Ukraine’s Destruction of Russian Vessels Causes more than Military Damage
NATO leaders, especially America’s top military command, are
certainly scratching their heads wondering why they haven’t yet accepted
Ukraine into its Euroatlantic fraternity.
On the other side, Russia, the former second mightiest
military force on the planet that is facing defeat if not a questionable
victory, is perhaps grateful that Ukraine’s demonstrated military prowess has
been kept outside of the alliance.
While Ukraine has forced Russian cutthroats to a standstill
on the ground, it is successfully striking Russian vessels with ferocious
precision that gives new meaning to the phrase “shooting ducks in a barrel.”
The tactical objective of Ukraine’s drone strikes is “functional
destruction.” Utilizing specialized 50-100 kg (110.23 to 220.46 lbs.) warheads,
drones systematically disable a vessel’s bridge, steering gear, and communications
arrays, before targeting fuel manifests to trigger uncontrollable onboard
fires. In response to the scale of these casualties, Russian maritime
authorities have been forced to temporarily suspend all commercial navigation
through the Don-Azov Canal and the Kerch Strait in mid-July 2026.
According to maritime intelligence, multiple Russian tankers
have been left burning, crews have had to be evacuated, and Russia’s domestic
ship-repair facilities now lack the capacity to handle dozens of heavily
damaged commercial vessels simultaneously. In fact, as of the weekend of July
11-12, Russia has reportedly been forced to completely halt commercial shipping
navigation through the Don-Azov Canal and the Kerch Strait due to the severity
of Ukraine’s threat.
The situation over the weekend of July 11-12 has escalated
dramatically into a massive, highly coordinated campaign targeting Russian
maritime logistics. Ukraine’s newly formed Unmanned Systems Forces (USF) – specifically
the drone units led by Maj. Robert "Magyar" Brovdi —have launched
relentless nightly strikes primarily targeting Russia’s “shadow fleet” in the
Black Sea and the Sea of Azov, an inland body of water considered by Moscow as
its domestic lake.
The primary strategist behind this campaign is Maj. Robert
Brovdi, widely known by his callsign “Magyar” (a reference to his Hungarian
descent and roots in Uzhhorod, Zakarpattia, Ukraine). Brovdi has earned the distinction
of being known as the bane of the Kremlin and Russia’s military command. His
battlefield strategy, tactics and successes have made him the most feared and
hated Ukrainian officer of the war.
Fear of Brovdi's units among Russian forces stems from
systematic precision and psychological integration of his campaign:
Pioneering Drone
Doctrine: Long before the formal creation of the Unmanned Systems Forces,
Brovdi’s unit treated drone warfare as an exact science, mastering custom-built
FPV strike drones and large night-bomber octocopters.
Psychological
Warfare: Brovdi’s detached, calm narration style over strike videos – utilizing
signature catchphrases and physical mapping indicators –has established a
potent psychological footprint, lowering adversary morale.
Asymmetric Maritime
Shift: The transition from tactical trench operations in the Donbas to
sweeping maritime interdictions demonstrates how low-cost, decentralized
technology can paralyze traditional naval assets without requiring a
conventional navy.
The latest data shows a historic surge in the number of hit
vessels, aiming squarely at crippling fuel supplies and isolating occupied
Crimea.
According to official updates from the Ukrainian General
Staff and Major Brovdi, this weekend’s strikes added massive numbers to the
tally of damaged Russian vessels:
Night of Friday, July
10 – Saturday, July 11: A colossal raid struck 28 Russian vessels in the
Sea of Azov. This included 21 oil tankers, 4 tugboats, 2 dry cargo ships, and 1
dredger. Concurrently, the SBU used a Sea Baby naval drone to hit another
shadow fleet tanker in the Black Sea.
Night of Saturday,
July 11 – Sunday, July 12: Drone operators struck another 14 vessels
overnight, specifically knocking out 10 tankers and 4 crucial ferries.
Night of Sunday, July
12 – Monday, July 13: The momentum carried straight into this morning, with
an overnight strike hitting 15 more vessels (7 tankers, 5 dry cargo ships, 1
ferry, and 2 tugboats).
The shocking total for the weekend is 57 vessels targeted and
a broader eight-day tally of 105 ships. This concentrated offensive, which
began in earnest around July 6, represents a major strategic shift toward
disrupting Moscow’s maritime fuel supply lines to make up for disrupted land
routes. It’s also a 55% drop in active shipping.
While the recent drone blitz has heavily targeted the
commercial “shadow fleet” tankers supplying the front line, it represents the
second phase of a broader naval strategy. Ukraine has spent the past four years
systematically dismantling Russia’s actual navy—the Black Sea Fleet—despite not
having a functional navy of its own.
