Ukraine behind Moscow drone attack, Defense Intelligence official says

July 24, 2023 - Russia-Ukraine news

By Kathleen Magramo, Sana Noor Haq, Aditi Sangal, Mike Hayes, Elise Hammond and Maureen Chowdhury, CNN

Updated 12:10 a.m. ET, July 25, 2023
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7:27 a.m. ET, July 24, 2023

Ukraine behind Moscow drone attack, Defense Intelligence official says

From CNN's Victoria Butenko

A member of the security services investigates a damaged building following a reported drone attack in Moscow on Monday.
A member of the security services investigates a damaged building following a reported drone attack in Moscow on Monday. Maxim Shemetov/Reuters

Ukraine’s Defense Intelligence, an arm of the Ministry of Defense, says it carried out a drone attack on Moscow early Monday morning, a Defense Intelligence official has told CNN.

The official was speaking on condition of anonymity because they had not received authorization to talk publicly about the incident.

Russian authorities said that Ukrainian drones hit two non-residential buildings in Moscow, calling the incident a "thwarted" attack. The Kremlin said later that all the drones targeting the Russian capital had been neutralized.

7:30 a.m. ET, July 24, 2023

Kremlin says all drones neutralized in Moscow

From CNN's Anna Chernova

A member of the security services stands guard next to the site of a damaged building following a reported drone attack in Moscow, Russia, on July 24.
A member of the security services stands guard next to the site of a damaged building following a reported drone attack in Moscow, Russia, on July 24. Maxim Shemetov/Reuters

Russian air defenses successfully neutralized all drones that targeted Moscow on Monday, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

“All the drones have been neutralized today, and measures are being taken,” Peskov said. “As for the development of the defense system, ensuring its more intensive work, this is a question for the Ministry of Defense.”

When asked about potential retaliation for the strike, Peskov reiterated Moscow will carry on with what it calls its “special military operation” in Ukraine.

“The special military operation is ongoing, it will continue, and its goals must be accomplished,” he added.

A Ukrainian security official has claimed Kyiv’s responsibility for the drone strikes that hit the Russian capital of Moscow and Crimea overnight.

6:06 a.m. ET, July 24, 2023

Explosive traces found on ship that visited Ukrainian river port, Russian intelligence says

From CNN's Vasco Cotovio and Maria Kostenko

The Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) claims remnants of explosives were found aboard a bulk carrier crossing the Black Sea, which had made a stop at a Ukrainian river port earlier this year.

“On July 22, in the hold of a foreign dry cargo ship en route from Turkey to the port of Rostov-on-Don to load grain crops, traces of explosives -- dinitrotoluene and tetryl were found,” the FSB said on Monday, according to Russian state news agency TASS.

“Signs of third-party interference in the structural parts of the dry cargo ship were also revealed.”

The vessel allegedly visited the Ukrainian river port of Kiliya, on the Danube River, and in July its 12-sailor Ukrainian crew was swapped out and the name of the vessel changed, the FSB claimed, according to TASS.

“These circumstances may indicate the possibility of using a foreign civilian ship to deliver explosives to the territory of Ukraine,” the FSB added.

The port of Kiliya was not part of the now defunct UN-brokered Black Sea Grain Initiative, which included the ports of Chornomorsk, Odesa and Yuzhny/Pivdennyi, with a much larger export capacity. Moscow announced last week it was pulling out of the grain deal.

The expired grain deal allowed for the safe shipment of grain from docks in southern Ukraine, after Russia barricaded ports and exacerbated a global food crisis.

Russian drone strikes have ramped up in the region along the Danube port, amid threats from Moscow against civilian ships crossing the Black Sea.

Overnight, Russia launched what Ukrainian authorities on Monday described as “4-hour-long attack by Shahed-136 drones” directed at its port infrastructure on the Danube. The attacks hit infrastructure used to export grain, but it was not immediately clear which port was hit.

Three drones were destroyed by air defense forces, although “some got through,” according to military officials in Odesa.

