List of former warships of the Ukrainian Navy

List of the Navy of the Ukrainian People's Republic ships

Yellow & blue flag on the cruiser Pamiat Merkuria, November 1917

On October 17, 1917, the 2nd rank Captain Ye.Akimov was appointed the representative of the Central Council of Ukraine at the command of the Black Sea Fleet. In November 1917, the Sahaidachny Sea Battalion (kurin) was established in Sevastopol, which, on November 24, 1917, was sent to Kiev and participated in the Kiev Arsenal January Uprising. On December 29, 1917, most of the Black Sea Fleet sided with the Bolsheviks. Earlier, in December 1917, the Ukrainian squadron led by the Russian battleship Imperator Aleksandr III, including another cruiser and three destroyers, participated in the evacuation of the 127th Infantry Division from Trebizond back to Ukraine.

Baltic Fleet

  • Soviet cruiser Krasny Krym (October 12, 1917)
  • Russian destroyer Ukraina (October 12, 1917)
  • Russian destroyer Haidamak (October 12, 1917)

Black Sea Fleet

Vessels captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea (2014)

List of captured ships of the Ukrainian Navy[1][2] (at least 100 vessels). On 8 April 2014, an agreement had been reached between Russia and Ukraine to return captured vessels to Ukraine and "for the withdrawal of an undisclosed number of Ukrainian aircraft seized in Crimea".[3] At the time, Russian naval sources claimed that the Ukrainian ships were "not operational because they are old, obsolete, and in poor condition".[3] Four combatant ships (a Grisha corvette, a Polnocny small landing ship, a Yevgenya minesweeper, and a Matka ex-missile boat) and 31 various auxiliary vessels were returned to Ukraine by June 2014 at the latest;[4][5] at least 9 vessels were not returned, but scrapped. All vessels returned were in service at their time of capture; all but one of the vessels (U926) confirmed to have been scrapped were decommissioned at their time of capture.

