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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Background  





2 Sinking  



2.1  Ukrainian account  





2.2  Russian account  





2.3  Other early observations  





2.4  Missile strike  





2.5  Images and video of the sinking ship  







3 Casualties  





4 Impact  





5 Aftermath  





6 See also  





7 References  














Sinking of the Moskva






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Coordinates: 45°1043N 30°5531E / 45.17861°N 30.92528°E / 45.17861; 30.92528
 

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Sinking of Moskva

Part of the Russian invasion of Ukraine

A large gray warship moves through open waters. Two helicopters fly overhead.
Moskva seen from the air in 2012

Date

14 April 2022; 2 years ago (2022-04-14)

Location

East of Snake Island, Black Sea

Coordinates

45°10′43N 30°55′31E / 45.17861°N 30.92528°E / 45.17861; 30.92528

Cause

Hit by two Ukrainian R-360 Neptune anti-ship missiles leading to a fire which caused munitions to explode

Participants

 Russian Navy
 Ukrainian Armed Forces

Deaths

18 killed (per Russian government)
40 killed (per Novaya Gazeta Europe)
~240 killed (per Naval News)
300 killed (per Business Insider)
400–600 killed (per The Insider)[1]

Non-fatal injuries

200 injured (per Business Insider)

Missing

10 missing (per Official Russian sources)[2]

Timeline

  • t
  • e
  • Northern Ukraine campaign

  • Chernobyl
  • Hostomel
  • Kyiv
  • Bucha
  • Irpin
  • Makariv
  • Moshchun
  • Brovary
  • Slavutych
  • Borodianka
  • Sumy
  • Chernihiv
  • Okhtyrka
  • Lebedyn
  • Northern Ukraine skirmishes
  • Desna

  • Eastern Ukraine campaign


    Southern Ukraine campaign


    Other regions


    Naval operations


    Spillover & related incidents

  • t
  • e
  • Northern Ukraine skirmishes

  • Kyiv strikes
  • Chernihiv strikes

  • Eastern Ukraine campaign


    Southern Ukraine campaign


    Other regions


    Spillover & related incidents

  • t
  • e
  • Northern Ukraine skirmishes

  • Kyiv strikes
  • Chernihiv strikes

  • Eastern Ukraine campaign


    Southern Ukraine campaign


    Other regions


    Naval operations


    Spillover & related incidents

  • t
  • e
  • Resistance to the Russian invasion of Ukraine

  • Ukrainian resistance
  • Belarusian–Russian anti-war resistance
  • rail war in Russia
  • Russian commissariat attacks
  • St. Petersburg cafe bombing
  • The Russian warship Moskva, the flagship of the Russian Navy's Black Sea Fleet, was sunk by Ukrainian forces on 14 April 2022 during the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Ukrainian officials announced that their forces had hit and damaged it with two R-360 Neptune anti-ship missiles, and that the ship had then caught fire. The United States Department of Defense later confirmed this, and Russia reported that the ship had sunk in stormy seas after the fire reached munitions onboard and they exploded.

    The cruiser is the largest Russian warship to be sunk in wartime since the end of World War II, and the first Russian flagship sunk since Knyaz Suvorov in 1905, during the Russo-Japanese War.

    Russia said that 396 crew members had been evacuated, with one sailor killed and 27 missing, but there are unverified reports of more casualties. At least 17 of the missing crew members were later declared dead by a court in Sevastopol.

    Background[edit]

    In February 2022, the Moskva left the Port of Sevastopol to participate in the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[3] The ship was later used against the Ukrainian armed forces during the attack on Snake Island, together with the Russian patrol boat Vasily Bykov.[4] Moskva hailed the island's garrison over the radio and demanded its surrender, receiving the now-famous reply "Russian warship, go fuck yourself" from its garrison. After this, contact was lost with Snake Island and the thirteen-member Ukrainian garrison surrendered.[5]

    Sinking[edit]

    Map
    Location of Moskva in Black Sea on 12 April 2022 by satellite imagery[6]

    Ukrainian account[edit]

    The first known report of a missile hitting the ship was at 20:42, 13 April 2022 Ukrainian time (EEST, UTC+03:00) with a Facebook post by a Ukrainian volunteer connected to the military:[7] "The cruiser Moskva has just been hit by 2 Neptune missiles. It is standing [not sunk], burning. And there is a storm at sea. Tactical flooding is required, apparently."[8] Later that evening presidential adviser Oleksiy Arestovych reported Moskva was on fire in rough seas and Odesa governor Maksym Marchenko officially confirmed that Ukrainian forces hit Moskva with two R-360 Neptune anti-ship missiles, which "caused very serious damage."[9][10] At 12:43, 14 April EEST, the Ukrainian Southern Command posted a video on Facebook with a report stating the ship had received damage within the range of the Neptune anti-ship missile and that there was a fire onboard. The video also claimed that other vessels in Moskva's group "tried to help, but a storm and a powerful explosion of ammunition overturned the cruiser and it began to sink."[11]

    Russian account[edit]

    Hours after Marchenko's claim, the Russian Ministry of Defense said that a fire had caused munitions to explode and that the ship had been seriously damaged, without any statement of cause or reference to a Ukrainian strike.[12][13][14][15] The ministry said on 14 April that the missile systems of the cruiser were undamaged, the fire was contained by sailors, and that efforts were underway to tow the ship to port.[16][17][18] Later on 14 April, the Russian ministry said that Moskva sank while being towed during stormy weather,[19][20][21] On 15 April, the sinking was briefly reported on Russian news media and television, where it was said to be due to "stormy seas".[21]

    Other early observations[edit]

    The United States Department of Defense spokesman John Kirby said early on 14 April that they did not have enough information to confirm a missile strike, but could not rule it out. Imagery they had examined showed the ship had suffered a sizable explosion. The cause of the explosion was not clear. The ship appeared to be moving under its own power, probably heading to Sevastopol for repairs.[22] A defense department spokesman later stated it was unclear whether the vessel was moving under her own power or being towed.[23] A senior Defense Department official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, stated the ship was "battling a fire on board, but we do not know the extent of the damage” but it was "big" and "extensive."[24]

    An image from a satellite with cloud-penetrating synthetic aperture radar (SAR) revealed that at 18:52 local time (UTC+03:00) on 13 April 2022, Moskva was located at 45°10′43.39″N 30°55′30.54″E / 45.1787194°N 30.9251500°E / 45.1787194; 30.9251500, about 80 nautical miles (150 km) south of Odesa, east of Snake Island and around 50 nmi (90 km) from the Ukrainian coast.[25] An analysis suggested this was not long after the damage occurred which caused the ship to eventually sink. In the image, the cruiser is accompanied by other vessels.[25]