7:26 a.m. ET, July 24, 2023

Drones brought down near Russian Ministry of Defense complex in Moscow

From CNN's Teele Rebane, Tim Lister and Vasco Cotovio

Police secure an area outside a damaged non-residential building on Komsomolsky Prospekt after a reported drone attack in Moscow, on July 24.
Police secure an area outside a damaged non-residential building on Komsomolsky Prospekt after a reported drone attack in Moscow, on July 24. Alexander Nemenov/AFP/Getty Images

One of the drones spotted in Moscow on Monday was brought down near a Russian Ministry of Defense complex. Social media footage of the aftermath, verified by CNN, showed damage to one of its buildings.

One of the buildings seen damaged in footage geolocated by CNN houses the Russian Ministry of Defense military orchestra. It was not immediately clear if the damage had been caused by the drones.

The area also houses the Russian Foreign Military Intelligence, known as GRU, 26165 unit, which carries out cyber activities, according to multiple Western sources. It’s also in the vicinity of the Russian Ministry of Defense’s National Defense Management Center.

Drones struck two non-residential buildings in Moscow in the early hours of Monday morning and were “suppressed” by defenses there, Russian authorities said, describing the incident a “thwarted” attack.

4:35 a.m. ET, July 24, 2023

Ukrainian minister claims responsibility for strikes in Moscow and Crimean peninsula

From CNN Maria Kostenko and Vasco Cotovio

Mykhailo Fedorov attends a briefing in Kyiv on June 19.
Mykhailo Fedorov attends a briefing in Kyiv on June 19. Kirill Chubotin/Ukrinform/Future Publishing/Getty Images

A Ukrainian security official has claimed Kyiv’s responsibility for the drone strikes that hit the Russian capital of Moscow and Crimea overnight.

“Drones attacked the orc capital and Crimea last night. Electronic warfare and air defense are becoming less and less capable of protecting the occupiers' skies,” said Mykhailo Fedorov, the Ukrainian minister of digital transformation, in a Telegram post on Monday.
“Whatever happens, there will be more of it,” he added. 

Fedorov’s ministry is in charge of the Ukrainian “Army of Drones” initiative, the government’s drone procurement plan. 

Ukraine almost never publicly claims responsibility for attacks that have taken place on Russian soil or in Russian-occupied territories during the course of the war, but has recently admitted its role in the huge explosion of the Crimean bridge in October.

What happened? The Russian Ministry of Defense says Ukraine launched 17 drones toward Crimea overnight through Monday, referring to strikes on the peninsula, which was illegally annexed by Russian forces in 2014, as a “terrorist attack.”

A Russian ammunition depot was hit by the Ukrainian drone attack in Crimea.

Meanwhile in Russia, Ukrainian drones struck two non-residential buildings in Moscow in the early hours of Monday morning and were “suppressed” by defenses there, Russian authorities said, describing the incident a “thwarted” attack.

 

3:10 a.m. ET, July 24, 2023

Ukrainian Defense Minister to share cluster munitions report with US this week

From CNN's Sebastian Shukla and Alex Marquardt in Kyiv

Oleksii Reznikov participates at a NATO Summit in Vilnius on July 12.
Oleksii Reznikov participates at a NATO Summit in Vilnius on July 12. Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP/Getty Images

The Ukrainian Defense Minister Oleksii Reznikov has said he will share a report with the United States about the use of US supplied cluster munitions in Ukraine this week.

The minister, speaking to CNN’s Alex Marquardt in Kyiv over the weekend, said he is awaiting the report which he will then pass on to the Pentagon “probably Monday or Tuesday,” meaning July 24 or 25.

Reznikov, speaking exclusively to CNN added, “we'll report about the consequences of this using [cluster munitions] so I think that next week I would have first report and I will share with my partners in Pentagon this reports. I hope that they will be more efficient than normal ammunition." 

