Login

 

Forgot password?
submarines shipbuilding Black Sea Fleet exercise Pacific Fleet Russian Navy Northern Fleet strategy cooperation Ukraine visits Russia piracy missiles trials Sevastopol history Sevmash presence contracts drills Baltic Fleet industry incident anti-piracy shipyards frigate training Gulf of Aden Somalia India developments reforms opinion Borei procurements policy Russia - India aircraft carrier Crimea arms exports USA St. Petersburg France tests financing Bulava Yury Dolgoruky US Navy Serdiukov cruise Mediterranean Zvezdochka NATO innovations United Shipbuilding Corporation Indian Navy Medvedev Arctic agreements commission Admiral Gorshkov Admiralteyskie Verfi Mistral Vladivostok accident hijacking corvettes overhaul Admiral Kuznetsov Russia - France anniversary Vysotsky Rosoboronexport event ceremony Yantar Severomorsk negotiations defense order conflict aircraft China deployment naval aviation investigations Black Sea Putin Varyag coast guard Novorossiysk Vikramaditya landing craft Far East crime marines meeting Severnaya Verf scandals memorials traditions Syria Japan statistics escort South Korea Neustrashimy Yasen tenders Marshal Shaposhnikov Admiral Chabanenko convoys Ukrainian Navy Severodvinsk Chirkov problems reinforcement tension firings tragedy technology Moskva search and rescue frontier service Baltic Sea Almaz provocation hostages upgrade Caspian Flotilla court Dmitry Donskoy rumors Turkey keel laying helicopters shipwreck Kilo class death Petr Veliky Admiral Panteleyev Atalanta Kaliningrad World War II Admiral Vinogradov Norway Rubin delivery launching patrols
Search
Our friends russian navy weapons world sailing ships
 
Tell a friend Print version

Ukrainian frontiersmen are ready to fight against Russia when needed

12/03/2010 
Text: Rosbalt
Photo: Tuzla Bar. taman-leto.ru
In contrast to Ukraine's Zmeiny Island (specifically, the adjacent shelf) handed over to Romania, Ukrainian frontiersmen will never left Tuzla. Seventeen servicemen who keep watch at Ukraine's outpost are ready to rebuff invaders if necessary, writes Krymskaya Pravda.

According to the frontier post commander Capt Alexander Galaniuk, despite the quiet situation "this area is of strategic significance". "If needed, reinforcement will come soon. Ships and boats will arrive in 12 minutes, helicopters – in three hours", he said.

Not 17 but 500 Ukrainian frontiersmen were here in 2003. "Ukraine was seriously preparing for battle; the site was heavily militarized", said the newspaper.

Answering the question about plans to disband the frontier post as it was at Zmeiny Island, the top-ranking official from Ukrainian Frontier Service knapped: "The frontier post Tuzla will remain there".

According to the newspaper, Tusla is the only frontier post in Ukraine.

Recall that Tuzla became a subject of territorial dispute between Russia and Ukraine in 2003. Russian authorities insisted that Tusla is a part of bar belonging to Russian territory while only continental part of Crimea Peninsula was handed over to Ukraine in 1954. As is known, Ukraine demands that the frontier must coincide with old Soviet border line between Crimean region (Ukrainian Soviet Republic) and Krasnodar Krai (Russian Soviet Republic). Moscow says there were no water borders between Soviet republics and that it is not a frontier but simply a division of responsibility zones. "If we draw the line in the Ukraine's manner, it would lie just at Russian coast. They would control Tuzla and fairways. It means that Russia would lose own access from the Azov to the Black Sea", explained a high-ranked Russian negotiator.

Back to the news list