    At 02:59, 14 April 2022 [EEST], the Telegram channel Reverse Side of the Medal, associated with the Russian paramilitary Wagner Group, posted the following: "According to unconfirmed reports, the flagship of the Black Sea Fleet, the cruiser Moskva, sank." The group added that, according to their "preliminary information, [the ship] was indeed attacked by the Neptune anti-ship missiles from the coastline between Odesa and Nikolaev." The channel reported that "the forces of the ship were diverted to counter the Bayraktar TB-2 UAV. The blow fell on the port side, as a result of which the ship took a strong roll. After the threat of detonation of ammunition, the crew of about 500 people was evacuated."[26][27]

    At 10:59, 14 April 2022 [EEST], the Lithuanian defense minister, Arvydas Anušauskas, reported on Facebook that an SOS signal was sent at 01:05, the cruiser rolled onto its side at 01:14, and the electricity went out half an hour later. "From 2 a.m., a Turkish ship evacuated 54 sailors from the cruiser, and at about 3 a.m., Turkey and Romania reported that the ship was completely sunk."[28][27][29][30] According to the Albanian website Politiko, a Turkish official denied to BBC News that a Turkish ship rescued any Russian crew.[31]

    In the afternoon of 14 April, US Defense Department spokesman Kirby confirmed the ship had sunk but said they were unable to confirm what caused the ship to sink, although the Ukrainian account was "certainly plausible."[24] Speculating about the cause of the explosion, he stated: "Certainly, it could have been damage from some external force, like a missile or an attack of some kind, a torpedo or something like that ... but it could also be something that happens inside the skin of the ship – an engineering fire, a fuel fire. You just don't know."[24]

    Missile strike[edit]

    AnR-360 Neptune launcher near Kyiv in 2019

    On 15 April, a senior US Defense official said that Moskva had been hit by two Neptune missiles; he also stated that the ship was about 65 nmi (120 km) south of Odesa when she was struck and that the cruiser continued onward under her own power before sinking on 14 April. The official also said intelligence appraisals indicated there were casualties at the time of the strike, but he did not know how many.[32][33] The Ukrainian missiles were apparently fired from a land-based launcher near Odesa while Moskva was located 60–65 nautical miles (110–120 kilometres) offshore.[34][18][35][36]

    On 5 May, a US official said that the US gave "a range of intelligence"[37][38][39] to assist in the sinking of the Moskva. However, the decision to strike was purely a Ukrainian one.[37] There was a US Navy P-8A Poseidon maritime surveillance aircraft in the area before the sinking.[7] The P-8A from Italy was patrolling within its radar range over the Black Sea[7] and the US, when asked, did identify the ship as the Moskva as part of intelligence sharing to help Ukraine defend against attacks from Russian ships.[40] The US Department of Defense spokesman John Kirby stated: "There was no provision of targeting information by any United States Navy P-8 flying in these air policing missions."[41]

    Moskva was equipped with a triple-tiered air defense that could have provided an adequate chance of intercepting the incoming Neptune missiles, with 3–4 minutes of radar detection warning.[42] There was no record that the crew had activated these systems, including the S-300F and 9K33 Osa surface-to-air missiles, chaff or decoys, electronic jamming, or the last-ditch AK-630 close-in weapon systems. Tayfun Ozberk, a Turkey correspondent for Defense News, suggested that the ship's radars either failed to detect the incoming Neptune missiles or that the defenses were not ready to engage the detected threat, implying a lack of crew training for such emergency scenarios.[43]

    The operation to sink Moskva may have been assisted by the use of at least one Bayraktar TB2 drone (UCAV), which seems to have observed the event and may have played other roles in the ship's sinking.[44][45] The Telegram post by the Wagner Group[27][26] and a Ukrainian official said the drone "diverted" or "distracted" the crew, but David Hambling, a technology journalist writing in Forbes, considered this unlikely, since the ship's anti-drone and anti-missile defenses were provided by two different systems: the long-range SA-N-6 Grumble (S-300F) missiles against the drone and the multibarreled AK-630 cannons against the Neptune missiles.[44]

    Several reports were consistent with Bayraktar drones being in the same area as the ship. Arda Mevlutoglu, a defense industry analyst, stated that a Bayraktar TB2 ground-control station was seen in Odesa on 10 April.[45] A video released by the Russian military on 12 April showed a missile being launched from the Russian frigate Admiral Essen and stated it destroyed a Bayraktar drone near the Crimean coast.[46][44][47] A Ukrainian video "shot from the air with a night vision scope,"[44] claimed to show Moskva burning in the distance,[48] and could have been made by a Bayraktar drone flying in the area.[44]

    Analysts stated the Bayraktar drone may have also provided targeting information.[45] Can Kasapoglu, the director of security and defense studies at the Turkish think tank Center for the Economics and Foreign Policy Studies (EDAM), said: "Reports that Turkish TB2 drones were involved in the attack either as a distraction for Moskva or as location spotter of Moskva are both quite possible."[45] Mevlutoglu mentioned that Rear Admiral Oleksiy Neizhpapa, commander of the Ukrainian naval forces, had in the past suggested that TB2 drones would be used with Neptune launchers for target reconnaissance.[45] Mevlutoglu also said the main radar system on Moskva was out of date, designed to detect aircraft and cruise missiles. The TB2, with a lower radar cross-section and flight speed, may have been missed by the ship's radar.[45]

    The aviation journalist Valius Venckunas reported: "According to Arkady Babchenko, a Russian military journalist and an outspoken critic of Vladimir Putin, a Ukrainian Bayraktar disabled Moskva’s radar station, rendering it unable to detect and intercept incoming missiles. However, Babchenko has not provided the source of such information."[49]

    Danish military analyst Anders Puck Nielsen makes a case that operator fatigue could have been a significant factor.[50] With such systems active, the cruiser was expected to survive several strikes from Neptune missiles (150 kg or 320 lb warhead each) due to its large displacement; one salvo combat model scenario suggests that at least eleven Neptune missiles would have needed to been launched simultaneously; Moskva could have defeated six of them, with the remaining five getting through its defenses and striking the ship, causing just enough hull damage to sink it.[51][unreliable source?] However, this assumes that ship munitions were not detonated by the impact thus poor damage control,[6][21][43] using conscripts instead of mid-grade professionals, and insufficient compartmentation have been suggested as contributing reasons to why the cruiser sank.[52]

    Images and video of the sinking ship[edit]

    By 18 April, two images and a short 3-second video clip were circulating on social media showing Moskva after the fire broke out and prior to the final sinking. The images show the ship listingtoport in daylight and calm seas, with signs of extensive fire damage around the central superstructure in addition to the presence of holes at the waterline, and most of her life rafts missing, indicating that some of the crew had evacuated by this point.[53][54][55] According to CNN, "a large Russian rescue tug can be seen dousing the warship with water on the far [starboard] side."[55]

