SBU confirmed strikes on the "Dzhankoi" airbase and port infrastructure in occupied Crimea
Kyiv • UNN
The SBU confirmed strikes on the Dzhankoi airbase and other targets in Crimea. A logistics hub with drones near Pokrovsk was also destroyed.

The Security Service of Ukraine confirmed strikes on the "Dzhankoi" airbase, units of Russian unmanned systems and enemy warehouses in the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine, reports UNN.
Details
"Units of the SBU's 'Alpha' operating in the middle strike zone conducted a comprehensive engagement of priority enemy targets in the temporarily occupied territories of Ukraine last week. These strikes were carried out in fulfillment of the tasks set by the President of Ukraine as part of the systematic reduction of Russia's military potential," the statement reads.
As the SBU stated, "Alpha special forces struck with drones at the military infrastructure of temporarily occupied Crimea," in particular:
- "the military airbase 'Dzhankoi', where repeaters for Russian Orion strike-reconnaissance drones and warehouses with weapons and military equipment were hit";
- "the infrastructure of the 'Krym' port in Kerch";
- "warehouses of ammunition and fuel and lubricants in the settlements of Novohryhorivka and Chervone."
The SBU, as noted, "also destroyed a logistics hub with unmanned aerial vehicles, ground robotic systems, and ammunition in the area of Pokrovsk, Donetsk region." This facility provided logistical support for Russian troops in that direction.
"In addition, points of permanent deployment of Russian unmanned system pilots in the settlements of Kamysh-Zorya and Kamyanka in the Zaporizhzhia region were successfully hit. Enemy military warehouses in Hranitne and Styla, Donetsk region, were also destroyed," the SBU stated.
These special operations, the SBU emphasized, "significantly disrupted elements of Russian troops' logistics, complicating the supply of ammunition and fuel to forward positions." "During the strikes, pilots and command staff of enemy unmanned systems and ground robotic systems units were also eliminated," the SBU said.