Zürcher Nachrichten - Russia struggles to turn Black Sea rule into amphibious attack

EUR -
AED 4.268807
AFN 76.128995
ALL 96.365789
AMD 443.574615
ANG 2.080444
AOA 1065.758721
ARS 1673.674315
AUD 1.751247
AWG 2.093455
AZN 1.972883
BAM 1.953571
BBD 2.342397
BDT 142.125365
BGN 1.953867
BHD 0.438096
BIF 3447.155519
BMD 1.162224
BND 1.50804
BOB 8.053809
BRL 6.329004
BSD 1.163058
BTN 104.580656
BWP 15.500911
BYN 3.362276
BYR 22779.584681
BZD 2.339131
CAD 1.610773
CDF 2591.758996
CHF 0.937275
CLF 0.027439
CLP 1076.428062
CNY 8.209485
CNH 8.207827
COP 4490.832409
CRC 568.651074
CUC 1.162224
CUP 30.798928
CVE 110.701528
CZK 24.266773
DJF 206.550565
DKK 7.468563
DOP 74.672518
DZD 151.21888
EGP 55.26234
ERN 17.433356
ETB 180.115634
FJD 2.65686
FKP 0.872594
GBP 0.87405
GEL 3.132216
GGP 0.872594
GHS 13.307695
GIP 0.872594
GMD 85.426305
GNF 10097.973317
GTQ 8.90868
GYD 243.282374
HKD 9.044628
HNL 30.532036
HRK 7.533302
HTG 152.312255
HUF 383.891793
IDR 19381.242558
ILS 3.747114
IMP 0.872594
INR 104.480831
IQD 1522.513058
IRR 48958.674107
ISK 148.799483
JEP 0.872594
JMD 186.095232
JOD 0.824019
JPY 182.33256
KES 150.217799
KGS 101.63645
KHR 4655.867651
KMF 492.782924
KPW 1045.997356
KRW 1708.805587
KWD 0.357
KYD 0.969169
KZT 599.785544
LAK 25202.821168
LBP 104077.132901
LKR 358.964185
LRD 205.568257
LSL 19.79245
LTL 3.431744
LVL 0.703018
LYD 6.322329
MAD 10.765097
MDL 19.747955
MGA 5218.384373
MKD 61.544932
MMK 2440.722983
MNT 4122.735213
MOP 9.321682
MRU 46.256927
MUR 53.602018
MVR 17.910378
MWK 2018.202256
MXN 21.148561
MYR 4.782539
MZN 74.265849
NAD 19.793027
NGN 1686.689157
NIO 42.734634
NOK 11.81537
NPR 167.324735
NZD 2.011652
OMR 0.446874
PAB 1.163073
PEN 3.90859
PGK 4.937013
PHP 68.946578
PKR 326.11503
PLN 4.230285
PYG 8132.509524
QAR 4.231668
RON 5.089956
RSD 117.44257
RUB 89.720551
RWF 1687.548824
SAR 4.361312
SBD 9.557922
SCR 16.780765
SDG 699.067862
SEK 10.88745
SGD 1.507979
SHP 0.871969
SLE 27.783516
SLL 24371.247887
SOS 664.205188
SRD 44.885661
STD 24055.68424
STN 24.871587
SVC 10.176212
SYP 12850.659963
SZL 20.001629
THB 37.027262
TJS 10.71737
TMT 4.067783
TND 3.405898
TOP 2.798356
TRY 49.492944
TTD 7.877011
TWD 36.198045
TZS 2847.448133
UAH 49.096939
UGX 4120.244934
USD 1.162224
UYU 45.447355
UZS 13953.658028
VES 299.396029
VND 30650.744745
VUV 141.377858
WST 3.237383
XAF 655.209297
XAG 0.019275
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.140968
XCG 2.096108
XDR 0.814073
XOF 653.169487
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.248134
ZAR 19.821491
ZMK 10461.401466
ZMW 26.895308
ZWL 374.23556
  • RBGPF

