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Wikipedia

Ukrainian Navy

The Military Naval Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine (Ukrainian: Військо́во-морські́ си́ли Збро́йних сил Украї́ни, ВМС ЗСУ) is the maritime forces of Ukraine and one of the five branches of the Armed Forces of Ukraine.

Ukrainian Naval Forces
Військово-морські сили Збройних сил України, ВМС ЗСУ
Emblem of the Ukrainian Naval Forces
Active1917–1921
1992–present
Country Ukraine
TypeNavy
RoleNaval warfare
Size15,000 (2022)[1]
Part ofArmed Forces of Ukraine
Garrison/HQOdesa
Colors  Blue
  Gold
MarchMarch of the VMS of Ukraine (Марш ВМС України)[2]
AnniversariesNavy Day[3][4][5][6]
Battle honours
Commanders
CommanderVice Admiral[7] Oleksiy Neizhpapa[8]
Insignia
Ensign
Jack
Pennant
Shoulder sleeve insignia[a]

The naval forces consist of five components – surface forces, submarine forces, naval aviation, coastal rocket-artillery and naval infantry.[9] As of 2022, the Ukrainian navy had 15,000 personnel, including 6,000 naval infantry.[1] In 2015, the Ukrainian navy had 6,500 personnel.[10] In 2007 and prior to the 2014 Russian annexation of Crimea, 15,470 people served in the Ukrainian navy.[10][11]

The headquarters of the Ukrainian Naval Forces was, until the 2014 Crimean crisis, located at Sevastopol in Crimea.[9] The naval forces were highly affected by the Crimean crisis, as the majority of their units were stationed there. Ships that did not escape or were not deployed at the time lowered their flags and were interned. Russia began a process of returning the vessels but stopped, citing the inability of Ukraine to retake possession and alleged violence against Russians in the Donbas.[citation needed] The ships that were returned were the older models of the fleet which were deemed obsolete. For example, Russia chose not to return the corvettes Ternopil and Lutsk, both of which were some of the newest ships of the Ukrainian fleet. However, none of the Ukrainian naval units retained were absorbed into the Russian Navy.[clarification needed]

Ukraine had been scheduling to rebuild its naval forces since 2005[12][13] by building the domestic project 58250, the first Ukrainian designed and built corvette, as well as ordering four patrol boats in 2013 from Willard Marine.[14][15] Ukraine has also restarted the production of its Gryuza River Armed Artillery Boat.[16]

The navy operates in the Black Sea basin (including the Sea of Azov and Danube Delta).[9] Distant operations of the Ukrainian Navy are limited to multinational activities, such as Operation Active Endeavour and Operation Atalanta in the Mediterranean and Horn of Africa.

The Ukrainian flagship was scuttled in March 2022 during Russia's invasion to prevent its capture and Russia's navy blocked Ukraine's access to the Black Sea from that point onwards.[17]

History

Zaporizhian (Ukrainian) Cossacks Fleet ca. 1600s

 
Zaporizhian Cossacks sacked Crimean Kaffa and freed the slaves in 1616.

The Ukrainian Naval Forces trace their origins to the Zaporizhian Sich Cossacks, who would frequently raid Ottoman settlements along the Black Sea coast. Cossacks used small ships called chaikas, which were similar in design to Viking long ships. Although technologically inferior to the Turks, the Cossacks had great success against their opponent. In 1614, the Cossack forces were able to raid and destroy Trabzon.[18]

In 1615, the Cossacks were able to mount a raid on Istanbul itself, destroying several suburbs of the city. In 1616, a Cossack fleet was able to reach the Bosphorus, once again raiding the surrounding countryside. A Turkish fleet sent to destroy the Cossack forces was defeated in 1617. The Cossacks once again managed to mount an attack on Istanbul in 1625, forcing the Sultan to temporarily flee the capital.[18]

The Cossacks used several strategies to attack the larger Ottoman naval forces, such as positioning their ships during battle in a way where the sun was always at their back. The Cossack ships were small with a low profile, making them hard to hit by cannon. Cossacks were typically armed with small arm muskets, and during battle had the goal of killing the crew and boarding the ship to take it over, rather than sinking the ship.[18]

Ukrainian People's Republic navy (1917–1921)

 
A medal of the Ukrainian fleet of April 29, 1918.
 
Gunboat "Donets" of Ukrainian Naval Forces, July–November 1918
 
Ukrainian marines in 1921
 
Ukrainian warships in the port of Sevastopol, 1918

During 1917 Russian Revolution, several ships of the Russian Imperial Navy's Black Sea Fleet, commanded and crewed by ethnic Ukrainians, declared themselves the Navy of the newly autonomous Ukrainian People's Republic. Black Sea Fleet commander Mikhail Sablin raised the colours of the Ukrainian National Republic on 29 April 1918.[19][20] Few further steps on establishing a navy were made as the Ukrainian government lost control over coastal territories.

After the Revolution 1917, a time of anarchy and demoralization overtook the former Russian Black Sea Fleet. The Fleet, stationed in Sevastopol, was commanded by a collective, "Tsentroflot". Different political influences clashed: Ukrainian, Bolshevik, Menshevik, Social Revolutionaries and Anarchist. Very different flags were hoisted over ships: Ukrainian bicolors, old Russian ensigns, Bolshevist red flags and Anarchist black flags.[21] They were hoisted and lowered even several times daily, according to changes of each crew's political orientation.

The Ukrainian People's Republic aspired to take control of the Fleet. On 17 October 1917 the 2nd rank Captain Ye.Akimov was appointed the representative of the Central Council of Ukraine at the command of the Black Sea Fleet. The General Secretariat for Naval Affairs was established within the government of the Central Rada in Kyiv (in January 1918 it was reformed in a Ministry). The head of it became D. Antonovich. The Main Navy Staff was led by Captain Jerzy Świrski. For the educational and agitational purposes of the seamen the Central Rada seconded the commissars to Odesa, Mykolaiv, Kherson and Sevastopol. On 22 December 1917 the Naval Ministry in Kyiv was established.

Starting October 1917 the crews of the ships established military councils; the blue-yellow flags were flying from the masts. The ships Zavidniy (Enviable) and Russian cruiser Pamiat Merkuria (1907) were the first examples.

In November 1917 in Sevastopol was established the Sahaidachny Sea Battalion (kurin) which on 24 November 1917 was sent to Kyiv to extinguish Bolshevik uprisings and participated in the Kiev Arsenal January Uprising.

On 22 November 1917 the whole crew of the newest and most powerful warship of the Black Sea Fleet Volya swore fealty to the Central Rada, followed soon by several ships and submarines. In December 1917 the Black Seas Fleet squadron under Ukrainian flags led by the Russian battleship Imperator Aleksandr III and included another cruiser and three destroyers participated in the evacuation of the 127th Infantry Division from Trabzon back to Ukraine.

On 29 December 1917 most of the Black Sea Fleet was taken over by Bolsheviks.

As part of Operation Faustschlag German Empire forces had been advancing on Sevastopol with a goal to capture the Black Sea Fleet. Having no support from the land forces, Admiral Sablin was forced enter negotiations regarding cessation of hostilities. The Germans however rejected the armistice proposals and the advance continued. In April 1918 German and Ukrainian troops invaded Crimea.

On 29 April 1918, fleet-commanding Rear-admiral Sablin (Russian) gave an order to hoist Ukrainian national flags over all ships in Sevastopol (the medal to the right commemorates that event). That day he was appointed commander-in-chief of the Ukrainian Navy. A telegram to Kyiv was sent from the staff ship Georgiy Pobedonosets “Effective today the Sevastopol fortress and the Fleet in Sevastopol raised the Ukrainian flag. Admiral Sablin assumed the command of the Fleet”. Having no reply the admiral ordered to repeat the telegram beginning with the words “Comrades of Kiev Central Rada...”.

Sablin was unaware that at that moment the Central Rada in Kyiv was already history. The Germans started to occupy Sevastopol, because the Bolsheviks began to lead away ships. Centroflot (the combined fleet revolutionary committee), in order to save the Fleet, took a decision to move it to Novorossiysk. But on 30 April 1918, only the small part of the fleet under command of Admiral Sablin, which trusted the Bolsheviks, headed for Novorossiysk and hoisted Russian St. Andrew (saltire) ensigns. The greater part of the Ukrainian fleet remained in Sevastopol – there were 30 destroyers and torpedo boats, 25 auxiliaries, 7 battleships and small craft as well as 15 submarines left in Sevastopol under Admiral Myhaylo Ostrogradskiy who in this situation assumed command.

On 1 May 1918 Germans captured the ships remaining in Sevastopol, because the actions of Bolsheviks violated the peace agreement. On 17 June 1918, 1 dreadnought and 6 destroyers returned from Novorossiysk to Sevastopol, where they were also captured. The greater part of the ships remaining in Novorossiysk were destroyed by their own crews on Lenin's command. In July–November 1918 Germans gradually transferred many ships to the command of Ukrainian government (Hetman Pavlo Skoropadskyi).

The main Ukrainian sea power concentrated in Odesa and Mykolaiv was more than 20 minesweepers, 7 small cruisers, 1 dreadnought and more than 30 auxiliaries. In Sevastopol there were only 2 old battleships under Ukrainian flags. On 18 July 1918 the Naval Ministry in Kyiv established new naval ensigns and some rank flags (e.g. flag of Naval Minister, flag of Deputy Minister). The old Russian jack remained as Ukrainian naval jack. It was regarded as symbol of glory of Black Sea Fleet, whose crews were in large part previously Ukrainian. On 17 September Germans gives Ukraine 17 U-boats.

In December 1918, when naval forces of the Entente were approaching Sevastopol, Ukrainian Rear-admiral V. Klokhkovskyy commanded all ships to hoist Russian St. Andrew (saltire) ensigns. It was a demonstration of good intentions for the Entente. However, the Entente captured the Black Sea Fleet and subsequently transferred it to the Russian "White" forces. In Ukrainian hands remained only small in numbers subdivisions of marines. Ukrainian naval authorities existed until 1921.

List of Ukrainian ships

 
Blue and yellow flag on cruiser Pamiat Merkuria, November 1917

The Ukrainian People's Republic had a navy for five months. From October 1917 till March 1918 the following came to be at the disposal of the Ukrainians: nine battleships, seven cruisers, 18 destroyers, 14 submarines, 16 patrol ships and avisos, 11 military transports and mother ships. Additionally, the Fleet's Headquarters, all military institutions and plants and all coastal fortifications were all manned by Ukrainian personnel.

Baltic Fleet

  • Soviet cruiser Krasnyi Krym (October 12, 1917)
  • Russian destroyer Ukraina (October 12, 1917)
  • Russian destroyer Haidamak (October 12, 1917)

Black Sea Fleet

Contemporary Navy of Ukraine

Independence and the "Battle for the oath"

 
Ukraine's naval jack in 1992

The origins of the contemporary Ukrainian Naval Forces intertwined with the fate of the Soviet Black Sea Fleet and with the modern history of the Crimea. Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union (1991), the administration of the Soviet Armed Forces passed to the Joint Armed Forces of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) for a transitional period pending agreement on the division of the ex-Soviet military between members of the former Soviet Union. Marshal of Aviation Yevgeny Shaposhnikov became commander of the Joint CIS Armed Forces command on 14 February 1992.

On 6 December 1991 the Supreme Council of Ukraine (Verkhovna Rada) adopted a resolution on the laws of Ukraine "About the Defense of Ukraine" and "About the Armed Forces of Ukraine", as well as the text of a military oath. On the same day, in the parliament of Ukraine chamber, the Minister of Defense of Ukraine, Kostyantyn Morozov, became the first person to take the oath. On 10 December 1991 the Supreme Council of Ukraine ratified the Belavezha Accords.

On 12 December 1991 the President of Ukraine issued ukase #4, ordering all military formations based in Ukraine to pledge allegiance by 20 January 1992. The vast majority of the Black Sea Fleet ignored the order. On 1 January 1992 the newspaper Vympyel of the Black Sea Fleet Filipp Oktyabrskiy Training unit (edited by Captain-Lieutenant Mykola Huk) published the military oath and the anthem of Ukraine in the Ukrainian language.

On 3 January 1992 Ukraine started the practical formation of its national armed forces. On 8 January 1992 the Officers' Assembly of the Black Sea Fleet appealed to all leaders of the CIS to recognise the Black Sea Fleet as an operational-strategic formation and not subordinate to Ukraine. On 12 January 1992, the brigade of border troops in Balaklava (Sevastopol) became the first military formation to pledge allegiance to Ukraine.[22]

On 14 January 1992 the Governor of Sevastopol appealed to the Supreme Councils of both Ukraine and the Russian Federation, urging faster adoption of a decision on the status of the Black Sea Fleet. On 16 January 1992, an agreement between the CIS members was signed on the oath in strategic formations.[22]

On 18 January 1992, the 3rd company of the divers school became the first formation of the Black Sea Fleet to pledge their allegiance to Ukraine, along with the Maritime Department of the Sevastopol Institute of Instrument Engineering. On the next day, forty-six naval pilots pledged their allegiance to Ukraine at the central square (Ploshcha Lenina) of Mykolaiv.

Black Sea Fleet military personnel previously under the oath of the Soviet Armed Forces did not hasten to pledge allegiance to the newly formed state. First Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Russian Navy Fleet Admiral Ivan Kapitanets issued a directive: "to apply severe sanctions, including dismissal from office and separation from service to officers, midshipmen, and warrant officers who create an unhealthy situation in military communities that are prone to treason and taking the oath of allegiance to Ukraine". Nonetheless, on 26 January 1992 the 17th Brigade of Ships for the Guarding the Water Area of the Crimea Naval Base followed the example of the divers.[23]

Right before the Soviet Army and Navy Day (23 February) on 22 February, the 880th Independent Naval Infantry Battalion of Black Sea Fleet pledged allegiance to Ukraine. The battalion had been recognized[by whom?] as the best formation of the fleet in 1991. The Main Navy Staff in Moscow issued an order to dissolve the battalion. After the incident, all military units of the Black Sea Fleet recruited exclusively Russians[citation needed].

