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Strikes show we are coming for Crimea, Kyiv tells Moscow

A series of enormous explosions, including that of a military ammunition dump, are only the start of a campaign to free the territory Vladimir Putin annexed, Ukrainian officials say.

A Ukrainian tank rolls down a road at a position along the front line in the Donetsk region. Picture: AFP
A Ukrainian tank rolls down a road at a position along the front line in the Donetsk region. Picture: AFP

Ukraine has warned Russia that a series of spectacular strikes hundreds of kilometres into Crimea are just the beginning of a campaign to free the peninsula that was annexed by President Vladimir Putin in 2014.

On Tuesday an enormous Russian ammunition dump exploded at a military base 200km behind the nearest front line, an airfield was ablaze outside Simferopol, the Crimean capital, and an electricity substation connecting the peninsula was destroyed. “These fireworks mean that Crimea is coming back to Ukraine,” Serhiy Bratchuk, the spokesman for Odesa region’s military administration, said.

Video from Azovske, near the town of Dzhankoi, northern Crimea, showed huge blazes after munitions were detonated, firing rockets off into the air. Earlier footage from a passing train had shown dozens of BM-21 Grad multiple launch rocket systems present at the ammunition dump before the blasts.

A satellite image of Saki airbase prior to the reported attack in Novofedorivka, Crimea, Ukraine. Picture: AFP
A satellite image of Saki airbase prior to the reported attack in Novofedorivka, Crimea, Ukraine. Picture: AFP
A satellite image of Saki airbase following the reported attack in Novofedorivka, Crimea, Ukraine. Picture: AFP
A satellite image of Saki airbase following the reported attack in Novofedorivka, Crimea, Ukraine. Picture: AFP

Although Ukraine did not formally claim responsibility, an adviser to President Volodymyr Zelensky hinted at the country’s involvement. “Morning near Dzhankoi began with explosions,” Mihailo Podolyak wrote on Twitter. “Demilitarisation in action.” An electricity substation nearby was hit in a separate attack and there were reports that a Russian airbase near Simferopol was also burning.

The Russian Ministry of Defence acknowledged the strikes on the munitions dump, blaming saboteurs and calling them “terrorist attacks”. Sergei Aksyonov, the Russian-installed leader of Crimea, said 3000 people had been evacuated and two people had been injured. Traffic jams stretched across the Kerch bridge linking Crimea to Russia as panicked Russian tourists cut short their holidays, while large queues formed at Simferopol rail station.

The attacks follow the near-total destruction of a Russian airbase and 10 planes in a blaze at Novofedorivka last Tuesday. Ukrainian officials told media that all were the result of raids carried out by an “elite special forces unit”, apparently able to operate with impunity at the heart of Mr Putin’s military operations in the south of Ukraine.

When contacted by The Times, however, military intelligence officials and special forces operators from a unit that has conducted several raids on Russian soil said that they had no knowledge of a special forces operation.

Satellite photos in the aftermath of the hit on the Novofedorivka airbase, near the town of Saky, showed large impact craters that suggested missile strikes rather than the type of explosive that could be carried by a special forces team. The Kremlin claimed that the destruction at the airbase was caused by an accidental fire.

Fire and smoke billows from a munitions depot in Crimea. Picture: AFP
Fire and smoke billows from a munitions depot in Crimea. Picture: AFP

The US has said it has not provided Ukraine with missiles capable of striking so deep into Russian-controlled territory. Kyiv has Neptune long-range anti-ship missiles, used to sink the battle cruiser Moskva, but these would need adapting for use against land targets and to fly through a three-layered Russian air defence to reach Crimea.

Ukraine’s air force has been targeting Russian anti-aircraft systems with the US-provided AGM-88 anti-radar missiles, resulting in radar operators turning off their systems to avoid being hit. It said Russia had been stockpiling missiles for an attack on August 24, which is Ukrainian independence day and six months since the invasion began.

It listed other targets that had could have been destroyed in the strike: “In the area of the Azovske railway station were 17 armoured fighting vehicles, 10 Gvozdika self-propelled guns, seven Msta-S self-propelled guns, two Pion self-propelled guns, three BM-21 Grad [multiple launch rocket systems], as well as ammunition. Dzankoi is a very fat nodal transit target. And this fat target was waiting for its time.”

The strikes are the latest setback for the Russian army in southern Ukraine, after nightly Himars missile strikes rendered the three bridges across the Dnipro river under its control inoperable.

Natalia Gumenyuk, a spokeswoman for Ukraine’s southern command, said that Moscow had withdrawn its army commanders from the occupied city of Kherson, on the northwestern bank of the Dnipro, leaving about 10,000 men without secure supply lines.

“Their command staff is very quickly moving in the direction beyond the bridge to ensure it’s not cut off from routes to safer territory,” she said.

However, in the Donbas region in eastern Ukraine, Russian forces are firmly dug in and still advancing slowly. Thousands of Russian troops have been sent to the south to meet a Ukrainian counter-offensive.

In Kharkiv, in northeastern Ukraine, one civilian was killed and nine others were wounded by Russian shelling, Oleh Synyehubov, the regional governor, said. He said the overnight attack was one of the most massive shellings of Kharkiv in recent days.

The Times

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/the-times/strikes-show-we-are-coming-for-crimea-kyiv-tells-moscow/news-story/7cb7fe0108b2a582981055a2b5788b36