Russia has issued a veiled warning over the future of grain exports via the Black Sea, after Moscow refused to extend a key agreement allowing safe passage for cargo ships from Ukrainian ports.
The caution came hours after Ukraine said a Russian strike overnight had damaged facilities at the southern port of Odesa, one of the main transit hubs for grain under the pact signed with the UN and Türkiye.
"Without appropriate security guarantees, certain risks arise here (in the Black Sea)," Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said.
Were a new arrangement to allow for exports "formalised without Russia, then these risks should be taken into account,” he said.
But Peskov put Moscow's position in starker terms when he said Ukraine was using the Black Sea export corridor "for combat purposes.”
‘Safe navigation guarantees’
Russia later told Türkiye that the coordination centre overseeing the deal would be disbanded in the wake of Moscow's exit.
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told his Turkish counterpart Hakan Fidan the decision to quit the deal also meant Russia would lift "safe navigation guarantees" for cargo ships in the Black Sea.
Moscow said its strike on Odesa came in retaliation for a Ukrainian attack one day earlier on the Crimea bridge, a key transit artery linking Russia's mainland to the peninsula annexed by Moscow in 2014.
The bridge was targeted using seaborne drones by Kiev's navy and SBU security service, a source told AFP.
Russian forces struck back against "facilities where terrorist acts against Russia had been prepared using unmanned boats", the defence ministry said in a statement.
Port facilities ‘damaged’
Kiev's military earlier said it had "destroyed" six Kalibr missiles and 21 Iran-built attack drones targeted at the Odesa region, but that port facilities were damaged in an assault overnight.
"Unfortunately, the debris of the downed missiles and the blast wave from the downing damaged the port infrastructure facilities and several private homes," Ukraine's military southern command said in a statement.
Across the country, Ukraine's air force said it had destroyed 31 of the 36 drones launched by Russia overnight.
The Odesa region is home to the maritime terminals central to the export deal between Moscow and Kiev that has enabled the shipment of more than 32 million tonnes of Ukrainian grain over the past year.
Russia’s war against Kiev saw Ukraine's Black Sea ports blocked by warships until the agreement –brokered by the UN and Türkiye and signed in July 2022 – allowed critical grain shipments to restart.
Russia decries 'unfairness'
The Kremlin said it was exiting the deal on Monday, after months of complaining that elements of the agreement allowing the export of Russian food and fertilisers had not been honoured.
Russia's decision to quit the grain accord was a “huge mistake”, French President Emmanuel Macron said, following a meeting of European, Latin American and Caribbean leaders in Brussels.
Russian President Vladimir Putin had “decided to weaponise food”, Macron said.
On Monday, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Ukraine was, nonetheless, prepared to keep exporting grain via the Black Sea despite Russia's exit.