You're reading: Putin’s attacks on Ukraine continue from Russian side

The United States said on July 24 that Russia was firing artillery across the border into Ukraine to target Ukrainian military positions.

“We have new evidence that the Russians intend to deliver heavier and more powerful multiple rocket launchers to the separatist forces in Ukraine, and have evidence that Russia is firing artillery from within Russia to attack Ukrainian military positions,” State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf said.

Russian military aggression towards Ukraine has persisted since Kremlin-backed guerrillas shot down a commercial airliner on July 17, killing all 298 people on board, including more than 80 children.

While the tragic event has all but deprived Russia of deniability over its involvement in the eastern Ukraine war that has claimed nearly 1,000 lives, Russia has regularly been shelling Ukrainian positions from its side of the border, according to Kyiv authorities.  

According to the counter-terrorism communications center, Russia fired at eight Ukrainian positions on July 22-24. Artillery fire and multiple-rocket launchers on July 24 twice shelled a checkpoint near the town of Ilinka from Russia. The same night, Ukrainian positions near Kamyshne, Berezovo, Amvrosievka and the Luhansk Airport were shelled by Grad rockets, stated Anti-Terrorism Operation spokesperson Vladyslav Seleznyov.

“Positions and checkpoints of anti-terrorist forces continue to be fired upon, including from the territory of the Russian Federation,” said Seleznyov. “The guerillas are trying to hold parts of the Ukrainian state’s borders.”

In a post on VKontakte, a Russian social media site, alleged Russian soldier Vadim Grigoriev boasts of “shelling Ukraine all night,” from Rostov Oblast, which included pictures of artillery cannons and munitions.
Kyiv claims that Russia has already shot down three Su-25 jets with projectiles from Russia. On the eve of the Malaysian airliner shoot-down, Kyiv says a Russian MiG-29 shot down one of its jets from Russian airspace. On July 23, National Security and Defense Council spokesman Andriy Lysenko said two more Su jets were shot down at an altitude of 5,200 meters by rockets fired from Russia.

Additionally, the Ukrainian Border Guard Service stated that on July 22-July 23 Russia fired three times on its positions near Amvrosiyivka, Herasimovka and the Uspenka border crossing with artillery batteries and Grad rockets.

The U.S. mission to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe expressed disappointment on July 24 when the Russian respresentative to the body only allowed a small group of international observers to two small checkpoints along its border, each a few hundred meters wide along a land border of nearly 2,000 kilomers in length.

“Let us be perfectly clear—this will not provide any real accounting of Russia’s massive flows of illegal arms, funding, and personnel,” Ambassador Daniel Baer stated. “Nor will this fig leaf provide an assurance to those mourning the tragedy of flight MH17 that Russia is doing anything to stop its illegal flow of arms and other support to separatists in eastern Ukraine.”

Russia continues to violate Ukraine’s airspace, the Border Guard Service added. Four times on the evening of July 22 Russian military helicopters and drones flew into Ukraine by as deep as 500 meters.
There is allegedly a military staging area in Novocherkassk, Rostov Oblast.  Supplies include T-64 tanks, Grad multiple-rocket launchers, various armored personnel carriers equipped with cannons, Buk advanced radar-guided surface-to-air systems, shoulder-fired rocket launchers as well as sniper rifles, mines, grenades and automatic weapons.

The National Security and Defense Council’s Lysenko also said on July 24 that a field camp of Russian armed forces has been set up not far from the state border in Bryansk Oblast.Lysenko also said that 10 kilometers from the border with northern Ukraine, Russia continued to equip camouflaged firing positions of infantry fighting vehicles.

He also said that in the border areas near Kharkiv Oblast, “Russian military had deployed five armored personnel carriers, three tanks and other military equipment,” reported Interfax Ukraine.
“According to the latest information here are about 500 Russian servicemen in the camp, and their number is constantly growing,” Lysenko said, cited by Interfax Ukraine.

Dangerous
eastern Ukrainian skies

A timeline of events shows how more advanced
weapons have been used since April to shoot down aircraft

DATE

TARGETS

LOCATION

WEAPONS INVOLVED

April 22

Spotter/transport plane

Slovyansk

Gunfire

April 25

Spotter/transport plane, helicopter

Kramatorsk

Gunfire

May 2

Two Mi-24 attack helicopter shot down; one Mi-8
transport helicopter damaged

Slovyansk

Shoulder-fired missile

May 5

Mi-24 helicopter shot down

Slovyansk

Gunfire

May 29

Helicopter (11 soldiers and a general killed)

Slovyansk

Unknown

June 5

Helicopter

Slovyansk

Gunfire

June 6

An-30 reconnaissance plane (5 crew members
killed)

Slovyansk

Unknown

June 14

Il-76 transport plane shot down (40 soldiers and
9 crew members killed)

Luhansk

Anti-aircraft gun

June 24

Mi-8 shot down (9 killed)

Slovyansk

Shoulder-fired missile

July 1

Fighter jet

Savur-Mohyla

Anti-aircraft gun

July 2

Su-24 jet is hit, returns to base

Antracit

Surface-to-air missile

July 14

An-26 transport plane  shot down

Izvarino

Surface-to-air missile

July 16

Two fighter jets

Amvrosiivka

Surface-to-air missile; MiG 29 jet in Russian
airspace

July 17

Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 (298 dead)

Hrabove/Torez

Surface-to-air missile

July 23

Two Su-25 jets shot down

Savur-Mohyla, Dmytrivka

Unknown, but projectiles shot from Russia

Source:
Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, National Security and Defense Council
of Ukraine.

Kyiv Post editor Mark Rachkevych can be reached at [email protected]