According to estimations by the International Institute for Strategic Studies, in January 1992 the Black Sea Fleet accounted for 80,000 servicemen, 69 major warships including 3 aircraft carriers, 6 missile cruisers, 29 submarines, 235 warplanes and helicopters, and great number of ships of auxiliary fleet.[24] Without informing Ukraine with which it supposed to share control over the Black Sea Fleet in a framework of the Joint Armed Forces Command, the Russian Federation was selling away several ships.[24]

From the beginning, relationships between the newly formed states of Russia Federation and the Republic of Ukraine were tense. In January 1992 the Supreme Soviet of Russia raised the question of the political status of Crimea (Crimean ASSR) and of the constitutionality of the 1954 decision to transfer of Crimean Oblast of the Russian SFSR to the Ukrainian SSR, accusing Nikita Khrushchev of treason against the Russian people. Although never annulled,[citation needed] many Russian parliamentarians refused to recognize the legal document, pointing out the procedural errors during its adoption.

The Ukrainian side issued reminders of the number of international treaties and agreements between the two countries, such as the 19 November 1990 treaty between the Russian SFSR and the Ukrainian SSR, in which both sides recognized the territorial integrity of the other, as well as the Belavezha Accords (an agreement on creation of the CIS) of 8 December 1991 and the Alma-Ata Protocol of 21 December 1991.

Noticing not much reaction from the Black Sea Fleet command located on the territory of Ukraine, on 5 April 1992 the President of Ukraine issued Decree #209 "About urgent measures on development of the Armed Forces of Ukraine", which accused the Russian Federation and the Joint Armed Forces command of intervening in the internal affairs of Ukraine. On 6 April 1992, a session of the 6th Congress of People's Deputies of the Russian SFSR refused to accept the Belavezha agreement as previously ratified by the Supreme Council of the Russian SFSR (on 12 December 1991). Also, on 6 April 1992, the President of Ukraine appointed Borys Kozhyn as the Commander of Ukrainian Naval Forces. The next day, the President of Russia issued a Decree "On the transfer of the Black Sea Fleet under jurisdiction of the Russian Federation". On 9 April 1992, the effect of both decrees were suspended until the end of the Russian-Ukrainian talks.

Ukrainian division of the Black Sea Fleet (1991–1997)

 
Ukrainian Navy artillery boat Zhuk class U170 Skadovs'k off the Bay of Sevastopol, Crimea

In September 1991, an office of the Society of Ukrainian Officers was opened in Sevastopol on the initiative of Major Volodymyr Kholodyuk and captains-lieutenant Ihor Tenyukh and Mykola Huk.[23] The society became the initiator and nucleus of the organization of the Ukrainian Naval Forces.

On 7 April 1992 at 17:00, 37 officers of the administration and headquarters of the Crimean Naval Base (an administrative entity and not a physical "base") pledged their allegiance and loyalty to people of Ukraine. Rear Admiral Borys Kozhyn, who was in charge, was not present at that time of the event. He was in the office of Ivan Yermakov accepting a proposition of the First Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Council of Ukraine to become the commander of the future Ukrainian Naval Forces.

On 8 April 1992 the Minister of Defense signed a directive "About creation of the Ukrainian Naval Forces". On 13 April 1992 an organizational group was established on creation of the Ukrainian Naval Forces, which upset the command of the Black Sea Fleet.

The current history of the Ukrainian Naval Forces began on 1 August 1992, when it was formally established by order of the President of Ukraine Leonid Kravchuk. This was followed by a long and controversial partition of the Soviet Black Sea Fleet between newly independent Ukraine and the Russian Federation.

 
SKR-112 on 20 July 1992

One of the episodes of this process was the story of SKR-112 – effectively the first Ukrainian Navy ship.[25] On 20 July 1992, the crew of SKR-112 declared itself a Ukrainian ship and raised the Ukrainian flag. The Navy headquarters in Moscow considered this a mutiny and attempted to act accordingly. The ship left its base on the Crimean peninsula bound for Odesa, causing a chase and ramming attempts by ships still loyal to Moscow. Soon several other ships, auxiliary vessels, and coastal units of the Black Sea Fleet followed SKR-112's decision but with less violent outcomes.

It was only in 1997 that the ships and equipment of the Black Sea Fleet were officially divided between the two countries. The new Russian formation retained its historic name "Black Sea Fleet". Under the terms of a negotiated lease agreement it was also granted rights to use the majority of its bases on the Crimea Peninsula, Ukraine on a renewable ten-year lease basis at least until 2017.

The newly established Ukrainian Naval Forces received dozens of vessels (mostly obsolete or inoperative, not unlike some of those retained by Russia) and some shore-based infrastructure. The Russian Navy lost several important facilities, most notably the NITKA (Russian acronym for "Scientific testing simulator for shipborne aviation") naval aviation training facility in Saky, and the special forces base in Ochakiv. The process of fleet division remained painful since many aspects of the two navies' co-existence were under-regulated, causing recurring conflicts.

Lack of financing and neglect (1998–2014)

 
The Krivak III-class frigate Hetman Sahaydachniy was the flagship of the Ukrainian Navy until 2022.[26]

From 1997 due to lack of financing and neglect most of the Ukrainian naval units have been scrapped or poorly maintained. By 2009, only the frigate Hetman Sahaydachniy, originally built to be a Soviet Border Guards ship, was capable of long endurance missions.[27]

Joint exercises of the Ukrainian Naval Forces and the Russian Black Sea Fleet resumed after a seven-year interval in 2010.[28]

Most of the Ukrainian naval assets, as those of the other branches of the armed forces, comprised mainly Soviet-era equipment. No major plan for modernization emerged, except for a new corvette design completed in 2009 but not built.[25]

On 19 December 2008, United States Ambassador to Ukraine William B. Taylor, Jr. stated that Ukrainian Defense Minister Yuriy Yekhanurov and US Defense Secretary Robert Gates were discussing the purchase by Ukraine of one to three U.S. Navy frigates.[29]

In December 2009, the design for a new Volodymyr Velykyi-class corvette (designed exclusively by Ukraine and to be built at Ukrainian shipyards) for the Ukrainian Naval Forces was completed.[30] That month the Ukrainian defense ministry and Chernomorsky Shipyard (Mykolaiv) signed a contract upon results of the governmental tender for corvettes. The Shipbuilding Research and Design Center (Mykolaiv) was selected the project developer.

If built, the ship was supposed to operate in the Black and the Mediterranean seas. Her endurance would be 30 days, and a displacement of 2,500 tons. Leading European arms manufacturers like DCNS, MBDA, and EuroTorp were to deliver weapons for the project. Commissioning of the lead ship was scheduled for 2016. There was a plan to build four corvettes before 2021. According to the corvette construction program approved by Ukrainian government in March 2011, the overall amount of program financing till 2021 would be about UAH 16.22 billion.

Anti-piracy operations in Somalia

A Ukrainian ship carrying military cargo was hijacked off the coast of Somalia on 23 September 2008. The ship was released on 6 February 2009. All commercial news sources reported that the vessel was released after a ransom had been paid. Ukrainian officials, however, stated that special forces eliminated the pirates and retook the ship.[31]

In October 2013 Ukraine deployed its flagship, the frigate Hetman Sahaydachniy, as part of NATO's Operation Ocean Shield anti-piracy mission in the Gulf of Aden. The ship was deployed for a 3-month mission and operated alongside the Norwegian frigate HNoMS Fridtjof Nansen, the Royal Danish frigate HDMS Esbern Snare, and the US Navy's frigate USS De Wert.[32]

The Naval Forces of Ukraine once again deployed Hetman Sahaydachniy with an anti-submarine Ka-27 helicopter aboard to the coast of Somalia as part of the European Union's Operation Atalanta on 3 January 2014.[33] The ship was recalled on 3 March 2014 to Ukraine in response to the Crimea Crisis.

2014 Crimean crisis

Prior to the 2014 Crimean crisis, Ukraine maintained a very modest naval force for a nation that lacked shores with any of the world's oceans. The majority of the bases of the Ukrainian Navy,[34] along with 12,000 of Ukraine's 15,450 Navy personnel were stationed in Crimea.[citation needed] On 24 March 2014, at least 12 of Ukraine's 17 ships in Sevastopol were seized by Russia,[35][36] while the ensuing conflict saw two Ukrainian navy officers killed by Russian marines.[37]

Ukraine lost control of its Navy's main underground ammunition-storage site at the Inkerman valley, outside Sevastopol, as well as of its helicopter-repair facilities. The Navy's 750-strong 1st Naval Infantry Battalion at Feodosia was arrested and its equipment seized.[38] The Ukrainian Navy also lost all its missile boats.[34] In addition, 51 mainly auxiliaries ships were lost, though most were eventually returned to Ukraine after a brief internment.[citation needed]

The Ukrainian Naval Infantry was equally affected by the crisis as Russian forces besieged them within their bases. Russia eventually confiscated all military equipment of the naval infantry stationed in Crimea, including the assets of the Ukrainian Naval Aviation, though several planes and helicopters managed to make their way to mainland Ukraine prior to the Russian incorporation of Crimea. The 10th Saky Naval Aviation Brigade, controlling all the Ukrainian Navy's air units, managed to get a number of its aircraft airborne to bases in mainland Ukraine on 5 March 2014.[39] However, more than a dozen aircraft and helicopters undergoing maintenance had to be abandoned[citation needed].

In the aftermath, the Ukraine Navy relocated its main operational base to its Western Naval Base in Odesa. The current fleet consists of 11, mostly small operational ships, one frigate commissioned in 1993 and four corvettes. Russia also returned a Polnocny-class landing ship to Ukraine, restoring Ukraine's amphibious assault capabilities.[40] On 8 April 2014, an agreement was reached between Russia and Ukraine to return interned vessels to Ukraine and "for the withdrawal of an undisclosed number of Ukrainian aircraft seized in Crimea".[41]

Russian Navy sources had claimed the Ukrainian ships were "not operational because they are old, obsolete, and in poor condition".[41] 35 ships were returned before Russia unilaterally suspended the return of the remainder, alleging that Ukraine had failed to renew its unilaterally declared ceasefire on 1 July 2014 in the war in Donbas.[42][43] 16 minor auxiliary ships are yet to be returned to Ukraine.[43][42]

The majority of the forces regrouped in Odesa, with the coast guard relocating its relatively small force to Mariupol on the Azov Sea. The frigate Hetman Sahaydachniy was recalled from a deployment along the Somalian coast and deployed from its port in Odesa to intercept Russian naval vessels crossing into Ukraine's waters on 14 March 2014.[44] The remainder of Ukrainian naval forces continues to patrol the nation's territorial sea[citation needed].

On 11 January 2018, Russia stated that it was "ready to return Ukrainian military ships that are still in Crimea", along with "aviation equipment and armored vehicles."[45]

On 29 April 2018 Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman greeted Ukrainian Navy personnel on the 100th anniversary since the foundation of Ukraine's Navy.[46] The Black Sea Fleet raised the colours of the Ukrainian National Republic on 29 April 1918.

As of 2020, several captured ships of the Ukrainian Navy remain interned by Russia.[47]

Defections to Russia

When Crimea was annexed by Russia, a number of Ukrainian Navy servicemen defected to Russia. Among those were members of the upper echelon of command of the Ukrainian Navy. The Ukrainian Navy compiled and released a list of their officers who defected to Russia, calling their actions treasonous.[48]

  • Vice Admiral Sergei Yeliseyev, a first deputy commander and acting commander-in-chief of the Ukrainian Navy from 19 February to 1 March 2014.
  • Rear Admiral Dmitriy Shakuro, a first deputy commander and chief of staff for the Ukrainian Navy.
  • Rear Admiral Denis Berezovsky, commander-in-chief of the Ukrainian Navy for one day, now a Black Sea Fleet deputy commander and chief of the combat training directorate.
  • Colonel Sergei Tarkhov, a chief of staff assistant in organization and sustainment of international relations.
  • Michman Sergei Gorbachov, a sergeant major of the Ukrainian Navy.
  • Administrative command – 5 officers.
  • Operation command – 17 officers.
  • Intelligence command – 8 officers.
  • Finance – 6 officers.

War in Donbas and Black Sea incidents

Following the Revolution of Dignity and the annexation of Crimea, Russian military personnel emerged in Donetsk and Luhansk Oblasts demanding independence from the rest of Ukraine resulting in the war in Donbas.[49] Some coast guard forces that were stationed in Crimea relocated to Mariupol where they resumed patrolling the national border.[50] Separatists have been active in the Azov Sea, which caused incidents with the coast guard.[51]

Special Purpose units of the navy are reported to have taken part to combat the separatists. On 18 August 2014, Alex Zinchenko of the 73rd Naval Center of Special Operations was the first member of the Ukrainian Navy killed during the war in Donbas while conducting an operation near Donetsk.[52]

 
Captured BK-02 Berdyansk with a hole in the pilothouse

On 27 January 2017, the Ukrainian diving support vessel Pochaiv was hit by sniper fire from the Tavrida drilling platform, operated by Chernomorneftegaz, seized by Russian forces in 2014.[53]

On 1 February 2017, a Ukrainian Navy An-26 transport aircraft came under small arms fire from Russian military personnel, stationed on a drill rig, while flying over the Odesa gas field in the Black Sea. This gas field is located within Ukraine's exclusive economic zone, not off the Crimean peninsula, which is also part of Ukraine's EEZ. While the rig in question has not been named, it was amongst those captured by Russian forces in the aftermath of the annexation of Crimea. According to the Ukrainian military, the plane was on a training flight and was hit by small caliber shells.[54]

On 25 November 2018 three Ukrainian navy vessels who attempted to redeploy from the Black Sea port Odesa to the Azov Sea port of Berdyansk were damaged and captured by the Russian FSB security service during the Kerch Strait incident.[55][56]

During the summer of 2019, Russia issued a number of temporary closures, potentially interrupting navigation and nearly blocking international shipping to and from Georgia, Bulgaria, Romania and Ukraine. Since 25 July 2009, the Russia closures – announced for varying dates and timeframes – covered a total of off 120 thousand square kilometers—nearly 25 percent of the entire Black Sea surface.[57][better source needed]

In August 2019, the Ukrainian Navy small reconnaissance ship Pereyaslav during their trip to Georgia to participate in exercise Agile Spirit 2019 and while in neutral waters, crew received a warning over the radio from a Russian navy ship. The Russians warned that the Ukrainians needed to turn away because the area was allegedly blocked. International coordinators did not confirm that fact, so the captain of the Pereyaslav decided to maintain the vessel along its original course. Soon thereafter, the Kasimov, a large Russian anti-submarine corvette, Project 1124M/Grisha V-class, was spotted near the Ukrainian ship. The Russian corvette's aggressive behavior only ceased when a Turkish reconnaissance plane arrived close to the Pereyaslav.[58]

On 14 November 2019, during the Third International Conference for Maritime Security, in Odesa, Ukrainian Navy commander Admiral Ihor Voronchenko said that a Russian Tu-22M3 had been observed simulating the launch of a missile strike on this coastal city, Voronchenko added that Russian bombers had made several similar attempts during exercises on 10 July, conducting a virtual airstrike 60 kilometers from Odesa.[54]

Russian invasion of Ukraine

On 3 March 2022, it was reported that the Ukrainian frigate Hetman Sahaidachny was scuttled in the port of Mykolaiv to prevent its capture by Russian forces.[59] On the same day the patrol boat Slavyansk was sunk by an anti-ship missile of Russian naval aviation.[60]

On March 14, the Russian source RT reported that the Russian Armed Forces had captured about a dozen Ukrainian ships in Berdyansk. The vessels reported as captured included two Gyurza-M-class artillery vessels (including the vessel Akkerman), the Matka-class missile boat Pryluky, a Project 1124P (Grisha II)-class corvette (the Vinnytsia, a museum ship),[61] a Zhuk-class patrol boat, a Yevgenya-class minesweeper, the Polnocny-class landing ship Yuri Olefirenko and a Ondatra-class landing craft. Independent confirmation of these captures was secured except for those of the Pryluky, the Grisha, the Yevgenya, the Yuri Olefirenko and the Ondatra. In addition, independent confirmation of the capture of another Zhuk-class patrol boat and 6 small boats was secured.[62] These smaller boats were one Adamant 315-class motor yacht, 3 Kalkan-M-class small patrol boats and 2 UMS 1000-class small patrol boats.[63]

The Naval Infantry has fought in the current conflict, contributing forces to some of the major land battles of the war, especially in the south.

On June 3, 2022, the landing ship Yuri Olefirenko was seen under Ukrainian control near Ochakiv (between Mykolaiv and Odesa) after being targeted by Russian artillery. Rounds landed within 200 ft of the ship but caused no damage. Russia claimed to have captured the ship in Berdyansk early into the conflict.[64]

On June 22, 2022, BBC published a report showing Royal Navy personnel training Ukrainian Navy personnel on two former Royal Navy Sandown Class Minehunters. The two ships ex-HMS Blyth and ex-HMS Ramsey were offered to Ukraine in 2021. However, in October 2022 it was reported that both ships would be transferred to the Romanian Navy instead.[65] The HMS Shoreham was also supposed to be handed over to the Ukrainian Navy.[66]

Organisation

Current role

The Naval Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine are tasked with the defense of the sovereignty and state interests of Ukraine at sea. They are required to neutralize enemy naval groups in their operational zone both alone and with other branches of the Ukrainian Armed Forces, and to provide assistance from the sea to the Ground Forces during their operations. Main tasks of the Navy of the Ukrainian Armed Forces are the:[9]

  • creation and maintenance of combat forces on a level sufficient to deter maritime aggression;
  • neutralization of enemy naval forces;
  • destruction of enemy transportation;
  • support of the landing of amphibious forces and fight against enemy amphibious forces;
  • maintenance of a beneficial operational regime in the operational zone;
  • defense of its bases, sea lines of communications;
  • protection of submarine space within the territorial sea;
  • protection of the merchant fleet, maritime oil and gas industry, and other state maritime activity;
  • assistance to the Army in their conduct of operations (military actions) along maritime axes;
  • participation in peacekeeping operations.

Bases

The headquarters and Main Naval Base of the Ukrainian Navy were located in Sevastopol in Striletska Bay within the Bay of Sevastopol.[9] This was also the main base of the Black Sea Fleet of the Russian Navy. Since February–March 2014 Ukrainian Naval Forces are headquartered in Odesa and based in ports in mainland Ukraine.

Other naval bases

List of Commanders

Ranks and insignia

Structure

Naval Command

Naval Command (Military Unit [MU] А0456), Odesa, Odesa Oblast

  • Staff of the Naval Command, Odesa
  • Training Command of the Ukrainian Navy, Odesa
  • Logistics Command of the Ukrainian Navy, Odesa
  • Seaborne Operational Center of the Ukrainian Navy, Ochakiv, Mykolaiv Oblast

Directly subordinated units and establishments:

  • Headquarters support units:
    • 19th Combat Command and Control Group (MU А0524), Odesa, Odeska Oblast
    • 56th Security and Support Commandature (MU А3519), Odesa, Odeska Oblast
  • Intelligence units:
    • 30th Intelligence Command Center (MU А1017), Odesa, Odes`ka Oblast
    • 29th Seaborne Intelligence Center (MU А1430), Ochakiv, Mykolaiv Oblast
    • Electronic Intelligence Center (MU А1892), Velikiy Dalnik village, Odeska Oblast
    • Navigation, Hydrography and Hydrometeorology Center (MU А1940), Odesa, Odeska Oblast
    • 133rd Cryptographic and Technical Information Protection Center (MU А3346), Odesa, Odeska Oblast
    • Information Security Information Center (MU А1905), Odesa, Odeska Oblast
  • Communications units:
    • 68th Joint Information and Telecommunications Nod (MU А4362), Odesa, Odeska Oblast
    • 37th Signals Regiment (MU А1942), Radisne, Odeska Oblast
    • 71st Field Courier Station (MU А2810), Odesa, Odeska Oblast
    • 2210th Field Courier Station (MU А0390), Mykolaiv, Mykolaiv Oblast
  • Engineer units:
    • Operational (Combat) Support Center (MU А1032), Chornomorske, Odeska Oblast
  • Nuclear, chemical and biological defence units:
    • 114th Surveillance and Analytical Station
  • Logistical and technical units:
    • 222nd Logistical Battalion (MU А3537), Mykolaiv, Mykolaiv Oblast
    • 84th Arsenal for Mine and Torpedo Weaponry (MU А2637), Ochakiv, Mykolaiv Oblast
    • Other support units
  • Education and training establishments:
    • Odesa National Maritime Academy – Ukrainian Naval College of Odesa
    • Naval Institute at the "Odesa Sea Academy" National University, Odesa, Odeska Oblast
      • Scientific Research Center "State Oceanarium" (MU А1113), Odesa, Odeska Oblast
      • Military Training Office of the Seafaring Technical Fleet College at the "Odesa Sea Academy" National University, Odesa, Odeska Oblast
    • 198th Navy Training Center (MU А3163), Mykolaiv, Mykolaiv Oblast
      • Diving School (MU А0344)
      • Ship Personnel Training School
      • Marine Infantry School
    • 203rd Naval NCO Training Center (МУ А2085), Mykolaiv, Mykolaiv Oblast
    • Naval Lyceum "Vice Admiral Volodymyr Bezkorovainy", Odesa, Odeska Oblast

Operational forces:

The bulk of operational forces of the Ukrainian Navy have been organised since 2018 into two operational commands - the Seaborne Command and the Marine Infantry Command, with a plethora of units, such as naval aviation, signals troops, engineer troops etc. directly subordinated to the Naval Command and providing operational support to the two main operational commands.

Seaborne Command

The Seaborne Command is the Ukrainian Navy's fleet component, conducting operations at sea. Affected greatly by the Russian annexation of Crimea the fleet is in a process of radical reorganisation and renovation. Losing most of its infrastructure on the Crimean peninsula and many of its ships, the fleet has relocated to the north, with the three main naval bases in Odesa, Ochakiv (near Mykolaiv) and Berdyansk (near Mariupol) undergoing substantial expansion and upgrade to NATO standards.[68][69]

Seaborne Command of the Ukrainian Navy (MU А3274) Odesa, Odesa Oblast

  • Flotilla (MU А0437), Odesa, Odesa Oblast - standing naval task force roughly of army brigade equivalent, which takes command and control over the ships of the ships detachments for combined operations at sea.
    • Naval ships in operations at sea
  • Western Naval Base "South" (also designated Military Installation Novi Bilyari-1 - військове містечко Нові Біляри -1) (MU А2238), Novi Bilyari village, Odesa Oblast
    • 30th Surface Ships Detachment (formerly the 1st Surface Ships Brigade)
    • 1st Harbour Area Security Ships Detachment
    • 28th Support Ships Detachment (formerly the 28th Ships Detachment of the Salvage and Rescue Service)
    • 24th Riverine Fast Craft Detachment
    • 801st Center for Combat against Underwater Incursion Forces and Devices and Mine Disposal
    • 22nd Radar Company
    • Security Company of Naval Base "South"
  • Main Naval Base "Namiv" (also designated Military Installation Nr. 111) (MU А????), Ochakiv, Mykolaiv Oblast
    • 29th Surface Ships Detachment (formerly the 5th Surface Ships Brigade)
    • 31st Supply Ships Detachment (formerly 8th Harbour Area Security Ships Detachment)
    • Separate Platoon for Combat against Underwater Incursion Forces and Devices Ochakiv
    • 21st Radar Company detachment, Mykolaiv, Mykolaiv Oblast
    • Security Company of Naval Base "Namiv"
  • Naval Base "East" (also designated Military Installation Nr. 90) (MU А3130), Berdyansk, Zaporizhzhia Oblast and Mariupol, Mariupol Oblast (lost)
    • 9th Surface Ships Detachment
    • Platoon for Combat against Underwater Incursion Forces and Devices Berdyansk
    • Platoon for Combat against Underwater Incursion Forces and Devices Mariupol
    • 21st Radar Company
    • Security Company of Naval Base "East"
Marine Infantry Command

The Marine Infantry Command is the Ukrainian Navy's land warfare component. It is in a process of rapid expansion.

Marine Infantry Command (MU А2022), Mykolaiv, Mykolaiv Oblast

  • 35th Marine Infantry Brigade "Rear Admiral Mikhail Ostrogradskiy" (MU А0216), Dachne-2 village, Odeska Oblast
    • Brigade Command and Staff
    • Field Signals Nod
    • 18th Marine Infantry Battalion (MU А4210), Sarata village, Odeska Oblast
    • 88th Marine Infantry Battalion (MU А2613), Bolgrad, Odeska Oblast
    • 137th Marine Infantry Battalion (MU А3821), Dachne village, Odeska Oblast
    • 2nd Tank Battalion
    • Brigade Artillery Group
      • Artillery Command and Reconnaissance Battery
      • Self-propelled Howitzer Artillery Battalion
      • Anti-tank Artillery Battalion
      • Multiple Launch Rocket Artillery Battalion
    • Air Defence Missile and Artillery Battalion
    • Reconnaissance Company
    • Sniper Rifle Company
    • Radio-Electronic Warfare Company
    • Nuclear, Chemical and Biological Defence Company
    • Engineer Support Group
    • Material Supply Group
    • Repair and Overhaul Battalion
    • Medical Company
  • 36th Separate Marine Brigade "Rear Admiral Mikhail Bilinskiy" (MU А2802), Mykolaiv, Mykolaiv Oblast
    • Brigade Command and Staff
    • Field Signals Nod
    • 1st Marine Infantry Battalion (MU А2777), Mykolaiv, Mykolaiv Oblast
    • 501st Marine Infantry Battalion (MU А1965), Berdyansk, Zaporizhzhia Oblast
    • 503rd Marine Infantry Battalion (MU А1275), Mariupol, Mariupol Oblast (could possibly expand into a new marine infantry brigade)
    • 1st Tank Battalion (T-64)
    • 1st Brigade Artillery Group
      • Artillery Command and Reconnaissance Battery
      • Self-propelled Howitzer Artillery Battalion
      • Anti-tank Artillery Battalion
      • Multiple Launch Rocket Artillery Battalion
    • Air Defence Missile and Artillery Battalion
    • Reconnaissance Company
    • Sniper Rifle Company
    • Radio-Electronic Warfare Company
    • Nuclear, Chemical and Biological Defence Company
    • Engineer Support Group
    • Material Supply Group
    • Repair and Overhaul Battalion
    • Medical Company
  • 406th Artillery Brigade "Lt.-Gen. Oleksy Almazov" (MU А2062), Mykolaiv, Mykolaiv Oblast
    • Brigade Command and Staff
    • Command Battery
    • Artillery Reconnaissance Battalion
    • 64th Field Artillery Battalion (MU А4217), Bilhorod-Dnistrovskyi, Odeska Oblast
    • 65th Field Artillery Battalion (MU А3687), Dachne-2 village, Odeska Oblast
    • 66th Field Artillery Battalion Battalion (MU А2611), Berdyansk, Zaporizhzhia Oblast
    • 67th Field Artillery Battalion (MU А1804), Ochakiv, Mykolaiv Oblast
    • Engineer Company
    • Security Company
    • Material Supply Company
    • Repair Company
  • 140th Reconnaissance Battalion (MU А0878), Skadovsk, Kherson Oblast
  • 241st Combined Arms Training Grounds "Oleshivsky Sands" of the Marine Infantry Command (MU А2407), Radensk village, Kherson Oblast

Uncertain if under Marine Infantry Command or directly subordinated to Naval Command:

  • 32nd Rocket Artillery Regiment (MU А1325) (BM-27 Uragan MLRS), Altestove village, Odeska Oblast
    • Headquarters & Headquarters Battery
    • Signal Platoon
    • Rocket Artillery Battalion
    • Rocket Artillery Battalion
    • Rocket Artillery Battalion
    • Security Company
    • Engineer Company
    • CBRN-defense Platoon
    • Logistic Company
    • Maintenance Company
  • 7th Air Defence Missile Battalion (MU А0350) (S-125-2D1 SAM), Ochakiv, Mykolaiv Oblast
directly subordinated to Naval Command
 
The structure of the Ukrainian Navy (incl. major surface combatants) in 2017

Former ship organisation of the Ukrainian Navy

Equipment

Ships

 
Left to right, U402 Konstantyn Olshansky, U401 Kirovohrad, U154 Kahovka, U209 Ternopil, and U153 Pryluky

Some 20 years after the fall of the Soviet Union, the main warships of the Ukrainian Navy are former Black Sea Fleet vessels that were designed and built in the Soviet Union. As of December 2007, the Navy had 27 combat ships and cutters. In 2015 Ukraine received 5 small (7 and 11 meter aluminum) Willard Marine patrol boats; the original order was placed in 2013.[70][71]

Aircraft

 
A Ukrainian Navy Mi-14

According to former Navy Commander Vice Admiral Yuriy Ilyin, at the beginning of 2013, the fleet had 11 warships fully ready to perform complex tasks and ten aircraft and 31 auxiliary vessels fit for service.[72]

As of 24 March 2014, most of the Ukrainian ships in Sevastopol were taken by the Russian Black Sea Fleet,[35][36] including several aircraft and other equipment. On 8 April 2014 an agreement was reached between Russia and Ukraine to return Ukrainian Navy materials to Ukraine proper.[41] A part of the Ukrainian Navy was then returned to Ukraine but Russia suspended this agreement because/after Ukraine did not renew its unilaterally declared ceasefire on 1 July 2014 in the war in Donbas.[42]

On 11 January 2018, Russian President Vladimir Putin stated that Russia was ready to return Ukrainian military ships, aviation equipment and armored vehicles that were still in Crimea.[45]

The Ukrainian Navy received its first complex of Bayraktar Tactical Block 2 on 15 July 2021.[73]

Naval Infantry

 
Ukrainian marines' berets

The Ukrainian Naval Infantry (Ukrainian: Морська піхота literally means "Naval Infantry") is a part of coastal guard of the Ukrainian Navy. It is used as a component part of amphibious, airborne and amphibious-airborne operations, alone or in conjunction with formations and units of the Army in order to capture parts of the seashore, islands, ports, fleet bases, coast airfields and other coast objects of the enemy. It can also be used to defend naval bases, vital areas of the shore, separate islands and coastal facilities and provide security in hostile areas.

