Russia beefs up warship presence in Black Sea as Ukraine tensions simmer
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[April 17, 2021]
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Two Russian
warships transited the Bosphorus en route to the Black Sea on Saturday
and 15 smaller vessels completed a transfer to the sea as Moscow beefs
up its naval presence at a time of tense relations with the West and
Ukraine.
The reinforcement coincides with a huge build-up of Russian troops near
Ukraine, something Moscow calls a temporary defensive exercise, and
follows an escalation in fighting in eastern Ukraine between
Russian-backed separatists and Ukrainian government forces.
Russia's relations with Washington, which cancelled the deployment of
two of its own warships to the Black Sea last week after fierce Russian
protests, are at a post-Cold war low.
Moscow expelled 10 U.S. diplomats on Friday in retaliation for the
expulsion of the same number of Russian diplomats from the United States
over alleged malign activity.
Russia has also temporarily restricted the movement of foreign warships
"and other state ships" near Crimea, which it annexed from Ukraine in
2014, a move condemned by both Kyiv and Washington.
Two Russian Ropucha-class landing ships from Russia's Northern Fleet,
capable of carrying tanks and of delivering armour and troops during
coastal assaults, transited the Bosphorus on Saturday, a Reuters
reporter in Istanbul saw.
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The Russian Navy's Ropucha-class landing ship Kondopoga passes
through the Bosphorus on its way to the Black Sea, in Istanbul,
Turkey April 17, 2021. REUTERS/Yoruk Isik
More Russian naval reinforcements in the form of two
more landing ships, this time from Russia's Baltic Fleet, are
expected to imminently transit the Bosphorus.
The RIA news agency on Saturday also reported that 15 smaller
vessels from Russia's Caspian Flotilla have completed their transfer
to the Black Sea as part of an exercise.
In a further sign of heightened tensions in the region, a ship
carrying logistics trucks and equipment for NATO forces in Romania
transited the Bosphorus on Friday evening, the same Reuters reporter
saw.
In St Petersburg, Russia's FSB security service briefly detained a
Ukrainian diplomat, Ukraine's foreign ministry said on Saturday.
[L1N2MA04O]
The Interfax news agency earlier cited the FSB as saying Oleksandr
Sosoniuk was taken into custody when he tried to obtain classified
information from Russian law enforcement databases during a meeting
with a Russian citizen.
(Reporting by Andrew Osborn in Moscow and by Yoruk Isik in Istanbul;
Editing by Helen Popper)
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