• =?UTF-8?Q?A_Journalist_Just_Spotted_Russia=e2=80=99s_=e2=80=98Admir?= =

    From a425couple@21:1/5 to All on Thu May 12 09:33:17 2022
    from https://www.forbes.com/sites/davidaxe/2022/05/09/a-journalist-just-spotted-russias-admiral-makarov-frigate-intact-and-at-sea/?sh=428a51c937ca

    A Journalist Just Spotted Russia’s ‘Admiral Makarov’ Frigate, Intact And At Sea
    David AxeForbes Staff
    I write about ships, planes, tanks, drones, missiles and satellites.
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    May 9, 2022,05:51pm EDT
    uncaptioned
    'Admiral Makarov' before the war. PHOTO VIA WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
    H.I. Sutton, an independent journalist focusing on naval warfare, has
    spotted more than a dozen of the Russian Black Sea Fleet’s remaining warships, intact and underway.

    They include Admiral Makarov, one of the fleet’s three frigates and
    arguably the top target for Ukraine’s drones and anti-ship missile
    batteries.

    Sutton’s analysis of new commercial satellite imagery seems to confirm
    that last week’s rumors about a successful Ukrainian attack on Admiral Makarov were just that—rumors. The frigate survives.

    But it’s worth noting where Sutton found Admiral Makarov on or before
    Monday: sailing near Sevastopol in the Russian-occupied Crimean
    Peninsula. In other words, close to home.

    Indeed, Sutton narrowed the locations of most of the underway Black Sea
    Fleet to a swathe of ocean off the west coast of Crimea. Just two
    ships—a landing craft and one unidentified vessel—were near Snake
    Island, the current locus of naval combat between Ukraine and Russia.

    Near to Crimea, Russian ships enjoy the protection of shore-based S-400 surface-to-air missile batteries and the Russian navy’s Su-30 fighter
    jets. Closer to Snake Island—which sits astride the main shipping route
    to Ukraine’s strategic port Odessa, 80 miles to the north—ships are at greater risk of coming under attack from Ukrainian TB-2 armed drones and whatever Neptune anti-ship missiles Ukraine has left.

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    Sutton’s work seems to confirm what analysts expected weeks ago after a
    pair of Neptune missiles holed, and ultimately sank, the Russian cruiser
    Moskva as she sailed between Snake Island and Odessa.

    SEC Reportedly Investigates Musk For Delay In Disclosing 5% Twitter Stake Moskva was the flagship of the Black Sea Fleet with its, at the time,
    two dozen or so major warships. The 612-foot cruiser with her 64
    long-range S-300 surface-to-air missiles also was the fleet’s main air-defense vessel. Her loss underscored Russian ships’ vulnerability to anti-ship missiles and compelled Black Sea Fleet commanders to pull
    bigger vessels away from Odessa.

    In addition to sinking Moskva, the Ukrainians also have sunk or damaged
    three Russian landing ships, five Raptor-class patrol boats and a
    landing craft. Ukraine’s escalating denial campaign targeting the
    110-acre Snake Island, which Russian forces led by Moskva seized the day
    after the Russia-Ukraine war widened on Feb. 23, has claimed four of the Raptors and the landing craft.

    On paper, the Black Sea Fleet still is a significant force. The fleet’s surviving ships include most of the dozen or so big landing ships it had
    before the wider war plus the 409-foot Admiral Makarov and her two
    sisters with their 24-apiece Buk medium-range SAMs.

    But it’s clearer than ever that the Kremlin is reluctant to risk these
    ships, even though the Ukrainian navy, having scuttled its flagship
    frigate in Odessa, no longer has a single large vessel. No, Kyiv’s
    drones and missiles are the threats. And they’re significant ones.

    The inability of the Russian fleet significantly to reinforce the Black
    Sea undoubtedly is a factor in the Kremlin’s naval hesitancy. For a big
    ship, there’s just one way into the Black Sea—from the Mediterranean via the Bosphorous Strait. But Turkey controls the strait and has blocked
    warships from entering.

    It’s possible the Russians could put fresh patrol boats into the Black
    Sea by shipping them over land. But absent a profound shift in Turkey’s response to Russian aggression, no additional frigates or landing ships
    are coming. The big ships the Black Sea Fleet has left are the ships it
    must fight with ... probably until the war ends.

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    David Axe
    David Axe
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    I'm a journalist, author and filmmaker based in Columbia, South Carolina.

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