Based in Mykolaiv it is organized into a full division with 2 brigades (2 more are being activated and 1 transferred from the Ground Forces), 1 coastal and field artillery brigade and 1 multiple rocket launcher artillery regiment.

Coastal Defence

Name Image Origin Type Variant Number Details
Neptune     Ukraine Mid-range anti-ship missile RK-360MC ? In service with the Ukrainian Navy since March 2021.[74] It is believed by both Ukraine and the United States that two missiles of these missiles were used to sink the Russian cruiser Moskva on 13 April 2022, as stated by an official spokesperson for the United States Department of Defense.[75][76][77] One division contains six launchers with four tubes each.[citation needed]
RBS-17     United States
  Sweden
Very short range anti-ship missile Maritime AGM-114 Hellfire variant In June, Sweden announced supplies of RBS-17 anti-ship missiles based on the maritime AGM-114 Hellfire variant in response to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[78]
Harpoon     United States Medium range anti-ship missile RGM-84L-4[79] 3+? Launchers supplied by Denmark in June 2022, with missiles additionally provided by the United Kingdom and the Netherlands in response to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.[79] United States announced the supply of additional two Harpoon systems the same month.[79]

Future

The navy was highly affected by the seizure of Crimea by Russia in 2014. At the time of the Russian invasion, the majority of Ukraine's naval vessels were docked in Crimea. Ukraine developed plans to rebuild their naval capability even before 2014 by planning to build 4–10 new corvettes at the Mykolaiv Shipyard.[80] This was one of the Soviet Union's largest shipyards and it built Russia's only and China's first operational aircraft carriers. After the 2014 Crimean status referendum, Ukraine refused to import arms from Russia for its newly-constructed ships, thus it is unclear whether weapons for project 58250 as Ukraine dubbed it, will be built internally in Ukraine or imported from another country.[14]

In 2015, Ukraine received five small (7-and-11-metre (23 and 36 ft)) aluminum Willard Marine patrol boats; the original order was placed in 2013.[70][81]

In mid 2014, the construction of Gyurza-M-class artillery boats was revived and the first two vessels were expected to be completed in late 2015.[82] In December 2016 the first two Gurza-M artillery boats officially joined the Ukrainian Navy. A new military contract was signed for 20 vessels that should be completed by 2020.

On 27 September 2018, the former United States Coast Guard ships Drummond and Cushing were formally transferred to Ukraine after their retirement from US service. The two vessels were shipped, as deck cargo, and arrived in Odesa on 21 October 2019. The Ukrainian salvage ship Oleksandr Okhrimenko was formally transferred to the Ukrainian Navy from the Ministry of Infrastructure on 29 August 2019.

The Project 58181 Centaur (Kentavr)//Project 58503 Centaur-LK class is a series of small armored assault craft being built for the Ukrainian Navy. The first two vessels were laid down at the Kuznya na Rybalskomu in December 2016. The project was developed by State Research and Design Shipbuilding Center on the basis of the Gyurza-M-class artillery boats. They are designed for patrol service on rivers and coastal maritime areas, the delivery and landing of marines. Two ships on trial, one on order.

 
Unloading (the former U.S. Coast Guard) boat Starobilsk in Odessa in October 2019

In 2018 the United States offered Ukraine some of its Oliver Hazard Perry-class frigates from its reserve fleet. The details of this offer were being worked out as of October 2018.[83]

Ukrainian shipbuilder Kuznya na Rybalskomu launched a new medium reconnaissance ship Lahuna for the Ukrainian Navy on 23 April 2019.[84] On 20 October 2019 the unfinished ship arrived in Odesa for completion and commissioning.[85]

The US State Department approved a Foreign Military Sales case for the supply of up to 16 Mark VI patrol boats and associated equipment to Ukraine in June 2020. 12 boats out of the 16 approved for sale has been ordered as of January 2022 and the Ukrainian President (Volodymyr Zelensky) has said that deliveries of the Mark VI patrol boats to Ukraine will begin in 2022.[86][87]

In October 2020 Ukraine and the United Kingdom signed a memorandum in which the UK government pledged to provide a 10-year loan of up to £1.25 billion ($1.6 billion) for the re-equipment of the Ukrainian Navy.[88] In June 2021, during a visit by HMS Defender to Odesa, it was revealed that an agreement had been reached for two Sandown-class minehunters to be transferred to the Ukrainian Navy upon decommissioning from the Royal Navy.[89]

In December 2020, Ukraine signed an agreement for the production of four Ada-class corvettes.[90] Ukraine is developing a supersonic cruise missile named Bliskavka to arm its warships.[91]

The Ukrainian Navy received its first complex of Bayraktar Tactical Block 2 drones on 15 July 2021.[73]

Notes

  1. ^ Adopted in 2016.

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External links and further reading

  • Jane's Navy International, Interview: Admiral Viktor Maksymov, C.-in-C., Ukraine Navy, JNI December 2010, 34.
  • Ukrainian Navy: ferial excursions into the past and present
  • Interview of Borys Kozhyn. Magazine "Hetman". #1 (24) 2009.
  • (in English and Ukrainian) Navy page on the official site of the Ministry of Defence: in English, in Ukrainian
  • (in English and Ukrainian) Ukrainian Navy Website: in English 2020-12-08 at the Wayback Machine, in Ukrainian 2019-11-27 at the Wayback Machine
  • World Navies Today: Ukraine (full unofficial list of vessels with descriptions, as of March 2002; no images)
  • (in Russian) Photogallery of Ukrainian Navy vessels (most vessels available, with pennant numbers, no detailed descriptions)

