Bellingcat presents interactive data map of Russia artillery attacs on Ukraine

Bellingcat, an international OSINT community, has presented an interactive data map of Russian artillery attacs on Ukraine in summer 2014.

Bellingcat experts have used available satellite images and open sources to analyze hundreds of impact craters left after Russian artillery strikes in Donbas, eastern Ukraine, and spotted hundreds of firing positions in Russia`s areas bordering Ukraine.

”In total, as evidenced by the number of impact craters, thousands of artillery projectiles were fired by the Russian military on targets inside Ukraine in the summer of 2014,” they concluded.

The main findings are, among others, that artillery units of the Russian Armed Forces fired at least on 149 separate occasion attacks against Ukraine in the summer of 2014. Another 130 locations were judged likely to have been used as artillery position.

”408 artillery target sites inside Ukraine within range of Russian artillery systems have a trajectory crossing the Ukrainian-Russian border, 127 of them are within 3 km of the Russian border,” says a report by Sean Case and Klement Anders, which was titled ”Putin`s Undeclared War: Summer 2014 – Russian Artillery Strikes against Ukraine” and presented with the map.

”Due to the current lack of publicly-available satellite imagery evidence and the rigid classification criteria used here, these figures represent lower bound estimates of the true numbers of artillery attacks, i.e. there were likely considerably more than 149 attacks as already indicated by the 130 further likely artillery positions,” the report said.

Bellingcat experts concluded that artillery attacks of the Russian Armed Forces from Russian territory began from early July 2014 and increased in frequency and scale into August and September 2014.

”Cross-border artillery attacks can be found in the entire border area of the conflict zone in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions. Due to the frequency, spatial distribution, and scale of the artillery attacks considered in this report, it is impossible to consider these attacks merely as accidents or as the actions of rogue units. These attacks can only therefore be considered as acts of war of the Russian Federation against Ukraine,” the report said.

After the annexation of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, which was part of Ukraine, Russia in March 2014 started to destabilize the situation in Donbas, eastern Ukraine. Russia has been shipping weapons to terrorists of the two self-proclaimed Donbas republics, also sending its regular troops there.

On February 12, 2015, peace agreements on Donbas were signed in Minsk in an attempt to end hostilities in Luhansk and Donetsk region. The agreements stipulate, among other things, a full ceasefire from 00:00 local time on February 15, 2015, the withdrawal of all heavy weapons and swaps of prisoners of war. However, the Russian-backed separatists regularly violate all the agreements.

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