Tuesday, November 07, 2023

 

Video: Ukraine Confirms Strike on Another Russian Warship

An unconfirmed image said to show damage to the Russian corvette Askold (Anton Geraschenko)
An unconfirmed image said to show damage to the Russian corvette Askold (Anton Geraschenko)

PUBLISHED NOV 6, 2023 9:52 PM BY THE MARITIME EXECUTIVE

 

The Ukrainian armed forces have confirmed a successful missile strike on a Russian Navy corvette at a yard in eastern Crimea, far behind the Russian lines. It is the latest in a series of attacks that have effectively driven Russian warships away from the western Black Sea.

On Saturday, Ukraine launched a missile attack on the Zaliv shipyard complex in Kerch. Ukrainian and Russian authorities both acknowledged the strike, and the Russian military reported that a ship had been damaged. The shipyard is about 150 miles away from the nearest Ukrainian-controlled territory, and the Armed Forces of Ukraine said that it used French-built SCALP cruise missiles to conduct the attack. 

The AFU claimed that Zaliv was "where one of the most modern ships of the Russian Navy was stationed," but did not identify the target. 

On Monday, a new video and a single image of the strike's aftermath appeared on social media. They appear to show multiple missile strikes on a Karakurt-class corvette, confirming the suspicions of open-source intelligence analysts. 

The Ukrainian military has confirmed the identity of the damaged vessel as the Askold, the latest of the Russian Navy's Karakurt-class missile corvettes. Askold had not yet been commissioned into service, but it would have carried up to eight Kalibr cruise missiles capable of striking targets within Ukraine. Instead, the imagery suggests that it sustained extensive damage to its superstructure, and the timeline for repair (if any) is unknown. 

It is the latest in a series of successful cruise missile strikes against the Russian Black Sea Fleet. Ukraine struck a shipyard in Sevastopol on September 12, destroying an amphibious assault ship and a Kilo-class attack submarine in a single blow. It also destroyed the fleet's headquarters building in downtown Sevastopol, as well as the backup fleet command post outside of the city. 

Ukraine Strikes Another Naval Shipyard in Russian-Occupied Crimea

Resistance
Courtesy partisan group Resistance

PUBLISHED NOV 5, 2023 2:11 PM BY THE MARITIME EXECUTIVE

 

On Saturday, Ukraine launched a missile attack on the Zaliv shipyard complex in Kerch, located on the eastern coast of the Crimean Peninsula. Ukrainian and Russian authorities both acknowledged the attempt, and the Russian military reported that a ship had been damaged. 

According to the Armed Forces of Ukraine, French-built SCALP missiles were used in the deep strike. The shipyard is about 150 miles away from the nearest Ukrainian-controlled territory, far beyond the range of most Ukrainian weapons systems. 

The AFU claimed that the attack on the yard's infrastructure was successful, and that the shipyard was "where one of the most modern ships of the Russian Navy was stationed."

Local Telegram channel Crimean Wind has identified the vessel as the missile boat Askold, a Project 22800 corvette. Askold is a newly built vessel, capable of deploying Kalibr supersonic cruise missiles, which have caused extensive damage to infrastructure behind the lines in Ukraine. 

Askold at launch (Courtesy Russian Ministry of Defense)

According to Russian media, the Russian Ministry of Defense has confirmed that a ship was damaged in the strike, without identifying the vessel. 

Independently-obtained satellite imagery from U.S. operator Planet Labs appears to show that a corvette-sized warship was at the pier at Zaliv a few days before the attack. The same vessel appears in a follow-up photo on November 5, but with changes: the dock next to it now appears black in color, as does the port side of the deckhouse. 

It is the latest in a series of successful SCALP ./ Storm Shadow cruise missile strikes against assets of the Russian Black Sea Fleet. Ukraine struck a yard in Sevastopol on September 12, destroying an amphibious assault ship and a Kilo-class attack submarine in a single blow. It also destroyed the fleet's headquarters building in downtown Sevastopol, inflicting an unknown number of casualties on the Russian Navy's general staff. 

No comments: