Tag: Crimea

  • Russian landing ship Caesar Kunikov sank off coast of Crimea – Ukraine

    Russian landing ship Caesar Kunikov sank off coast of Crimea – Ukraine

    A large Russian ship called the Caesar Kunikov has sunk near Crimea. Ukraine’s armed forces reported this.

    There were loud explosions on Wednesday morning, as per local social media. They said that the ship was hit not far from Yalta town.

    Ukraine has attacked Russia’s navy in Crimea several times.

    Satellite pictures from last year showed that most of the ships had left the peninsula.

    Ukraine’s intelligence agency said on a messaging app that they used Magura V5 naval drones in the attack.

    Russia has been at war with Ukraine for almost three years. Ukraine’s military leader says the situation is very difficult.

    Last week, Col Gen Oleksandr Syrskyi became the top commander. On Wednesday, he went to the front line after a Russian missile killed three people in Selydove.

    Russia’s navy did not confirm that the Caesar Kunikov ship was sunk in the Black Sea. They only said they destroyed six Ukrainian drones. A video showing the aftermath of the Ukrainian attack was recently uploaded and verified by media.

    Russian military bloggers acknowledged that their aircraft had been hit, but said that the crew had survived. The Russian military doesn’t often tell about big defeats and Russians listen to just a few popular bloggers for news.

    The Caesar Kunikov was made at the end of the Soviet period. If it’s confirmed that the ship has sunk, it would be the second time a ship has been successfully hit in the Black Sea this month. A little ship called Ivanovets was attacked by drones about two weeks ago.

    In December, the Novocherkassk, a Russian landing ship, was hit while parked in the port of Feodosiya.

  • Ukraine war: Missiles fired into Crimea and Russian city of Belgorod

    Ukraine war: Missiles fired into Crimea and Russian city of Belgorod

    Russian officials said they stopped a Ukrainian attack on a border city as the air war between the two countries gets worse.

    The authorities said that twelve missiles were destroyed before they reached Belgorod. Twenty-five people were killed in Belgorod on Saturday. Ukraine hasn’t said anything.

    The attacks happened after Russia did its biggest bombing from the air.

    Ukraine’s leader, Volodymyr Zelensky, said that Russia has fired around 300 missiles and used 200 drones in the last five days.

    Russia started bombing Ukraine again last week. Ukrainian soldiers fought back against the attack on Belgorod on Saturday, and more than 100 people got hurt.

    In his speech at night, he said Russia shot “almost 100 different types of missiles” on Tuesday. He said that the enemy planned to cause a lot of damage with these weapons.

    MrZelensky said that 10 very fast ballistic missiles were destroyed on Tuesday.

    Ukrainian leaders said on Wednesday that the attacks on Tuesday, including in the cities of Kharkiv and Kyiv, had hurt or killed over 130 people in the country.

    On Tuesday, one person died and five were hurt in Belgorod, according to the region’s governor. However, the 12 missiles that were launched at the area last night were stopped by Russia’s air defense system, according to the defense ministry.

    Explosions happened in Sevastopol, the biggest city in Russia-controlled Crimea. A missile was also shot down over the port. The governor, Mikhail Razvozhayev, said this on Telegram. No one was hurt and nothing was broken.

  • Ukraine claims Russian air defence system destroyed in Crimea

    Ukraine claims Russian air defence system destroyed in Crimea

    Ukraine has successfully destroyed a Russian air defense system in the area of Crimea that Russia has taken control of, according to information received by the BBC.

    The security service and navy of Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine, carried out an attack on a Russian military site near Yevpatoriya using cruise missiles, according to a source from Ukrainian intelligence that spoke to the BBC.

    People on social media shared videos that showed a fire and smoke in a place called Yevpatoriya, which is located in the western part of a peninsula that Russia has control over.

    Moscow has not said anything about the attack so far.

    However, the Russian defense ministry stated on Wednesday that they had destroyed multiple Ukrainian flying robots and prevented another attempt to harm a naval patrol ship.

    There were some explosions reported in Crimea, which Russia took over unlawfully in 2014, earlier on Thursday.

    According to a source from the BBC who knows a lot, the Ukrainian operation used drones to attack a Russian radar. Then, they used cruise missiles to attack missile launchers that protect against attacks from the air.

    The drones targeted the devices that protect against air attacks and the devices that detect enemy planes. After turning off the radar stations, the Navy groups attacked the S300 and S400 ‘Triumph’ systems, which are valued at $1. 2 billion, using two Neptune cruise missiles,” the person said.

    No information was given about how many batteries were focused on.

    Ukrainian news sources said that there were explosions and smoke near a military base at around 5:40 am local time. Local residents reported this. Some videos have been posted on social media.

    Russia’s defense department said that they shot down 11 flying drones over Crimea, but they don’t think the attack was very significant.

    Local officials that Russia chose have not said that they found any problems with the military place or the systems that protect from attacks in the air.

    The S400 air defence system from Russia started being used in 2007, and it is a newer and improved version of the S300 that has been used since 1978.

    There are different types of these systems, but the most advanced one has the longest reach and can go up to 400km (249 miles) in distance, says the Russian Defence Ministry.

    The S400 is able to destroy both manned and unmanned aircraft, as well as ballistic missiles.

    It seems that Ukraine is increasing the number of attacks on the forces that have taken control of Crimea.

    The attack happened after a big attack on the port of Sevastopol, where Ukraine says two Russian naval ships were badly damaged.

    Russian officials said that 10 missiles were used in the attack and it caused 24 people to get hurt. Ukraine used missiles to show that they are using more long-range weapons, some of which they made in their own country.

    The Ukrainian military said they are now using their own made Neptune cruise missiles.

    Meanwhile, Ukraine’s finance ministry announced that the country will receive $1. 25 billion (around £1 billion) from the United States for the World Bank’s PEACE in Ukraine project.

    Officials stated that the money would be used for things that are not related to the military. It would be given to people who are in need and used to provide education and medical help.

  • Russian shipyard in Crimea hit by Ukrainian missiles

    Russian shipyard in Crimea hit by Ukrainian missiles

    Ukraine attacked a Russian ship repair base in Crimea early Wednesday morning. This is Ukraine’s biggest attack on the port since the war started.

    Russia’s Defense Ministry said that the Ukrainian army attacked the Sergo Ordzhonikidze shipyard in Sevastopol. The shipyard is used by Russia to fix its Black Sea Fleet. The attack involved 10 cruise missiles and three unmanned boats.

    The ministry stated that their air defense forces successfully destroyed seven missiles, and their patrol ship Vasily Bykov destroyed all of the boats.

    However, Russian officials have said that the attack caused harm to two Russian warships and 24 individuals were hurt.