    The source or author of the video or images is unknown.[53][54][55] The Telegraph reported the images were first posted to the web via Telegram on a channel linked to Russian security agencies.[56] Analysts who were independently consulted by The Guardian and CNN confirmed that the images appear to show Moskva.[53][55] The Guardian quoted Yörük Işık, a journalist and expert ship spotter, as saying: "I believe the video is real. What we see shape, size. It is the Moskva."[53] The Guardian also reported: "He [Işık] said he believed at least one of the photographs was taken from a Project 22870 rescue tugship, of which Russia is believed to have two in the Black Sea."[53]

    A senior US defense official said the images could not be independently verified, "but the images themselves comport with what we had assessed to be the damage done to the ship."[55] Carl Schuster, former director of operations at the US Pacific Command's Joint Intelligence Operations Center, stated: "Assuming the photo is not faked in some way or photo-shopped, it looks like the missile(s) hit forward, which is not unexpected. Anti-ship cruise missiles (ASCMs) tend to go for the center of the radar return, which typically is the forward section of the superstructure."[55] Chris Parry, a former rear admiral, wrote to The Guardian: "It seems that one–two missiles entered the ship just below after the pair of Vulcan anti-ship missiles ... This would have caused massive internal damage and looks to have punctured the two missiles ... which would have drained down propellant fuel that further intensified the fire within the ship by spreading horizontally along the decks and through the damaged bulkheads."[53] Naval experts consulted by the BBC considered damage to be consistent with a missile attack but disagreed with each other about the plausibility of other causes. The video does not show the storm stated in Russian reports.[57]

    Casualties[edit]

    Lithuania's defense minister Arvydas Anušauskas said on 14 April that a distress signal had been sent from Moskva that day, and a Turkish ship responded, evacuating 54 personnel from the cruiser at 2 am, before she sank at 3 am. According to him, there were 485 crew on board, of whom 66 were officers. It was not known how many had survived.[30][58][29][59]

    Ukrainian sources reported on 15 April that some of Moskva's crew were killed, including First Rank Captain (NATO OF-5, US O-6) Anton Kuprin (age 43), the ship's commanding officer, at the time of the explosion.[60] On 15 April, a senior US official said the government also believed there had been casualties.[32][61] At a US Department of Defense briefing on 18 April, a senior defense official revealed they had also seen lifeboats in the water with sailors in them but did not have an accurate count.[62] The independent Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta Europe reported some 40 sailors had been killed at the time of the sinking.[63] According to an eyewitness, there were some 200 injured sailors in a hospital in Crimea, out of an estimated 500 crewmembers from the ship. The report also said that the remaining sailors remained unaccounted for.[64]

    The Russian Ministry of Defense said soon after the sinking that the crew had been evacuated,[60] and initially did not report any casualties; however, some relatives of sailors have been told that their family member was "missing".[65] On 16 April, Russia released a video allegedly showing a meeting in Sevastopol with around 100 sailors of Moskva, along with Navy Commander-in-Chief Admiral Nikolay Yevmenov, who said that the sailors would continue their service in the Navy.[61] According to independent Russian online newspaper The Insider, out of a complement of 500 to 700 crewmen, about 100 sailors, and notably the First Rank Captain of the ship Anton Kuprin, are visible in the video.[1] Naval News reported that the Russian Defense Ministry video showed around 240 people survived, which is roughly half the crew.[43] The Ukrainian edition of Radio Liberty, however, says that it is impossible to verify the authenticity of the video.[66]

    On 22 April, the Russian Defense Ministry released a statement confirming that one sailor from Moskva was killed and 27 were missing, while 396 crew members were rescued.[2][67] Family members of crew serving aboard the Moskva allege that the number of missing sailors could be higher and that they have received no official information regarding their fate.[68] At least 17 of the missing crew members were later declared dead by a court in Sevastopol.[69]

    Impact[edit]

    S-300F (SA-N-6) missile launchers on a Slava-class cruiser

    Moskva is the largest Soviet or Russian warship to be sunk in action since World War II,[70] when German aircraft bombed the Soviet battleship Marat,[71] and the first loss of a Russian flagship in wartime since the 1905 sinking of the battleship Knyaz Suvorov during the Battle of Tsushima in the Russo-Japanese War.[72] The last time a warship of comparable size was sunk was during the Falklands War in 1982, when the Argentine Navy cruiser ARA General Belgrano was sunk by the Royal Navy submarine HMS Conqueror.[73] If Ukrainian claims are true, Moskva might be the largest warship ever disabled or destroyed by a missile, according to Carl Schuster, a retired US Navy captain and former director of operations at the US Pacific Command's Joint Intelligence Center.[73]

    The loss of Moskva is considered significant and humiliating to Russian president Vladimir Putin but "more about psychological damage than material damage" according to Mykola Bielieskov from Ukraine's National Institute for Strategic Studies. He said that it would not completely lift Russia's naval blockade on Ukraine, but showed that Ukraine could employ sophisticated weaponry effectively.[21] The Institute for the Study of War reached similar conclusions and said the loss of the ship may force Russia "to either deploy additional air and point-defense assets to the Black Sea battlegroup or withdraw vessels from positions near the Ukrainian coast."[74] Russia moved 5 other warships further away from the Ukrainian coast.[75]

    Moskva was the only warship in Russia's Black Sea Fleet with the S-300F missile system for long-range air defense. While the ship did not itself fire missiles at land targets in Ukraine, it still provided anti-aircraft support to vessels that did, and the sinking prompted Russian ships, now less protected, to move further offshore.[21] Retired US Rear Admiral Samuel J. Cox, director of the Naval History and Heritage Command, told The New York Times that with the loss of the ship, in the newspaper's words, "any amphibious assault on Ukraine would be much more dangerous for Russia, with its landing and amphibious ships much more vulnerable to attacks."[76]

    In June 2022, Russian Vasily Bykov class corvettes were spotted fitted with ground-based Tor-M1/2 anti-air missile systems on deck, with analysts speculating that the arrangement was to compensate for the loss of seaborne air defense following the loss of the Moskva.[77] Also in June, some of Russia's many gas platforms were attacked due to decreased area protection, about halfway between Crimea and occupied Snake Island.[78][79] By August, the Russian Navy's ability to control the Black Sea had decreased as Odesa was no longer threatened from sea. However, the Russian Navy maintained the ability to protect Russian exports crossing the sea.[80]

