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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 175
Wednesday, 24 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 11:11 UTC
  • UTC11:11
  • EDT07:11
  • GMT12:11
  • CET13:11
  • JST20:11
  • HKT19:11
← The MonexusGeopolitics

Ukrainian navy and military intelligence destroy three Russian uncrewed surface vessels off Crimea

A coordinated Ukrainian Navy and military intelligence operation destroyed three Russian uncrewed surface vessels near Crimea hours after Kyiv's forces struck a strategic Russian bridge on the peninsula.

@operativnoZSU · Telegram

Ukraine's Navy and the country's military intelligence directorate (HUR) destroyed three Russian uncrewed surface vessels in a coordinated Black Sea operation on 24 June 2026, according to Ukrainian officials and footage circulated by domestic broadcasters. The strikes, announced in quick succession between 08:14 and 08:32 UTC, came hours after Ukrainian forces damaged a strategic bridge linking the Russian-occupied Crimean peninsula to the mainland.

The pattern is consistent with a deliberate Kyiv campaign to degrade Moscow's logistics and drone-launch capacity in the western Black Sea, and to do so using platforms and tactics that the Russian navy has struggled to counter. The day's three confirmed hits — three Russian boats and one bridge — amount to a single tactical packet rather than a coincidence.

What happened at sea

The naval action was first reported by the Telegram channel of Ukrainian public broadcaster TSN at 08:14 UTC on 24 June, citing the Navy and the Main Intelligence Directorate of Ukraine's defence ministry (HUR). A short time later, the Telegram channel noel_reports, which tracks open-source naval reporting, carried confirmation from the same services that three Russian uncrewed surface vessels — commonly called USVs in the maritime-drone literature — had been detected and destroyed in a coordinated engagement.

The footage released by TSN, filmed apparently from a Ukrainian surface platform, shows the three vessels being struck and burning out in sequence. The clips are consistent with previous Ukrainian operations against Russian sea drones, in which naval strike craft and uncrewed systems themselves are used to engage the slower, less manoeuvrable Russian platforms before they can launch against Ukrainian coastal targets.

Uncrewed surface vessels have become one of the defining features of the Black Sea war. Russia has used them to threaten Ukrainian ports and to extend the reach of its naval blockade; Ukraine has, in turn, built a doctrine around detecting and destroying them at range, often by pairing reconnaissance drones with small attack craft. The 24 June operation fits that pattern.

The Crimea bridge strike

At 08:32 UTC, Al Jazeera's breaking-news wire reported that Ukraine had struck a strategic Russian bridge in Crimea. The report did not specify which of the two main crossings of the Kerch Strait — the Crimean Bridge proper, opened in 2018, or the parallel rail bridge opened in 2019 — was hit, nor the extent of damage.

The two crossings are the principal overland route between mainland Russia and the occupied peninsula. They are central to Russian logistics, including the movement of military hardware to formations in southern Ukraine, and have been a recurring target of Ukrainian long-range strikes since at least October 2022, when the road bridge was first damaged in a truck-bomb attack. Kyiv's strategic logic in targeting the crossings is to raise the cost of sustaining the occupation; Moscow's strategic logic in rebuilding and protecting them is to keep Crimea physically tethered to Russia.

Al Jazeera's one-line bulletin does not say whether the bridge strike and the naval action were part of a single coordinated operation, or whether the timing reflects two separate planned actions executed on the same day. Ukrainian operational security practice is to keep such questions unanswered in real time; confirmation of coordination, if it exists, will come in later official statements.

Why uncrewed surface vessels matter

The Russian uncrewed surface vessel fleet is, in the technical literature, an asymmetric response to Ukraine's own pioneering use of sea drones in 2022. Those early Ukrainian strikes — most famously against the Russian Black Sea Fleet flagship Moskva in April 2022 — demonstrated that small, cheap, slow platforms could impose serious costs on a much larger conventional navy. Russia's answer has been to field its own USVs, deployed both from shore and from patrol craft, to threaten Ukrainian shipping and port infrastructure.

Destroying three such vessels in a single day does not end the Russian drone threat to Ukrainian ports. But it does two things. First, it denies Russia a finite stock of equipment that is not, as of mid-2026, being produced at the rate Ukraine's own drones are. Second, it provides the kind of footage that Kyiv uses to demonstrate to Western partners that donated systems — radar, communications, strike craft — are being integrated into an effective kill chain, not warehoused.

The reporting available on 24 June does not specify the type of the three Russian vessels destroyed, the location of the engagement within the Black Sea, or whether any Russian personnel were involved. Russian state-aligned channels had not, as of the cited timestamps, acknowledged the losses; that is the usual pattern, with Russian milbloggers and Telegram channels often taking several hours to surface counter-claims.

The bigger picture

The day's strikes sit inside a longer arc. Ukraine's wartime naval doctrine has moved from a near-total loss of large surface combatants in 2022 to a posture in which it is the side initiating action at sea. The Crimea bridge strikes, dating back to late 2022, are the most visible expression of a campaign to make the occupation logistically expensive; the sea-drone duels are the less visible but continuous version of the same campaign.

What remains uncertain is the cumulative effect. Russian logistics in southern Ukraine have absorbed repeated hits to the Kerch crossings and have continued to function, partly through ferry traffic and partly through the longer land corridor through Mariupol and Berdiansk. Ukrainian USV losses, in turn, are not always reported in real time. A honest reading of 24 June is that Kyiv chose to demonstrate it can still dictate tempo in the western Black Sea — and that the demonstration, not the destruction of three boats, may have been the point.

This publication's reporting here leans on Ukrainian primary sources and a single Western wire bulletin for the bridge strike, in line with Monexus's standing practice of leading with Kyiv's account and treating Russian state-aligned channels as counter-claim material only. The asymmetry of available sourcing on the day itself is noted rather than smoothed over.

Wire provenance

This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:

  • https://t.me/TSN_ua
  • https://t.me/noel_reports
© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire