Ukraine Is Blowing Up Russian Cargo Ships
The goal: to drive resupplies effort onto land -- and into drones' crosshairs
This story was commissioned by Euromaidan Press. Since Substack pays only around a fifth of my bills, I have no choice but to take on a lot of freelance work. I still want my Substack audience to know where to read those freelance stories, however. Hence this excerpt.
One-way attack drones from Ukraine’s Unmanned Systems Forces struck five Russian cargo ships on the Sea of Azov on June 5.
The strikes, which left at least one ship a burned-out hulk, are a kind of corollary to Ukraine’s escalating campaign of middle-distance strikes on Russian supply lines on land in occupied territories. Aiming to weaken Russian regiments before they can attack across the disputed gray zone, Kyiv’s drone units aren’t only hitting trucks and vans on land—they’re also hitting ships at sea.
“There’s a method to the madness here,” Ukraine Control Map explained. “Take out the ships, force Russia to use more trucks, more logistic bottlenecks.” Then hammer the bottlenecks with drones.
The ultimate goal is to make it more difficult for the Kremlin to resupply and reinforce its 700,000 troops in occupied Ukraine. It’s cheaper and easier to defeat an attack before it even begins by starving the attacking troops of food, fuel, batteries, ammunition and other vital supplies.
Read the rest at Euromaidan Press.