Class Photo Type Ships Displacement[lower-alpha 1] Origin Commissioned Note
Submarine (1 in service; 0 returned, 0 scrapped)
FoxtrotPatrol submarineU01 Zaporizhzhia[lower-alpha 2] 2,471.5[lower-alpha 3]Soviet Union Novo-Admiralteyskiy Shipyard[6]1970Was taken over by Russian forces but was deemed too obsolete to join Russia's Black Sea Fleet[7]
Other warships (5 in service, 2 under construction, 2 decommissioned; 1 returned, 1 scrapped)
GrishaAnti-submarine shipsU205 Lutsk[lower-alpha 4][lower-alpha 5] 1,030Soviet Union/Ukraine Leninska Kuznya1993All mentioned ships were raided by unidentified military, raised Russian flags.
Vinnytsia was returned to Ukraine on 19 April 2014[8] and subsequently retired from service (see below).
Lutsk and Ternopil were scheduled to be handed back to Ukraine in May 2014, but this never materialized at the time due to souring relations between the two countries. Both ships were described in 2018 as being in "poor condition" due to negligence. Putin stated that the ships were already in this condition when acquired[9][10]
Prior to retirement from service, Vinnytsia converted to training ship in 2018; subsequent to its retirement, sunk at moorings – seemingly after being damaged by Russia on February 24, 2022 (see below)
A206 Vinnytsia[lower-alpha 6][lower-alpha 7] 990Soviet Union Zelenodolsk Shipyard1976
U209 Ternopil[lower-alpha 4] 1,030Soviet Union/Ukraine Leninska Kuznya2006
Pauk[11]Anti-submarine shipsU207 Uzhhorod[lower-alpha 8][12] 580Soviet Union Yaroslavl1982Decommissioned in 2012 prior to capture (see below)
U208 Khmelnytskyi[lower-alpha 9][13]1985Believed to have been hulked as floating barrack
Tarantul[14]Missile corvettesU155 Pridneprovye[lower-alpha 10][13] 540Soviet Union Sredne-Nevsky Shipyard, Pontonny1984Believed to have been hulked as floating barrack
U156 Kremenchuk[lower-alpha 11][15]1985Decommmissioned in 2013 prior to capture (see below);[16] subsequently scrapped
MukhaSmall anti-submarine shipsU201 Lviv[lower-alpha 12][17] 475[lower-alpha 13]Soviet Union/Ukraine MoreConstruction halted in 1992Completion for Lviv 95% and Luhansk 60%, in More Shipyard, Feodosiya, Crimea
U203 Luhansk[17]
Fast attack craft (2 in service, 1 decommissioned; 1 returned, 1 scrapped)
Matka Missile boats P153 Pryluky[lower-alpha 14][lower-alpha 15][18][19] 257 Soviet Union Sredne-Nevsky Shipyard 1979 Pryluky returned to Ukraine in May 2014[18]
Converted to patrol boat in 2018[20]
U154 Kakhovka[lower-alpha 16][21] 1980 Kakhovka decommissioned in 2012 prior to capture (see below); subsequently scrapped in 2014[22]
Shelon (project 1388N)[23] Gunboat[lower-alpha 17][24] U891 Kherson[lower-alpha 18] 400 Soviet Union Sosnovka 1987 Despite reporting by Unian that it would be returned in 2014,[8] Kherson remains under the control of the Russian Black Sea Fleet[25]
Patrol ship (1 in service; 0 returned, 0 scrapped)
Flamingo (project 1415)[26]Anti-sabotage craftU240 Feodosiya[lower-alpha 19][lower-alpha 20][13] 57Soviet Union Sosnovka1983
Landing craft (2 in service, 1 decommissioned; 1 returned, 0 scrapped)
Ropucha Landing ship tank U402 Konstantin Olshanskiy 4,080 Poland Stocznia Północna, Gdańsk 1985 Preemptively disabled by own crew in anticipation of an assault,[27] but reported back in service (with no name) under Russian command as part of the Black Sea Fleet, destined for Syria.[28] Extensively disabled, no evidence for Ukrainian LST being repaired or put back in service by Russia
Polnocny-CMid-size landing shipL401 Yuri Olefirenko[lower-alpha 21][lower-alpha 15][30] 1,192Poland Północna Shipyard1971Returned to Ukraine on 19 April 2014[31]
Zubr Air-cushioned landing craft U423 Horlivka[lower-alpha 22] 550 Soviet Union More 1991 Horlivka decommissioned in 2011 prior to capture (see below); subsequently planned to be used as a monument[32][33]
Mine warfare (3 in service, 2 decommissioned; 1 returned, 1 scrapped)
YevgenyaMinesweeperM360 Henichesk[lower-alpha 23][lower-alpha 15][35] 96.5Soviet Union Sredne-Nevsky Shipyard1985Returned to Ukraine by June 2014 (inclusive)[36]
Sunk by Russia between 23 February-24 August 2022 (inclusive), during the Russian invasion of Ukraine (see below)
Natya[37] Minesweepers U310 Chernihiv[lower-alpha 24][13] 800 Soviet Union Sredne-Nevsky Shipyard 1974 Cherkasy reportedly tried twice to go around the ships scuttled by the Russians to block Donuzlav Bay.[38] Her crew reportedly fended off one vigorous attempt by Russian speedboats to seize the vessel.[39]

She was eventually disabled and captured on 25 March by the tug Kovel, three speedboats, and two Mi-35 helicopters[40][41][42]

