Russia Loses Control of the Black Sea

There is a method behind Ukrainian mad dash

Shankar Narayan
4 min readSep 19, 2023

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Cargo Ship in the Sea (Licensed Image)

Little by little, day by day, and week by week, Ukraine continues to reduce Russian naval power in the Black Sea. In the last four weeks, Ukraine staged a daring naval raid on Crimea to destroy air-defense equipment, destroyed two S-400 air-defense systems, took control of two oil rigs the Russians were using as surveillance outposts in the western Black Sea, and destroyed a submarine and a landing ship undergoing maintenance at the Sevastopol naval base, one of the most protected areas in all of Crimea.

But all that I have written above is information that was well-covered by international media. What escaped coverage was Ukraine’s relentless hunting of Russian patrol ships roaming around in the Black Sea. Ukraine has either sunk or damaged four Russian patrol ships in the last week.

On Sept. 14, three USVs (Uncrewed surface vessels or maritime drones) targeted and damaged Vasiliy Bykov, a 308-foot Project 22160-class vessel in the southwestern Black Sea, Samum, a 215-foot Project 1239 vessel in Sevastopol harbor, and Sergey Kotov, a 308-foot Project 22160-class vessel in the Black Sea. One day later, Ukrainian USVs damaged Askold, a 220-foot long Project 22800 patrol boat.

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Shankar Narayan

He didn't care what he had or what he had left, he cared only about what he must do.