Military release unique footage of the bridge strike in Armyansk
Kyiv • UNN
Fighters of the 1st Separate Assault Regiment named after Kotsiubailo and the SBU disabled a bridge in Armyansk. As a result of the attack, 50 of the occupiers' trucks carrying fuel and ammunition were destroyed.

Unique footage of the strike on the bridge in Armyansk and trucks carrying ammunition and fuel was shared by fighters of the 1st Separate Assault Regiment named after Dmytro Kotsiubailo, UNN reports.
"No intact bridges remain for enemy logistics from the occupied Crimea.
A series of precise strikes was carried out on the night of June 11. Up to 50 trucks, ready for dispatch to the Huliaipole direction, were concentrated in the strike zone near the bridge in Armyansk. The bridge itself was disabled using FirePoint assets and does not require a repeat strike — a vital enemy logistical route is completely paralyzed," the fighters reported.
This operation is the result of systematic work by the joint multi-domain center "Phalanx" of the 1st Separate Assault Regiment named after Dmytro Kotsiubailo, the 475th Separate Assault Regiment "CODE 9.2," and the SBU Special Operations Center "Alpha." The strikes are aimed at bleeding the enemy's 37th and 64th Motorized Rifle Brigades, which we are fighting against.
"We are reclaiming territories not at the cost of lives, but through comprehensive work. This is not the end. To be continued," the military added.
Additional Information
On the night of June 9, the Chonhar Bridge, which connects Crimea with the Kherson region, suffered repeated strikes.
The first instance occurred on the night of June 7 — Ukrainian FP-2 and Behemoth drones attacked the Chonhar Bridge connecting the Kherson region with Crimea. The strike was carried out by units of the Phalanx multi-domain operations center of the 1st Separate Assault Regiment and the 475th Separate Assault Regiment Code 9.2. Following the attack, traffic on the bridge was blocked. Presumably, the second strike was delivered using the same assets.
On June 11, reports emerged of strikes on two bridges across the North Crimean Canal — in the vicinity of the settlements of Preobrazhenka and Myrne.