    While two sister ships of Moskva were deployed to the Eastern Mediterranean as of February 2022,[81] Turkey has for the duration of the war closed the Turkish Straits to belligerent warships whose home port is not in the Black Sea, following the Montreux Convention. Thus, Russia cannot send ships to replace the lost Moskva from its other fleet bases without violating Turkish sovereignty.[82][83]

    In 2020, the archpriest of the Russian Orthodox Church Sevastopol District said that a fragment of the True Cross would be kept in Moskva's chapel. The True Cross is the cross on which believers say Jesus was crucified and a very rare relic important to many Christians.[84] There was speculation after her sinking that the relic may have gone down with the ship.[85][86][87]

    Aftermath[edit]

    Ukrainian postage stamp, depicting a Ukrainian soldier giving Russian cruiser Moskva the finger, issued two days before she sank[88][89]
    Russian salvage ship Kommuna

    United States National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan said that the sinking of Moskva "is a big blow to Russia", with Moscow split between a narrative of incompetence and one of having been attacked.[90] Sasaki Takahiro, guest professor on Russian security policy at Hiroshima University, stated in The Asahi Shimbun that the sinking of Moskva is compared with that of Yamato, the battleship of Imperial Japan.[91] US Defense Department spokesman John Kirby said that Moskva's main mission was air defense for the Russian forces in the Black Sea and that her sinking "will have an impact on that capability, certainly in the near term".[92]

    According to an analysis by Forbes Ukraine on 14 April 2022, the sinking of Moskva is the most costly single loss for the Russian military in the war to date, and the ship would cost around US$750 million to replace.[93][94]

    Although Russia did not confirm that Ukrainian missiles had hit the ship, Reuters reported that in the morning of 15 April, Russia launched an apparent retaliatory missile strike against the missile factory Luch Design BureauinKyiv, where the Neptune missiles allegedly used in the attack were designed and manufactured.[95]

    The sinking of Moskva came two days after Ukrposhta released one million "Russian warship, go fuck yourself" stamps, which show a soldier giving the fingertoMoskva. The sinking boosted sales of the stamp in Ukraine.[96] Some people in Ukraine queued for more than two hours to get the stamp.[97] The sinking of Moskva likely boosted the morale of many Ukrainians and negatively affected morale of the invading Russian forces.[98] Oleksiy Neizhpapa, the commander of Ukrainian naval forces, was promoted as a reward for the sinking of Moskva.[99]

    Russian TV media only discussed the story briefly, while news articles described out-of-date fire-suppression systems and said that the sinking would not have an effect on the war. However, film director and former State Duma member Vladimir Bortko, while speaking as a guest on a talk show, urged retaliation in the form of total war, asserting that the fate of Moskva “is absolutely a cause for war...[a] real war, no fooling around."[21][100] On 18 April, Russia-1 state TV presenter Vladimir Solovyov criticised the Russian navy over the sinking;[101][102] Russian commentator Sergei Markov, a strong Kremlin supporter, told the BBC Radio 4's The World at One that the cruiser had been struck by missiles shipped from Norway, and that her electronic defenses had been neutralised by the US.[103] The Russian tabloid Komsomolskaya Pravda speculated that the ship had been hit by a Norwegian AGM-119 Penguin missile.[104][105][106]

    A Ukraine-based publication[107] and two defense analysts[108] wrote in the aftermath that Moskva had the capability to carry nuclear warheads and that she may have been carrying two nuclear warheads at the time of her sinking. They called for neighboring nations to launch an investigation into the possibility of a nuclear accident. There is a slight chance that the cruiser was carrying nuclear warheads for her P-500/P-1000 anti-ship missiles, but there is no evidence indicating that she was doing so.[109] A senior U.S. defense official stated there were no nuclear weapons on the ship when she sank.[53]

    Ukraine declared the wreck of Moskva as having "underwater cultural heritage". It is being advertised as a dive wreck as it is only 130 km off the coast from Odesa and the water is only 45–50 metres deep. The wreck "can be admired without much diving".[67][110]

    The Russian navy was reported to have sent the salvage ship Kommuna with the AS-28 submersible onboard to the wreck, as part of an eight-ship convoy. Worldwide, Kommuna is the oldest active-duty navy ship still in service, at 110 years old and inherited from the Imperial Russian Navy. Due to the size of Moskva and that she sank in one piece, bringing her to the surface is thought to be impractical. The aim is likely to recover encryption material, weapons, bodies, and other sensitive material that foreign powers might be interested in.[111] Kommuna is based with the Black Sea Fleet and sails from Sevastopol. Her presence at the wreck site would expose her to attack by Ukrainian forces.[112] On 24 May, Ukrainian sources claimed that Russia had spent the previous two weeks removing bodies and classified equipment from the wreck of the Moskva.[113][114] According to Ukraine, five to seven ships were involved.[115]

    On 30 June, Russia retreated from Snake Island,[116] the island that Moskva had attacked together with Vasily Bykov.[13] The Ukrainian military set foot on Snake Island on 4 July and raised the Ukrainian flag over it.[117]

    On 4 November, a Sevastopol court declared 17 of the missing sailors of the Moskva dead.[118]

    See also[edit]

    References[edit]

