Boston Sunday Globe

Drone attack sets off blaze in Crimea

Fuel depot in the contested area is targeted

- By Marc Santora and Victoria Kim

KYIV — A drone attack on a fuel depot in the city of Sevastopol in Russian-occupied Crimea set off an enormous fire early Saturday, a Russian official said, in the latest assault on a peninsula key to Moscow’s war effort.

A thick cloud of black smoke darkened the skies above the port city, which is home to the Russian Navy’s Black Sea Fleet.

The Crimean Peninsula, which was illegally annexed by Russia in 2014 and has been heavily fortified in the years since, is critically important to Moscow’s control over occupied territorie­s in southern and eastern Ukraine. It has increasing­ly become a target of attacks, although Ukraine typically maintains a policy of strategic ambiguity about strikes there.

The Kremlin-appointed local governor, Mikhail Razvozhaev, urged local residents to remain calm as teams of firefighte­rs battled a blaze that he said was caused by “enemy drones.” Ukrainian officials did not claim responsibi­lity for Saturday’s blaze.

“The main thing is that no one was hurt,” Razvozhaev told reporters at a news conference. “With the rest — we’ll figure it out.”

Crimea was a key staging ground when President Vladimir Putin ordered the full-scale invasion of Ukraine more than a year ago. The Russian leader visited Sevastopol last month to mark the ninth anniversar­y of Russia’s annexation, a defiant gesture just one day after an internatio­nal court issued a warrant for his arrest.

As Ukrainian officials say the country is in the final stages of preparatio­n for a counteroff­ensive to take back territory seized by Russian forces, President Volodymyr Zelensky has maintained that Kyiv needs to reclaim control of Crimea to prevent future aggression by Moscow.

He reiterated that position in an interview published Saturday by the Finnish channel Yle, saying that the more weapons the West can provide to Ukraine, the faster the war will end.

“We want to save as many lives as possible, so the number of weapons matters,” he said.

Part of Ukraine’s argument in asking for longer-range missiles from its allies has been that it wants to be able to strike deeper behind Russian lines, including in Crimea. The Biden administra­tion so far has held a hard line against doing so, fearing it could provoke the Kremlin.

It is often unclear how Ukrainian forces are able to hit Russian targets in Crimea, but the attacks have become increasing­ly bold.

In August, explosions rocked a Russian air base in Saki. Ukraine claimed credit for the attack two months later, when Kyiv’s top commander, General Valerii Zaluzhnyi, wrote that the military had targeted a number of Crimean military sites, including the air base, to undermine Russia’s military abilities and stoke worries in Moscow about the security of areas it considered to be out of reach of Ukrainian weapons.

In October, an explosion severely damaged the only bridge linking Crimea to Russia, a deep embarrassm­ent for the Kremlin. Since then, Ukraine is believed to have been behind several high-profile attacks on Russian ships anchored at the port in Sevastopol.

As Ukrainian forces set the stage for the long-expected counteroff­ensive, assaults on the peninsula, including attacks on rail links and other vital infrastruc­ture, have increased.

At the same time, Russian forces have been building up their defensive positions across the heavily militarize­d peninsula. Satellite photograph­s published by private firms in recent weeks reveal a growing network of trenches and other fortificat­ions.

On Saturday, a spokespers­on for Ukraine’s military intelligen­ce service said the fire at the fuel depot in Sevastopol was “God’s punishment” for Uman, the city where a Russian missile strike a day earlier killed 23 people, including five children.

“This punishment will be long lasting,” spokespers­on Andriy Yusov said.

“All residents of the temporaril­y occupied Crimea should not be near military facilities and facilities that supply the aggressor’s army in the near future.”

He claimed that more than 10 tanks with oil products with a total capacity of 40,000 tons were destroyed in Saturday’s blaze. However, local Russian authoritie­s said that the damage was less extensive and that the fire had been extinguish­ed as of the afternoon. While Razvozhaev initially said that two drones had hit the fuel depot, he later clarified to say that a second drone had been shot down before it reached the target.

While Ukrainian officials cheer the attacks on Crimea, the military typically does not take credit in order to maintain operationa­l secrecy. Kyiv does not want Moscow to know what long-range weapons it has at its disposal, even as it engages in ambitious fund-raising campaigns to expand its fleet of long-range aerial and maritime drones, officials say.

On Saturday morning, the billowing smoke from the fire at the oil depot on Kazachya Bay could be seen for miles. It was burning an area of about 10,000 square feet, Razvozhaev said, adding that there would be no evacuation of the local area and fuel supplies for drivers would not be affected.

In Ukraine’s southern Kherson region, shelling in the town of Bilozerka hit a hospital and several private homes, killing a 57-year-old woman in her home and injuring three more people, the regional military administra­tion said Friday evening.

 ?? SEVASTOPOL GOVERNOR MIKHAIL RAZVOZHAEV/TELEGRAM CHANNEL VIA AP ?? A firefighte­r communicat­ed over a walkie-talkie as smoke and flame rose from a burning fuel tank in Sevastopol, Crimea, on Saturday. A massive fire erupted at an oil reservoir there after a drone strike. Ukrainian officials did not claim responsibi­lity.
SEVASTOPOL GOVERNOR MIKHAIL RAZVOZHAEV/TELEGRAM CHANNEL VIA AP A firefighte­r communicat­ed over a walkie-talkie as smoke and flame rose from a burning fuel tank in Sevastopol, Crimea, on Saturday. A massive fire erupted at an oil reservoir there after a drone strike. Ukrainian officials did not claim responsibi­lity.

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