Tuesday, March 5, 2024

Ukraine Claims Responsibility for Blowing Up Railway Bridge Deep in Russian Interior


Ukraine Claims Responsibility for Blowing Up Railway Bridge Deep in Russian Interior



Ukraine has taken responsibility for “disabling” a railway bridge in the Russian mainland region of Samara after explosions were seen in the early hours of Monday morning.

Apparently continuing with the strategy to take the war closer to home for Russians, the Defence Intelligence of Ukraine (DIU) confirmed “disabling railway bridge in Russia’s Samara region,” state media Ukrinform reported.


In a post on social media, the Ukrainian intelligence service wrote: “The Main Directorate of Intelligence of the Ministry of Defence of Ukraine confirmed the fact that the railway bridge over the Chapayevka River in was disabled.”

The DIU claimed that the railway was used by the “aggressor state to transport military cargo” including “engineered ammunition produced by the Polimer JSC plant in Chapayevsk, Samara region.”

The intelligence service said that in light of the damage sustained during the explosion, it is likely that the bridge will be out of commission for at least the next few weeks.

Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) confirmed to state news agency TASS that a “blast” was heard at the railway bridge at around 5:13 am local time on Monday and that train traffic has since been suspended.

Local emergency services told the Russian news outlet that they believed an explosive device was planted at the base of the bridge’s footing and that support structures and a fence for the bridge were damaged near banks of the the river.


With the frontlines in the war devolving into a stalemate situation, in which large-scale movements are often prohibited by both sides using drones to surveil each other’s positions, attacking Russian infrastructure has become a key element in Kyiv’s strategy, with the sabotage of railways and bridges to disrupt shipments of Russian military supplies being a chief aim.

“The war in Ukraine is changing right now, as Ukraine increases the number of guerrilla operations against Russian forces and decreases conventional operations,” said Seth G. Jones of the Center for Strategic and International Studies told the New York Times in December, adding: “The goal is to deliver death by a thousand cuts.”


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