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Fighting back

Crimea base blast deals blow to Russia’s war machine in ukraine.

- By NATALIA DROZDIAK, ALEX WICKHAM and VOLODYMYR VERBYANY

EXPLOSIONS at a Russian airbase in Crimea that Ukraine says destroyed nine fighter aircraft may indicate new Ukrainian offensive capabiliti­es that complicate Kremlin efforts to support its invading forces, according to European intelligen­ce officials and defense analysts.

“In just one day, the occupiers lost 10 combat aircraft, nine in Crimea and one more in the direction of Zaporizhzh­ia,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said in his nightly video address to the nation.

More Russian armoured vehicles, ammunition warehouses and logistics routes were also destroyed, and “the more losses the occupiers suffer, the sooner we will be able to liberate our land”, he said.

The exact nature of the recent blasts remains unclear, as Russian officials blame safety lapses involving munitions and deny any Ukrainian role while officials in Kyiv hint at the involvemen­t of their forces. Rumours have swirled online that Ukrainian special forces, partisans, drones or long-range rockets were responsibl­e, which would represent a serious security failure at an important Russian air base some 200km behind the front lines, according to defense analysts.

The destructio­n of combat aircraft at the Saky base follows an unexplaine­d attack on the headquarte­rs of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet in Crimea last month. The suspected Ukrainian assault will likely change Moscow’s view of Crimea as a secure base to support its invasion forces, especially if more strikes follow, the intelligen­ce officials said.

That could force an already stretched Russian military to divert resources to protect areas previously seen as secure, just as Ukraine’s army is pressing to advance toward the southern city of Kherson seized by Moscow’s troops early in the war.

A huge road and rail bridge connecting Crimea to Russia across the Kerch Strait represents an obvious target for Ukraine’s military to sever supply lines to an important staging post for the Kremlin’s forces.

Recently, Belarus dismissed reports of explosions at an airbase close to the Ukrainian border that opposition activists say has been used by Russia’s military during the invasion. An equipment fire broke out at the Zyabrovka base and was extinguish­ed, the staterun Belta news service reported, citing a Belarus Defense Ministry statement.

Satellite imagery of the Crimea base showed apparently extensive damage to buildings and aircraft. Russian losses include at least four SU-30SM multirole aircraft and six SU-24M/MR strike and tactical reconnaiss­ance aircraft, according to analysis of the images by Oryxspioen­kop, a Dutch opensource intelligen­ce defense analysis website.

The Crimea explosions most likely point to sabotage operations either by Ukrainian special forces or partisans, according to Ben Barry, a senior fellow for land warfare at the London-based Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies.

“If Russia wants to guard their airbases, that can only come at the expense of troops for the attack on Ukraine,” he said. “It potentiall­y should reduce the number of Russian forces on the front line – whether that will be decisive or not, we cannot tell.”

Ukrainian officials haven’t directly claimed responsibi­lity while suggesting in social media posts that their forces were behind the explosions. A top Zelenskyy aide warned that the blasts were “just the beginning” of efforts to reclaim Crimea after Russian President Vladimir Putin annexed the Black Sea peninsula in 2014.

That makes the issue potentiall­y even more sensitive for Putin, who has repeatedly declared Crimea to be an inalienabl­e part of Russia, a claim rejected by the internatio­nal community which regards it as Ukrainian territory.

UK Defence Secretary Ben Wallace dismissed Russia’s explanatio­ns for the blasts in an interview with the BBC, saying it was clear the explosions weren’t caused by someone dropping a cigarette. It would be legitimate to target Russian forces in Crimea because “Ukraine, under United Nations articles, is perfectly entitled to defend its territory and take what action it needs to against an invading force”, he said. – Bloomberg News/tribune News Service

 ?? — ugc via ap ?? Rising smoke seen from the beach at saky after explosions were heard from the direction of a Russian military airbase near novofedori­vka, Crimea, on aug 9. More explosions and fires hit a military depot in Russiaanne­xed Crimea on aug 16.
— ugc via ap Rising smoke seen from the beach at saky after explosions were heard from the direction of a Russian military airbase near novofedori­vka, Crimea, on aug 9. More explosions and fires hit a military depot in Russiaanne­xed Crimea on aug 16.

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