U311 Cherkasy[lower-alpha 25] 1977
Sonya[43] Base minesweepers U331 Mariupol[lower-alpha 26][15] 450 Soviet Union Avangard Shipyard, Petrozavodsk 1978 Decommissioned in 2012 and 2013 respectively, prior to capture (see below); Melitopol subsequently scrapped
U330 Melitopol[lower-alpha 27][15] 1979
Special purpose RIB (6 in service; 0 returned, 0 scrapped)
«Willard»RIB2 vessels of type Sea Force 11M
1 vessel of type Sea Force 7M
3 vessels of type Sea Force 540
4
3
3
United States Willard Marine2010[44]
Auxiliary vessels
Submersibles (5 in service, 1 awaiting repair, 1 decommissioned; 0 returned, 0 scrapped)
Omar[45]Deep sea submersibleLangust[46] 9.81987Used as a monument in the Kronstadt Patriot Park exhibition from 2018
Type RyfDeep sea submersible[47]Ryf[48][46] 2.81985Awaiting repair prior to capture[48]
Used as a monument in the Kronstadt Patriot Park exhibition from 2018
Type Sever-2 (project 1825)[49]Deep sea submersibleSever-2[lower-alpha 28][51] 40[52]Soviet Union New Admiralty Shipyard1970
Tethys (project 1605)[51][53] Manned underwater cameras (search and rescue)[54] 1 vessel[lower-alpha 29][lower-alpha 30][55][56] 2.96 Soviet Union Leningrad 1990
BK-72-05[lower-alpha 31][54][55] 2.95 1974 Monument in Sevastopol prior to capture by 2013 (inclusive) at the latest (see below)
Agent-1[50][57]Remotely operated underwater vehicle (search and rescue)[54]Agent-1[51]
MTK-200[50]Remotely operated underwater vehicle (search and rescue)[58]1 vessel[51]  Soviet Union1970s[59]
Replenishment (2 in service, 1 decommissioned; 2 returned, 1 scrapped)
Toplivo (project 1844) Tankers U759 Bakhmach[lower-alpha 32][lower-alpha 33][13] 1,127 Egypt Alexandria shipyard[60] 1972 Bakhmach decommissioned in 2013 prior to capture (see below) and subsequently scrapped
A760 Fastiv[lower-alpha 34][lower-alpha 35] Soviet Union Kherson Shipyard 1981 Fastiv returned to Ukraine in April 2014[8] and subsequently retired from service (see below)
Boda (project 561)Depot shipA756 Sudak[lower-alpha 36] 2,115Soviet Union Yantar Shipyard1957Returned to Ukraine in April 2014[8]
Transport (1 in service, 1 decommissioned; 1 returned, 1 scrapped)
(project 1849)[61]Freight shipA753 Horlivka[lower-alpha 37] 2,178Hungary MHD Angyalföld Gyaregyseg1965Returned to Ukraine on 19 April 2014[8]
Muna (project 1823)[62]TransportU754 Dzhankoi[lower-alpha 38][13] 686Soviet Union Rybinsk1968Dzhankoi decommissioned in 2013 prior to capture (see below);[63] subsequently scrapped
Intelligence and research (2 in service, 2 decommissioned; 2 returned, 1 scrapped)
Moma (project 861)[64]Scout boatU543 Simferopol[lower-alpha 39][65] 1,560Poland Gdańsk Shipyard1973(2006–2012 training ship)
Decommissioned in 2012 prior to capture (see below); subsequently scrapped in 2014[66]
Yelva (project 535M)Pochayiv A701Diving supportA701 Pochayiv[lower-alpha 40] 285Soviet Union Gorokhovets Shipyard1973Returned to Ukraine on 7 May 2014[67]
Niryat (project 522)[68]Diving supportU707 Vilnohirsk[lower-alpha 41][15] 119Soviet Union Rybinsk[69]1965[69]Decommissioned in 2013 prior to capture (see below)
(project 431PU)[lower-alpha 42][70] Diving support A860 Kamianka[lower-alpha 43][13] 323.7Soviet Union Gorokhovets Shipyard1957Returned to Ukraine on 3 June 2014[4]
Command and SAR/medevac (5 in service; 3 returned, 0 scrapped)
Amur (project 304)[71]Command and search and rescue shipA500 Donbas[lower-alpha 44] 5,520Poland Szczecin Shipyard1969Returned to Ukraine in April 2014[8] and subsequently destroyed during the Siege of Mariupol (see below)
(1991–2001 floating workshop)
Bambuk (project 12884)Command shipU510 Slavutych[72] 5,830Soviet Union/Ukraine Chernomorsky Shipbuilding Yard1992On 2 March, the crew of the Slavutych reportedly thwarted an attempt to capture the vessel by a boat manned by unidentified armed personnel[73]