On Thursday the White House’s John Kirby said that Ukrainian forces are using US-provided cluster munitions against Russia “appropriately” and “effectively” in combat.”

“They are using them appropriately. They’re using them effectively and they are actually having an impact on Russia’s defensive formations and Russia’s defensive maneuvering,” Kirby told reporters. 

Reznikov wouldn’t offer detail before the report comes but said he expects them to be most effective "especially against the artillery systems, especially during the counter battery fighting and also they will be efficient against the armored personnel carriers, for the infantry fighting vehicles, they will also be good against their infantry in the fields."

The sharing of the report is part of the deal with the Pentagon to obtain the cluster munitions, called DPICMS, Reznikov said. 

The US has said the decision to provide Ukraine with DPICMs is due to a low supply of the standard unitary 155mm artillery round. The supply of clusters is “temporary,” according to US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan.

CNN was first to report that the US clusters had arrived in Ukraine.

Why is it controversial? Cluster munitions scatter “bomblets” across large areas, which would allow Ukrainian forces to target larger concentrations of Russian forces and equipment with fewer rounds of ammunition.

But the bomblets can also fail to explode on impact, and can pose a long-term risk to anyone who encounters them, similar to landmines.

The UK, France, Germany and other key US allies have outlawed the munitions under the Convention on Cluster Munitions, but the US and Ukraine are not signatories to the ban.

3:08 a.m. ET, July 24, 2023

Ukraine fired 17 drones toward Crimea, Russian Ministry of Defense says

From CNN's Maria Kostento in Kyiv

The Russian Ministry of Defense says Ukraine launched 17 drones toward Crimea overnight, referring to strikes on the peninsula, which was illegally annexed by Russian forces in 2014, as a “terrorist attack.”

The ministry said 14 Ukrainian unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) "were suppressed by means of radio-electronic warfare".

Three of the drones were shot down by Russian air defenses, three fell into the Crimean peninsula and 11 of the drones fell into the Black Sea, the Russian Ministry of Defense said.

“There were no casualties,” the MOD added.

Some context: Earlier on Monday, Sergey Aksyonov, the Moscow-installed governor of Crimea had said an ammunition depot and a house had been destroyed in strikes hitting Crimea overnight into Monday. He also said road and rail traffic had been suspended in certain areas of the peninsula. 

2:36 a.m. ET, July 24, 2023

Crimea highway and railroad suspended after Ukrainian strikes, Russian-installed official says

From CNN’s Maria Kostenko and Martin Goillandeau

Traffic on the railroad and highways of parts of Crimea have been suspended “for safety reasons" following drone attacks on transport infrastructure, Sergey Aksyonov, the Moscow-installed governor of the annexed region said on Monday.

The northern part of the occupied Crimean peninsula were heavily affected, with the railroads of the Dzhankoi district and the Dzhankoi-Simferopol highway closed off, according to Aksyonov.

He added that residents within a 5 kilometer (3 mile) radius from the site of the accident in Dzhankoi district “would be evacuated to temporary accommodation centers.”

There were no reported casualties in the attack, he added.

Aksyonov earlier said that Ukrainian strikes hit Crimea overnight into Monday, damaging an ammunition depot in the peninsula.

CNN has not independently verified the reports of the attacks.

 

2:36 a.m. ET, July 24, 2023

Russian ammunition depot hit by Ukrainian drone attack in Crimea, Russian-appointed official says

From CNN’s Maria Kostenko in Kyiv

An ammunition depot and a house were destroyed in strikes hitting Crimea overnight into Monday, according to Sergey Aksyonov, the Russian-installed head of the occupied region. 

Aksyonov said in a statement that “eleven enemy UAVs were shot down by air defense forces and suppressed by electronic warfare equipment in the skies over Crimea."

CNN has not independently verified reports of the attacks.

This comes after Ukrainian forces hit an ammunition dump in Crimea on Saturday, forcing an evacuation of the area and canceling train services, Russian-backed authorities in the annexed peninsula say.