Times Colonist

Ukraine says it has sunk another Russian warship in Black Sea

- ILLIA NOVIKOV

KYIV, Ukraine — Ukraine claimed Tuesday it has sunk another Russian warship in the Black Sea using high-tech sea drones as Kyiv’s forces continue to take aim at targets deep behind the war’s front line. Russian authoritie­s did not confirm the claim.

The Ukrainian military intelligen­ce agency said a special operations unit destroyed the large patrol ship Sergey Kotov overnight. The ship, which Ukraine said was commission­ed in 2021 and was hit near the Kerch Strait, reportedly can carry cruise missiles and about 60 crew.

The sinking of such a modern ship would be a significan­t loss and an embarrassi­ng blow for Moscow, even though there are dozens of other vessels in its Black Sea fleet.

Patrol boats such as the Sergey Kotov are part of Russia’s countermea­sures against drone attacks, according to an article published last month by the Foreign Policy Research Institute, a U.S. think tank. The vessels use radar and a helicopter to detect and destroy drones using grenade launchers and heavy machine guns, it said.

Kyiv’s forces are struggling to keep the better-provisione­d Russian army at bay at some points along the largely static 1,500-kilometre front line, but are also taking aim at targets far beyond the battlefiel­d.

In the Black Sea, Ukrainian successes against enemy warships have pushed the Russian fleet away from the coast, allowing Ukraine to set up a grain export corridor.

The Ukraine defence ministry posted on X, formerly Twitter, a video of what it said was the nighttime attack on the Sergey Kotov using Magura V5 uncrewed vessels that are designed and built in Ukraine and laden with explosives. Seven Russian crew members were killed and six were injured in the strike, while 52 crew were rescued, the military intelligen­ce agency said.

The Ukrainian claims could not immediatel­y be independen­tly verified, and disinforma­tion has been a feature of the fighting that broke out after Russia’s full-scale invasion of its neighbour in February 2022.

The private security firm Ambrey said the attack took place at the port of Feodosia, in Crimea, which Russia annexed in 2014. Ambrey said it has seen footage taken from a merchant vessel, showing the Sergey Kotov firing at the drones.

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