    Mikhail Razvozhaev, the governor chosen by Russia to govern Sevastopol, the biggest city in Crimea, confirmed a big attack that happened. Crimea was taken over by Moscow’s forces in 2014 without following the law. Videos and pictures that are said to be from the area, some shared by Razvozhaev, show a big cloud of smoke and a raging fire.

    Razvozhaev said he was at a place called Sevmorzavod. 24 people were hurt in the attack, with 4 in okay condition.

    Another Russian military blogger, who is not officially recognized, mentioned that two ships were harmed. One was a diesel-electric submarine called “Rostov-on-Don,” and the other was a big landing ship named “Minsk,” which had a fire incident. Both boats were being fixed in a special area without water. CNN wasn’t able to confirm the story themselves.

    Another account that was not official said that Ukraine used missiles called Storm Shadow that were made in Britain.

    The leader of Ukraine’s air force, Lieutenant General Mykola Oleshchuk, said on Wednesday: “While the people who took over are still getting over the attack at night in Sevastopol, I want to thank the pilots of Ukraine’s air force for their great job in fighting. To be continued. ”

  • Russian air defence system destroyed by Ukraine’s new ‘super missile’ attack

    Russian air defence system destroyed by Ukraine’s new ‘super missile’ attack

    The annexation of Crimea has been used as testing ground for a “new, completely modern” weapon that Ukraine has boasted of constructing.

    An explosion at a Russian S-400 missile complex close to the Tarkhankut peninsula settlement of Olenivka was captured on camera and provided by the Defence Intelligence of Ukraine (GUR) last week.

    Initial theories suggested that the army had deployed a Storm Shadow missile supplied by the British or French with precise accuracy to level the storehouse.

    However, Oleksiy Danilov, the National Security and Defence Council‘s secretary, informed Ukrains Radio about the advanced missile.

    A “super missile” from Ukraine hits a missile depot in the seized Crimea.

    “The missile was brand new and very advanced,” he said, complimenting its perfect performance.

    At the same time, Ukrainian TV highlighted that it is not clear if the missile is completely new or just changed from an existing one.

    One idea is that the Neptune missile, which flew close to the ground and slower than the speed of sound, and sank the Moskva ship, may have been changed.

    More information about this new and innovative missile has not been shared yet, but it seems to be made to attack targets on the ground.

    In the past, Ukraine has hinted at the possibility of using new weapons to attack Crimea from a far distance.

    Ukrainian intelligence says that all of Russia’s S-400 air defence system was destroyed.

    The system can hit things in the air, on the ground, and in the ocean. It can hit things that are up to 250 miles away in the sky.

    According to Ukrainian official Anton Gerashchenko, the explosion caused complete destruction to the installation, missiles, and the people on it.

  • Russia shoots down drones in Crimea as explosions heard at Kerch bridge

    Russia shoots down drones in Crimea as explosions heard at Kerch bridge

    There have reportedly been explosions along the Kerch Bridge in Crimea, which connects Russia with the occupied area.

    Russian-appointed officials assert that they shot down two drones in the vicinity and that no bridge damage has occurred, despite the temporary suspension of traffic.

    Smoke can be seen erupting from the bridge in a video of it.

    The report was released after Russian troops overnight destroyed 20 drones over Crimea.

    The ministry announced in a Telegram message that 14 drones were shot down by Russian air defences and an additional six were electronically jammed. There were no reported injuries or damage.

    The drone strikes on Moscow, the capital of Russia, lasted three days in a row before the nocturnal attacks.

    Drone attacks on Russia have little clear military benefit for Ukraine after more than 17 months of hostilities, but the tactic has succeeded in unsettling Russians and making the war’s repercussions real to them.

    Drone strikes on Moscow and Crimea, which Russia took from Ukraine in 2014 and which the majority of the world viewed as illegitimate, have risen in recent weeks.

    Officials in Kiev have not acknowledged or denied any involvement by Ukraine in the attempted strikes.

    In a separate incident, Russia asserted that a nighttime counterattack had allowed it to retake control of the town of Urozhaine in eastern Ukraine’s Luhansk area.

    According to Oleh Syniehubov, the regional governor, a 73-year-old woman was killed early on Saturday morning during Russian shelling of Ukraine’s north-eastern Kharkiv area.

    Ihor Klymenko, the minister of internal affairs for Ukraine, reported that a guided Russian aerial bomb struck the city of Orikhiv in the country’s partially controlled southern Zaporizhzhia region, killing one police officer and injuring 12 others.

    He claimed that four of the injured also included police officers.

    Since Russia began its full-scale invasion in February 2022, the city of Odesa on Ukraine’s Black Sea coast has opened a number of beaches.

    Six beaches, according to Odesa Governor Oleh Kiper, are open, but he emphasised that it is not permitted to enter beaches when there is an air raid alert.

    Since Moscow cancelled a historic grain deal last month amid Kyiv’s relentless efforts to retake its occupied territories, the strategic port and major hub for grain exports has been repeatedly targeted by missile and drone attacks, and Russian mines have frequently washed up on the city’s beaches.

  • Road bridges between occupied Ukraine and Crimea hit by explosions

    Road bridges between occupied Ukraine and Crimea hit by explosions

    As Ukraine intensifies its attacks on Russian infrastructure and territory, major road bridges connecting the seized Crimea with areas of the Kherson region under Russian control have been destroyed by explosions, according to Russian authorities.

    The explosions happened the same day the mayor of Moscow reported that a drone had been shot down as it approached the city, and shortly after that, Ukraine attacked a significant naval facility and one of Russia’s largest oil tankers with a sea drone.

    Videos appear to show a Russian cruiser being attacked by a Ukrainian sea drone.

    The missiles that struck two bridges in Crimea on Sunday, according to Vladimir Saldo, the interim leader of Kherson region chosen by Russia, were all Storm Shadows, an air-launched long-range missile supplied to Ukraine by the UK.

    Saldo said that civilian traffic, not military traffic, used the two bridges. Twenty thousand people of the Kherson city of Henichesk had their supplies cut off due to a gas pipeline rupture that ran across the bridge.

    This kind of cunning rocket attack is unforgivable, Saldo remarked. It resembles an injured animal rising to its feet.

    “These strikes have no impact on the ongoing special military operation,” They have made the decision to exact small-scale retaliation against civilians and those currently traversing the land of the Kherson region.

    He said that no one was wounded and that traffic would resume on the bridge by the end of the day.

    Volodymyr Zelensky, the president of Ukraine, had earlier claimed that a Russian guided aerial bomb had hit a blood transfusion facility in the Kharkiv region on Saturday.

    Without giving an exact count, he said, “There are dead and wounded.”