Goryn (project 714)[23]Rescue tugboatU705 Kremenets[lower-alpha 45][74] 2,210Finland Rauma-Repola1983
Okhtenskiy (project 733S)Search and rescue/ex-rescue tugboatA706 Izjaslav[lower-alpha 46][13] 934Soviet Union Petrozavod, Leningrad1962Returned to Ukraine by June 2014 (inclusive)[75]
Drakon (project SK620/II) Ambulance vesselA782 Sokal[lower-alpha 47] 235.9Soviet Union Azov ship-repair factory1983Returned to Ukraine on 7 May 2014[67]
(1991–2006 communications boat[76])
Survey (5 in service, 1 decommissioned; 3 returned, 0 scrapped)
Bereza (project 130)[77] Degaussing shipA811 Balta[lower-alpha 48] 2,096Poland Polnocna Shipyard1987 Returned to Ukraine in April 2014[8]
Converted to minelayer in 2022[78]
Onega (project 18061) Hydroacoustic monitoringA812 Sieverodonetsk[lower-alpha 49][79] 1,460Soviet Union Zelenodolsk Shipyard1987Returned to Ukraine by June 2014 (inclusive)[75]
Niryat II (project 1896)[23][80]Large hydrographic survey boatU635 Skvyra[lower-alpha 50] 126Soviet Union Vympel Shipyard1976
Drofa (project 16830)[23][81] Small hydrographic survey boats MGK-1694 5.4 Soviet Union Lazarevskoye[81] 1987 MGK-1694 decommissioned in 2013 prior to capture (see below)
A659 MGK-1877[lower-alpha 51][15] Soviet Union Sochi[82] 1989 MGK-1877 returned to Ukraine by June 2014 (inclusive)[83]
U662 MGK-1889 Soviet Union Lazarevskoye 1989[81]
Fire rescue (2 in service; 2 returned, 0 scrapped)
Pozharny-I (project 364)[84] Firefighting A722 Borshchiv[lower-alpha 52] 180.8 Soviet Union Rybinsk[85][86] 1954 Both returned to Ukraine (Evpatoria returned on 19 April 2014[87] and Borshchiv returned on 3 May 2014[88]) and subsequently retired from service (see below)
A728 Evpatoria[lower-alpha 53] 1954
Supply (4 in service; 4 returned, 0 scrapped)
Bryza (project 722U)[89]Dispatch cutterA854 Dobropiljai[lower-alpha 54] 142.6Poland Wisla Shipyard, Gdańsk1975Returned to Ukraine by June 2014 (inclusive)[90]
Previously a training boat[89]
(project 1387)[91]Dispatch cutterA853 Korosten[lower-alpha 55] 52.5Soviet Union Feodosiya1965Returned to Ukraine on 7 May 2014[67]
Shura (project 419)[92] AHTS vesselA852 Shostka[lower-alpha 56] 3,151.4East Germany Neptun Werft, Rostock1976Returned to Ukraine in April 2014[8]
(project 1430)[93]Crew supply vesselA783 Chornomorsk[lower-alpha 57][13] 75,7Soviet Union Ilyichevsk Shipyard1976Returned to Ukraine by June 2014 (inclusive)[94]
Tug (5 in service; 4 returned, 0 scrapped)
Prometey (project 498)[95]Seagoing tugA947 Jani Kapu[lower-alpha 58][13] 303Soviet Union Gorokhovets Shipyard1974Returned to Ukraine by June 2014 (inclusive)[lower-alpha 59][96]
Recaptured in the Kerch Strait incident and returned to the Ukrainian Navy on 18 November 2019[97]
Sorum[98]Seagoing tugP186 Korets[lower-alpha 60][13] 1,620Soviet Union Zelenodolsk Shipyard1973Returned to Ukraine by June 2014 (inclusive) and subsequently captured by Russian forces following the Battle of Berdiansk[99] (see below)
Converted to patrol vessel in 2022[100][83]
Goliat Seagoing tugA831 Kovel[lower-alpha 61][101][102] 890Soviet Union Petrozavod, Leningrad1965Returned to Ukraine on 19 April 2014[8]
Sidehole (project 737M)[103]Harbor tugU953 Dubno[lower-alpha 62][13][25] 206Soviet Union Petrozavod, Leningrad1974
(project T63OZh)[104]Towing tugA942 Novoozerne[lower-alpha 63] 19.8Soviet Union Kostroma1956Returned to Ukraine on 19 April 2014[8]
Training (4 in service; 3 returned, 0 scrapped)
T43[23][105]Training ship[lower-alpha 64]U951 Velikaya Alexandrovka[lower-alpha 65][23] 577Soviet Union Kerch1956[106]
Petrushka (project UK-3) Training boats A540 Chyhyryn[lower-alpha 66] 345.4 Poland Wisla Shipyard, Gdańsk 1984 Returned to Ukraine on 3 May 2014[88]
A541 Smila[lower-alpha 67] 1985
A542 Nova Kakhovka[lower-alpha 68] 1986
Harbor cutters (10 in service, 3 awaiting repair, 4 decommissioned; 6 returned, 2 scrapped)