    0.7600

    79.11

    +0.96%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.25

    +0.13%

  • SCS

    0.0300

    16.15

    +0.19%

  • NGG

    -0.3100

    75.02

    -0.41%

  • RIO

    1.5400

    74.56

    +2.07%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    23.18

    +0.04%

  • GSK

    -0.8850

    47.585

    -1.86%

  • AZN

    -1.2550

    90.025

    -1.39%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    14.75

    -0.34%

  • JRI

    0.0170

    13.737

    +0.12%

  • RELX

    0.0440

    39.524

    +0.11%

  • BTI

    -0.2000

    57.21

    -0.35%

  • BCE

    -0.1450

    23.195

    -0.63%

  • BCC

    0.1000

    71.91

    +0.14%

  • VOD

    -0.0250

    12.475

    -0.2%

  • BP

    -0.1850

    35.595

    -0.52%

Russia struggles to turn Black Sea rule into amphibious attack
Russia struggles to turn Black Sea rule into amphibious attack / Photo: Handout - Russian Defence Ministry/AFP

Russia struggles to turn Black Sea rule into amphibious attack

Russia may rule the Black Sea but any amphibious assault on the Ukrainian coast seems risky while Kyiv's missiles threaten to destroy Russian ships if they get too close, experts say.

Text size:

According to British intelligence sources, Russia operates around 20 warships in the Black Sea, where the balance of power is now static since Turkey blocks any access by vessels belonging to a warring party.

"It's their 'Mare Nostrum'," said Captain Eric Lavault, a spokesman for the French navy, a reference to the Latin term meaning "Our Sea" used in ancient Rome to describe the Mediterranean.

The fact that all the other Black Sea countries either already belong to NATO or hope to join the Western alliance has not cowed Russia's claim to supremacy.

On paper, the recent capture of the coastal Ukrainian city of Mariupol and Russian control of the entire Sea of Azov coastline should underline Russian dominance and allow Moscow's troops to establish a direct logistics link between its fighters in the Donbas region and the eastern port of Novorossiysk, Lavault said.

But since the surprise sinking last month of the Russian warship Moskva all bets are off.

The disappearance of the Russian flagship has created great uncertainty for the attackers along what is still a Ukrainian-controlled coastline between Odessa and Romania.

This is not thanks to Kyiv's navy, which has been destroyed, but to land-based missiles like the Neptune -- believed to have delivered the fatal blow to the Moskva -- and, soon, the Harpoon that Britain is to deliver to Ukraine.

The impact of the Moskva's sinking on Russian planning may well prevent any attempt by the Russian navy to land near Odessa with the aim of surrounding the Ukrainian heartland and linking up Russian forces with separatists in the Moldavian Transnistria region.

"That zone presents a threat that the Russians must take into account," said defence expert Igor Delanoe at the French-Russian Monitor, a political analysis body based in Moscow.

Any such landing is currently "out of reach" for the Russians, said Delanoe.

Russian progress in the Donbas region could open up new options, he said, "but they will have to neutralise the coastal defences," he cautioned.

- 'Not Russia's any more' -

Russian forces have had great trouble locating and destroying Ukrainian surface-to-air missiles because of their mobility, said Michael Petersen, director of the Russia Maritime Studies Institute and an associate professor at the US Naval War College.

"I suspect that would also be the case for any mobile coastal defense cruise missile system that Ukraine may have," he said, adding that the exact number of Neptune missiles -- which have a range of some 300 kilometres (200 miles) -- available to Ukrainian forces was unknown.

Russia's failure to establish air superiority, and its apparent inability to precision-target missiles, are not helping its efforts to knock out Ukraine's coastal defences, added French navy spokesman Lavault.

He said this had allowed the defenders to create "a maritime cordon sanitaire" and threaten Russian southern supply lines between Kherson and Nikolayev.

In addition, Ukraine has deployed mines, and is expected to take delivery of naval surface drones promised by the US, although it is not certain that they will be armed.

"More likely, if Ukraine is provided with unmanned systems, they would be used to provide surveillance and reconnaissance for weapon systems," Petersen said.

British Defence Secretary Ben Wallace meanwhile went as far as contesting Russia's centuries-old supremacy in the Black Sea altogether.

"The Russians can't control the Black Sea," he told Sky News. "It's not theirs anymore."

Whatever the outcome of the Ukraine war, Russia will not give up its Black Sea role quietly, experts agreed.

But as other Black Sea countries, notably Romania and Turkey, deploy their own coastal missile systems based on Ukraine's example, Moscow's role will become harder to maintain.

"Certainly Russia will be less secure in the Black Sea than they were before the war," said Petersen.

M.J.Baumann--NZN