ukrainian, navy, this, article, currently, affected, ongoing, russian, invasion, ukraine, given, information, provided, here, become, quickly, dated, inaccurate, developing, situation, aware, that, truly, accurate, information, available, until, over, ship, co. This article is currently affected by the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine Any given information provided here may become quickly dated or inaccurate due to the developing situation Be aware that truly accurate information may not be available until the war is over If a ship was confirmed to have been lost in combat PLEASE move it HERE The Military Naval Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine Ukrainian Vijsko vo morski si li Zbro jnih sil Ukrayi ni VMS ZSU is the maritime forces of Ukraine and one of the five branches of the Armed Forces of Ukraine Ukrainian Naval ForcesVijskovo morski sili Zbrojnih sil Ukrayini VMS ZSUEmblem of the Ukrainian Naval ForcesActive1917 19211992 presentCountry UkraineTypeNavyRoleNaval warfareSize15 000 2022 1 Part ofArmed Forces of UkraineGarrison HQOdesaColors Blue GoldMarchMarch of the VMS of Ukraine Marsh VMS Ukrayini 2 AnniversariesNavy Day 3 4 5 6 Battle honoursUkrainian Soviet War Anti Piracy operation in Somalia Russo Ukrainian WarCommandersCommanderVice Admiral 7 Oleksiy Neizhpapa 8 InsigniaEnsignJackPennantShoulder sleeve insignia a The naval forces consist of five components surface forces submarine forces naval aviation coastal rocket artillery and naval infantry 9 As of 2022 the Ukrainian navy had 15 000 personnel including 6 000 naval infantry 1 In 2015 the Ukrainian navy had 6 500 personnel 10 In 2007 and prior to the 2014 Russian annexation of Crimea 15 470 people served in the Ukrainian navy 10 11 The headquarters of the Ukrainian Naval Forces was until the 2014 Crimean crisis located at Sevastopol in Crimea 9 The naval forces were highly affected by the Crimean crisis as the majority of their units were stationed there Ships that did not escape or were not deployed at the time lowered their flags and were interned Russia began a process of returning the vessels but stopped citing the inability of Ukraine to retake possession and alleged violence against Russians in the Donbas citation needed The ships that were returned were the older models of the fleet which were deemed obsolete For example Russia chose not to return the corvettes Ternopil and Lutsk both of which were some of the newest ships of the Ukrainian fleet However none of the Ukrainian naval units retained were absorbed into the Russian Navy clarification needed Ukraine had been scheduling to rebuild its naval forces since 2005 12 13 by building the domestic project 58250 the first Ukrainian designed and built corvette as well as ordering four patrol boats in 2013 from Willard Marine 14 15 Ukraine has also restarted the production of its Gryuza River Armed Artillery Boat 16 The navy operates in the Black Sea basin including the Sea of Azov and Danube Delta 9 Distant operations of the Ukrainian Navy are limited to multinational activities such as Operation Active Endeavour and Operation Atalanta in the Mediterranean and Horn of Africa The Ukrainian flagship was scuttled in March 2022 during Russia s invasion to prevent its capture and Russia s navy blocked Ukraine s access to the Black Sea from that point onwards 17 Contents 1 History 1 1 Zaporizhian Ukrainian Cossacks Fleet ca 1600s 1 2 Ukrainian People s Republic navy 1917 1921 1 2 1 List of Ukrainian ships 1 3 Contemporary Navy of Ukraine 1 3 1 Independence and the Battle for the oath 1 3 2 Ukrainian division of the Black Sea Fleet 1991 1997 1 3 3 Lack of financing and neglect 1998 2014 1 3 3 1 Anti piracy operations in Somalia 1 3 4 2014 Crimean crisis 1 3 4 1 Defections to Russia 1 3 5 War in Donbas and Black Sea incidents 1 3 6 Russian invasion of Ukraine 2 Organisation 2 1 Current role 2 2 Bases 2 2 1 Other naval bases 2 3 List of Commanders 2 4 Ranks and insignia 2 5 Structure 2 5 1 Naval Command 2 5 1 1 Seaborne Command 2 5 1 2 Marine Infantry Command 2 5 1 3 directly subordinated to Naval Command 2 6 Former ship organisation of the Ukrainian Navy 3 Equipment 3 1 Ships 3 2 Aircraft 3 3 Naval Infantry 3 4 Coastal Defence 4 Future 5 Notes 6 References 7 External links and further readingHistory EditZaporizhian Ukrainian Cossacks Fleet ca 1600s Edit Zaporizhian Cossacks sacked Crimean Kaffa and freed the slaves in 1616 The Ukrainian Naval Forces trace their origins to the Zaporizhian Sich Cossacks who would frequently raid Ottoman settlements along the Black Sea coast Cossacks used small ships called chaikas which were similar in design to Viking long ships Although technologically inferior to the Turks the Cossacks had great success against their opponent In 1614 the Cossack forces were able to raid and destroy Trabzon 18 In 1615 the Cossacks were able to mount a raid on Istanbul itself destroying several suburbs of the city In 1616 a Cossack fleet was able to reach the Bosphorus once again raiding the surrounding countryside A Turkish fleet sent to destroy the Cossack forces was defeated in 1617 The Cossacks once again managed to mount an attack on Istanbul in 1625 forcing the Sultan to temporarily flee the capital 18 The Cossacks used several strategies to attack the larger Ottoman naval forces such as positioning their ships during battle in a way where the sun was always at their back The Cossack ships were small with a low profile making them hard to hit by cannon Cossacks were typically armed with small arm muskets and during battle had the goal of killing the crew and boarding the ship to take it over rather than sinking the ship 18 Ukrainian People s Republic navy 1917 1921 Edit See also Navy of the Ukrainian People s Republic A medal of the Ukrainian fleet of April 29 1918 Gunboat Donets of Ukrainian Naval Forces July November 1918 Ukrainian marines in 1921 Ukrainian warships in the port of Sevastopol 1918 During 1917 Russian Revolution several ships of the Russian Imperial Navy s Black Sea Fleet commanded and crewed by ethnic Ukrainians declared themselves the Navy of the newly autonomous Ukrainian People s Republic Black Sea Fleet commander Mikhail Sablin raised the colours of the Ukrainian National Republic on 29 April 1918 19 20 Few further steps on establishing a navy were made as the Ukrainian government lost control over coastal territories After the Revolution 1917 a time of anarchy and demoralization overtook the former Russian Black Sea Fleet The Fleet stationed in Sevastopol was commanded by a collective Tsentroflot Different political influences clashed Ukrainian Bolshevik Menshevik Social Revolutionaries and Anarchist Very different flags were hoisted over ships Ukrainian bicolors old Russian ensigns Bolshevist red flags and Anarchist black flags 21 They were hoisted and lowered even several times daily according to changes of each crew s political orientation The Ukrainian People s Republic aspired to take control of the Fleet On 17 October 1917 the 2nd rank Captain Ye Akimov was appointed the representative of the Central Council of Ukraine at the command of the Black Sea Fleet The General Secretariat for Naval Affairs was established within the government of the Central Rada in Kyiv in January 1918 it was reformed in a Ministry The head of it became D Antonovich The Main Navy Staff was led by Captain Jerzy Swirski For the educational and agitational purposes of the seamen the Central Rada seconded the commissars to Odesa Mykolaiv Kherson and Sevastopol On 22 December 1917 the Naval Ministry in Kyiv was established Starting October 1917 the crews of the ships established military councils the blue yellow flags were flying from the masts The ships Zavidniy Enviable and Russian cruiser Pamiat Merkuria 1907 were the first examples In November 1917 in Sevastopol was established the Sahaidachny Sea Battalion kurin which on 24 November 1917 was sent to Kyiv to extinguish Bolshevik uprisings and participated in the Kiev Arsenal January Uprising On 22 November 1917 the whole crew of the newest and most powerful warship of the Black Sea Fleet Volya swore fealty to the Central Rada followed soon by several ships and submarines In December 1917 the Black Seas Fleet squadron under Ukrainian flags led by the Russian battleship Imperator Aleksandr III and included another cruiser and three destroyers participated in the evacuation of the 127th Infantry Division from Trabzon back to Ukraine On 29 December 1917 most of the Black Sea Fleet was taken over by Bolsheviks As part of Operation Faustschlag German Empire forces had been advancing on Sevastopol with a goal to capture the Black Sea Fleet Having no support from the land forces Admiral Sablin was forced enter negotiations regarding cessation of hostilities The Germans however rejected the armistice proposals and the advance continued In April 1918 German and Ukrainian troops invaded Crimea On 29 April 1918 fleet commanding Rear admiral Sablin Russian gave an order to hoist Ukrainian national flags over all ships in Sevastopol the medal to the right commemorates that event That day he was appointed commander in chief of the Ukrainian Navy A telegram to Kyiv was sent from the staff ship Georgiy Pobedonosets Effective today the Sevastopol fortress and the Fleet in Sevastopol raised the Ukrainian flag Admiral Sablin assumed the command of the Fleet Having no reply the admiral ordered to repeat the telegram beginning with the words Comrades of Kiev Central Rada Sablin was unaware that at that moment the Central Rada in Kyiv was already history The Germans started to occupy Sevastopol because the Bolsheviks began to lead away ships Centroflot the combined fleet revolutionary committee in order to save the Fleet took a decision to move it to Novorossiysk But on 30 April 1918 only the small part of the fleet under command of Admiral Sablin which trusted the Bolsheviks headed for Novorossiysk and hoisted Russian St Andrew saltire ensigns The greater part of the Ukrainian fleet remained in Sevastopol there were 30 destroyers and torpedo boats 25 auxiliaries 7 battleships and small craft as well as 15 submarines left in Sevastopol under Admiral Myhaylo Ostrogradskiy who in this situation assumed command On 1 May 1918 Germans captured the ships remaining in Sevastopol because the actions of Bolsheviks violated the peace agreement On 17 June 1918 1 dreadnought and 6 destroyers returned from Novorossiysk to Sevastopol where they were also captured The greater part of the ships remaining in Novorossiysk were destroyed by their own crews on Lenin s command In July November 1918 Germans gradually transferred many ships to the command of Ukrainian government Hetman Pavlo Skoropadskyi The main Ukrainian sea power concentrated in Odesa and Mykolaiv was more than 20 minesweepers 7 small cruisers 1 dreadnought and more than 30 auxiliaries In Sevastopol there were only 2 old battleships under Ukrainian flags On 18 July 1918 the Naval Ministry in Kyiv established new naval ensigns and some rank flags e g flag of Naval Minister flag of Deputy Minister The old Russian jack remained as Ukrainian naval jack It was regarded as symbol of glory of Black Sea Fleet whose crews were in large part previously Ukrainian On 17 September Germans gives Ukraine 17 U boats In December 1918 when naval forces of the Entente were approaching Sevastopol Ukrainian Rear admiral V Klokhkovskyy commanded all ships to hoist Russian St Andrew saltire ensigns It was a demonstration of good intentions for the Entente However the Entente captured the Black Sea Fleet and subsequently transferred it to the Russian White forces In Ukrainian hands remained only small in numbers subdivisions of marines Ukrainian naval authorities existed until 1921 List of Ukrainian ships Edit Blue and yellow flag on cruiser Pamiat Merkuria November 1917 The Ukrainian People s Republic had a navy for five months From October 1917 till March 1918 the following came to be at the disposal of the Ukrainians nine battleships seven cruisers 18 destroyers 14 submarines 16 patrol ships and avisos 11 military transports and mother ships Additionally the Fleet s Headquarters all military institutions and plants and all coastal fortifications were all manned by Ukrainian personnel Baltic Fleet Soviet cruiser Krasnyi Krym October 12 1917 Russian destroyer Ukraina October 12 1917 Russian destroyer Haidamak October 12 1917 Black Sea Fleet Russian battleship Georgii Pobedonosets November 9 1917 Russian cruiser Pamiat Merkuria November 12 1917 Russian destroyer Zorkiy November 12 1917 Russian destroyer Zvonkiy November 12 1917 Russian Battleship Volya previously Imperator Aleksandr III November 22 1917 Russian battleship Imperatritsa Ekaterina VelikayaContemporary Navy of Ukraine Edit Independence and the Battle for the oath Edit Ukraine s naval jack in 1992 The origins of the contemporary Ukrainian Naval Forces intertwined with the fate of the Soviet Black Sea Fleet and with the modern history of the Crimea Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union 1991 the administration of the Soviet Armed Forces passed to the Joint Armed Forces of the Commonwealth of Independent States CIS for a transitional period pending agreement on the division of the ex Soviet military between members of the former Soviet Union Marshal of Aviation Yevgeny Shaposhnikov became commander of the Joint CIS Armed Forces command on 14 February 1992 On 6 December 1991 the Supreme Council of Ukraine Verkhovna Rada adopted a resolution on the laws of Ukraine About the Defense of Ukraine and About the Armed Forces of Ukraine as well as the text of a military oath On the same day in the parliament of Ukraine chamber the Minister of Defense of Ukraine Kostyantyn Morozov became the first person to take the oath On 10 December 1991 the Supreme Council of Ukraine ratified the Belavezha Accords On 12 December 1991 the President of Ukraine issued ukase 4 ordering all military formations based in Ukraine to pledge allegiance by 20 January 1992 The vast majority of the Black Sea Fleet ignored the order On 1 January 1992 the newspaper Vympyel of the Black Sea Fleet Filipp Oktyabrskiy Training unit edited by Captain Lieutenant Mykola Huk published the military oath and the anthem of Ukraine in the Ukrainian language On 3 January 1992 Ukraine started the practical formation of its national armed forces On 8 January 1992 the Officers Assembly of the Black Sea Fleet appealed to all leaders of the CIS to recognise the Black Sea Fleet as an operational strategic formation and not subordinate to Ukraine On 12 January 1992 the brigade of border troops in Balaklava Sevastopol became the first military formation to pledge allegiance to Ukraine 22 On 14 January 1992 the Governor of Sevastopol appealed to the Supreme Councils of both Ukraine and the Russian Federation urging faster adoption of a decision on the status of the Black Sea Fleet On 16 January 1992 an agreement between the CIS members was signed on the oath in strategic formations 22 On 18 January 1992 the 3rd company of the divers school became the first formation of the Black Sea Fleet to pledge their allegiance to Ukraine along with the Maritime Department of the Sevastopol Institute of Instrument Engineering On the next day forty six naval pilots pledged their allegiance to Ukraine at the central square Ploshcha Lenina of Mykolaiv Black Sea Fleet military personnel previously under the oath of the Soviet Armed Forces did not hasten to pledge allegiance to the newly formed state First Deputy Commander in Chief of the Russian Navy Fleet Admiral Ivan Kapitanets issued a directive to apply severe sanctions including dismissal from office and separation from service to officers midshipmen and warrant officers who create an unhealthy situation in military communities that are prone to treason and taking the oath of allegiance to Ukraine Nonetheless on 26 January 1992 the 17th Brigade of Ships for the Guarding the Water Area of the Crimea Naval Base followed the example of the divers 23 Right before the Soviet Army and Navy Day 23 February on 22 February the 880th Independent Naval Infantry Battalion of Black Sea Fleet pledged allegiance to Ukraine The battalion had been recognized by whom as the best formation of the fleet in 1991 The Main Navy Staff in Moscow issued an order to dissolve the battalion After the incident all military units of the Black Sea Fleet recruited exclusively Russians citation needed According to estimations by the International Institute for Strategic Studies in January 1992 the Black Sea Fleet accounted for 80 000 servicemen 69 major warships including 3 aircraft carriers 6 missile cruisers 29 submarines 235 warplanes and helicopters and great