    Overnight, a fresh round of Russian missiles also impacted targets across Ukraine, the majority of which were intercepted.

    The fighting is becoming more and more frequent with Ukrainian attacks within Russia and on territory that is under Russian control.

    Throughout the summer, a number of drone attacks targeted Russian cities, including Moscow, and on Friday, a battleship was left listing after an attack on a Russian port hundreds of kilometres from Ukrainian-held territory.

    Russian tanker being attacked by a marine drone in a video. Here’s why it might change everything.

    On Saturday, Ukraine vowed that additional strikes on Russian ships and the Crimea bridge will occur.

    Any explosions that occur near Russian ships or the bridge over the Crimean Peninsula are “certainly a logical and practical move.” Additionally, these special operations are carried out in Ukrainian territorial seas and are entirely lawful, according to Vasyl Maliuk, head of the SBU.

    The only way for the Russians to halt these explosions, according to Maliuk, is to leave Ukraine’s territorial waters and our territory.

  • Russia accuses Ukraine of attacking tanker near Crimea

    Russia accuses Ukraine of attacking tanker near Crimea

    Russian authorities have reported that a Russian tanker carrying 11 crew members suffered damage in an attack within the Black Sea, allegedly carried out by Ukrainian forces.

    The incident, which occurred in the Kerch Strait, resulted in damage to the vessel’s engine room during an overnight strike. Fortunately, no injuries were reported among the crew.

    While Ukraine has not made a public statement regarding the incident, a source from the Ukrainian security service informed the BBC that a sea drone was utilized in the attack.

    This marks the second consecutive day featuring an assault involving similar weaponry. However, Russia has not confirmed any destruction resulting from the previous day’s attack.

    Sea drones, also known as naval drones, are unmanned, compact vessels designed to operate either on or beneath the water’s surface.

    The Kerch Strait serves as the link between the Black Sea and the Sea of Azov, effectively dividing Crimea – a peninsula seized by Moscow in 2014 – and Russia’s Taman peninsula.

    Ukraine’s SBU security service revealed that the operation on Saturday was conducted in collaboration with the Ukrainian navy, involving the use of 450kg of TNT explosive. Notably, the targeted tanker was laden with fuel, causing the resulting explosion to be visible from a considerable distance.

    As per Russia’s maritime transport agency, the Sig tanker was positioned 17 miles (27km) south of the Crimean Bridge at the time of the attack.

    An official from Russia’s regional Marine Rescue Co-ordination Centre (MRCC) reported to the state-run Tass news agency that two tugboats had already arrived at the scene of the assault, situated just south of the Kerch Strait.

    “The engine room was damaged. Not much, but it was damaged,” the official said.

    Russia’s maritime transport agency RosMorRechFlot later said the vessel had a hole “in the area of [the] engine room near the waterline from the starboard side, presumably as a result of an attack by a sea drone”.

    “The ship is afloat,” it added.

    Reports from Russian state-run media indicate that the Crimean Bridge’s lights, located to the north, were deactivated and traffic was halted due to warnings of an impending attack.

    On Friday, Ukrainian security sources informed the BBC that a Ukrainian naval drone had executed a substantial strike on a Russian naval vessel near the Black Sea port of Novorossiysk. Allegedly, footage emerged depicting the drone hitting the Olenegorsky Gornyak large landing ship. Another video, yet to be verified, displayed a prominently tilting vessel being towed to port.

    In contrast, Russia’s defense ministry asserted that it had successfully thwarted a Ukrainian attack on its naval base in Novorossiysk, involving two sea drones, without acknowledging any resulting damage.

    Situated southeast of the Kerch Strait, Novorossiysk stands as a significant conduit for Russian exports.

    Recent weeks have witnessed escalated clashes at sea, coinciding with Russia’s abandonment of a pivotal UN agreement that ensured secure grain exports across the Black Sea.

    Russian drones and missiles have targeted Ukrainian ports, prompting Kyiv to issue threats of retaliation.

    In a distinct development, Saudi Arabia is scheduled to convene talks aimed at resolving the Ukrainian conflict later on Saturday. Invitations have been dispatched to approximately 30 nations, excluding Russia, for the meeting to be held in the Red Sea city of Jeddah.

    Russian President Vladimir Putin initiated a comprehensive invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

  • Crimean attacks will continue – Ukrainian defence minister

    Crimean attacks will continue – Ukrainian defence minister

    Oleksii Reznikov, Ukraine’s defence minister, declares that Ukraine will keep attacking the Russian-occupied Crimea and the Kerch Bridge that connects it to the Russian mainland while simultaneously acknowledging that the plan for Ukraine’s lethargic counteroffensive is running late.

    Ukraine has kept up its airstrikes within Crimea while Russia has pounded the southern port city of Odesa and the surrounding area over the past week. A week after seaborne drones hit the Kerch bridge, Ukrainian drones bombed an ammo stockpile on Tuesday.

    According to Reznikov in an interview with CNN, “all these targets are official targets because it will lessen their ability to fight against us (and) will help to save the lives of Ukrainians.”

    Asked if Ukraine’s goal is to permanently disable the bridge, Reznikov responded: “It’s normal tactics to ruin the logistic lines of your enemy to stop the options to get more ammunition, to get more fuel, to get more food, etcetera. That’s why we will use these tactics against them.”

    Reznikov also accused Russia of operating as “a terrorist state.”

    The fifth night of Russian strikes in Odesa badly damaged more than two dozen landmarks in the historic city center. Drones meanwhile pounded the region’s port infrastructure, targeting crucial grain stocks days.

    The barrage comes after Moscow withdrew from a crucial grain deal that allowed for the safe export of Ukrainian wheat to international markets, exacerbating a global food crisis.

    “This approach is absurd, but it’s real and that’s why it’s new evidence they are a terrorist state,” Reznikov told CNN’s Alex Marquardt on Saturday.

    Senior Russian officials have said the spike in attacks is a response to a deadly explosion on the strategic Kerch bridge in Russian-occupied Crimea earlier this month.

    “(Russia) tried to explain that it’s a response for some explosions in their territories, but they are fighting with the civilians,” Reznikov said. “That’s why I call them looters, rapists and murderers.”

    Asked if Ukraine plans to ramp up attacks against Russian ships in the Black Sea in retaliation, he said, “We have capacity. We have weapons as we did with the cruiser Moskva and if they threaten us in the Black Sea, we’ll have to respond.”

    The pride of Russia’s fleet, guided-missile cruiser Moskva, sank in the Black Sea in April, in an attack claimed by Ukrainian officials.

    Ukrainian air defense forces have struggled to counter Russia’s renewed attacks on Odesa in recent weeks, as Kyiv attempts to break Moscow’s tight defenses in the southeastern regions.