    1. ^ a b "Минобороны показало моряков крейсера『Москва』— около 100 человек. В Украине заявляли о гибели экипажа, который оценивали в 500-700 человек" [The Ministry of Defense showed the sailors of the cruiser "Moskva" - about 100 people. In Ukraine, they announced the death of the crew, which was estimated at 500-700 people]. The Insider. 16 April 2022. Archived from the original on 30 September 2022. Retrieved 4 December 2023.
  • ^ a b "Russia says one sailor died, 27 missing after missile cruiser sank". Al Arabiya. 22 April 2022. Archived from the original on 23 April 2022. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  • ^ Sutton, H. I. "OSINT Tracker Feb 15 2022: Russian Navy Anti-Ship Capabilities in Mediterranean & Black Sea". Covert Shores. Archived from the original on 16 February 2022. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
  • ^ "Zmiinyi Island In Black Sea Attacked From Russian Ships – Border Service". ukranews_com. 24 February 2022. Archived from the original on 24 February 2022. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  • ^ "Ukrainian Navy confirms Snake Island soldiers are alive, POWs". The Jerusalem Post. 28 February 2022. Archived from the original on 28 February 2022. Retrieved 28 February 2022.
  • ^ a b "Russian warship Moskva: What do we know?". BBC News. 14 April 2022. Archived from the original on 14 April 2022. Retrieved 14 April 2022.
  • ^ a b c Volkmann, Elizia (20 April 2022). "Ukraine war: US spy plane on patrol in Black Sea before sinking of Russian flagship Moskva". The Times. Archived from the original on 3 May 2022. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  • ^ Trevithick, Joseph; Rogoway, Tyler (13 April 2022). "Russia's Black Sea Flagship Moskva Has Exploded Off Ukraine (Updated)". The War Zone. Archived from the original on 17 April 2022. Retrieved 15 January 2023. Russian: "Двумя ракетами 'Нептун' только что поражен крейсер 'Москва'. Стоит, горит. А на море шторм. Требуется тактическое затопление, судя по всему." [www.facebook.com/serg.marco/posts/3223179567999876)]
  • ^ "Russian warship Moskva on fire but afloat, Pentagon says". The Guardian. 14 April 2022. Archived from the original on 14 April 2022. Retrieved 17 April 2022.
  • ^ "Russia says flagship missile cruiser has sunk after explosion off coast of Ukraine". The Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Archived from the original on 14 April 2022. Retrieved 14 April 2022.
  • ^ "Russian cruiser Moskva capsized and began to sink – Operational Command South". ukrinform.net. 14 April 2022. Archived from the original on 14 April 2022. Retrieved 14 April 2022. Facebook post:『Поточна оперативна обстановка на півдні України: ранок 14.04.2022 [Current operational situation in the south of Ukraine: morning 14.04.2022]』(12:43 14 April EEST) on Facebook (fb.watch/cyVbeRP2zf/); partial video transcript: Ukrainian: В Чорноморській операційній зоні ПКР «Нептун» уражений крейсер «Москва» – флагман чорноморського флоту росії – отримав суттєві пошкодження. Виникла пожежа. Інші одиниці корабельного угруповання намагалися надати допомогу, але шторм і потужний вибух боєзапасу перекинули крейсер і він почав тонути. (tr. "In the Black Sea operational zone of the PKR 'Neptune' the affected cruiser 'Moscow' – the flagship of the Russian Black Sea Fleet – received significant damage. There was a fire. Other units of the ship's group tried to help, but a storm and a powerful explosion of ammunition overturned the cruiser and it began to sink.")
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  • ^ a b "Москва утонула . Как ВСУ поразили флагман ЧФ РФ" ['Moskva' drowned. How the Armed Forces hit the flagship of the Russian Black Sea Fleet]. korrespondent.net (in Russian). Archived from the original on 14 April 2022. Retrieved 14 April 2022.
  • ^ "Крейсер 'Москва' затонул при буксировке" [Cruiser Moskva sank while being towed]. tass.ru. Archived from the original on 14 April 2022. Retrieved 29 April 2022 (22:52, 14 April 2022 [EEST], updated 22:58 14 April 2022 [EEST]).
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  • ^ a b "Telegram post by Reverse Side of the Medal (edited 02:59)" (in Russian). 14 April 2022. Archived from the original on 30 September 2022. Retrieved 13 May 2022. По неподтвержденным данным, флагман Черноморского флота крейсер «Москва» – затонул. ... По нашей предварительной информации, флагман Черноморского флота России крейсер «Москва» действительно был атакован ПКР «Нептун» с береговой линии между Одессой и Николаевым. Также силы корабля были отвлечены на противодействие БПЛА «Bayraktar TB-2». Удар пришёлся по левому борту, в результате чего корабль принял сильный крен. После угрозы детонации боекомплекта, экипаж порядка ~500 человек был эвакуирован. [According to unconfirmed reports, the flagship of the Black Sea Fleet, the cruiser Moskva, sank. ... According to our preliminary information, the flagship of the Russian Black Sea Fleet, the cruiser Moskva, was indeed attacked by the Neptune anti-ship missile from the coastline between Odessa and Nikolaev. Also, the ship’s forces were diverted to counteract the Bayraktar TB-2 UAV. The impact hit the port side, causing the ship to take a strong list. After the threat of detonation of the ammunition, the crew of about 500 people was evacuated.]
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  • Part of the Russo-Ukrainian War

    Overview

    General

  • Timeline
  • Feb – Apr 2022
  • Apr – Aug 2022
  • Aug – Nov 2022
  • Nov 2022 – Jun 2023
  • Jun – Aug 2023
  • Sep – Nov 2023
  • Dec 2023 – Mar 2024
  • Apr 2024 – present
  • Aerial warfare
  • Defense lines
  • Foreign fighters
  • Information war
  • Naval warfare
  • Legality
  • Map
  • Order of battle
  • Peace negotiations
  • Proposed no-fly zone
  • Red lines
  • Reparations
  • Territorial control
  • Women
  • Prelude

  • Disinformation
  • 2021 Russia–United States summit
  • 2021 Black Sea incident
  • Belarus–European Union border crisis
  • "On the Historical Unity of Russians and Ukrainians"
  • Crimea Platform
  • Zapad 2021
  • December 2021 ultimatum
  • 2022 Ukraine cyberattacks
  • Zametil 2022
  • Union Resolve 2022
  • Stanytsia Luhanska kindergarten bombing
  • British–Polish–Ukrainian trilateral pact
  • Evacuation of the Donetsk PR and Luhansk PR
  • Mobilization in Donetsk PR and Luhansk PR
  • "Address concerning the events in Ukraine"
  • "On conducting a special military operation"
  • Background

  • 2014 pro-Russian unrest in Ukraine
  • Annexation of Crimea
  • War in Donbas
  • Putinism
  • Foreign
    relations

  • Belarus–Ukraine
  • Belarus–Russia
  • Russia–United States
  • Ukraine–United States
  • Russia–NATO
  • Ukraine–NATO
  • Siege of Mariupol
  • Battle of Kherson
  • Battle of Melitopol
  • Battle of Mykolaiv
  • Battle of Enerhodar
  • Battle of Voznesensk
  • Battle of Huliaipole
  • Battle of Davydiv Brid
  • Kherson counteroffensive
  • Dnieper campaign
  • Eastern
    Ukraine

  • Battle of Kharkiv
  • Battle of Izium
  • Battle of Rubizhne
  • Battle of Popasna
  • Battle of Marinka
  • Battle of Donbas
  • Battle of Vuhledar
  • Kharkiv counteroffensive
  • Luhansk Oblast campaign
  • Battle of Avdiivka
  • Northern
    Ukraine

  • Capture of Chernobyl
  • Battle of Kyiv
  • Battle of Hostomel
  • Battle of Vasylkiv
  • Battle of Bucha
  • Battle of Irpin
  • Battle of Makariv
  • Russian Kyiv convoy
  • Battle of Moshchun
  • Battle of Brovary
  • Battle of Slavutych
  • Battle of Sumy
  • Siege of Chernihiv
  • Battle of Okhtyrka
  • Battle of Lebedyn
  • Northeastern border skirmishes
  • Airstrikes
    by city

