital assets that provide near-continuous coverage. They could detect any signals related to the launch, the air defense radars of the Moskva and its escorts going active, the conversations on the radios, etc. Should be very distinctive (and instructive!).
Third, there's what *I* used to do ~45 years ago in the Air Force: non-imaging infrared satellites to detect heat-generating events. 24-hour coverage. Depending on the detection thresholds, they could have seen the launch flares, any defending missile launches, and most certainly the explosion on the Moskva (we saw the flames of the DC-10 crash in Chicago, and that was with '70s technology).
Finally, let's not forget our naval assets. Don't know if the US Navy has managed to slip a submarine into the Black Sea (hard to dive deep when you have ****s that big) but I'd suspect it'd be shadowing the Moskva and its task group. Should be very obvious if the group was trying to defend against incoming missiles.
Ron Wanttaja