    But Ukraine’s grueling counteroffensive has not resulted in any significant breakthroughs, despite Western allies donating billions of dollars worth of aid to bolster Kyiv’s military might and putting hundreds of soldiers through training.

    Reznikov however insisted the operation is “going to plan,” saying: “Our generals, our commanders, they see the real situation on the battlefield. And again, I have to repeat the main value for us is life of for our soldiers.”

    But asked if the plan is behind schedule, he acknowledged that it is.

    If Ukrainian forces can successfully puncture Moscow’s sizeable defense lines along Ukraine Sea of Azov coastline that links Crimea to Donbas, Reznikov said it would be “a good result” for Kyiv.

    “We have to do it thinking about the lives of our soldiers instead of Russians. They’re using the soldiers as cannon fodder.

    “It’s a war and I think that we will show to the world again that we will win this war,” he said, referring to Ukraine taking back territory in the Kherson and Kharkiv regions.

    Reznikov said that F-16 training for Ukrainian pilots will begin in August, adding that if Kyiv had the fighter jets now they would “certainly” have helped make more progress in the counteroffensive.

    Reznikov also said he would share a report with the United States about the use of controversial US-supplied cluster munitions in Ukraine this week, “probably Monday or Tuesday.”

    Highly destructive cluster munitions are outlawed by the UK, France, Germany and other key US allies, but the US and Ukraine are not signatories to the ban, nor is Russia.

    Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has shifted the security landscape in Europe, triggering Western allies to rethink their national security strategy and reigniting calls from Kyiv to join NATO.

    The NATO summit in the Lithuanian capital of Vilnius in July kicked off with heightened pleas from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to invite Ukraine into the bloc, despite resistance from allies amid Kyiv’s war with Russia.

    In his interview with CNN, Reznikov acknowledged that Ukraine will likely only be able to join the alliance once the war is over, referencing Article 5, which requires members to come to the defense of any fellow member under attack.

    “”After the victory, after then, it will be in the interest of NATO because we became a real eastern shield of NATO or eastern shield of Europe,” he said.

    Ukraine has gained “real combat experience – how to deter Russians, to defeat them, to beat them with using NATO standard weaponry,” he added.

    He predicted that Ukraine’s membership bid will be accepted in July 2024, when the NATO summit is scheduled to take place in Washington to mark the 75th anniversary of the alliance.

    Asked if he thought the war would be over by next summer, he quickly answered, “Yes. We will win this war.”

  • Two killed and one injured after ‘attack’ on bridge connecting Crimea to Russia

    Two killed and one injured after ‘attack’ on bridge connecting Crimea to Russia

    In an incident that destroyed the main bridge connecting Crimea to Russia‘s mainland, the Ukrainian Security Service apparently claimed responsibility.

    Early this morning, after what they called a “emergency,” officials shuttered the 12-mile (19-km) bridge.

    At the eastern end of the Kerch Bridge in the Krasnodar area, the health ministry reported two fatalities on the bridge, along with a daughter who was also hurt.

    Sources told BBC Russian and Ukrainian news site censor.net that the attack was carried out as a ‘special operation’ by Ukraine’s naval forces and Security Service.

    Separately, the Russian-installed head of the Crimean parliament Vladimir Konstantinov also said Ukraine was responsible, blaming it on the ‘terrorist regime in Kyiv’.

    The incident prompted immediate speculation on messaging app Telegram, with pro-Kremlin channel Readovka suggesting ‘a missile attack was carried out on the Crimean bridge, as a result of which the 145th support pillar collapsed’.

    There has been no confirmation that any of the 600 pillars on the bridge have collapsed, and Russia’s transport ministry said only the road surface was affected.

    A video believed to be filmed this morning shows a large gap between sections of road.

    Governor Sergei Aksyonov said he expected rail traffic on the bridge to resume within a matter of hours, though no such assurances were given for road traffic.

    The moment of the explosion of the Crimean Bridge, 17 July 2023
    A low-quality image reportedly captures a significant explosion on the bridge last night (Credits: Romanov92/e2w)

    On Telegram, he wrote: ‘An emergency occurred in the area of ​​​​the 145th support from the [Russian side of the bridge].

    ‘Measures are being taken to restore the situation. I ask residents and guests of the peninsula to refrain from traveling through the Crimean bridge and, for security reasons, choose an alternative land route through new regions.’

    The Kerch Bridge is a vital supply route for the war in Ukraine, providing rail and road links to the rest of Russia through the region it annexed in 2014.

    Opened in 2018, it has been described as Vladimir Putin’s flagship infrastructure project and a major feat of engineering.

    It was damaged in October by a truck bomb on its roadway, and only fully reopened in February.

    Several question remain about who carried out last year’s attack and how, but it was celebrated by the Ukrainian government and the country’s postal service released a stamp to commemorate the event.

    Oleksiy Danilov, who leads Ukraine’s National Security and Defence Council, posted a video of Marilyn Monroe singing ‘Happy Birthday, Mr President’ alongside a clip of the explosion, which happened the day after Putin turned 70.

  • Ukraine grain deal: Russia says extension is still yet to be decided

    Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Vershinin says the fate of the grain deal after November 18 is unknown.

    Vershinin stated that the agreement is divided into two parts, one of which calls for lifting sanctions on Russian food exports.

    “It is impossible not to mention here the terrorist attacks that the Ukrainian side carried out on the Crimean Bridge. And the terrorist attack on Sevastopol, where ships are stationed that provide a humanitarian corridor through which dry cargo ships or other vessels go as part of the implementation of this Black Sea grain deal,” he said.

     

  • What has happened in Kherson?

    Russian forces swept across southern Ukraine from annexed Crimea at the start of the war in February, seizing Kherson city in early March.

    But yesterday the Russian defence minister ordered the withdrawal of his forces from the city, and the west bank of the Dnipro river.

    Russia’s commander in Ukraine, Sergei Surovikin, said it was no longer possible to keep supplying the city.

    Kherson has been the biggest prize in Russia’s invasion but Ukrainian forces have mounted a concerted counter offensive over recent weeks to try to recapture the city.

    So this is the biggest setback yet for President Putin’s invasion.

    Source: BBC

  • Russia withdrawing troops from major city of Kherson

    Russian troops have been ordered to leave Kherson, a key city in southern Ukraine.

    General Sergei Surovikin stated on television that it is no longer possible to supply Kherson and other parts of the Dnipro River’s west bank.

    He said: “We will save the lives of our soldiers and fighting capacity of our units.

    “Keeping them on the right (western) bank is futile.

    “Some of them can be used on other fronts.”

    Russia’s defence minister Sergei Shoigu responded by saying: “I agree with your conclusions and proposals.