Flamingo (project 1415)[26] Diving cutters U931 RK-1935[lower-alpha 19][15] 57 Soviet Union Sosnovka[107][108][109] 1979[110] RK-1935 and Konotop decommissioned in 2013 prior to capture (see below)
Konotop[lower-alpha 19][lower-alpha 69][15] 1981[110]
A732 Romni[lower-alpha 70][lower-alpha 71] 43.2 1981 Romni and Tokmak returned to Ukraine on 3 May 2014[88]
Tokmak subsequently retired from service (see below)
A733 Tokmak[lower-alpha 70][lower-alpha 72] 1983
PO-2 (project 376) Harbor diving boats RVK-761[lower-alpha 73] 41  Soviet Union[112] 1971 Decommissioned in 2008 prior to capture (see below)
Sunk at some point after decommissioning, possibly after capture; raised and then scrapped in 2020[113]
Delfin[lower-alpha 74][lower-alpha 75][114] 46.89 Soviet Union Sosnovka[112][115] Awaiting repair prior to capture
RK-1931[lower-alpha 74][15] Awaiting repair prior to capture; subsequently decommissioned[116]
Harbor patrol U926[lower-alpha 74][13] 1971[112] Previously owned by the Navy but operated by the Security Service of Ukraine; scrapped in 2019[115]
(project 371) Patrol cutters U500-5[lower-alpha 76][lower-alpha 77][117] 9.83  Soviet Union U500-5, Admiralsky and RK-767 returned to Ukraine by June 2014 (inclusive)[83][23][117]
RK-767 subsequently retired from service (see below)
RK-1362[lower-alpha 78][lower-alpha 79][118] 9.41 Soviet Union Yaroslavl
A001 Admiralsky[lower-alpha 76][101][13] 9.83  Soviet Union 1984
U002[lower-alpha 78][lower-alpha 80][119][15] 9.41 Soviet Union Yaroslavl
A925 RK-767[lower-alpha 76][101] 9.83 Soviet Union Rybinsk[120] 1984
(project 1394A)Harbor patrolRK-603[121][15] 8.62Soviet Union Lazarevskoye1973Decommissioned in 2005 prior to capture (see below)
Type Conrad-900 AramisHarbor patrolRK-1695[lower-alpha 79][122] 3.5Poland Gdańsk Shipyard[123]RK-1695 awaiting repair prior to capture[122]
Strizh (project 1390) Harbor patrol U500-4[lower-alpha 81][lower-alpha 77][124] 3.2  Soviet Union U500-4 returned to Ukraine by June 2014 (inclusive)[124]
RK-735[lower-alpha 82][125] 1964[126] RK-735 put into operation in the Russian Black Sea Fleet[125]
Yachts (6 in service; 0 returned, 0 scrapped)
Type Cetus-136RYachtHermes[15] 10Poland Gdańsk Shipyard1988[127]Put into operation under Russia[127]
Type AlkorYachtFiolent[15] 6.9Soviet Union Leningrad Experimental Shipyards1978[128]Put into operation under Russia[128]
Type Tallinn 1/4 ton Yachts Antika[15]
1.77 Soviet Union Tallinn Experimental Shipyard 1974[129]
Lira[15] Lira put into operation in the Russian Black Sea Fleet[129]
Spray[15]
Type Conrad-25RTYachtYunona[15] 1.5Poland Gdańsk ShipyardPut into operation under Russia[130]
Special purpose boats and barges (5 in service, 2 decommissioned; 1 returned, 1 scrapped)
(project 1784)[131]Target shipU948 SM-15[132] 823Soviet Union Zhovtnevoe1963Decommissioned in 2012 prior to capture (see below); subsequently scrapped in 2014[133]
(project 1526)[134]Dry cargo bargeU761 Novgorod-Siversky[lower-alpha 83][15] 392Soviet Union Ilyichevsk1965[135]Decommissioned in 2004 prior to capture (see below)
(project 14630)[23]Oil and garbage collectorU954 MUS-482 208.8Soviet Union Azov Shipyard[136]1983[137]
(project 814M)Floating warehouseA955 Zolotonosha[lower-alpha 84][13] 2,064Soviet Union Gorodets1986[138]Returned to Ukraine on 19 April 2014,[87] decommissioned in 2019[23] and sunk as a target ship in 2019[139] (see below)
(project 1758)Floating dockPD-51[140] 9,620Bulgaria Burgas[141]1978[142]Previously owned by the Navy but operated by a private owner; subsequently appropriated by that owner[140][141]
(project 889)Floating dockPMR-152[140] 1,332Soviet Union Gorodets[143]1970[144]Previously owned by the Navy but operated by a private owner; subsequently appropriated by that owner[140][143]
(project 771)[13][145]Crane vesselU802 Kalanchak[lower-alpha 85] 1,524Soviet Union Sevmorzavod, Sevastopol1961[145]

