Ukraine strikes ferry crossing in occupied Crimea and vessel in Russia

Ukraine strikes ferry crossing in occupied Crimea and vessel in Russia

Ukraine has struck a ferry crossing in the city of Kerch in Russian-occupied Crimea, in addition to a boat in the neighbouring Russian region of Krasnodar, according to a Ukrainian official.

Serhii Bratchuk, spokesperson for the Odesa Oblast Military Administration, reportedly said that the attacks happened overnight on Friday, without giving any information on the extent of the damage or whether the boat struck was a military target.

Multiple explosions were heard around Crimea in the early hours of Friday morning, according to local media, with a fire reported around the Kerch ferry crossing.

Explosions were also heard in the city of Chernomorsk near Odesa at around 4:30 am local time (3:30 CET), while the Kerch bridge, which connects Crimea with Russia was reportedly closed to traffic from 2 am to 7 am.

Across the border, Russia's Ministry of Defence said that Russian forces destroyed five Ukrainian aerial drones and two naval drones in the Black Sea.

Ukraine has often attacked targets in the Russian-occupied Crimea since Moscow launched its full-scale invasion back in early 2022, after it first invaded and unilaterally annexed Crimea in 2014.

Biggest assault on Russian soil since WWII continues

Ukrainian attacks on the Crimean peninsula have previously caused widespread power outages and brought traffic on bridge crossings to a complete standstill.

However, a navy spokesperson told local media in June that destroying the Kerch Bridge now would no longer be as useful because Russia has mostly stopped using it for military purposes.

Yet, earlier in August, Ukrainian army intelligence chief Kyrylo Budanov stated that Kyiv had a "complex solution" in the works that could result in the destruction of the bridge.

Moscow further fortified the crossing last month.

The attacks on Crimea come as Kyiv continues its incursion into Russia itself, with Kyiv recently claiming its forces had captured the Russian town of Sudzha, in the biggest assault on Russian soil since World War II.

It would be the largest Russian town to fall under Ukraine's control since the start of the operation more than a week ago.

President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Ukraine's military was setting up a command office in Sudzha, suggesting that Ukraine might plan to remain in the Kursk region long-term — or just signal Moscow that it may intend to do so.

In the Kremlin's most recent reaction to the ongoing assault on Russian territory, presidential aide Nikolai Patrushev accused the West of being behind the incursion into Kursk.

“The operation in the Kursk region was also planned with the participation of NATO and Western special services,” Patrushev told the government-friendly Izvestia newspaper on Friday.

Patrushev, the former director of the Russian intelligence agency FSB, is a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin and one of the Kremlin's main hardliners, often referred to as "conspiracist in chief".