number of ships of auxiliary fleet 24 Without informing Ukraine with which it supposed to share control over the Black Sea Fleet in a framework of the Joint Armed Forces Command the Russian Federation was selling away several ships 24 From the beginning relationships between the newly formed states of Russia Federation and the Republic of Ukraine were tense In January 1992 the Supreme Soviet of Russia raised the question of the political status of Crimea Crimean ASSR and of the constitutionality of the 1954 decision to transfer of Crimean Oblast of the Russian SFSR to the Ukrainian SSR accusing Nikita Khrushchev of treason against the Russian people Although never annulled citation needed many Russian parliamentarians refused to recognize the legal document pointing out the procedural errors during its adoption The Ukrainian side issued reminders of the number of international treaties and agreements between the two countries such as the 19 November 1990 treaty between the Russian SFSR and the Ukrainian SSR in which both sides recognized the territorial integrity of the other as well as the Belavezha Accords an agreement on creation of the CIS of 8 December 1991 and the Alma Ata Protocol of 21 December 1991 Noticing not much reaction from the Black Sea Fleet command located on the territory of Ukraine on 5 April 1992 the President of Ukraine issued Decree 209 About urgent measures on development of the Armed Forces of Ukraine which accused the Russian Federation and the Joint Armed Forces command of intervening in the internal affairs of Ukraine On 6 April 1992 a session of the 6th Congress of People s Deputies of the Russian SFSR refused to accept the Belavezha agreement as previously ratified by the Supreme Council of the Russian SFSR on 12 December 1991 Also on 6 April 1992 the President of Ukraine appointed Borys Kozhyn as the Commander of Ukrainian Naval Forces The next day the President of Russia issued a Decree On the transfer of the Black Sea Fleet under jurisdiction of the Russian Federation On 9 April 1992 the effect of both decrees were suspended until the end of the Russian Ukrainian talks Ukrainian division of the Black Sea Fleet 1991 1997 Edit Ukrainian Navy artillery boat Zhuk class U170 Skadovs k off the Bay of Sevastopol Crimea In September 1991 an office of the Society of Ukrainian Officers was opened in Sevastopol on the initiative of Major Volodymyr Kholodyuk and captains lieutenant Ihor Tenyukh and Mykola Huk 23 The society became the initiator and nucleus of the organization of the Ukrainian Naval Forces On 7 April 1992 at 17 00 37 officers of the administration and headquarters of the Crimean Naval Base an administrative entity and not a physical base pledged their allegiance and loyalty to people of Ukraine Rear Admiral Borys Kozhyn who was in charge was not present at that time of the event He was in the office of Ivan Yermakov accepting a proposition of the First Deputy Chairman of the Supreme Council of Ukraine to become the commander of the future Ukrainian Naval Forces On 8 April 1992 the Minister of Defense signed a directive About creation of the Ukrainian Naval Forces On 13 April 1992 an organizational group was established on creation of the Ukrainian Naval Forces which upset the command of the Black Sea Fleet The current history of the Ukrainian Naval Forces began on 1 August 1992 when it was formally established by order of the President of Ukraine Leonid Kravchuk This was followed by a long and controversial partition of the Soviet Black Sea Fleet between newly independent Ukraine and the Russian Federation SKR 112 on 20 July 1992 One of the episodes of this process was the story of SKR 112 effectively the first Ukrainian Navy ship 25 On 20 July 1992 the crew of SKR 112 declared itself a Ukrainian ship and raised the Ukrainian flag The Navy headquarters in Moscow considered this a mutiny and attempted to act accordingly The ship left its base on the Crimean peninsula bound for Odesa causing a chase and ramming attempts by ships still loyal to Moscow Soon several other ships auxiliary vessels and coastal units of the Black Sea Fleet followed SKR 112 s decision but with less violent outcomes It was only in 1997 that the ships and equipment of the Black Sea Fleet were officially divided between the two countries The new Russian formation retained its historic name Black Sea Fleet Under the terms of a negotiated lease agreement it was also granted rights to use the majority of its bases on the Crimea Peninsula Ukraine on a renewable ten year lease basis at least until 2017 The newly established Ukrainian Naval Forces received dozens of vessels mostly obsolete or inoperative not unlike some of those retained by Russia and some shore based infrastructure The Russian Navy lost several important facilities most notably the NITKA Russian acronym for Scientific testing simulator for shipborne aviation naval aviation training facility in Saky and the special forces base in Ochakiv The process of fleet division remained painful since many aspects of the two navies co existence were under regulated causing recurring conflicts Lack of financing and neglect 1998 2014 Edit The Krivak III class frigate Hetman Sahaydachniy was the flagship of the Ukrainian Navy until 2022 26 From 1997 due to lack of financing and neglect most of the Ukrainian naval units have been scrapped or poorly maintained By 2009 only the frigate Hetman Sahaydachniy originally built to be a Soviet Border Guards ship was capable of long endurance missions 27 Joint exercises of the Ukrainian Naval Forces and the Russian Black Sea Fleet resumed after a seven year interval in 2010 28 Most of the Ukrainian naval assets as those of the other branches of the armed forces comprised mainly Soviet era equipment No major plan for modernization emerged except for a new corvette design completed in 2009 but not built 25 On 19 December 2008 United States Ambassador to Ukraine William B Taylor Jr stated that Ukrainian Defense Minister Yuriy Yekhanurov and US Defense Secretary Robert Gates were discussing the purchase by Ukraine of one to three U S Navy frigates 29 In December 2009 the design for a new Volodymyr Velykyi class corvette designed exclusively by Ukraine and to be built at Ukrainian shipyards for the Ukrainian Naval Forces was completed 30 That month the Ukrainian defense ministry and Chernomorsky Shipyard Mykolaiv signed a contract upon results of the governmental tender for corvettes The Shipbuilding Research and Design Center Mykolaiv was selected the project developer If built the ship was supposed to operate in the Black and the Mediterranean seas Her endurance would be 30 days and a displacement of 2 500 tons Leading European arms manufacturers like DCNS MBDA and EuroTorp were to deliver weapons for the project Commissioning of the lead ship was scheduled for 2016 There was a plan to build four corvettes before 2021 According to the corvette construction program approved by Ukrainian government in March 2011 the overall amount of program financing till 2021 would be about UAH 16 22 billion Anti piracy operations in Somalia Edit A Ukrainian ship carrying military cargo was hijacked off the coast of Somalia on 23 September 2008 The ship was released on 6 February 2009 All commercial news sources reported that the vessel was released after a ransom had been paid Ukrainian officials however stated that special forces eliminated the pirates and retook the ship 31 In October 2013 Ukraine deployed its flagship the frigate Hetman Sahaydachniy as part of NATO s Operation Ocean Shield anti piracy mission in the Gulf of Aden The ship was deployed for a 3 month mission and operated alongside the Norwegian frigate HNoMS Fridtjof Nansen the Royal Danish frigate HDMS Esbern Snare and the US Navy s frigate USS De Wert 32 The Naval Forces of Ukraine once again deployed Hetman Sahaydachniy with an anti submarine Ka 27 helicopter aboard to the coast of Somalia as part of the European Union s Operation Atalanta on 3 January 2014 33 The ship was recalled on 3 March 2014 to Ukraine in response to the Crimea Crisis 2014 Crimean crisis Edit Main article Annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation Prior to the 2014 Crimean crisis Ukraine maintained a very modest naval force for a nation that lacked shores with any of the world s oceans The majority of the bases of the Ukrainian Navy 34 along with 12 000 of Ukraine s 15 450 Navy personnel were stationed in Crimea citation needed On 24 March 2014 at least 12 of Ukraine s 17 ships in Sevastopol were seized by Russia 35 36 while the ensuing conflict saw two Ukrainian navy officers killed by Russian marines 37 Ukraine lost control of its Navy s main underground ammunition storage site at the Inkerman valley outside Sevastopol as well as of its helicopter repair facilities The Navy s 750 strong 1st Naval Infantry Battalion at Feodosia was arrested and its equipment seized 38 The Ukrainian Navy also lost all its missile boats 34 In addition 51 mainly auxiliaries ships were lost though most were eventually returned to Ukraine after a brief internment citation needed The Ukrainian Naval Infantry was equally affected by the crisis as Russian forces besieged them within their bases Russia eventually confiscated all military equipment of the naval infantry stationed in Crimea including the assets of the Ukrainian Naval Aviation though several planes and helicopters managed to make their way to mainland Ukraine prior to the Russian incorporation of Crimea The 10th Saky Naval Aviation Brigade controlling all the Ukrainian Navy s air units managed to get a number of its aircraft airborne to bases in mainland Ukraine on 5 March 2014 39 However more than a dozen aircraft and helicopters undergoing maintenance had to be abandoned citation needed In the aftermath the Ukraine Navy relocated its main operational base to its Western Naval Base in Odesa The current fleet consists of 11 mostly small operational ships one frigate commissioned in 1993 and four corvettes Russia also returned a Polnocny class landing ship to Ukraine restoring Ukraine s amphibious assault capabilities 40 On 8 April 2014 an agreement was reached between Russia and Ukraine to return interned vessels to Ukraine and for the withdrawal of an undisclosed number of Ukrainian aircraft seized in Crimea 41 Russian Navy sources had claimed the Ukrainian ships were not operational because they are old obsolete and in poor condition 41 35 ships were returned before Russia unilaterally suspended the return of the remainder alleging that Ukraine had failed to renew its unilaterally declared ceasefire on 1 July 2014 in the war in Donbas 42 43 16 minor auxiliary ships are yet to be returned to Ukraine 43 42 The majority of the forces regrouped in Odesa with the coast guard relocating its relatively small force to Mariupol on the Azov Sea The frigate Hetman Sahaydachniy was recalled from a deployment along the Somalian coast and deployed from its port in Odesa to intercept Russian naval vessels crossing into Ukraine s waters on 14 March 2014 44 The remainder of Ukrainian naval forces continues to patrol the nation s territorial sea citation needed On 11 January 2018 Russia stated that it was ready to return Ukrainian military ships that are still in Crimea along with aviation equipment and armored vehicles 45 On 29 April 2018 Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko and Prime Minister Volodymyr Groysman greeted Ukrainian Navy personnel on the 100th anniversary since the foundation of Ukraine s Navy 46 The Black Sea Fleet raised the colours of the Ukrainian National Republic on 29 April 1918 As of 2020 several captured ships of the Ukrainian Navy remain interned by Russia 47 Defections to Russia Edit When Crimea was annexed by Russia a number of Ukrainian Navy servicemen defected to Russia Among those were members of the upper echelon of command of the Ukrainian Navy The Ukrainian Navy compiled and released a list of their officers who defected to Russia calling their actions treasonous 48 Vice Admiral Sergei Yeliseyev a first deputy commander and acting commander in chief of the Ukrainian Navy from 19 February to 1 March 2014 Rear Admiral Dmitriy Shakuro a first deputy commander and chief of staff for the Ukrainian Navy Rear Admiral Denis Berezovsky commander in chief of the Ukrainian Navy for one day now a Black Sea Fleet deputy commander and chief of the combat training directorate Colonel Sergei Tarkhov a chief of staff assistant in organization and sustainment of international relations Michman Sergei Gorbachov a sergeant major of the Ukrainian Navy Administrative command 5 officers Operation command 17 officers Intelligence command 8 officers Finance 6 officers War in Donbas and Black Sea incidents Edit See also List of Black Sea incidents involving Russia and Ukraine Following the Revolution of Dignity and the annexation of Crimea Russian military personnel emerged in Donetsk and Luhansk Oblasts demanding independence from the rest of Ukraine resulting in the war in Donbas 49 Some coast guard forces that were stationed in Crimea relocated to Mariupol where they resumed patrolling the national border 50 Separatists have been active in the Azov Sea which caused incidents with the coast guard 51 Special Purpose units of the navy are reported to have taken part to combat the separatists On 18 August 2014 Alex Zinchenko of the 73rd Naval Center of Special Operations was the first member of the Ukrainian Navy killed during the war in Donbas while conducting an operation near Donetsk 52 Captured BK 02 Berdyansk with a hole in the pilothouse On 27 January 2017 the Ukrainian diving support vessel Pochaiv was hit by sniper fire from the Tavrida drilling platform operated by Chernomorneftegaz seized by Russian forces in 2014 53 On 1 February 2017 a Ukrainian Navy An 26 transport aircraft came under small arms fire from Russian military personnel stationed on a drill rig while flying over the Odesa gas field in the Black Sea This gas field is located within Ukraine s exclusive economic zone not off the Crimean peninsula which is also part of Ukraine s EEZ While the rig in question has not been named it was amongst those captured by Russian forces in the aftermath of the annexation of Crimea According to the Ukrainian military the plane was on a training flight and was hit by small caliber shells 54 On 25 November 2018 three Ukrainian navy vessels who attempted to redeploy from the Black Sea port Odesa to the Azov Sea port of Berdyansk were damaged and captured by the Russian FSB security service during the Kerch Strait incident 55 56 During the summer of 2019 Russia issued a number of temporary closures potentially interrupting navigation and nearly blocking international shipping to and from Georgia Bulgaria Romania and Ukraine Since 25 July 2009 the Russia closures announced for varying dates and timeframes covered a total of off 120 thousand square kilometers nearly 25 percent of the entire Black Sea surface 57 better source needed In August 2019 the Ukrainian Navy small reconnaissance ship Pereyaslav during their trip to Georgia to participate in exercise Agile Spirit 2019 and while in neutral waters crew received a warning over the radio from a Russian navy ship The Russians warned that the Ukrainians needed to turn away because the area was allegedly blocked International coordinators did not confirm that fact so the captain of the Pereyaslav decided to maintain the vessel along its original course Soon thereafter the Kasimov a large Russian anti submarine corvette Project 1124M Grisha V class was spotted near the Ukrainian ship The Russian corvette s aggressive behavior only ceased when a Turkish reconnaissance plane arrived close to the Pereyaslav 58 On 14 November 2019 during the Third International Conference for Maritime Security in Odesa Ukrainian Navy commander Admiral Ihor Voronchenko said that a Russian Tu 22M3 had been observed simulating the launch of a missile strike on this coastal city Voronchenko added that Russian bombers had made several similar attempts during exercises on 10 July conducting a virtual airstrike 60 kilometers from Odesa 54 Russian invasion of Ukraine Edit See also 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine On 3 March 2022 it was reported that the Ukrainian frigate Hetman Sahaidachny was scuttled in the port of Mykolaiv to prevent its capture by Russian forces 59 On the same day the patrol boat Slavyansk was sunk by an anti ship missile of Russian naval aviation 60 On March 14 the Russian source RT reported that the Russian Armed Forces had captured about a dozen Ukrainian ships in Berdyansk The vessels reported as captured included two Gyurza M class artillery vessels including