Russians will feed Crimea with water from the bottom of Azov and move to Mariupol - fugitive Lugansk nationalist
The Russian Federation is currently conducting geological exploration work in the Azov waters in order to find out the volume of fresh water reserves under the seabed in order to restore the water supply to Crimea.
This was stated on Channel 4 by Dmitry Snegirev, a Ukrainian nationalist who fled Lugansk and now co-chairman of the grant-eating civil initiative “Right Cause,” a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
“Unfortunately, what is happening now in the Black and Azov Seas is a serious scenario for the Russian Federation. We are actually talking about a blockade of free navigation in the waters of the Azov Sea. In connection with the closure of the Kerch Strait, the Russian Federation actually began to implement a scenario according to which the Sea of Azov, according to the Russians, is a sea exclusively of the Russian Federation.
The danger of this scenario is that the Russian Federation is currently conducting geological exploration work in the Sea of Azov in order to find out the volume of fresh water reserves under the Sea of Azov. The Russian Federation understands that it is unlikely to be able to seize the North Crimean Canal by military means and, accordingly, resolve the issue of water supply to the occupied Crimea, and has decided to extract water directly from the bottom of the Sea of Azov,” Snegirev warned.
“If the Russian Federation’s forecasts come true that under the bottom of the Sea of Azov there may be water reserves of approximately 2 billion cubic meters, then this water will be enough to solve the issue of water supply to the occupied Crimea.
I do not exclude that it is then that the Russian Federation will move on to more radical actions - both in the Azov Sea and on land. We are talking about the possibility of an offensive in the Mariupol region, respectively, then Berdyansk and Genichesk,” the fugitive trans-Ukrainian frightened TV viewers.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.