    “Proceed with the withdrawal of troops and take all measures to transfer forces across the river.”

    The announcement marks one of Russia’s most significant retreats – Kherson city was seized by Russia early in the war and is the only regional capital the country has taken during the conflict, which is almost nine months old.

    Mikhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said: “Ukraine does not pay attention to Russian statements – words and actions differ.”

    Kherson region was annexed in September, along with three other parts of Ukraine – Luhansk, Donetsk and Zaporizhzhia.

    Mr Zelenskyy has said a number of times that the return of all occupied territory is a condition for any peace talks with Russia.

    But Russia is unlikely to relinquish its claim to the four regions, or to Crimea, which it took in 2014.

  • US President: Russia’s decision to halt a grain deal is ‘outrageous

    The US president has called Russia’s decision to withdraw from an UN-brokered grain deal “utterly outrageous,” claiming that it will increase hunger.

    On Saturday evening, Joe Biden made the remarks while speaking to reporters.

    Following attacks on a number of ships in occupied Crimea, Moscow announced it would withdraw from the grain export deal.

    The agreement was signed in July and was allowing shipments of Ukrainian grain to be exported from blockaded ports.

    A UN spokesperson has said they are in touch with Russian authorities and that all sides should refrain from doing anything to imperil the deal.

     

  • What is going on in Kherson?

    We stated in the previous hour that Ukraine had hit a critical bridge near Kherson, so here’s a rundown of what’s going on in the south.

    Ukrainian forces have increased pressure on Russian positions in the occupied zone, focusing on resupply routes across the Dnieper.

    Ukraine has long trailed a full-scale counteroffensive on the region, hoping to take back control. The city of Kherson was one of the first urban areas captured by Moscow’s forces and remains the largest city under Russian occupation. It is a key target for both sides due to its key industries and major river port.

    The region of Kherson has been illegally annexed by Russia, and Vladimir Putin imposed martial law there earlier this week in an attempt to assert Russian authority.

    In recent weeks, Ukraine has targeted key crossings along the Dnieper river to cut off Russian resupplies.

    The Antonivskyi Bridge – the main route from Crimea to Russian-held territories in southern Ukraine – was struck late last night.

    Russian authorities have set up ferry crossings and pontoon bridges to ferry supplies to Kherson after the bridge was made inoperable.

     

  • US: Iranian drone trainers are assisting Russian soldiers in Crimea

    The US says Iranian military trainers are in Crimea teaching Russian soldiers how to utilise Iranian-made drones to attack targets in Ukraine.

    “We can confirm that Russian military personnel based in Crimea have been piloting Iranian UAVs and using them to conduct kinetic strikes across Ukraine, including in strikes against Kyiv in recent days,” US State Department spokesman Ned Price told a daily briefing with reporters.

    “We assess that … Iranian military personnel were on the ground in Crimea and assisted Russia in these operations,” Price said.

    He added “we do have credible information,” but did not provide evidence.

     

  • Elon Musk compliments a prominent Putin loyalist in a bizarre Twitter interaction

    Elon Musk, the inventor of Tesla, has become increasingly significant in discussions about the Ukraine conflict, amid new accusations that he has communicated with Vladimir Putin.

    He drew severe criticism after proposing a peace plan in which Ukraine ceded Crimea to Russia.

    His latest intervention involves a somewhat bizarre Twitter exchange with former Russian prime minister, senior Kremlin official, and prominent Putin ally Dmitry Medvedev.

    Musk had complimented Mr Medvedev on a “pretty good troll” after he ridiculed outgoing prime minister Liz Truss.

    He then asked the deputy chairman of the Security Council of Russia about it the current situation in Bakhmut, which has faced intense Russian shelling over recent days.

    Mr Medvedev concluded (for now at least) the seemingly friendly discussion by suggesting he would see Musk “in Moscow on the Victory Day”.

     

  • Black Sea grain deal: Russia readies to quit deal, writes to UN with demands

    Russia’s Geneva U.N. envoy told Reuters on Thursday that Moscow has expressed reservations to the UN about a pact on Black Sea grain exports and is prepared to reject renewing the accord next month unless its demands are met.

    The July accord, mediated by the UN and Turkey, allowed Ukraine to resume grain exports from Black Sea ports that had been closed since Russia’s invasion. Moscow obtained assurances for its own grain and fertiliser exports.

    The agreement helped stave off a global food crisis: Russia and Ukraine are two of the world’s biggest grain exporters and Russia is the number one fertiliser exporter. But Moscow has repeatedly complained about its implementation, arguing it still faces difficulty selling fertilizer and food.

    In an interview with Reuters, Gennady Gatilov, Russia’s ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva, said Moscow had delivered a letter to U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday setting out a list of complaints. U.N. officials are due in Moscow on Sunday to discuss the renewal of the agreement.

    “If we see nothing is happening on the Russian side of the deal – export of Russian grains and fertilisers – then excuse us, we will have to look at it in a different way,” he said.

    He declined to make a copy of the letter available. A spokesperson for the United Nations did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    \Asked if Russia might withhold support for the grains deal’s renewal over the concerns, he said: “There is a possibility…We are not against deliveries of grains but this deal should be equal, it should be fair and fairly implemented by all sides.”

    Gatilov, a career diplomat who was deputy minister of foreign affairs before taking up the Geneva post, said that he saw fading prospects for a negotiated settlement to the nearly eight-month war in Ukraine. He cited what he called “terrorist acts” such as an explosion on a bridge to Crimea.

    “All this makes it more difficult to reach a political solution,” he said.

    Washington has said that Russian claims to be open to talks on the war’s future amount to “posturing” as it continues to strike Ukrainian cities.

    Asked about the prospect of a meeting between President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Joe Biden, Gatilov said it was not feasible given the levels of U.S. military support for Ukraine. “It makes the U.S. a part of the conflict,” he said.

    However, he was more upbeat on other negotiated outcomes such as on aid access and a further prisoner swap, calling these “a possibility”.

     

  • NATO’s chief of staff promises a “united and determined response” in the event of an energy supply attack

    The EU suspects sabotage caused the damage to the Nord Stream gas pipelines last month, and Russia has come under suspicion, but it is not known for definite who was to blame.

    The head of the alliance has promised that a planned attack on NATO’s energy sources will be faced with a “united and determined response.”

    Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg pledged to boost the protection of critical infrastructure in response to the damage to the Nord Stream gas pipelines.

    The EU believes three leaks in the pipelines last month were the work of sabotage and suspicion has fallen on Russia, but it is not known for sure who was responsible.

    Mr Stoltenberg said NATO has doubled its presence in the Baltic and the North Sea to more than 30 ships supported by aircraft and undersea activities.