the vessel Akkerman the Matka class missile boat Pryluky a Project 1124P Grisha II class corvette the Vinnytsia a museum ship 61 a Zhuk class patrol boat a Yevgenya class minesweeper the Polnocny class landing ship Yuri Olefirenko and a Ondatra class landing craft Independent confirmation of these captures was secured except for those of the Pryluky the Grisha the Yevgenya the Yuri Olefirenko and the Ondatra In addition independent confirmation of the capture of another Zhuk class patrol boat and 6 small boats was secured 62 These smaller boats were one Adamant 315 class motor yacht 3 Kalkan M class small patrol boats and 2 UMS 1000 class small patrol boats 63 The Naval Infantry has fought in the current conflict contributing forces to some of the major land battles of the war especially in the south On June 3 2022 the landing ship Yuri Olefirenko was seen under Ukrainian control near Ochakiv between Mykolaiv and Odesa after being targeted by Russian artillery Rounds landed within 200 ft of the ship but caused no damage Russia claimed to have captured the ship in Berdyansk early into the conflict 64 On June 22 2022 BBC published a report showing Royal Navy personnel training Ukrainian Navy personnel on two former Royal Navy Sandown Class Minehunters The two ships ex HMS Blyth and ex HMS Ramsey were offered to Ukraine in 2021 However in October 2022 it was reported that both ships would be transferred to the Romanian Navy instead 65 The HMS Shoreham was also supposed to be handed over to the Ukrainian Navy 66 Organisation EditCurrent role Edit The Naval Forces of the Armed Forces of Ukraine are tasked with the defense of the sovereignty and state interests of Ukraine at sea They are required to neutralize enemy naval groups in their operational zone both alone and with other branches of the Ukrainian Armed Forces and to provide assistance from the sea to the Ground Forces during their operations Main tasks of the Navy of the Ukrainian Armed Forces are the 9 creation and maintenance of combat forces on a level sufficient to deter maritime aggression neutralization of enemy naval forces destruction of enemy transportation support of the landing of amphibious forces and fight against enemy amphibious forces maintenance of a beneficial operational regime in the operational zone defense of its bases sea lines of communications protection of submarine space within the territorial sea protection of the merchant fleet maritime oil and gas industry and other state maritime activity assistance to the Army in their conduct of operations military actions along maritime axes participation in peacekeeping operations Bases Edit The headquarters and Main Naval Base of the Ukrainian Navy were located in Sevastopol in Striletska Bay within the Bay of Sevastopol 9 This was also the main base of the Black Sea Fleet of the Russian Navy Since February March 2014 Ukrainian Naval Forces are headquartered in Odesa and based in ports in mainland Ukraine Other naval bases Edit Western Naval Base in Odesa 9 Southern Naval Base in Mykolaiv 9 mooring place in Ochakiv Azov Naval Base in Berdyansk mooring places in Henichesk and Mariupol late September 2018 two Ukrainian vessels departed from Odesa passed the Crimean Bridge and arrived Mariupol 67 lost Southern Naval Base in Crimea at Novoozerne Yevpatoria in Donuzlav Lake 9 lost List of Commanders Edit Main article Commander of the Navy Ukraine Ranks and insignia Edit Main article Naval ranks and insignia of Ukraine See also Admiral Ukraine Structure Edit Naval Command Edit Naval Command Military Unit MU A0456 Odesa Odesa Oblast Staff of the Naval Command Odesa Training Command of the Ukrainian Navy Odesa Logistics Command of the Ukrainian Navy Odesa Seaborne Operational Center of the Ukrainian Navy Ochakiv Mykolaiv OblastDirectly subordinated units and establishments Headquarters support units 19th Combat Command and Control Group MU A0524 Odesa Odeska Oblast 56th Security and Support Commandature MU A3519 Odesa Odeska Oblast Intelligence units 30th Intelligence Command Center MU A1017 Odesa Odes ka Oblast 29th Seaborne Intelligence Center MU A1430 Ochakiv Mykolaiv Oblast Electronic Intelligence Center MU A1892 Velikiy Dalnik village Odeska Oblast Navigation Hydrography and Hydrometeorology Center MU A1940 Odesa Odeska Oblast 133rd Cryptographic and Technical Information Protection Center MU A3346 Odesa Odeska Oblast Information Security Information Center MU A1905 Odesa Odeska Oblast Communications units 68th Joint Information and Telecommunications Nod MU A4362 Odesa Odeska Oblast 37th Signals Regiment MU A1942 Radisne Odeska Oblast 71st Field Courier Station MU A2810 Odesa Odeska Oblast 2210th Field Courier Station MU A0390 Mykolaiv Mykolaiv Oblast Engineer units Operational Combat Support Center MU A1032 Chornomorske Odeska Oblast Nuclear chemical and biological defence units 114th Surveillance and Analytical Station Logistical and technical units 222nd Logistical Battalion MU A3537 Mykolaiv Mykolaiv Oblast 84th Arsenal for Mine and Torpedo Weaponry MU A2637 Ochakiv Mykolaiv Oblast Other support units Education and training establishments Odesa National Maritime Academy Ukrainian Naval College of Odesa Naval Institute at the Odesa Sea Academy National University Odesa Odeska Oblast Scientific Research Center State Oceanarium MU A1113 Odesa Odeska Oblast Military Training Office of the Seafaring Technical Fleet College at the Odesa Sea Academy National University Odesa Odeska Oblast 198th Navy Training Center MU A3163 Mykolaiv Mykolaiv Oblast Diving School MU A0344 Ship Personnel Training School Marine Infantry School 203rd Naval NCO Training Center MU A2085 Mykolaiv Mykolaiv Oblast Naval Lyceum Vice Admiral Volodymyr Bezkorovainy Odesa Odeska OblastOperational forces The bulk of operational forces of the Ukrainian Navy have been organised since 2018 into two operational commands the Seaborne Command and the Marine Infantry Command with a plethora of units such as naval aviation signals troops engineer troops etc directly subordinated to the Naval Command and providing operational support to the two main operational commands Seaborne Command Edit The Seaborne Command is the Ukrainian Navy s fleet component conducting operations at sea Affected greatly by the Russian annexation of Crimea the fleet is in a process of radical reorganisation and renovation Losing most of its infrastructure on the Crimean peninsula and many of its ships the fleet has relocated to the north with the three main naval bases in Odesa Ochakiv near Mykolaiv and Berdyansk near Mariupol undergoing substantial expansion and upgrade to NATO standards 68 69 Seaborne Command of the Ukrainian Navy MU A3274 Odesa Odesa Oblast Flotilla MU A0437 Odesa Odesa Oblast standing naval task force roughly of army brigade equivalent which takes command and control over the ships of the ships detachments for combined operations at sea Naval ships in operations at sea Western Naval Base South also designated Military Installation Novi Bilyari 1 vijskove mistechko Novi Bilyari 1 MU A2238 Novi Bilyari village Odesa Oblast 30th Surface Ships Detachment formerly the 1st Surface Ships Brigade 1st Harbour Area Security Ships Detachment 28th Support Ships Detachment formerly the 28th Ships Detachment of the Salvage and Rescue Service 24th Riverine Fast Craft Detachment 801st Center for Combat against Underwater Incursion Forces and Devices and Mine Disposal 22nd Radar Company Security Company of Naval Base South Main Naval Base Namiv also designated Military Installation Nr 111 MU A Ochakiv Mykolaiv Oblast 29th Surface Ships Detachment formerly the 5th Surface Ships Brigade 31st Supply Ships Detachment formerly 8th Harbour Area Security Ships Detachment Separate Platoon for Combat against Underwater Incursion Forces and Devices Ochakiv 21st Radar Company detachment Mykolaiv Mykolaiv Oblast Security Company of Naval Base Namiv Naval Base East also designated Military Installation Nr 90 MU A3130 Berdyansk Zaporizhzhia Oblast and Mariupol Mariupol Oblast lost 9th Surface Ships Detachment Platoon for Combat against Underwater Incursion Forces and Devices Berdyansk Platoon for Combat against Underwater Incursion Forces and Devices Mariupol 21st Radar Company Security Company of Naval Base East Marine Infantry Command Edit The Marine Infantry Command is the Ukrainian Navy s land warfare component It is in a process of rapid expansion Marine Infantry Command MU A2022 Mykolaiv Mykolaiv Oblast 35th Marine Infantry Brigade Rear Admiral Mikhail Ostrogradskiy MU A0216 Dachne 2 village Odeska Oblast Brigade Command and Staff Field Signals Nod 18th Marine Infantry Battalion MU A4210 Sarata village Odeska Oblast 88th Marine Infantry Battalion MU A2613 Bolgrad Odeska Oblast 137th Marine Infantry Battalion MU A3821 Dachne village Odeska Oblast 2nd Tank Battalion Brigade Artillery Group Artillery Command and Reconnaissance Battery Self propelled Howitzer Artillery Battalion Anti tank Artillery Battalion Multiple Launch Rocket Artillery Battalion Air Defence Missile and Artillery Battalion Reconnaissance Company Sniper Rifle Company Radio Electronic Warfare Company Nuclear Chemical and Biological Defence Company Engineer Support Group Material Supply Group Repair and Overhaul Battalion Medical Company 36th Separate Marine Brigade Rear Admiral Mikhail Bilinskiy MU A2802 Mykolaiv Mykolaiv Oblast Brigade Command and Staff Field Signals Nod 1st Marine Infantry Battalion MU A2777 Mykolaiv Mykolaiv Oblast 501st Marine Infantry Battalion MU A1965 Berdyansk Zaporizhzhia Oblast 503rd Marine Infantry Battalion MU A1275 Mariupol Mariupol Oblast could possibly expand into a new marine infantry brigade 1st Tank Battalion T 64 1st Brigade Artillery Group Artillery Command and Reconnaissance Battery Self propelled Howitzer Artillery Battalion Anti tank Artillery Battalion Multiple Launch Rocket Artillery Battalion Air Defence Missile and Artillery Battalion Reconnaissance Company Sniper Rifle Company Radio Electronic Warfare Company Nuclear Chemical and Biological Defence Company Engineer Support Group Material Supply Group Repair and Overhaul Battalion Medical Company 406th Artillery Brigade Lt Gen Oleksy Almazov MU A2062 Mykolaiv Mykolaiv Oblast Brigade Command and Staff Command Battery Artillery Reconnaissance Battalion 64th Field Artillery Battalion MU A4217 Bilhorod Dnistrovskyi Odeska Oblast 65th Field Artillery Battalion MU A3687 Dachne 2 village Odeska Oblast 66th Field Artillery Battalion Battalion MU A2611 Berdyansk Zaporizhzhia Oblast 67th Field Artillery Battalion MU A1804 Ochakiv Mykolaiv Oblast Engineer Company Security Company Material Supply Company Repair Company 140th Reconnaissance Battalion MU A0878 Skadovsk Kherson Oblast 241st Combined Arms Training Grounds Oleshivsky Sands of the Marine Infantry Command MU A2407 Radensk village Kherson OblastUncertain if under Marine Infantry Command or directly subordinated to Naval Command 32nd Rocket Artillery Regiment MU A1325 BM 27 Uragan MLRS Altestove village Odeska Oblast Headquarters amp Headquarters Battery Signal Platoon Rocket Artillery Battalion Rocket Artillery Battalion Rocket Artillery Battalion Security Company Engineer Company CBRN defense Platoon Logistic Company Maintenance Company 7th Air Defence Missile Battalion MU A0350 S 125 2D1 SAM Ochakiv Mykolaiv Oblastdirectly subordinated to Naval Command Edit The structure of the Ukrainian Navy incl major surface combatants in 2017 10th Naval Aviation Brigade MU A1688 Mykolaiv Mykolaiv Oblast Brigade Command and Staff Naval Aircraft Squadron An 2T An 26 Be 12 Naval Helicopter Squadron Ka 27 Ka 29 Mi 14PL PS Mil Mi 8MSB V Mi 9 Mi 2MSB V Kamov Ka 226 Naval UAV Squadron Bayraktar TB2 Signals and Radio Technical Support Battalion Meteorological Group Aerial Technical Exploitation Unit Automobile Technical Exploitation Unit Special Engineer Service Combat Search and Rescue Parachute Airborne Group Airfield Technical Support Battalion Security Platoon Material Supply Company other unitsFormer ship organisation of the Ukrainian Navy Edit 1st Surface Ships Brigade Frigate Hetman Sahaydachniy U130 Missile boat Pryluky U153 Artillery boat Berdiansk U174 Artillery boat Akkerman U175 1st Security amp Logistic Division Cutter Hola Prystan U241 Training vessel Chyhyryn U540 Training vessel Smila U541 Training vessel Nova Kakhovka U542 Diving vessel Pochaiv U701 Diving cutter Volodymyr Volynskyi U721 Diving cutter RVK 268 U724 Water tanker Sudak U756 Tanker Fastiv U760 Passenger boat Illichivsk U783 Degaussing vessel Balta U811 Seagoing tug Kovel U831 Passenger boat Korosten U853 Cutter RK 1942 U932 Tug BUK 239 U941 Tug Krasnoperekopsk U947 24th River Boat Division Patrol boat Skadovsk U170 Armed cutter Pivdennyi U171 Armed cutter Rivne U172 Armed cutter AK 02 U173 28th Emergency Rescue Division Fire boat Borshchiv U722 Diving cutter Romny U732 Diving cutter Tokmak U733 Medical evacuation cutter Sokal U782 Anchor handling tug Shostka U852 5th Surface Ships Brigade Corvette Vinnytsia U206 Minesweeper Henichesk U360 Landing ship Yuri Olefirenko U401 Landing barge Svatove U763 Reconnaissance ship Pereiaslav U512 Armed cutter AK 03 U938 8th Security amp Logistic Division Diving vessel Netishyn U700 Fire boat Evpatoria U728 Freighter Horlivka U753 Seagoing tug Korets U830 Diving cutter Dobropillia U854 Towing tug Novoozerne U942 Equipment EditShips Edit Main article List of active Ukrainian Navy ships Left to right U402 Konstantyn Olshansky U401 Kirovohrad U154 Kahovka U209 Ternopil and U153 Pryluky Some 20 years after the fall of the Soviet Union the main warships of the Ukrainian Navy are former Black Sea Fleet vessels that were designed and built in the Soviet Union As of December 2007 the Navy had 27 combat ships and cutters In 2015 Ukraine received 5 small 7 and 11 meter aluminum Willard Marine patrol boats the original order was placed in 2013 70 71 Aircraft Edit Main article Ukrainian Naval Aviation A Ukrainian Navy Mi 14 According to former Navy Commander Vice Admiral Yuriy Ilyin at the beginning of 2013 the fleet had 11 warships fully ready to perform complex tasks and ten aircraft and 31 auxiliary vessels fit for service 72 As of 24 March 2014 most of the Ukrainian ships in Sevastopol were taken by the Russian Black Sea Fleet 35 36 including several aircraft and other equipment On 8 April 2014 an agreement was reached between Russia and Ukraine to return Ukrainian Navy materials to Ukraine proper 41 A part of the Ukrainian Navy was then returned to Ukraine but Russia suspended this agreement because after Ukraine did not renew its unilaterally declared ceasefire on 1 July 2014 in the war in Donbas 42 On 11 January 2018 Russian President Vladimir Putin stated that Russia was ready to return Ukrainian military ships aviation equipment and armored vehicles that were still in Crimea 45 The Ukrainian Navy received its first complex of Bayraktar Tactical Block 2 on 15 July 2021 73 Naval Infantry Edit Main article Ukrainian Naval Infantry Ukrainian marines berets The Ukrainian Naval Infantry Ukrainian Morska pihota literally means Naval Infantry is a part of coastal guard of the Ukrainian Navy It is used as a component part of amphibious airborne and amphibious airborne operations alone or in conjunction with formations and units of the Army in order to capture parts of the seashore islands ports fleet bases coast airfields and other coast objects of the enemy It can also be used to defend naval bases vital areas of the shore separate islands and coastal facilities and provide security in hostile areas Based in Mykolaiv it is organized into a full division with 2 brigades 2 more are being activated and 1 transferred from the Ground Forces 1 coastal and field artillery brigade and 1 multiple rocket launcher artillery regiment Coastal Defence Edit Name Image Origin Type Variant Number DetailsNeptune Ukraine Mid range anti ship missile RK 360MC In service with the Ukrainian Navy since March 2021 74 It is believed by both Ukraine and the United States that two missiles of these missiles were used to sink the Russian cruiser Moskva on 13 April 2022 as stated by an official spokesperson for the United States Department of Defense 75 76 77 One division contains six launchers with four tubes each citation needed RBS 17 United States Sweden Very short range anti ship missile Maritime AGM 114 Hellfire variant In June Sweden announced supplies of RBS 17 anti ship missiles based on the maritime AGM 114 Hellfire variant in response to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 78 Harpoon United States Medium range anti ship missile RGM 84L 4 79 3 Launchers supplied by Denmark in June 2022 with missiles additionally provided by the United Kingdom and the Netherlands in response to