By combining Neptune anti-ship missiles, Storm Shadow cruise
missiles, and Magura V5/Sea Baby maritime drones, Ukraine has sunk, destroyed,
or heavily damaged roughly one-third of Russia’s Black Sea warships. This
campaign has effectively broken the Russian naval blockade and forced Moscow to
withdraw its remaining major assets from occupied Crimea to safer ports like
Novorossiysk.
Unlike the commercial tankers carrying raw oil and grain, these
warships carried the literal teeth of Russia’s maritime campaign:
Kalibr Cruise
Missiles: Corvettes like the Tsiklon and the Rostov-na-Donu submarine were
high-priority targets precisely because they carried vertical launch cells for
Kalibr cruise missiles. These weapons were regularly used to strike Ukraine's
energy grid and civilian infrastructure.
Heavy Armor and
Logistics: The Ropukha-class landing ships acted as a floating bridge. When
the physical Crimean Bridge was damaged, these ships were stuffed with heavy
military vehicles, main battle tanks, and tons of artillery ammunition to
resupply the southern front lines. When the Novocherkassk was hit in Feodosia,
secondary explosions proved it was heavily loaded with ammunition (suspected to
be Iranian-made Shahed drones).
Air Defense Systems:
The flagship Moskva carried long-range S-300F missile systems meant to lock
down the airspace over the entire Black Sea. Losing it left the rest of the
fleet highly vulnerable to air attacks, which paved the way for Ukraine to
successfully strike subsequent targets.
Ukraine’s warship campaign has completely changed how the
naval war is fought. On land, Ukraine’s successful drone warfare has launched a
new, historic strategy of fighting the enemy. By utilizing low-cost,
explosive-laden robotic boats, Ukraine also proved that massive,
multi-million-dollar steel warships can be systematically overwhelmed. This
complete loss of naval dominance in the western Black Sea is exactly what
forced Russia to rely on the smaller, commercial shadow-fleet vessels in the
Sea of Azov – the very ships that are now the target of Ukraine's current drone
campaign.
While these warheads are rarely large enough to instantly sink
a massive steel hull, the tactics are intentionally designed to achieve
functional destruction:
1. Immobilization: The first drone strikes
typically target the bridge/deckhouse to destroy steering equipment,
communications, and electronics.
2. Ignition:
Subsequent drones target the main deck near fuel hatches to ignite intense,
long-burning fires.
According to maritime intelligence, multiple tankers have
been left burning, crews have had to be evacuated, and Russia's domestic
ship-repair facilities lack the capacity to handle dozens of heavily damaged
commercial vessels simultaneously. In fact, as of this weekend, Russia has
reportedly been forced to completely halt commercial shipping navigation through
the Don-Azov Canal and the Kerch Strait due to the severity of the threat.
The primary target of this targeted blitz is Russia’s
maritime economic lifeline:
Sanctioned Oil and
Fuel: The vast majority of the vessels hit—such as the Chelsea-6, Sanar-1, Sanar-17,
Climena, and Penelope—are part of Moscow's international "shadow
fleet." These small tankers (averaging about 7,000 tons deadweight)
transport crude oil and refined petroleum products with deactivated satellite
transponders to evade international sanctions. This fuel directly funds the
Russian war budget and keeps military assets moving in the south.
Military Logistics
and Grain: The dry cargo ships hit (including the Donstar and Vladimir
Yarygin) are utilized as auxiliary supply links. They transport military
vehicles, ammunition, and bulk goods between mainland Russia and occupied ports
like Mariupol and Berdiansk. Additionally, these routes are heavily used to
export grain out of the Don River basin.
Kyiv’s campaign has introduced critical friction points into
both the Russian war economy and domestic military stability and fear into the
hearts and minds of Russians.
Logistical and
Refinery Strains: These seaborne tanker strikes occur alongside long-range
strikes on domestic Russian infrastructure, such as the Syzran oil refinery.
Because Russia relies heavily on its shadow fleet to bypass international
sanctions and move petroleum products, the sudden degradation of transport
capacity has caused domestic consumer gasoline prices inside Russia to climb
steeply.
Network Paralysis:
Traffic through the Don-Azov Canal and the Kerch Strait has faced severe
restrictions, cutting off primary agricultural and fuel shipping arteries.
According to maritime intelligence data, the number of active vessels
broadcasting AIS transponders in the Sea of Azov plummeted by 55% within a
week, as civilian crews go “dark” or refuse to sail due to the lack of
integrated naval air defenses.
Command Panic: Culturally,
the Sea of Azov was long treated by Moscow as a secure internal lake. Prominent
Russian military bloggers have entered a phase of severe recrimination, openly
blaming naval command for failing to field localized defenses against nimble
aerial and aquatic drone units. The explicit targeting of control cabins and
command bridges sends a stark psychological signal directly to the crews
operating the ships.
Ukraine’s NATO and European friends would do well to take
into consideration Kyiv’s successes and grant it membership in the Atlantic
alliance.