Tag: Ukrainian

  • Media investigation finds Ukrainian officer coordinated Nord Stream pipelines sabotage

    Media investigation finds Ukrainian officer coordinated Nord Stream pipelines sabotage

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    A Ukrainian special forces commander played a key role in sabotaging the Nord Stream gas pipelines in September last year, reports said Saturday. 

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    Mystery has surrounded who was behind the blasts that damaged the pipelines, cutting off a major route for Russian gas exports to Europe and fuelling already high tensions over Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine.

    Different theories have emerged pointing the finger at Ukraine, Russia or the United States. All have denied involvement.

    A joint investigation by The Washington Post newspaper and German outlet Der Spiegel singles out Roman Chervinsky, a 48-year-old who served in Ukraine’s Special Operations Forces.

    He was the “coordinator”, the reports said, citing officials in Ukraine and elsewhere in Europe, as well as other people with knowledge of the operation, who spoke anonymously.

    He oversaw logistics and support for a six-person team, which rented a sailing boat using false identities and diving equipment to place explosive charges on the pipelines, said the Post.

    The blasts ruptured three of the four pipelines that make up Nord Stream 1 and Nord Stream 2, spewing gas into the Baltic Sea.

    Chervinsky did not plan the operation or act alone, and took orders from more senior Ukrainian officials, the Post reported. 

    He denied any role in the sabotage through his lawyer.

    Read moreNord Stream 2: Russia-Germany gas pipeline becomes a geopolitical lever

    “All speculations about my involvement in the attack on Nord Stream are being spread by Russian propaganda without any basis,” he said in a statement to the Post and Der Spiegel.

    Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky has repeatedly denied his country was behind the sabotage. 

    “I would never do that,” he told Germany’s Bild newspaper in June, adding that he would “like to see proof”.

    But the Nord Stream operation was designed to keep Zelensky in the dark, the Post reported. 

    The two media outlets said the Ukrainian government did not respond to requests for comment on their investigation.

    Chervinsky is currently on trial in Kyiv, accused of having abused his power during an attempt to persuade a Russian pilot to defect. 

    He says his prosecution is political retribution for having criticised Zelensky, according to the reports. 

    (AFP)

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  • The Dnipro River, a key front line between Russian and Ukrainian troops

    The Dnipro River, a key front line between Russian and Ukrainian troops

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    A sweeping plain dotted with ruined houses stretched into the horizon and towards the blue expanse of the Dnipro River, where a clutch of Ukrainian forces were poised for Russian attacks.

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    4 min

    The Dnipro, Europe’s fourth-longest river and a historic trading route, has become a key front since Ukrainian troops pushed Russian forces back over its banks in the south last year.

    The river winds the length of the country from north to south, eventually flowing into the Black Sea from the Kherson region, where it separates the two armies.

    While Ukraine’s recapture of Kherson city last November was a shock defeat for the Kremlin, Russian forces on the opposing bank still control swathes of territory and shell towns and villages they retreated from.

    Read moreUkrainian forces advance 7km in 24 hours in Kherson region

    “The Russians are throwing everything they have at us: artillery, attack drones, phosphorus,” an army sergeant with the call sign Vozhd, or Leader, told AFP.

    His unit was keeping watch on the riverbank southwest of Kherson city, ready to alert artillery units if Russian forces made an incursion across the river.

    Ukraine's recapture of Kherson city last November was a shock defeat for the Kremlin
    Ukraine’s recapture of Kherson city last November was a shock defeat for the Kremlin © Roman Pilipey, AFP

    Wearing a balaclava and carrying a gun, the 38-year-old serviceman said the good weather the region had been enjoying was playing in their favour.

    “Rain is the enemy. When the sky is clear, you can see boats arriving much better,” he said.

    ‘Solid’ Russian defences

    Kyiv launched a major counteroffensive in the south and east in June but the front line has barely moved and the two sides have continually bombarded each other with heavy weaponry.

    Read moreUkrainian forces conducting ‘offensive actions’ at the front, says Kyiv

    “We have the advantage on this side,” Vozhd said, standing on a small promontory topped with tufts of dry grass.

    This position is higher than the opposite bank sheltering the Russian lines, around 10 kilometres (six miles) across the water.

    This autumn, Ukrainian forces appeared to have established several small bridgeheads on the left bank northeast of the city of Kherson.

    Kyiv launched a major counteroffensive in the south and east in June but the front line has barely moved
    Kyiv launched a major counteroffensive in the south and east in June but the front line has barely moved © Roman Pilipey, AFP

    Vozhd’s 45-year-old commander, whose call sign is Armyanchik, said his men also sometimes cross to the Dnipro’s left bank.

    “The Russians are well prepared. They have solid lines of defence. It won’t be easy but on the other hand, this is our homeland and we know the terrain,” Armyanchik told AFP, conceding his forces lacked armoured boats.

    Karamba, a moustachioed 35-year-old, participated in operations on the opposite bank.

    His work was to clear mines before assault brigades arrive, a task made more difficult by the breach of the dam in June, which sent a torrent of floodwater downstream and dislodged landmines.

    “Because of the flooding, there are mines everywhere: inside ruined houses, in thickets and caught in dead branches,” he said.

    The Nova Kakhovka dam is located in Russian-held territory along the Dnipro river.
    The Nova Kakhovka dam is located in Russian-held territory along the Dnipro river. © Studio Graphique France Médias Monde

    At another position near the Dnipro, a unit of the 123rd territorial brigade was using a large abandoned building as a mortar position and to hide boats.

    “We have to be discreet here,” said one soldier, referring to pro-Russian informers among the local population.

    Barrier between two camps

    Nearby a 31-year-old gunner with the call sign Vitamin was tasked with firing mortar rounds at coordinates provided by scouts like Vozhd.

    “The Russians have had faster boats for two months now,” he said, making adjustments to his mortar.

    His main target was a network of small islands scattered across the river, where he said the Russians were “trying to set up positions”.

    Mortar shells marked with inscriptions "For our children and grandchildren" and "For Odesa"
    Mortar shells marked with inscriptions “For our children and grandchildren” and “For Odesa” © Roman Pilipey, AFP

    “I’m here to stop them,” said the gunner, who claimed to have sunk six Russian boats with their crews. He said he did not know the number of Ukrainian boats sunk in turn.

    “The river is a natural rampart. It makes it more difficult for the enemy to position itself, but also for us to land on the other side,” he said.

    Between his legs, a small dog called Zhulka barks. The Ukrainian soldiers rescued her from one of the islands during an operation.

    She has since become a kind of “alarm signal”: she always runs away from approaching drones — a serious hazard on the plains.

    “Drones are always flying over our heads, our mortars and tanks. They constantly fire down at you — and that’s on top of the aviation,” Karamba said.

    Ukrainian forces appear to have established several small bridgeheads on the left bank northeast of the city of Kherson
    Ukrainian forces appear to have established several small bridgeheads on the left bank northeast of the city of Kherson © Roman Pilipey, AFP

    “The Russians have more drones than us,” Vitamin added.

    “I’m sure they are watching us right now.”

    (AFP)

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