Russia's largest attack on Ukraine just showed that its Black Sea Fleet is still dangerous despite its heavy losses

  • Russia carried out its largest air attack against Ukraine so far on Monday.

  • The attack included 28 Kalibr missiles fired from Russian naval vessels in the Black Sea.

  • Russia's Black Sea Fleet has taken heavy losses, but the attack shows it's still a threat.

Russia fired hundreds of missiles and attack drones into Ukraine on Monday, targeting critical infrastructure and other sites across the country in what Ukraine said was the largest aerial bombardment of the war.

Ukraine's air force said it detected 127 missiles launched by Russian aircraft, ground forces, and warships, as well as an additional 109 drones. Kyiv said it destroyed 102 missiles and 99 drones during the massive barrage.

At least seven people were killed in the attack, and dozens more were injured, the State Emergency Service of Ukraine said Monday evening local time.

The Russian attack involved several different types of weapons, including 28 Kalibr cruise missiles that were fired from "surface" and "underwater carriers in the eastern part of the Black Sea," Ukraine's air force said, indicating launches from surface warships and submarines.

Three emergency-service workers with hoses on the scene of an explosion, with fires and billowing smoke behind them.
Ukrainian emergency-service workers trying to extinguish a fire that broke out after the Russian missile attack on Odesa on Monday.Photo by Ukrainian Emergency Service/Anadolu via Getty Images

The involvement of Russia's Black Sea Fleet shows it's still capable of carrying out large-scale attacks on Ukraine despite taking heavy losses.

Ukraine says it has sunk, damaged, or destroyed at least a third of the Russian Black Sea Fleet since the start of the war — a notable success given that Kyiv doesn't have a proper navy of its own.

Ukrainian military and security forces have relied heavily on domestically produced naval drones and anti-ship missiles to engage in asymmetrical warfare and curb the Russian naval threat.

The Ukrainian campaign has ultimately forced the Black Sea Fleet to disperse from its headquarters in the southwestern corner of the occupied Crimean peninsula and relocate to the eastern part of the region, closer to Russia, where the Kalibr missiles were fired from on Monday.

A submarine firing a missile out of the ocean, producing a trail of smoke. The logo for the Russian defense ministry is in the top-right corner of the image.
A screenshot from a video released by the Russian defense ministry in March showing a Kalibr cruise missile being fired from the Volkhov diesel submarine of Russia's Pacific Fleet as part of drills in an undisclosed location.Russian Defense Ministry Press Service via AP

Despite these substantial setbacks to the fleet, a spokesperson for Ukraine's navy said earlier this year that Russia maintained a serious presence in the Black Sea, including a combination of missile carriers, submarines, and patrol ships.

Three Russian cruise-missile submarines were spotted in the broad Black Sea area just a few weeks ago.

On Monday, Russia also launched ballistic missiles and cruise missiles from other platforms during its huge bombardment, including Tu-95 strategic bombers, Su-34 fighter-bombers, and Su-57 fifth-generation aircraft, Ukraine said, adding that its forces shot down 201 of the 236 aerial threats.

Business Insider was unable to verify the Ukrainian claims.

Three warships sailing in a grainy photo with the logo for the Russian defense ministry in the top-right corner.
A photo released by Russia's defense ministry in July last year showing warships of the Black Sea Fleet participating in naval drills.Russian Defense Ministry Press Service via AP

Lt. Gen. Mykola Oleshchuk, the commander of Ukraine's air force, said in a statement, "All available weapons and equipment were used to repel the air attack: aviation, anti-aircraft missile forces of the Air Force, mobile fire groups of the Ukrainian Defence Forces and electronic warfare units."

John Kirby, a spokesperson for the White House National Security Council, said the US was focused on providing Ukraine with critical air-defense systems and interceptor missiles to defend itself against such attacks in the future.

"Their air defense performed really well during these attacks," he told reporters on Monday. "Clearly, some things got through. But they knocked the majority out of the sky, and we have to make sure they can continue to do that."

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