    In a speech on Tuesday, he also said the alliance is monitoring Russia’s nuclear forces closely as the country was “losing on the battlefield” in Ukraine.

    Meanwhile, Moscow has issued a fresh warning to the West over its involvement in the Ukraine war.

    Deputy foreign minister Sergei Ryabkov said Russia will take adequate countermeasures in response to the West’s “growing involvement”.

    In the comments reported by the state-owned RIA news agency, he said: “We warn and hope that they realise the danger of uncontrolled escalation in Washington and other Western capitals.”

    Russian bombs have rained down on Ukraine, killing at least 14 people on Monday.

    Vladimir Putin said the strikes were in retaliation for its “terrorist action” against Russian territory – the attack on the Kerch Strait Bridge in occupied Crimea – but Ukraine has rejected this claim of “provocation”.

    Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has vowed to make the battlefield “more painful” for Russian troops in response to the rocket attacks and said air defence was the “number one priority”.

    Despite remarkable Ukrainian battlefield successes – both early on in the war with the defence of Kyiv and more recently with counterattacks in Kharkiv and Kherson regions – the war could continue for decades to come, one expert said.

    Sky News security and defence analyst Professor Michael Clarke said the war is likely to be a “generational struggle” and could be a “forever conflict” until “something changes in European security or Russia”.

    Mr Clarke said the current crisis in Ukraine was the “second war” and the first war was witnessed in 2014 when Russia annexed Crimea.

    He added: “My feeling is next year there will be a ceasefire in which the Ukrainians will be better placed and that ceasefire will be unstable and it will break down and there will be a third war and then a ceasefire and a fourth war.

    “We’re dealing here with an existential struggle because the Russian establishment thinks that Ukraine has no right to exist and they won’t change their mind in the short-term.

    “This is likely to be a generational struggle. Let’s say it’s going to last 30,40 or 50 years.”

     

  • Motive for Putin’s escalation is ‘pretty understandable’ says Ukrainian MP

    An alleged Russian missile strike on a new power plant in the area has been reported, according to Ukrainian MP Volodymyr Ariev, who is in Kyiv this morning.

    He said: “We know that yesterday’s strike was preplanned since Russian policy is still in effect. Although the perpetrator of the explosion in Crimea hasn’t been identified, [Vladimir] Putin would like to respond to it.”

    Mr Ariev added that the reason for this escalation is “pretty understandable”.

    “In one month, Putin is going to the meeting of G20 countries on Bali Island in Indonesia,” he said. “So he would like to present himself not as a weak leader after the defeat of Russian army in conventional battlegrounds.

    “He would like to speak to the world from a position of strength. So that’s why he changed the commander… and his first day was an air strike to scare Ukraine.

    “Of course, Ukrainians were not scared.”

     

  • Zelenskyy, Liz Truss: Ukraine expresses hope in British government’s support

    Ukraine “counts on Britain’s leadership”, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said following a call with Prime Minister Liz Truss.

    Ms Truss and Mr Zelenskyy spoke today following the wave of attacks which left at least 11 dead and 64 injured.

    The missile and drone barrage was launched by Moscow in retaliation for the attack on a bridge linking Russia with Crimea.

    The Russian attacks prompted an international outcry, with Ms Truss and fellow leaders of G7 nations expected to hold crisis talks on Tuesday.

    Following the call with Mr Zelenskyy, a spokesperson for Ms Truss said the prime minister had stressed that the UK stood “wholeheartedly” behind the Ukrainian leader.

     

     

     

  • Crimea bridge blast: Putin accuses Ukraine of ‘terrorism’

    Vladimir Putin, the president of Russia, has described the attack on the bridge leading to Crimea, which Russia has annexed act as an “act of terrorism”.

    President Putin said Ukraine’s intelligence forces had aimed to destroy a critically important piece of Russia’s civil infrastructure.

    He was speaking at a meeting with the head of the Investigative Committee of Russia, Alexander Bastrykin.

    Officials say three people were killed in the blast on the bridge.

    The victims were in a nearby car when a lorry blew up, Russian officials say.

    “There is no doubt, this is an act of terrorism aimed at destroying Russia’s critical civilian infrastructure,” Mr Putin said.

    “Its authors, perpetrators, and beneficiaries are the security services of Ukraine.”

    Mr Bastrykin said that citizens of Russia and some foreign states had aided preparations for the attack.

    Crimea map

    According to Mr Bastrykin, investigators have established that the truck which they say blew up travelled through Bulgaria, Georgia, Armenia, North Ossetia and Krasnodar Territory.

    He has ordered an investigation into the incident which brought down sections of the roadway.

    Ukrainian officials have not indicated that their forces were behind the attack.

    But an adviser to Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky, Mykhailo Podolyak, denied Mr Putin’s accusation.

    He wrote that there is “only one terrorist state here” and that the “whole world knows who it is”.

    “Does Putin accuse Ukraine of terrorism? It looks too cynical even for Russia,” he said.

    On Saturday, President Volodymyr Zelensky acknowledged the incident in his nightly address: “Today was not a bad day and mostly sunny on our state’s territory.”

    “Unfortunately, it was cloudy in Crimea. Although it was also warm,” he added.

    Crimea bridge before and after the explosion

    Russian authorities partially re-opened the roadway part of the bridge hours after the attack but for light traffic only.

    The railway part of the bridge – where oil tankers caught fire – has also reopened.

    The 19km (12-mile) bridge, the longest in Europe, is an important supply route for Russian forces fighting in Ukraine.

    Russia has used the bridge to move military equipment, ammunition, and personnel from Russia to battlefields in southern Ukraine.

    It was opened by Mr Putin in 2018, four years after Russia’s annexation of Crimea.

    Security camera footage released on social media showed a truck – allegedly from the Russian city of Krasnodar, an hour’s drive from the crossing – moving west across the bridge at the time of the explosion.

    The footage shows a huge fireball erupting just behind – and to one side – of the truck as it begins to climb an elevated section of the bridge.

    The speed with which the truck bomb theory started to spread in Russian circles was suspicious. It suggested the Kremlin preferred an act of terrorism to a more alarming possibility: that this was an audacious act of sabotage carried out by Ukraine.

    “I’ve seen plenty of large vehicle-borne IEDs [improvised explosive devices] in my time,” a British army explosives expert told me. “This does not look like one.”

    A more plausible explanation, he said, is a massive explosion below the bridge – probably delivered using some kind of clandestine maritime drone.

    “Bridges are generally designed to resist loads on the deck and a certain amount of side loading from the wind downwards,” he said. “They are not generally engineered to resist upward loads. I think this fact was exploited in the Ukrainian attack.”

