In reaction to a string of unexplained explosions in Crimea, Russia makes a statement.

 A series of explosions rocked Crimea as a Ukrainian presidential adviser disclosed Kyiv's military strategy, prompting the Russian Defense Ministry to label it a "act of sabotage."

Crimea was shaken by a series of explosions

On August 16, the Russian Defense Ministry reported that there had been an explosion in a temporary storage area at the ammunition stockpile in the village of Mayskoye, north of Crimea. A substation also caught fire approximately 20 kilometers away, according to the TASS news agency.


Two persons were hurt by the blasts, and the nearby train station was also damaged. According to CNN, train services from Russia to the Crimea had to be suspended. 2,000 people in the village of Mayskoye, according to RT, have been ordered to evacuate immediately and leave the region at least five kilometers away.

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Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to the president of Ukraine, wrote on Twitter shortly after the explosion that Crimea is today "where warehouse explosions happen and invaders and looters are at high risk of dying," but Russian officials did not acknowledge responsibility for the incident.

The same day, an explosion was recorded in Crimea around 93 kilometers south of Simoferopol, and then an explosion and black smoke were reported at an airbase in Gvardeyskoye, in the middle of the peninsula. According to The Guardian, the Russian Defense Ministry has referred to these as "acts of sabotage."

Two sizable explosions happened recently at the Russian airbase in Crimea, Saky. While Russia claims the explosions were unintentional and did not seriously harm anyone, Ukraine has not publicly confirmed that this was its attack. At least nine Russian jets at the base, however, appear to have damage, according to satellite photographs.

Reuters reports that Kiev is making an effort to sever Russia's supply lines in preparation for a possible counterattack by Ukrainian soldiers. Mayskoye, a town on the key rail line connecting Crimea to Russia, is where Russian forces in southern Ukraine receive resupplies.

Zelensky adviser: Ukraine's strategy is to "create chaos"

Mykhailo Podolyak, the chief advisor to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, indicated in an exclusive interview with The Guardian on August 16 that there might be other attacks in the "coming two or three months" that are comparable to earlier acts. An unidentified attacker struck the Crimean airbase and train crossing.


In order to cause havoc within the military infrastructure, he continued, "our plan is to damage logistics, supply lines, ammunition depots, and other things. stated Podolyak.

The adviser, who is frequently cited as the third-most important person in Ukraine, claimed that Moscow's strategy of using superior artillery capacity to control territory in the Donbass region contrasts with Kyiv's strategy.

We don't utilize the strategies from the 1960s and 1970s or from the previous century, he added, adding that Ukraine's counterattack is extremely different.

Ukrainian grain tanker unloads

The first ship that departed Ukraine two weeks ago in accordance with a deal to resume grain exports in the nation docked at the Syrian port of Tartus on August 16, according to a source in the shipping sector and satellite data.

According to Reuters, the Razoni, which was sailing under the flag of Sierra Leone, departed the Ukrainian port of Odessa on August 1 in compliance with the aforementioned arrangement but did not discharge as intended in Lebanon. Because the vessel turned off its transponder recently, it has been difficult to determine its whereabouts.

On the morning of August 16, according to satellite photographs from Planet Labs PBC, the ship was in the port of Tartus. According to a source, the ship unloaded some of the corn it had brought from Ukraine here. 26,000 tons of grain were transported on the ship in total.

UN Secretary-General will visit Ukraine this week

On August 18, President Zelensky of Ukraine and President Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey will meet with UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres in the Ukrainian city of Lviv. He would travel to the Black Sea port of Odessa the next day, a UN spokeswoman told Reuters.

Zelensky and Guterres are anticipated to talk about the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant problem as well as finding a political resolution to the conflict with Russia.



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