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Ukraine claims it has hit the Russian bridge leading to Crimea using underwater explosives

Ukraine's SBU Security Service said on Tuesday it had struck the road and railway bridge connecting Russia and the Crimean Peninsula below the level of the water with explosives.

The SBU released a statement in which it said that 1,100 kilograms (2.420 pounds) worth of explosives were used early in the morning to damage underwater pillars on the bridge. This bridge was a major supply route in the past for Russian forces operating in Ukraine.

The Russian official outlet that provides regular updates on the status of the bridge reported its operation was suspended for approximately three hours between 4:00 am and 7:00 am local time.

The bridge was reopened, and it is now functioning normally.

"We hit the Crimean Bridge two times before, in 2022, and 2023." Today we continue this tradition under water," said the SBU in a statement.

The SBU released video footage showing an explosion near one of the many pillars that support the bridge.

The structure and bearing of the bridge matched satellite images and files of the area. The video's date of filming could not be independently verified.

Russian military bloggers claimed that the attack was unsuccessful, and speculated that it may have been carried out using a Ukrainian drone.

Ukraine launched drones on Sunday in an operation codenamed Spider's Web to target Russian long-range nuclear bomber planes located at remote airfields throughout Russia.

The Crimea Bridge, measuring 19 km (12 miles), is the only direct connection between the transport networks of Russia and Crimea peninsula. Moscow annexed the peninsula from Ukraine in

The bridge was the flagship project of Russian President Vladimir Putin. The bridge consists of two separate roads and a railway. Both are supported by concrete stilts. At the point where ships cross between the Black Sea, and the smaller Azov Sea, the steel arches hold a larger span.

The bridge was used during the Russian invasion of Ukraine, in February 2022. They crossed it from Crimea to take over parts of Ukraine’s southern Kherson region and its southeastern Zaporizhzhia region. (Reporting from Pavel Polityuk in Kyiv and Olena Hartmash; additional reporting by Andrew Osborn, editing by Peter Graff & Mark Heinrich).

(source: Reuters)