    Some observers have noted that in one of the other security camera videos, something that looks like the bow wave of a small boat appears next to one of the bridge supports, a split second before the explosion.

     

     

  • Crimea bridge: Russia ramps up security after blast

    Russia ramped up security on its only bridge to Crimea after a huge blast destroyed sections of it on Saturday.

    President Vladimir Putin has now ordered the country’s Federal Security Service (FSB) to oversee the key connector to the occupied peninsula.

    The bridge is also a pivotal symbol of Russia’s annexation of Crimea from Ukraine in 2014. The blast killed three people, Russian investigators said.

    Officials said work to fix the damaged sections would begin immediately.

    Russia’s deputy prime minister ordered the destroyed parts of the bridge to be taken down immediately, and said divers would begin investigating damage below the waterline on Sunday morning, Russian news agencies report.

    Hailed by Russian media as “the construction of the century”, the bridge has been crucial to Russia for the movement of military equipment, ammunition and troops into southern Ukraine.

    But new satellite images released on Saturday showed smoke and fire near the collapsed areas of the 19km (12-mile) bridge, which was opened with much fanfare four years after Moscow annexed Crimea.

    Since it plays a strategic role in the war, Ukrainian authorities have said it is a legitimate target, as they vow to retake the peninsula.

    Ukrainian officials responded with thinly-veiled approval to the explosion – but have not indicated that their forces were behind the attack.

    President Volodymyr Zelensky acknowledged the incident in his nightly address on Saturday, saying: “Today was not a bad day and mostly sunny on our state’s territory.”

    “Unfortunately, it was cloudy in Crimea. Although it was also warm,” he added.

    Russian authorities moved swiftly to reopen those parts of the key connector still intact, and said late on Saturday that the bridge has been partially reopened to road and rail traffic.

    It is a vital artery in Moscow’s supply chain to the battlefront in its invasion of Ukraine – and to the annexed Crimean territory itself.

    The Moscow-appointed governor of Crimea, Sergei Aksyonov, said there was a desire for revenge, but made reassurances that the peninsula still had a month’s worth of fuel and more than two months’ worth of food.

    “The situation is manageable – it’s unpleasant, but not fatal,” he said.

    Ukrainian official David Arakhamia, parliamentary head of Mr Zelensky’s party, said “Russian illegal construction is starting to fall apart and catch fire.

    “The reason is simple: If you build something explosive, then sooner or later it will explode.”

    And a Ukrainian MP told the BBC that regardless of who was responsible for the attack, this was a “big Ukrainian victory and very severe and hard loss for Russia”.

    “The bridge is not destroyed but damaged, but the image of Putin is destroyed, that is the most important thing,” Oleksiy Goncharenko said.

    Crimea map

    It is hard to overstate the political, symbolic and strategic significance of the Crimean bridge. Russian officials previously claimed it was well protected from threats from air, land or water – particularly since it is more than 100 miles from Ukrainian-held territory.

    A Russian national anti-terrorism committee said the damage was caused by a truck bomb blowing up, which caused seven railway carriages to catch fire. The home of a man from the Krasnodar region of southern Russia is being investigated, it added.

    While Ukraine has not linked its armed forces to the explosion, it has targeted Crimea in the past. Last month, Ukraine claimed responsibility for a series of air strikes on Crimea – including an attack on Russia’s Saky military base.

    Since the bridge attack on Saturday, Ukraine’s social media has erupted in celebration. Its second-largest bank says it has already issued a new debit card design featuring the collapsed bridge.

    In recent weeks, Kyiv’s forces have taken back significant amounts of territory seized by Russia earlier in the war.

    Hours after the bridge explosion, Russia appointed a new commander to lead its troops in Ukraine. Sergei Surovikin is a veteran commander known for leading Russian forces in Syria and was accused of overseeing the decimation of the city of Aleppo.

    But Russia still controls swathes of Ukraine, including the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant – the biggest in Europe – which has lost all external power and is relying on emergency diesel generators for the energy it needs for reactor cooling, according to the UN nuclear watchdog.

    And the nearby city of Zaporizhzhia, in Ukraine’s south-east, saw overnight shelling which killed at least 12 people, according to regional governor Oleksandr Starukh.

    A dozen Russian air strikes hit several residential buildings, destroying some and damaging many more, he said.

    “There may be more people under the rubble. A rescue operation is under way at the scene. Eight people have already been rescued,” he said on Telegram.

    Earlier, officials said 17 people had been killed in the shelling.

    Source: BBC

  • Ukraine’s Crimean fightback having ‘psychological impact’ on Russia

    Ukrainian strikes on Crimea are having major psychological and operational effects on Moscow’s forces, Western officials have told journalists.

    Explosions at the Saki airbase on 9 August and other assaults have put more than half of the Black Sea fleet’s naval jets out of action, they said.

    The fleet has a revered history, but it has suffered a series of humiliations since the invasion began in February.

    Officials said the setbacks have forced it to adopt a defensive posture.

    In March, the fleet’s flagship, the cruiser Moskva, was sunk by Ukraine. The 510-crew missile cruiser had led Russia’s naval assault on Ukraine, and its sinking was a major symbolic and military blow.

    At the time, the Russian defense ministry said ammunition on board the Moskva exploded in an unexplained fire, and the ship tipped over while being towed back to port.

     

    In June, the fleet suffered another embarrassment when it was forced to abandon Snake Island, a tiny outpost in the north-west of the Black Sea seized by Russia on the first day of its invasion, after coming under sustained Ukrainian bombardment.

    In recent weeks, the fleet’s home in the Crimean peninsula, which Russia annexed in 2014, has come under attack from Ukrainian forces.

    At least eight fighter jets were destroyed in the bombardment of Saki airbase on 9 August.

    Following the attacks, scores of holidaymakers were seen fleeing the peninsula, which was previously untouched by fighting. Images acquired by the BBC showed queues of traffic on roads leading out of Crimea three days after the attack.

    The 9 August strikes were not the only apparent Ukrainian strikes in Crimea.

    In July, Russian officials alleged that a Ukrainian drone attack forced an end to Navy Day celebrations in Sevastopol, and on 16 August there were explosions at at arms depot on the peninsula.

    Source: BBCnews

  • Ukraine admits it was behind three explosions in Crimea

    Ukraine was behind three explosions that rocked Russian military facilities in the annexed province of Crimea this past week, including an explosion at a Russian air base on the peninsula’s west coast that wrecked several airplanes, according to a Ukrainian government report circulated internally and shared with CNN by a ​Ukrainian official. ​

    The official requested anonymity because they were not authorized to share the information with the media.

    The report describes the Saki airbase, which was rocked by explosions last Tuesday, as a hard but one-time loss for Russian military infrastructure in the peninsula, with subsequent attacks as proof of Ukraine’s systematic military capability in targeting Crimea.

