Kyiv claims cruise missiles hit in city of Dzhankoi, in attack Russian-installed official blames on drone
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Russian cruise missiles destroyed in Crimea blast, Ukraine says
Kyiv says cargo of Kalibr missiles destroyed on train in city of Dzhankoi in blast that Russia-installed regional chief blames on drone attack
Graham Russell and agencies
Mon 20 Mar 2023 23.31 EDT
Ukraine’s defence ministry has said an explosion in the Crimean city of Dzhankoi destroyed Russian cruise missiles intended for use by Moscow’s Black Sea fleet.
The ministry did not claim responsibility but, if confirmed, Monday’s explosion could represent a rare, daring attack by Ukrainian forces in the heart of territory that was illegally annexed by
Russia in 2014. A Russian military air base is located near Dzhankoi, and Ukrainian officials have long said that the city and its surrounds have been turned into Russia’s largest military base in Crimea.
Russian officials there said the city was the target of a drone attack. Sergei Aksenov, the Russian-appointed governor of
Crimea, said anti-aircraft weapons were fired near Dzhankoi but did not say why or refer to cruise missiles. Falling debris injured one person and damaged a home and a store, Aksenov said.
Anton Gerashchenko, an adviser to Ukraine’s interior ministry, circulated footage he said reportedly showed a train station in the city being hit by a loud single, fiery blast. It was not possible to verify his claim.
Other footage showed the same blast, as well as the sound of what could be anti-aircraft fire beforehand.
The Ukraine defence ministry’s main intelligence directorate said on Monday: “An explosion in Dzhankoi city in the north of temporarily occupied Crimea destroyed Russian Kalibr-KN cruise missiles as they were being transported by rail.”
It said the missiles, designed to be launched from ships in Russia’s Black Sea fleet, had an operational range of more than 2,500km (1,550 miles) on land and 375km at sea.
Ihor Ivin, the Russia-installed head of the Dzhankoi administration, was quoted as saying the city was attacked by drones, and that a 33-year-old man suffered a shrapnel injury from a downed drone.
Russian state news agency Tass quoted Ivin as saying on Krym-24 TV that a house, school and grocery store caught fire, and that the power grid sustained damage.
Oleg Kryuchkov, an adviser to Aksenov, claimed the drones were laden with shrapnel and aimed at civilian targets. One was hit and came down near a technical school while others came down in residential areas, he said.
While Ukraine did not claim responsibility for Monday night’s attack, it has shown it is able to strike at long-distance targets in Crimea. Russia’s Black Sea flagship vessel, the Admiral Makarov, was damaged in a drone attack on the Crimean port of Sevastopol in October, according to an examination of video footage.
Ukraine is also presumed to have
struck the bridge connecting the peninsula with Russia, the
Saky aerodrome, and the naval headquarters building in Sevastopol.
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskiy has always vowed to liberate Crimea, together with all of occupied southern and eastern Ukraine.
With Reuters
They have used lasers to mark the moon, lol.