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Ukraine says 9 Russian warplanes destroyed in Crimea blasts

Ukraine said Wednesday that nine Russian warplanes were destroyed in a deadly string of explosions at an air base in Crimea that appeared to be the result of a Ukrainian attack, which would represent a significant escalation in the war.
Russia denied any aircraft were damaged in Tuesday’s blasts — or that any attack took place. But satellite photos clearly showed at least seven fighter planes at the base had been blown up and others probably damaged.
Ukrainian officials stopped short of publicly claiming responsibility for the explosions, while mocking Russia’s explanation that a careless smoker might have caused ammunition at the Saki air base to catch fire and blow up. Analysts also said that explanation doesn’t make sense and that the Ukrainians could have used anti-ship missiles to strike the base.
If Ukrainian forces were, in fact, responsible for the blasts, it would be the first known major attack on a Russian military site on the Crimean Peninsula, which was seized from Ukraine the Kremlin in 2014.
Russian warplanes have used Saki to strike areas in Ukraine’s south.
This satellite image provided Planet Labs PBC shows destroyed Russian aircraft at Saki Air Base after an explosion on August 9, 2022, in the Crimean Peninsula, the Black Sea peninsula seized from Ukraine Russia and annexed in March 2014. (Planet Labs PBC via AP)
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 explosions, which killed one person and wounded 14, sent tours fleeing in panic as plumes of smoke rose over the coastline near.
Video showed shattered windows and holes in the brickwork of some buildings.
One tour, Natalia Lipovaya, said that “the earth was gone from under my feet” after the powerful blasts. “I was so scared,” she said.
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.

Satellite images of the Saky airfield in Crimea, made yesterday at 11.10 am, show that more than 30 planes and helicopters were there before the explosion – worth more than $1 billion in total.
It would take over 18 months to replace them even without the sanctions. pic.twitter.com/qMTXJ2ba0G
— Anton Gerashchenko (@Gerashchenko_en) August 10, 2022
Crimea’s regional leader, Sergei Aksyonov, said some 250 residents were moved to temporary housing after dozens of apartment buildings were damaged.
Russian authorities sought to downplay the explosions, saying Wednesday that all hotels and beaches were unaffected on the peninsula, which is a popular tour destination for many Russians.
But video posted on social media showed long lines of slowly moving cars on the road to Russia as tours headed for home.
A Ukrainian presidential adviser, Oleksiy Arestovych, cryptically said that the blasts were either caused Ukrainian-made long-range weapons or the work of Ukrainian guerrillas operating in Crimea.

#Russian officials remain confused about the August 9 attack on the #Saki Air Base in Russian-occupied #Crimea, over 225km behind Russian lines. Ukrainian officials framed the attack as the start of #Ukraine’s counteroffensive in the south.
New report: https://t.co/TOWyzm65t2 pic.twitter.com/zwOvRAWtUC
— ISW (@TheStudyofWar) August 11, 2022
A Ukrainian parliament member, Oleksandr Zavitnevich, said the airfield was rendered unusable.
He reported on Facebook that it housed fighter jets, tactical reconnaissance aircraft and military transport planes.
Satellite photos dated Wednesday issued Planet Labs PBC showed wreckage in spots on the airfield where the company’s photos a day earlier showed numerous warplanes.
“Official Kyiv has kept mum about it, but unofficially the military acknowledges that it was a Ukrainian strike,” Ukrainian military analyst Oleh Zhdanov said.
The base is at least 200 kilometers from the closest Ukrainian position. Zhdanov suggested that Ukrainian forces could have struck it with Ukrainian or Western-supplied anti-ship missiles that have the necessary range.
The Washington-based Institute for the Study of War said it couldn’t independently determine what caused the explosions but noted that simultaneous blasts in two places at the base probably rule out an accidental fire but not sabotage or a missile attack.
But it added: “The Kremlin has little incentive to accuse Ukraine of conducting strikes that caused the damage since such strikes would demonstrate the ineffectiveness of Russian air defense systems.” During the war, the Kremlin has reported numerous fires and explosions on Russian territory near the Ukrainian border, blaming some of them on Ukrainian strikes. Ukrainian authorities have mostly kept silent about the incidents, preferring to keep the world guessing.
Neither side has released much information about their own casualties. In his nightly video address Wednesday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy claimed nearly 43,000 Russian soldiers had been killed.
Colin Kahl, US undersecretary of defense for policy, estimated Monday that Russian forces have sustained up to 80,000 deaths and injuries in the fighting. He did not break down the figure with an estimate of forces killed or provide a Ukrainian casualty count.
In other developments, Russian forces shelled areas across Ukraine on Tuesday night into Wednesday, including the central region of Dnipropetrovsk, where 13 people were killed, according to the region’s governor, Valentyn Reznichenko.
Reznichenko said the Russians fired at the city of Marganets and a near village. Dozens of residential buildings, two schools and several adminrative buildings were damaged.
“It was a terrible night,” Reznichenko said. “It’s very hard to take bodies from under debris. We are facing a cruel enemy who engages in daily terror against our cities and villages.”
In Ukraine’s east, where fighting has raged for eight years, a Russian attack on the centre of the city of Bakhmut in the Donetsk region killed seven, wounded six and damaged stores, homes and apartment buildings, setting off fires, Ukraine’s prosecutor general said on Telegram.
Bakhmut is a key target for Russian forces as they advance on regional hubs.
In the city of Donetsk, which has been under the control of Russia-backed separats since 2014, Ukrainian shelling hit a brewery, killing one person and wounding two, the separats’ emergency service said.
It said the shelling late Wednesday caused a leak of toxic ammonia and warned people to stay inside and breathe through cotton gauze.
Two residents of the village of Staryi Saltiv in the Kharkiv region in the northeast were killed Wednesday in Russian shelling, police reported.
In the country’s southeast, Moscow’s forces continued shelling the city of Nikopol across the Dnieper River from the Russian-occupied Zaporizhzhia power station, the biggest nuclear plant in Europe.
Ukraine and Russia have accused each other of shelling it, stoking international fears of a catastrophe.
On Wednesday, foreign miners of the Group of Seven industrialized democracies demanded that Russia immediately hand back full control of the plant to Ukraine.
They said they are “profoundly concerned” about the risk of a nuclear accident with far-reaching consequences.

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