    The August 9 incident at Saki airbase, which destroyed at least seven military aircraft, severely damaged the base, and killed at least one person​.

     

    Russia claimed it was a result of an accident and Ukrainian officials have so far declined to confirm on the record that they were responsible. What caused the explosions remains unclear.

    In a speech following the incident, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said the war “began with Crimea and must end with Crimea — its liberation.”​

    Another set of explosions were reported in Crimea this week, on August 16, this time at an ammunition depot in Maiske and at an airfield in Gvardeyskoe.

    Russian officials said the incident in Maiske had been the result of sabotage​, but they did not specify the kind of sabotage, or whom they believed was responsible.

    What do we know about other recent incidents?

     

    On Tuesday, a fire and smoke plume were seen rising from an electrical substation 12 miles away from Maiske’s ammunition depot, according to social media footage. The cause of the fire, and smoke, at the substation remains unclear.

    The incidents both took place around the Dzhankoi area, described by the British Ministry of Defence as “a key road and rail junction that plays an important role in supplying Russia’s operations in southern Ukraine.”

    Smoke rises from an electric substation in Crimea on Tuesday.

    The attacks come at a time when nascent resistance movement in Russian occupied areas appears to have been carrying out acts of sabotage.

    Over the weekend, Ukrainian officials said that a railway bridge near the southeastern Ukrainian city of Melitopol, used by Russians to transport military equipment and weapons from occupied Crimea, was blown up by Ukrainian partisans. Melitopol has for months been a center of underground resistance to Russian occupation.

    As analysts speculate that there is a campaign to degrade Russia’s military capability in Crimea, Zelensky warned Ukrainians living in occupied areas on Tuesday to stay clear of Russian forces’ military facilities.

    What do the blasts mean for Putin’s ambitions?

     

    The explosions at Saki airbase jolted sunbathers lounging in beach-side cabanas last week, and marked the start of a series of mysterious incidents on the Ukrainian peninsula that threatens the jewel of President Vladimir Putin’s revanchist ambitions.

    Western officials and analysts have since offered competing explanations about the cause.

    In any event, the Cavell Group said, the “Saki attack was audacious and highly effective in both damaging Russian reinforcements and striking a significant psychological blow to morale amongst the Russian military and civilians.”

    A mushroom cloud of smoke can be seen in the distance, scaring beachgoers in Crimea last week.

    Whatever caused the explosions, they could have significant implications for the overall conflict, especially if the attack were to have been carried out with any new long-range weapon system that Ukraine has developed.

    The UK Ministry of Defence says that the loss of combat jets represents a minor proportion of the overall fleet of aircraft Russia has available to support the war.

    But it noted that Saki is the main base for supporting the Russian navy in the Black Sea. “The fleet’s naval aviation capability is now significantly degraded. The incident will likely prompt the Russian military to revise its threat perception,” it said.

    It may also cause a re-evaluation of the threat to Crimea which “has probably been seen as a secure rear-area,” the ministry said.

    Source: CNN

  • Russian-Ukraine war : Seven Russian warplanes destroyed in Crimea blast

    According to recent satellite photographs, at least seven Russian warplanes were destroyed on Tuesday after explosions shook and claimed Crimea. According to CNN research, this may have been Moscow’s largest loss of combat aircraft in a single day since World War II.

    The destroyed warplanes appear to be Su-24 bombers and Su-30 multirole fighter jets, said Peter Layton, a fellow at the Griffith Asia Institute and a former Australian Air Force pilot, who examined Planet Lab satellite photos showing the Saki Air Base before and after the explosions.
    Two more warplanes appear to have been damaged, Layton said. On Wednesday, the Ukrainian armed forces added nine aircraft to the tally of Russian military hardware they say has been destroyed since the Russian invasion of Ukraine began in February.
    A satellite image from August 10, after the explosion, shows the charred remains of at least seven aircraft in the earthen berms.
    The Ukrainian Ministry of Defense said it could not determine the cause of the explosions at the air base, which lies 225 kilometers (140 miles) behind the Russian front line, according to the Institute for the Study of War think tank.
    The Russian Ministry of Defense said the blasts were caused by aviation ammunition — but did not say how it had been detonated.
    Video on social media, verified and geolocated by CNN as being from the air base, shows smoke rising from the base before it is rocked by three large, fiery explosions that send black mushroom clouds into the sky. Two of the explosions happen almost simultaneously and a third occurs shortly thereafter.
    The satellite photos also show ​the explosions burned a swath of vegetation around a portion of the air base.

    ‘Explosive propagation’

    Layton said the satellite images point to a deliberate attack, rather than an accident, due to the presence of three large craters.
    Whatever caused the craters could have caused other Russian munitions to explode, Layton said.
    “If one bomb explodes, it can send high speed, very hot fragments into any adjacent bombs and detonate them. This is called explosive propagation,” Layton said. “In the image of the Russian air base, you can see three explosion sources. These set off adjacent aircraft that it seems had bombs on them. The explosion propagated.”

    In the trenches: See Ukrainians holding the line against Russia

    Russian munitions are not engineered to avoid such chain-reaction explosions, Layton added.
    He noted that the type of destruction at the air base is reminiscent of what led to the sinking of the Russian Navy cruiser Moskva earlier in the Ukraine war.
    “The Moskva also had an internal explosion when warheads in the anti-ship cruise missiles on board self-detonated,” Layton said. “This was the explosive fill burning to an explosion.
    “Russian weapons are less safe than Western weapons in terms of the sensitivity of the explosive fill of the warheads. This is at least due to most weapons being old ex-Soviet stocks and so old technology,” he said.
    The Planet Labs photos show that other aircraft not destroyed but possibly damaged by the explosions had been moved away from the area where the blasts occurred.
    The detonations also caused damage in a nearby town, where windows in some buildings were blown out, according to Russian state news agency TASS. Some high-rise buildings lost power, while shops and a cultural center were damaged, TASS reported.
    Russian warplanes
    Four helicopters and a four-engine plane appear to have left the air base in the past 24 hours, the satellite images taken before and after the attack appear to show.

    Zelensky’s Crimea vow

    Since 2014, the Saki Air Base has been home to a Russian naval aviation regiment, part of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet, according to the state-run RIA-Novosti news service.
    Russia annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014, after Russian President Vladimir Putin sent military forces into what was then an autonomous region of southern Ukraine with strong Russian loyalties.
    Thousands of Russian-speaking troops wearing unmarked uniforms poured into the peninsula in early March that year. Two weeks later, Russia completed its annexation of Crimea in a referendum slammed by Ukraine and most of the world as illegitimate.