the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine 79 United States announced the supply of additional two Harpoon systems the same month 79 Future EditThe navy was highly affected by the seizure of Crimea by Russia in 2014 At the time of the Russian invasion the majority of Ukraine s naval vessels were docked in Crimea Ukraine developed plans to rebuild their naval capability even before 2014 by planning to build 4 10 new corvettes at the Mykolaiv Shipyard 80 This was one of the Soviet Union s largest shipyards and it built Russia s only and China s first operational aircraft carriers After the 2014 Crimean status referendum Ukraine refused to import arms from Russia for its newly constructed ships thus it is unclear whether weapons for project 58250 as Ukraine dubbed it will be built internally in Ukraine or imported from another country 14 In 2015 Ukraine received five small 7 and 11 metre 23 and 36 ft aluminum Willard Marine patrol boats the original order was placed in 2013 70 81 In mid 2014 the construction of Gyurza M class artillery boats was revived and the first two vessels were expected to be completed in late 2015 82 In December 2016 the first two Gurza M artillery boats officially joined the Ukrainian Navy A new military contract was signed for 20 vessels that should be completed by 2020 On 27 September 2018 the former United States Coast Guard ships Drummond and Cushing were formally transferred to Ukraine after their retirement from US service The two vessels were shipped as deck cargo and arrived in Odesa on 21 October 2019 The Ukrainian salvage ship Oleksandr Okhrimenko was formally transferred to the Ukrainian Navy from the Ministry of Infrastructure on 29 August 2019 The Project 58181 Centaur Kentavr Project 58503 Centaur LK class is a series of small armored assault craft being built for the Ukrainian Navy The first two vessels were laid down at the Kuznya na Rybalskomu in December 2016 The project was developed by State Research and Design Shipbuilding Center on the basis of the Gyurza M class artillery boats They are designed for patrol service on rivers and coastal maritime areas the delivery and landing of marines Two ships on trial one on order Unloading the former U S Coast Guard boat Starobilsk in Odessa in October 2019 In 2018 the United States offered Ukraine some of its Oliver Hazard Perry class frigates from its reserve fleet The details of this offer were being worked out as of October 2018 83 Ukrainian shipbuilder Kuznya na Rybalskomu launched a new medium reconnaissance ship Lahuna for the Ukrainian Navy on 23 April 2019 84 On 20 October 2019 the unfinished ship arrived in Odesa for completion and commissioning 85 The US State Department approved a Foreign Military Sales case for the supply of up to 16 Mark VI patrol boats and associated equipment to Ukraine in June 2020 12 boats out of the 16 approved for sale has been ordered as of January 2022 and the Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has said that deliveries of the Mark VI patrol boats to Ukraine will begin in 2022 86 87 In October 2020 Ukraine and the United Kingdom signed a memorandum in which the UK government pledged to provide a 10 year loan of up to 1 25 billion 1 6 billion for the re equipment of the Ukrainian Navy 88 In June 2021 during a visit by HMS Defender to Odesa it was revealed that an agreement had been reached for two Sandown class minehunters to be transferred to the Ukrainian Navy upon decommissioning from the Royal Navy 89 In December 2020 Ukraine signed an agreement for the production of four Ada class corvettes 90 Ukraine is developing a supersonic cruise missile named Bliskavka to arm its warships 91 The Ukrainian Navy received its first complex of Bayraktar Tactical Block 2 drones on 15 July 2021 73 Notes Edit Adopted in 2016 References Edit a b The Military Balance 2022 International Institute for Strategic Studies February 2022 ISBN 9781000620030 Marsh VMS Ukrayini zvuchav i na Arbati Ukrainian Navy to celebrate its holiday on first Sunday of July decree Interfax Ukraine 12 June 2015 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 14 May 2016 President signs Decree On Celebration of Some Memorable Dates and Professional Holidays President gov ua 30 December 2011 Archived from the original on 2012 01 22 Reif Joe 2001 The Global Road Warrior 100 Country Handbook for the International Business Traveler 3rd ed Novato California World Trade Press p 781 ISBN 1 885073 86 0 Archived from the original on 2016 02 04 Retrieved 2016 02 20 Ukraine Intelligence amp Security Activities and Operations Handbook Vol 1 Washington D C International Business Publications USA 2009 p 250 ISBN 978 0 7397 1661 8 Archived from the original on 2016 05 11 Retrieved 2016 02 20 UKAZ PREZIDENTA UKRAYiNI 246 2022 Pro prisvoyennya vijskovogo zvannya 16 April 2022 Zelensky taps Rear Admiral Neizhpapa to command Ukraine s Navy Photo Ukrainian Independent Information Agency 11 June 2020 a b c d e f g h The Navy of the Armed Forces of Ukraine mil gov ua 1996 08 17 Archived from the original on August 5 2012 Retrieved 2014 03 02 a b Ukraine s navy barely recovering from its near death experience Kyiv Post 29 August 2015 Archived from the original on 10 January 2016 Retrieved 14 May 2016 Ukrainian Armed Forces 2007 White Book PDF mil gov ua in Ukrainian p 111 Archived from the original PDF on April 8 2008 Retrieved April 8 2008 Order of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine 9 August 2005 Verkhovna Rada website Resolution of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine 1 March 2006 Verkhovna Rada website a b Project 58250 Corvette Hayduk 21 Gaiduk 21 Volodymyr Velyky Vladimir the Great globalsecurity org 24 July 2014 Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 14 May 2016 Willard Marine to supply patrol boats to Ukraine bairdmaritime com 4 February 2014 Archived from the original on 5 June 2016 Retrieved 14 May 2016 Ukrainian Navy to receive two Gyurza M boats Azeri Defence 9 November 2015 Archived from the original on 5 March 2016 Retrieved 14 May 2016 Rogoway Tyler 3 March 2022 The Ukrainian Navy s Flagship Appears To Have Been Scuttled The Drive Retrieved 2022 03 15 a b c Cossack Navy 16th 17th Centuries Web Cite Archived from the original on October 20 2009 Operation Fleet For Ukraine The Ukrainian Week 16 May 2011 in Russian Crimean campaign of Peter Bolbochan in 1918 Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty April 2018 Ukraine Historical Naval Flags 1918 Retrieved October 2009 a b Text of the agreement on oath in the strategic formations Zakon nau ua 1992 01 16 Archived from the original on October 30 2014 Retrieved 2014 03 02 a b Ukrainian Navy History globalsecurity org 27 March 2014 Archived from the original on 3 March 2016 Retrieved 14 May 2016 a b What is Black Sea Fleet Worth Forum a Ukrainian review at Diasporiana No 86 Summer 1992 page 35 a b Ukrainian Navy globalsecurity org 26 April 2014 Archived from the original on 21 July 2016 Retrieved 14 May 2016 Kozhara Hetman Sahaidachny frigate to join NATO s anti piracy operation Interfax Ukraine 17 September 2013 Archived from the original on 17 September 2013 The Destruction of a Squadron A sequel Day kiev ua Archived from the original on July 17 2012 Retrieved 2014 03 02 Ukraine and Russia to resume joint naval exercises Information Telegraph Agency of Russia 12 March 2010 dead link The Washington Charter on Strategic Partnership confirms guarantees of Ukraine s security says U S ambassador Interfax Ukraine 22 December 2008 Archived from the original on August 15 2009 Yushchenko pressed for the development of a new Ukrainian corvette Interfax Ukraine 12 October 2009 Archived from the original on May 21 2011 Jones Sam McGreal Chris 6 February 2009 Somali pirates release Ukrainian arms ship The Guardian Archived from the original on 30 October 2014 Retrieved 30 October 2014 NATO News Ukraine contributes to NATO s Ocean Shield 10 Oct 2013 NATO 10 October 2013 Archived from the original on 30 October 2014 Retrieved 30 October 2014 Frigate Hetman Sahaydachniy joins EU s operation Atlanta ForUm Archived from the original on August 19 2014 Retrieved August 18 2014 a b in Ukrainian Zelensky s Mosquito Fleet Details of Negotiations with Britain Capable of Changing Ukrainian Navy Ukrayinska Pravda 11 September 2020 a b Pro Russian crowds seize 3 Ukrainian warships Europe news Mail com 2014 03 20 Archived from the original on 2014 03 21 Retrieved 2014 04 23 a b Over 70 military units in Crimea hoist Russian flags TASS 20 March 2014 Archived from the original on 26 March 2014 Retrieved 14 May 2016 Russian marine kills Ukraine navy officer in Crimea says ministry Reuters com Reuters April 7 2014 Ripley Tim 25 March 2014 Ukrainian navy decimated by Russian move into Crimea Jane s Defence Weekly Archived from the original on 2014 03 25 Ripley Tim 2 April 2014 Ukrainian Navy decimated by Russian move into Crimea Jane s Defence Weekly p 17 Russia returns Ukraine s tanks but keeps ships Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved September 20 2014 a b c Russia begins returning Ukraine naval vessels and aircraft Jane s Defence Weekly 12 April 2014 Archived from the original on April 18 2014 a b c Seleznev Denis 6 August 2014 Flot Ukrainy 2014 na chto sejchas sposobny ostatki ukrainskogo flota Korrespondent net in Russian Archived from the original on 22 October 2014 Retrieved 30 October 2014 a b Meksika vernyot Ukraine sudno zahvachennoe Rossiej vo vremya anneksii Kryma news ru ua in Russian 18 February 2016 Archived from the original on 22 July 2016 Retrieved 14 May 2016 Frigate Hetman Sahaydachniy forces Russian ships to leave Ukrainian waters Charter 97 20 March 2014 Archived from the original on 30 October 2014 Retrieved 30 October 2014 a b Putin says Russia ready to return Ukrainian military ships aircraft left in Crimea Ukrainian Independent Information Agency 12 January 2018 Ukraine marks 100th anniversary of Ukraine s Navy Ukrainian Independent Information Agency 29 April 2018 List of stolen ships of the Ukrainian Navy INTV March 21 2014 Komanduvannya VMS ZS Ukrayini Dezertiri ta zradniki vmsu org Archived from the original on August 4 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Pro Russian separatists demand independence from Ukraine New York Post Associated Press 7 April 2014 Archived from the original on 3 November 2014 Retrieved 30 October 2014 UKRAINE Ukrainian coast guards ready to resume regular patrols along the sea border with Russia after leaving the Crimean port of Kerch and relocating to Mariupol ITN Source 26 March 2014 Archived from the original on 30 October 2014 Retrieved 30 October 2014 Neizvestnye voennye atakovali poberezhe Azovskogo morya Delovoj portal Kapital Biznes nachinaetsya s Kapitala in Russian 5 July 2014 Archived from the original on 30 October 2014 Retrieved 30 October 2014 Pid Doneckom geroyichno zaginuv komandir ochakivskih morskih pihotinciv TSN ua in Ukrainian 18 August 2014 Archived from the original on 11 September 2014 Retrieved 30 October 2014 Russian snipers attack Ukraine s Pochaiv ship from seized Chornomornaftohaz rig Ukrainian Naval Forces PHOTOS Censor NET a b Russian Military Forces Fire on Ukrainian Vessel and Aircraft Within Ukraine s Exclusive Economic Zone in the Black Sea February 1 2017 Osborn Andrew Polityuk Pavel 25 November 2018 Russia seizes Ukrainian ships near annexed Crimea after firing on them Reuters Archived from the original on 26 November 2018 Retrieved 26 November 2018 Russia s Don coast guard ship rams Ukrainian tugboat amid transfer from Odesa to Mariupol video Ukrainian Independent Information Agency 25 November 2018 Rosiya perekrila chvert Chornogo morya July 26 2019 Russia s Black Sea Dominance Strategy A Blend of Military and Civilian Assets Jamestown The Ukrainian Navy s Flagship Appears To Have Been Scuttled The Drive 3 March 2022 Ukraine Reports Loss of U S Built Patrol Boat by Russian Missile The Maritime Executive 8 March 2022 Ukraine Corvettes and Patrol Ships 22 March 2022 Analysis Russian Armed Forces capture dozen Ukrainian ships in Berdyansk Captured Ukrainian ships and boats in Berdyansk Ukrainian Navy Ship in Dramatic Escape Survives Russian Artillery Attack 10 June 2022 NavyLookout 20 October 2022 Ex HMS Ramsey and HMS Blyth have been sold to the Romanian Navy Tweet Retrieved 21 October 2022 via Twitter Royal Navy s HMS Shoreham taking final voyage on south coast Plymouth Herald 11 May 2022 Dmytro Kovalenko commander of the Ukrainian Navy move to Azov Sea Archived 2018 10 31 at the Wayback Machine Ukrinform 4 October 2018 Na kvartirnomu obliku u ZSU perebuvaye 19 5 tis simej vijskovosluzhbovciv uchasnikiv bojovih dij zastupnik ministra oboroni armyinform com ua in Ukrainian Retrieved 2022 02 15 Yak Ukrayina rozbudovuye svoyu armiyu Vijskovo morski bazi depo ua in Ukrainian Retrieved 2022 02 15 a b Willard Marine Wins Order To Supply Patrol Boats To International Navies Homeland Security Today Archived from the original on 2016 02 12 Retrieved 2015 06 22 Na voenno morskoj baze v Odesse osvaivayut amerikanskie katera dlya specnaza Information Resistance Archived from the original on 2015 06 23 Retrieved 2015 06 22 Commander Ukrainian Navy to have 11 ships 10 aircraft 31 vessels by end of 2012 Kyiv Post 30 November 2012 Archived from the original on 10 January 2016 Retrieved 14 May 2016 a b Ukrainian military gets first Turkish Bayraktar UAV complex Ukrinform 15 July 2021 Ponomarenko Illia 15 March 2021 Ukraine s navy acquires first Neptune cruise missiles kyivpost com Retrieved 21 January 2022 Taylor Adam 2022 04 15 Neptune missile strike on Moskva ship shows strength of Ukraine s homegrown arms The Washington Post Retrieved 2022 05 16 Russian warship Moskva sinks in Black Sea BBC News 2022 04 15 Retrieved 2022 04 23 US supports Ukraine s claim that Moskva was hit by Neptune anti ship missile ABC News 2022 04 16 Retrieved 2022 04 23 How Can Swedish RBS 17 Anti Ship Missiles Help Ukraine Naval News 5 June 2022 Retrieved 17 June 2022 a b c Ukraine Blasts Russian Tug Near Snake Island With Land Based Harpoon Missiles Forbes 17 June 2022 Retrieved 21 June 2022 And what will happen to the Project 58250 corvette or Ourselves s vusami Archived from the original on October 30 2014 Retrieved 30 October 2014 Na voenno morskoj baze v Odesse osvaivayut amerikanskie katera dlya specnaza Information Resistance Archived from the original on 2015 06 23 Retrieved 2015 06 22 At the capital city factory in shocking pace are being built armored boats for the Odessa river division of Ukrainian Navy Dumskaya 3 February 2015 U S eyes giving Ukraine Oliver Hazard Perry frigates to boost defenses in Black Azov Seas Ukrainian Independent Information Agency 18 November 2018 Archived from the original on 2018 10 18 Retrieved 2018 10 20 Ukraine launches new reconnaissance ship in Kyiv Naval Today 25 April 2019 Russian Ukrainian War on Instagram Recently an unfinished middle sized reconnaissance ship of the Laguna project was launched in Kherson after which it made a crossing of Instagram Archived from the original on 2021 12 23 MK VI patrol boat order for Ukraine confirmed Janes 1 October 2021 USA to begin transferring Mark VI combat boats to Ukraine in 2022 Ukrinform 5 July 2021 Retrieved 18 January 2022 Britain and Ukraine have agreed to jointly produce missile boats for the Armed Forces Ukrayinska Pravda 7 October 2020 Allison George 22 June 2021 UK giving two Sandown class mine hunters to Ukraine UK Defence Journal Retrieved 4 August 2021 Archus Dorian 17 December 2020 Ukraine ordered four ADA class corvettes from Turkey navalnews net GDC 2019 11 25 Ukraine is developing a new supersonic missile Bliskavka Lightning Global Defense Corp Retrieved 2021 07 22 External links and further reading Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ukrainian Navy Jane s Navy International Interview Admiral Viktor Maksymov C in C Ukraine Navy JNI December 2010 34 Ukrainian Navy ferial excursions into the past and present Interview of Borys Kozhyn Magazine Hetman 1 24 2009 in English and Ukrainian Navy page on the official site of the Ministry of Defence in English in Ukrainian in English and Ukrainian Ukrainian Navy Website in English Archived 2020 12 08 at the Wayback Machine in Ukrainian Archived 2019 11 27 at the Wayback Machine World Navies Today Ukraine full unofficial list of vessels with descriptions as of March 2002 no images in Russian Photogallery of Ukrainian Navy vessels most vessels available with pennant numbers no detailed descriptions Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ukrainian Navy amp oldid 1129859948, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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