Monday, October 31, 2022

Russia Halts Grain Deliveries After Ukraine Drone Attack In Crimea

Russia Halts World Grain Deliveries After Ukraine Drone Attack In Crimea (Worthy News Radio)

Stefan J. Bos


In a move impacting world food supplies, says it halts cooperating in a grain corridor deal after  carried out a “massive” drone attack on its Black Sea Fleet. Moscow’s latest announcement could undermine deliveries from one of the breadbaskets of the world.

Moscow recently agreed to lift a grain blockade that had undermined food supplies to millions of starving people. Russia’s grain threats come after video footage emerged purportedly showing stunned locals watching a Ukrainian drone attack Saturday on the occupied Crimean port city of Sevastopol, which Moscow said damaged one warship. Russia annexed Ukraine’s Crimea peninsula in 2014.

The alleged attack comes as fighting escalates in Europe’s most significant armed conflict since World War Two.

Local people appeared disturbed watching Ukrainian drones being destroyed by at least one Russian military helicopter, video footage purportedly showed.

But not all drones miss their targets. Russia’s military said at least one warship was damaged in Ukrainian air strikes hitting the port city of Sevastopol in the occupied Crimea peninsula. Moscow annexed Crimea from Ukraine in 2014, a move condemned by Kyiv and its Western allies.

Russian officials claimed the early Saturday attack involved nine Ukrainian aerial and seven marine drones. However, Ukraine has not confirmed it was responsible.

However, Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has made clear he wants to recapture Crimea and four other territories that Russia recently annexed from Ukraine. The attack came amid an ongoing Ukrainian counter-offensive in which troops successfully retook territory occupied by Russian forces.

Moscow has responded with a relentless barrage of missiles and increasingly Iranian-made drones that killed and injured at least scores of people in recent weeks.

Kyiv says they hit civilian targets and critical infrastructures, including the energy grid, leaving four million people across Ukraine without reliable power supplies.

And as the battle continued, Russia’s defense minister said 82,000 conscripts had already been sent to Ukraine.

Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu told Russian President Vladimir  in televised remarks that a further 218,000 mobilized men were being trained in barracks. But he stressed that the “partial mobilization” of 300,000 forces had concluded.

It was not possible to verify the figures. However, the West views the move as a desperate effort to halt Kyiv’s counter-offensive with poorly trained troops.

Western military observers believe tens of thousands of Russian soldiers were severely injured or killed, though Moscow has given lower figures.

Overall, tens of thousands of people, including troops and civilians, were killed on both sides in what is rapidly becoming Europe’s bloodiest armed conflict since the Second World War.



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