  • Dnipro strikes
  • Ivano-Frankivsk strikes
  • Kharkiv strikes
  • Kherson strikes
  • Khmelnytskyi strikes
  • Kryvyi Rih strikes
  • Kyiv strikes
  • Lviv strikes
  • Mykolaiv strikes
  • Odesa strikes
  • Rivne strikes
  • Vinnytsia strikes
  • Zaporizhzhia strikes
  • Zhytomyr strikes
  • Airstrikes on
    military targets

  • Millerovo air base attack
  • Chornobaivka attacks
  • 7 March 2022 Mykolaiv military barracks attack
  • Yavoriv military base attack
  • 18 March 2022 Mykolaiv military quarters attack
  • Berdiansk port attack
  • Sinking of the Moskva
  • Desna barracks airstrike
  • Attack on Nova Kakhovka
  • Crimea attacks
  • Dyagilevo and Engels air bases attacks
  • Makiivka military quarters shelling
  • Machulishchy air base attack
  • Zarichne barracks airstrike
  • Resistance

    Russian-occupied Ukraine

  • Berdiansk Partisan Army
  • Yellow Ribbon
  • Atesh
  • Belarus and Russia

  • Civic Council
  • Irpin Declaration
  • Killing of Darya Dugina
  • Military commissariats arsons
  • Rail war in Russia
  • Rail war in Belarus
  • Russian
    occupations

    Ongoing

  • Annexation of Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk and Zaporizhzhia oblasts
  • Elections in Russian-occupied Ukraine
  • Russian-occupied territories of Ukraine
  • Donetsk Oblast
  • Kharkiv Oblast
  • Kherson Oblast
  • Luhansk Oblast
  • Mykolaiv Oblast
  • Zaporizhzhia Oblast
  • Previous

  • Dnipropetrovsk and Poltava oblasts
  • Kyiv Oblast
  • Odesa Oblast
  • Sumy Oblast
  • Zhytomyr Oblast
  • Potentially
    related

  • Mystery fires in Russia
  • Nord Stream pipeline sabotage
  • Transnistria attacks
  • Zagreb Tu-141 crash
  • Other

  • 2023 Crimean Bridge explosion
  • Assassination attempts on Volodymyr Zelenskyy
  • Coup d'état attempt in Ukraine
  • Bridges in the Russo-Ukrainian War
  • Violations of non-combatant airspaces
  • Operation Synytsia
  • Attacks in Russia
  • 2023 Ukrainian counteroffensive
  • Wagner Group rebellion
  • General

  • Allegations of genocide of Ukrainians
  • Attacks on hospitals
  • Cluster munitions
  • Incendiary weapons
  • Landmines
  • Russian filtration camps
  • Russian mobile crematoriums
  • Russian theft of Ukrainian grain
  • Russian torture chambers
  • Looting
  • Sexual violence
  • Mistreatment of prisoners of war
  • Attacks on
    civilians

  • Kharkiv government building airstrike
  • 3 March Chernihiv bombing
  • Irpin refugee column shelling
  • Mariupol hospital airstrike
  • Stara Krasnianka care house attack
  • Mykolaiv cluster bombing
  • March 2022 Donetsk attack
  • 2022 Borodianka airstrikes
  • Chernihiv breadline attack
  • Mariupol theatre airstrike
  • Kyiv shopping centre bombing
  • Sumykhimprom ammonia leak
  • March 2022 Kharkiv cluster bombing
  • Mykolaiv government building missile strike
  • Bucha massacre
  • Kramatorsk railway station attack
  • April 2022 Kharkiv cluster bombing
  • Bilohorivka school bombing
  • Shooting of Andrii Bohomaz
  • Maisky Market attack
  • Kremenchuk shopping mall attack
  • Serhiivka missile strike
  • Chasiv Yar missile strike
  • Olenivka prison massacre
  • Kharkiv dormitories missile strike
  • Chaplyne railway station attack
  • Izium mass graves
  • September 2022 Donetsk attack
  • Zaporizhzhia civilian convoy attack
  • Kupiansk civilian convoy shelling
  • Zaporizhzhia residential building airstrike
  • Russian strikes against Ukrainian infrastructure
  • 2023 Dnipro residential building airstrike
  • Sloviansk airstrike
  • Uman missile strike
  • Kramatorsk restaurant missile strike
  • Lyman cluster bombing
  • 2023 Pokrovsk missile strike
  • Chernihiv missile strike
  • Kostiantynivka missile strike
  • Hroza missile attack
  • Volnovakha massacre
  • December 2023 strikes
  • 2024 Pokrovsk missile strike
  • 2024 Donetsk attack
  • Lysychansk missile strike
  • 6 March 2024 Odesa strike
  • March 2024 strikes
  • April 2024 Chernihiv missile strike
  • May 2024 Kharkiv strikes
  • 8 July 2024 strikes
  • Crimes against
    soldiers

  • Torture and castration of a Ukrainian POW in Pryvillia
  • Rape of Donetsk People's Republic soldiers by Kadyrovites
  • Murder of Yevgeny Nuzhin
  • Makiivka surrender incident
  • Execution of Oleksandr Matsievskyi
  • 2022 Ukrainian prisoner of war beheading
  • Legal cases

  • ICJ court case
  • Task Force on Accountability
  • Universal jurisdiction
  • Crime of aggression
  • Criminal proceedings
  • Military aid
  • People's Bayraktar
  • Signmyrocket.com
  • Humanitarian aid
  • Sanctioned yachts
  • Relations with Russia
  • Ukraine

  • Be Brave Like Ukraine
  • Brave1
  • Coordination Headquarters for the Treatment of Prisoners of War
  • Decolonization and derussification law
  • Delta
  • Destroyed Russian military equipment exhibition
  • For Courage and Bravery (Ukraine)
  • Grain From Ukraine
  • Headquarters of the Supreme Commander-in-Chief
  • Hero City
  • I Want to Live
  • International Defence Industries Forum
  • International Legion and other foreign units
  • International Sponsors of War
  • Forced confiscation law of Russian property [ru; uk]
  • Look for Your Own
  • Martial law
  • Mobilization
  • Media Center Ukraine
  • National Council for the Recovery of Ukraine from the War [uk]
  • National Multi-Subject Test [uk]
  • North Korea–Ukraine relations
  • Points of Invincibility
  • Recognition of Ichkeria
  • Rescuer City [uk]
  • Save Ukrainian Culture [uk]
  • Syria–Ukraine relations
  • Ukrainian Freedom Orchestra
  • United24
  • United News
  • Russia

