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Ukraine war: Satellite images show Russian warplanes destroyed in Crimea airbase attack |

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Satellite images appear to show several Russian warplanes at an airbase in Crimea have been damaged or destroyed.

Ukraine’s air force said on Wednesday that nine aircraft were demolished in explosions a day before – a claim Russia denied.

The images, from the US-based Planet Labs, show several warplanes in pieces and swathes of scorched earth.

Image:
The airbase before the attack

One person was reportedly killed and more than a dozen others injured in the series of blasts at the Saky Russian military airbase, close to seaside resorts on the annexed Crimean Peninsula.

Kyiv has not publicly claimed responsibility for the attack, but a senior Ukrainian official told Sky News that Ukrainian Special Forces carried out the operation.

It would be the first known major attack on a Russian military site on the Crimean Peninsula, which was seized from Ukraine by the Kremlin in 2014 and used as a launchpad for the invasion of its neighbour in February.

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Explosions near beach in Russian-occupied Crimea

Russian warplanes have used the base to strike areas in southern Ukraine.

Crimea holds huge strategic and symbolic significance for both sides.

The Kremlin’s demand that Ukraine recognise Crimea as part of Russia has been one of its key conditions for ending the fighting, while Ukraine has vowed to drive the Russians from the peninsula and all other occupied territories.

The Russian authorities sought to downplay the explosions, saying on Wednesday that all hotels and beaches were unaffected on the peninsula, which is a popular tourist destination for many Russians.

Crimea airbase attack ‘a very public and costly failure’ for Russia

Justin Crump, CEO of the intelligence company Sibylline and ex-British military veteran, said it appeared SU24 and SU30 strike aircraft belonging to naval aviation were destroyed in the attack.

“Ukraine has claimed nine aircraft were destroyed, and the satellite images seem to show at least that,” he told Sky News. “Ukraine carried out this attack but we don’t know for sure how.”

He said: “They have privately indicated special forces were most likely used. This seems credible given an earlier attack on the fleet HQ in Sevastopol two weeks ago. That was a drone strike, but it shows that they have got capability and people operating around Sevastopol, and the US has said no US-supplied weapons were used – so this all points to ingenuity by Ukraine.

“It looks like there were three locations where very large explosions took place, seemingly centred on buildings and ammunition storage, which subsequently affected the nearby aircraft.”

He added: “Russia can replace these aircraft, but they cannot replace the loss of confidence to Crimea as a safe area, including for Russian tourists.

“It is a very public and costly failure that will further fuel paranoia in the Russian military, while Ukraine will seek to remain the element of surprise in its operations.”

Moscow said the explosions were detonations of stored ammunition and had not been caused by an attack.

Russia’s main news agencies quoted an unnamed ministry source as saying that “only a violation of fire safety requirements is considered as the main reason for the explosion of several ammunition stores at the Saky airfield”.

Ukrainian officials appeared to mock Russia’s explanation that a careless smoker might have caused ammunition at the Saky airbase to catch fire and blow up.

In an apparently sarcastic post on Facebook, the Ukrainian defence ministry said: “The Ministry of Defence of Ukraine cannot establish the cause of the fire, but once again recalls the rules of fire safety and the prohibition of smoking in unspecified places.”

It added: “We can’t rule out that the occupiers will ‘accidentally’ find some characteristic ‘insignia’, ‘visiting card’ or even ‘DNA’.”

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‘We will never give up Crimea’

One tourist, Natalia Lipovaya, said that “the earth was gone from under my feet” after the powerful blasts.

Sergey Milochinsky, a local resident, recalled hearing a roar and seeing a mushroom cloud from his window. “Everything began to fall around, collapse,” he said.

A Ukrainian parliament member, Oleksandr Zavitnevich, said on Facebook the airfield – which houses fighter jets, tactical reconnaissance aircraft and military transport planes – was no longer usable.

The developments come amid renewed shelling of the Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant in southern Ukraine on Thursday.

Russian-installed local officials blamed Ukraine for shelling the plant for the second time in one day, disrupting the shift changeover of power plant workers.

Vladimir Rogov, a member of the Moscow-installed regional administration, wrote on Telegram that at least three strikes were near the radioactive isotope storage facility – however these reports could not be verified.

Ukraine’s Energoatom said the plant’s area was struck five times on Thursday, including near the site where radioactive materials are stored, but nobody was injured and radiation levels remained normal.

Military activity near the plant, which was captured by Russian forces but is still run by Ukrainian technicians, has caused concern with warnings that shelling near it could cause a nuclear disaster.

Russia’s military industrial capacity is said to be “under significant strain”, and the credibility of many of its weapons systems undermined by their association with its forces’ “poor performance in the Ukraine war”, according to UK intelligence.

Russia has long considered the defence industry to be one of its most important export successes, the UK Ministry of Defence said.

But in its daily briefing on Thursday, the MoD said Russia was highly unlikely to be capable of fulfilling some export orders for armoured fighting vehicles because of the exceptional demand for vehicles for Russia’s own forces in Ukraine, and the increasing effect of Western sanctions.

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