About ten Tu-95 strategic bombers are currently deployed at Olenya Air Base on the Kola Peninsula. Photo: Russian Ministry of Defense
Arctic Russian airbase “undoubtedly” on radar of
Ukrainian armed forces, expert says
The Olenya airbase
is undoubtedly on the radar of Ukrainian armed forces, says an expert after a
wave of bombers from the Kola Peninsula again launched a massive cruise missile
attack on Ukraine, the third since Christmas.
By
January 09, 2024
Ukraine’s
Air Force early Monday morning reported on Telegram that
13 Russian strategic bombers had taken off, of which nine came from Olenya
airbase.
Located
inside the Arctic Circle, the airbase is as far from Ukraine as it is possible
to come in the European part of Russia.
A few
hours after take-off, the Tu-95 warplanes launched their deadly loads,
typically four cruise missiles each, against targets in four oblasts in
Ukraine. Although most were shot down, a few hit their targets including
in Kharkiv, Ukraine’s second-largest city.
4
civilians were killed and 33 more injured in the attack.
Monday’s
massive air strike was the third in just over a week as Moscow intensifies its
war of hitting civilian infrastructure and apartment blocks. Russia’s
state-controlled propaganda agency TASS claims the
missiles were targeting Ukrainian military-industrial complex
facilities.
Like
the attacks on December 29 and January 2, most
planes came from Olenya just south of Murmansk. It was last spring the
strategic air forces relocated more than 10 Tu-95M
and Tu-160 long-range bombers to Olenya. The move came after
Engels airbase in Saratov region was hit by Ukrainian drones.
In
August 2023, also six Tu-22M3 were relocated from
Soltsy-2 airbase in Novgorod region to Olenya after at least one plane was
damaged by fire after an attack. Soltsy-2 is 650 km away from Ukraine.
A key
question, however, is for how long are the bombers safe in the Murmansk
region.
Olenya
airbase is more than 1,800 km from Ukraine, but it is well known that sabotage
groups are operating inside Russia.
“A
recent example is last week’s torching of a Su-34 fighter-bomber at the
Shagol air base in Chelyabinsk,” says Kristian Åtland, a senior researcher
at the Norwegian Defence Research Establishment.
“This
is well east of the Ural mountains. Something similar could in theory happen at
bases located further from the Ukrainian theater of operations, including the
Kola Peninsula,” Åtland says to the Barents Observer.
The
Olenya airbase is undoubtedly on the radar of the Ukrainian armed forces, says
Katarzyna Zysk, a professor at the Norwegian Institute of Defence Studies.
“Given
that Ukrainian operatives are in Russia, one cannot exclude a sabotage
or another form of attack to, first of all, undermine the Russian
military capability, as well as to humiliate Moscow as a measure
of psychological warfare,” Zysk says.
She
adds that sabotage actions would be challenging to carry out due to the
region’s remoteness and climatic conditions.
But
as strikes on civilian objects in major Ukraine cities continue with a majority
of the bombers coming from the Russian north, risks of drone attacks or
sabotage actions increase.
“Needless
to say, the Ukrainians want the Russian air attacks to stop, and they are using
all available means to bring them to a halt,” Kristian Åtland says.
“It
is natural to assume that they are looking at all parts of the Russian ‘kill
chain’, including the ground infrastructure.”
There are several weapons storage and readiness facilities near the
airbase, including the location where cruise missiles arrive by train.
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