    • highways in the annexed territories
  • A291 "Tavrida"
  • R260
  • R280 "Novorossiya"
  • 2022 Moscow rally
  • 2023 Moscow rally
  • 2022 Moscow Victory Day Parade
  • 2023 Moscow Victory Day Parade
  • 2024 Moscow Victory Day Parade
  • 2023 Presidential Address to the Federal Assembly
  • Blockade of Ukraine [ru]
  • Bohdan Khmelnytsky Battalion
  • Censorship in Russia [ru]
  • Chechnya
  • Conmemorative Medal "Participant of a Special Military Operation" [ru]
  • Conversations about Important Things
  • Krasovsky case
  • Legalization of parallel imports [ru]
  • Manifesto of the South Russian People's Council
  • Martial law
  • Masha Moskalyova case
  • Metropolis of Crimea
  • Mikhail Simonov case
  • Mobilization
  • Operation Doppelgänger
  • Opinion polling [ru]
  • Orthodox Christmas truce proposal
  • Wagner Group–Ministry of Defense conflict
  • Russian Orthodox clergymen appeal against war
  • Salvation Committee for Peace and Order
  • Special Coordinating Council
  • Ukraine bioweapons conspiracy theory
  • Unfriendly countries list
  • War censorship laws
  • We Are Together. Sports
  • "What Russia Should Do with Ukraine"
  • United States

  • 2022 State of the Union Address
  • Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2022
  • Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023
  • Disinformation Governance Board
  • Executive Order 14071
  • Pentagon document leaks
  • Task Force KleptoCapture
  • Ukraine Defense Contact Group
  • Ukraine Democracy Defense Lend-Lease Act
  • Ukraine Security Assistance Initiative
  • Other countries

  • Canada
  • China
  • Croatia
  • Denmark
  • Federated States of Micronesia
  • France
  • Georgia [ru]
  • Germany
  • Hungary [hu]
  • India
  • Iran
  • Israel
  • Lithuania
  • Moldova
  • New Zealand
  • Poland
  • Syria [ru]
  • Taiwan [zh-yue]
  • United Kingdom
  • United Nations

  • Resolution ES-11/2
  • Resolution ES-11/3
  • Resolution ES-11/4
  • Resolution ES-11/5
  • Resolution ES-11/6
  • Security Council Resolution 2623
  • Resolution A/RES/77/229
  • Easter truce
  • International
    organizations

  • Accession of Ukraine to the EU
  • Brussels summit
  • European Political Community
  • Madrid summit
  • NATO virtual summit
  • Operation Oscar
  • Ramstein Air Base meeting
  • EU–Ukraine Summit
  • REPowerEU
  • Steadfast Defender 2024
  • SWIFT ban against Russian banks
  • Ukraine Recovery Conference
  • Versailles declaration
  • 2023 Vilnius summit
  • 15th BRICS summit
  • 2024 Washington summit
  • Other

  • F-16 training coalition
  • Finland–NATO relations
  • Finland–Russia border barrier
  • Iron diplomacy
  • Proposed Russian annexation of South Ossetia
  • Recognition of Russia as a terrorist state
  • Removal of monuments and memorials
  • Streets renamed
  • Serving heads of state and government that have visited Ukraine during the invasion
  • Sweden–NATO relations
  • Public

    Protests

  • demolition of monuments to Alexander Pushkin
  • ArmWomenNow
  • Ukrainian Artistic Front
  • In Russia
  • In Belarus
  • In China
  • In Czech Republic
  • Companies

  • Boycott of Russia and Belarus
  • E.N.O.T. Corp.
  • McDonald's in Russia
  • NashStore [ru]
  • People's Satellite
  • Starlink satellites
  • Stop Bloody Energy
  • Wagner Group
  • Yale CELI List of Companies
  • Technology

  • alerts.in.ua
  • DDoS attacks on Romania
  • DeepStateMap.Live
  • IT Army of Ukraine
  • Killnet
  • Liveuamap
  • Open-source intelligence
  • peacenotwar
  • Russian Asset Tracker
  • Squad303 [pl]
  • Ukraine Siren Alerts
  • Wikipedia
  • Spies

  • Russian spies in the Russo-Ukrainian War
  • Other

  • Black Sea Grain Initiative
  • Collaboration with Russia
  • Concert for Ukraine
  • Free Buryatia Foundation
  • Free Nations of Post-Russia Forum
  • Game4Ukraine
  • Get Lost
  • Global Tour for Peace
  • Go by the Forest
  • Guide to the Free World
  • Mozart Group
  • Olena Zelenska Foundation
  • Open letter from Nobel laureates
  • Pavel Sudoplatov Battalion
  • Rubikus.HelpUA
  • Ruslan Shostak Charitable Foundation
  • Russia's War Crimes House
  • Saving Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Online
  • Serhiy Prytula Charity Foundation
  • Spain letter bomb attacks
  • Yermak-McFaul Expert Group on Russian Sanctions
  • Pavel Filatyev
  • True Russia
  • Volos Declaration
  • Wimbledon ban
  • Impact

    Effects

  • Casualties
  • Britons killed
  • Canadians killed
  • Colombians killed
  • Israelis killed
  • journalists killed
  • Russian generals killed
  • Economic impact
  • Education
  • End of the Whisky War
  • Environmental impact
  • Eurovision Song Contest 2022
  • Eurovision Song Contest 2023
  • Food crises
  • Impact on theatre [uk]
  • List of notable deaths
  • Nuclear power plants
  • Nuclear risk
  • Religion
  • Russian emigration
  • Ship losses
  • Ukrainian cultural heritage
  • Trauma
  • Urengoy–Pomary–Uzhhorod pipeline explosion
  • Violations of non-combatant airspaces
  • Women
  • Human rights

  • Ukrainian refugee crisis
  • UN Commission of Inquiry
  • UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission
  • Terms and phrases

  • "Anglo-Saxons"
  • "Bavovna"
  • "Grandpa in his bunker"
  • "Good evening, we are from Ukraine"
  • "Orc"
  • "Putin khuylo!"
  • "Khuy Voyne!"
  • "Russia is here forever [uk]"
  • "Russian warship, go fuck yourself"
  • "Slava Ukraini!"
  • "Special military operation"
  • "To bomb Voronezh"
  • "Strength is in truth"
  • "Westsplaining"
  • "Where have you been for eight years?"
  • "Without you"
  • Popular culture

    Songs

  • Bakhmut Fortress
  • Bayraktar
  • Bilia topoli
  • City of Mary
  • Flowers of Minefields
  • Generation Cancellation
  • Generation Z
  • Oyda
  • Hey, Hey, Rise Up!
  • Mama ŠČ!
  • Oi u luzi chervona kalyna
  • Slava Ukraini!
  • Stefania
  • Ukraine
  • Crushed
  • Films

  • A Rising Fury
  • Follow Me
  • Turn in the Wound
  • Ukraine on Fire 2 [uk]
  • Other

