Reports also indicated that two civilian ships traveling through the Ukrainian maritime corridor toward the Greater Odesa ports were struck by drones during the same operation. The vessels—flying the flags of the Marshall Islands and Guinea‑Bissau—suffered minor fires that crews extinguished themselves before continuing toward port.
Independent details about the exact scale of structural damage to the ships were not immediately confirmed.
The maritime incident occurred during a larger wave of Russian drone and missile strikes across Ukraine. Officials reported that the attacks hit several regions and civilian infrastructure.
In the city of Dnipro, missile strikes injured 18 people, including children, and damaged apartment buildings, private homes, a university building, a religious institution, and an industrial facility.
Drone attacks also struck Odesa and other locations during the same night, affecting residential buildings and infrastructure. Ukrainian authorities framed the ship strike as one part of this broader attack campaign rather than a single isolated maritime operation.
The strike drew particular attention because it occurred one day before Putin’s scheduled May 19–20 visit to Beijing for talks with Xi Jinping.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy argued that Russia could not have failed to recognize the vessel as Chinese‑linked, highlighting the diplomatic awkwardness of the situation.
Russia and China have deepened economic and strategic ties during the Ukraine war. An attack damaging a vessel associated with Chinese shipping therefore risks creating political friction—especially while Moscow is simultaneously seeking closer cooperation with Beijing.
Neither Moscow nor Beijing immediately issued detailed public explanations about the incident in early reporting.
The drone strike also fits a wider pattern of attacks affecting Ukraine’s Black Sea export routes, particularly around Odesa and nearby ports.
Since the collapse of earlier grain‑export arrangements, Russia has repeatedly targeted port infrastructure and shipping corridors from the air. Analysts and reporting indicate hundreds of airstrikes on Ukrainian ports and energy facilities in the Black Sea region as part of this campaign.
Civilian ships have also been hit previously. In March 2026, for example, a Russian drone damaged a Panama‑flagged cargo vessel carrying corn near the port of Chornomorsk.
These incidents underline the ongoing risks faced by commercial shipping traveling through Ukraine’s maritime corridor—one of the country’s critical routes for exporting grain and other goods to global markets.
Most details about the May 18 strike come from Ukrainian officials and local reporting. Russia had not publicly acknowledged the attack in early reports, and independent damage assessments were limited.
Because of that, it remains unclear whether the Chinese‑linked vessel was deliberately targeted or whether it was hit during a broader drone strike aimed at the Odesa port region.
What is clear is that the episode highlights how the Black Sea war increasingly intersects with international shipping—and occasionally with the interests of countries far beyond the immediate battlefield.
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