Most crewmembers of Russia's Caesar Kunikov large landing ship, which Ukrainian forces destroyed off the coast of Crimea in the Black Sea on February 14, have died. — Ukrinform.
They are a sacrifice putin is willing to make. There will be no memorial for them, as they never officially died. Some widow might get a bag of wheat or a net of onions though.
I wonder what the actual condition of the Russian navy is at this point. I heard their ships were generally in poor condition even before the war (those reports of the Moskva's air defense being crippled before it left port, for example), and now they're losing so many trained crew. Last I heard their shipyards were roughly keeping pace with losses in terms of tonnage but you can't just herd conscripts on a ship and expect it to function at all.
Russian warship: "Snake Island, I, Russian warship, repeat the offer: put down your arms and surrender, or you will be bombed. Have you understood me? Do you copy?"
Ukrainian 1 to Ukrainian 2: "That's it, then. Or, do we need to fuck them back off?"
Ukraine’s attack on Sevastopol on 29 October 2022 will go down in history as the first major example of what many believe is a new era of drone warfare.
It's been sixteen months since the USV attack on Sevastopol -- they knew that Ukraine had USVs in the works -- and Russian warships continue to be taken out.
The Russian war economy is too tight to support military R&D on top of the existing war effort. GDP per capita is way too low and military brass aren't willing to discuss the subject of their own vulnerabilities to Putin. Their use of oil money to buy Iranian drones is a necessary kink in their supply chain since they don't have the means to build their own drones at scale and they can't develop industrial capacity for the same without jumping face first into the woodchipper of sanctions.
Remember when Putin said the invasion would take 3 days? Deception can be tactically useful but not when you're the one lying to yourself.
There's still stuff that I think that they could have done. If they're trying it, I don't believe that they're doing a very effective job of it.
In World War II, the US's response when it was clear that aircraft were going to be a lot more dangerous to ships than originally-anticipated was to weld AA gun platforms everywhere they possibly could onto the ship, including hanging off the sides. The guns weren't intrinsically any sort of tech wonder, but the more lead they were putting out, the greater the chances of a hit in the time that the aircraft was closing. I've definitely seen video of Ukraine running USV attacks successfully while Russia was shooting at the drones and not hitting them.
In this case, I'd think that they could have put something like autocannon platforms or quad-mount heavy machine gun mounts on the thing or the like. Maybe they aren't integrated with the ship's fire-control system, have to have someone physically go out there, but this doesn't require amazing accuracy so much as throwing more lead downrange.
They could have had patrol boats or some other kind of smaller, less-capable vessel screening the larger ship. That's historically the response that was taken to the introduction of torpedo boats, which historically had a somewhat-similar role to these USVs -- relatively-inexpensive, small vessels that could hit hard enough to take down a much-more-expensive ship. The torpedo boat destroyer, which ultimately became the destroyer, was introduced to fill that role; it wasn't a very large vessel, but it was enough to stop a torpedo boat.
My guess is that it's possible to use laser-guided ATGMs to hit boats. Norway uses TOWs in a man-portable form, IIRC on a tripod launcher, for coastal defense to counter boats. That doesn't require any modification to ships, just sticking someone trained to use them on the ship and some ATGMs.
If the problem is not picking up on the fact that the USV is there until too late -- I didn't see any shooting at the USV this time -- they can increase the number of people on watch and their equipment. I believe I saw a searchlight on one in the past, and they could probably stick more floodlights on the thing.
I mean, that costs something, but they know what ships they're putting in the danger zone, where to put resources, and losing these ships to really inexpensive USVs has to be far more costly to the Russian Navy.
It's not about the economy. It's the soviet era again, the dictatorship, which is extremely antagonist to research and innovation.
For innovation to happen, you need many people, and especially high ranked ones, to admit that something can improve. And then you need the system to highlight true solutions rather than favour your friends and family.
USSR was plagued by these kind of problems. Russia seems somehow even worse.
The video I’ve seen had multiple points of view, and it looks like the last images are the vessel on its side a full 90 degree list. While there’s no way to establish a time frame, that’s a bad day.