  • Back to the Cold War
  • Borodianka cat [uk]
  • Ghost of Kyiv
  • Kherson watermelon
  • Královec Region
  • Madonna of Kyiv
  • North Atlantic Fella Organization
  • Newspeak in Russia [ru; uk]
  • Patron
  • "Putler"
  • "Putinversteher"
  • Raccoon of Kherson
  • Saint Javelin
  • Saint Mariuburg [ru; uk]
  • Vasylkiv maiolica rooster
  • Vladimir Putin's meeting table
  • Walk of the Brave
  • "Z" military symbol
  • Key people

    Ukrainians

  • visit to the United States
  • visit to the United Kingdom
  • visits to Europe
  • Andriy Biletsky
  • Denys Shmyhal
  • Denys Kireyev
  • Denys Monastyrsky
  • Denys Prokopenko
  • Iryna Venediktova
  • Kyrylo Budanov
  • Mykola Oleschuk
  • Oleksandr Pavlyuk
  • Oleksandr Syrskyi
  • Oleksii Reznikov
  • Oleksiy Danilov
  • Oleksiy Neizhpapa
  • Ruslan Khomchak
  • Rustem Umerov
  • Sergiy Kyslytsya
  • Serhiy Shaptala
  • Serhii Sternenko
  • Valerii Zaluzhnyi
  • Vitali Klitschko
  • Yevhen Moisiuk
  • Russians

  • Aleksandr Dvornikov
  • Aleksandr Lapin
  • Aleksey Nagin
  • Alexander Bortnikov
  • Andrei Kolesnikov
  • Andrei Sychevoi
  • Andrey Belousov
  • Andrey Vorobyov
  • Dmitry Medvedev
  • Gennady Zhidko
  • Igor Kastyukevich
  • Ivan Popov
  • Mikhail Mishustin
  • Maria Lvova-Belova
  • Nikolai Patrushev
  • Oleg Salyukov
  • Oleg Tsokov
  • Ramzan Kadyrov
  • Roman Berdnikov
  • Rustam Muradov
  • Sergey Kobylash
  • Sergey Lavrov
  • Sergey Naryshkin
  • Sergei Shoigu
  • Sergey Surovikin
  • Timur Ivanov
  • Valery Gerasimov
  • Viktor Sokolov
  • Viktor Zolotov
  • Vitaly Gerasimov
  • Vyacheslav Gladkov
  • Vyacheslav Volodin
  • Yevgeny Prigozhin
  • Other

  • Donetsk People's Republic Denis Pushilin
  • Luhansk People's Republic Leonid Pasechnik
  • 2024 Korochansky Ilyushin Il-76 crash
  • Anti-Russian sentiment
  • Anti-Ukrainian sentiment
  • Antonov An-225 Mriya
  • Azovstal Iron and Steel Works
  • Belgorod accidental bombing
  • Brovary helicopter crash
  • Bryansk Oblast military aircraft crashes
  • Claims of Vladimir Putin's incapacity and death
  • Decolonization in Ukraine
  • Decommunization in Ukraine
  • Derussification in Ukraine
  • Foreign leaders that have visited during the invasion
  • Institute for the Study of War
  • Irkutsk military aircraft crash
  • Ivanovo Ilyushin Il-76 crash
  • Kyivstar cyberattack [ru; uk]
  • Lady R incident
  • Nord Stream 2
  • Proposed Russian annexation of Transnistria
  • Punisher
  • Russian nuclear weapons
  • Russian military presence in Transnistria
  • Ryazan military aircraft crash
  • Siberian wildfires
  • Sinhury mid-air collision [uk; zh]
  • Soloti military training ground shooting
  • Soviet imagery
  • U-24 association
  • Ukrainian conscription crisis
  • Ural Airlines Flight 1383
  • Voronezh military aircraft crash
  • "The Vladimir Putin Interview"
  • Yeysk military aircraft crash
  • Moldovan coup d'état attempt allegations
  • 2023 visit by Joe Biden to Ukraine
  • 2023 visit by Fumio Kishida to Ukraine
  • 2023 visit by Xi Jinping to Russia
  • 2023 visit by Yoon Suk Yeol to Ukraine
  • Wagner Group plane crash
  • Yaroslav Hunka scandal
  • Shipwrecks and maritime incidents in 2022

    Shipwrecks

  • 3 Jan: Grigory Lovtsov
  • 5 Jan: Tanimbar Bahari
  • 8 Jan: Capitólio rockfall
  • 14 Feb: Trailer Princess
  • 15 Feb: Villa de Pitanxo
  • 18 Feb: Euroferry Olympia
  • 28 Feb: Hetman Sahaidachny
  • 1 Mar: Felicity Ace
  • 3 Mar: Sloviansk, Helt
  • 13 Mar: PNS Khaibar
  • 24 Mar: Saratov (sinking)
  • 5 Apr: Azburg
  • 6 Apr: Donbas
  • 13–14 Apr: Moskva (sinking)
  • 16 Apr: Xelo
  • 23 Apr: Kazu I
  • 7 Jun: Spirit of Norfolk
  • 10 Jun: Vinnytsia
  • 17 Jun: Spasatel Vasily Bekh
  • 19 Jun: Jumbo Kingdom
  • 12 Jul: USS Rodney M. Davis
  • 22 Jul: USS Denver
  • 24 Jul: Unidentified boat
  • 28 Jul: Tourist No. 2
  • 23 Jun: Princess Miral
  • 29 Aug: Hephaestus
  • 2 Sep: 007
  • 7 Oct: Unnamed boat
  • 29 Oct: Ivan Golubets [pl]
  • 30 Oct: BRP Rajah Humabon, BRP Cebu, BRP Sultan Kudarat
  • 14 Dec: 2022 English Channel boat capsizing
  • 18 Dec: HTMS Sukhothai
  • Other incidents

  • 11 Jan: Fridtjof Nansen
  • 12 Jan: SMP Novodvinsk
  • 24 Feb: Yasa Jupiter
  • 25 Feb: Millennial Spirit, Namura Queen, Baltic Leader
  • 27 Feb: Lady Anastasia
  • 1 Mar: Banglar Samriddhi
  • 7 Mar: Vasily Bykov
  • 24 Mar: Tsezar Kunikov, Novocherkassk
  • 27 Mar: Omskiy-205
  • 14 Apr: USS The Sullivans
  • 19 Apr: Lana
  • 12 May: Vsevolod Bobrov
  • 25 Jun: Norwegian Sun
  • 28 Jul: Cathlamet
  • 24 Aug: Pyhäranta
  • 31 Aug: OS35
  • 22 Sep: Tartus migrant
  • 2021 2023


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sinking_of_the_Moskva&oldid=1232071149"

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