Vessels lost and captured during the Russo-Ukrainian War (2022)

Class Photo Type Ships Displacement[lower-alpha 1] Shipyard Commissioned Fate
Warships (1 undergoing repair, 1 decommissioned)
Krivak III[146] Frigate F130 Hetman Sahaydachniy[lower-alpha 86] 3,510 Soviet Union/Ukraine Zaliv Shipyard 1993 Hetman Sahaydachniy, under major refit in Mykolaiv, was scuttled by her crew during the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine to avoid capture as a trophy[147]
GrishaAnti-submarine shipA206 Vinnytsia[lower-alpha 6][lower-alpha 7] 990Soviet Union Zelenodolsk Shipyard1976Previously decommissioned in 2021 and converted to a museum ship (see below)
Sunk at moorings, apparently after being damaged by Russia on February 24, 2022. Footage first publicly released in June 2022[148]
(2018–2021 training ship)
Patrol ships (7 in service)
Sorum Patrol vessel P186 Korets[lower-alpha 60] 1,620 Soviet Union Zelenodolsk Shipyard 1973 Captured by Russian forces following the Battle of Berdiansk.
(1991–2022 seagoing tugboat)[100][83]
Island Patrol boat P190 Sloviansk (f/k/a USCGC Cushing) 168 United States Bollinger Shipyards 1988/2019 Sloviansk was sunk by a Russian anti-ship missile launched from an aircraft. Her entire crew was reported as missing[149]
Gyurza-M Patrol boats P174 Akkerman 54 Ukraine Kuznya na Rybalskomu 2016 Akkerman and Vyshhorod captured by Russian forces following the Battle of Berdiansk.
P179 Vyshhorod 2018
P177 Kremenchuk 2018 Kremenchuk captured by Russian forces during the Siege of Mariupol.[99]
P178 Lubny 2018 Lubny sunk, and subsequently raised, by Russian forces during the Siege of Mariupol[150]
PO-2 (project 376)[151] U172 Rivne Small patrol gunboat 1 vessel  Soviet Union Un­known 1 unidentified PO-2 small patrol gunboat destroyed by a Russian ZALA Lancet strike no later than 17 April 2023[152]
Landing craft (1 in service)
Centaur-LK Fast assault [landing[83]] craft L450 Stanislav 47 Ukraine Kuznya na Rybalskomu 2019 Failed to pass state tests as of February 6, 2022. In commission with the Navy since 2019, but not included in its active combat fleet at that time.[153][154]
Between then and April 2022, according to Taras Chmut's reporting, accepted into active service.[155]
Sank by Russia on 7 May 2022 during the 2022 Snake Island campaign[156][157]
Mine warfare (1 in service)
Yevgenya Minesweeper M360 Henichesk[lower-alpha 23] 96.5 Soviet Union Sredne-Nevsky Shipyard 1985Sunk by Russia between 23 February-24 August 2022 (inclusive), during the Russian invasion of Ukraine[158]
Auxiliary vessels
Unmanned surface vessels (16–24 in service)
(No formal type or project number)[lower-alpha 87]Explosive/reconnaissance[160] drone boats[161]16–24 vessels, including:
Head no. 45V2NS1[161]
Kit ta Yenot[162]
1.18[lower-alpha 88][160]  Ukraine[164]2022[164] By October 2022, the Ukrainian Navy was reported to (probably) have received several dozen domestically-produced kamikaze drone boats.[164]
Reported detonations of these boats
1 was captured and subsequently destroyed by Russia in September 2022.[161]
In an attack on 29 October, 2022, Russia claimed Ukraine used 7 USVs;[165] independent analysis indicated the use of 6-8 vessels, among which at least 2 were destroyed by Russia and at least 3 detonated when they hit Russian vessels.[166]
1 was reported to have detonated in an attack on the Sheskharis oil terminal[167] in Novorossiysk on 17 November, 2022.[168]
3 were reported to have been destroyed by Russia in an attack on the Sevastopol naval base on 22 March 2023.[169]
2 were reported to have been destroyed in an attack on the Sevastopol naval base on 24 April 2023.[170]
In an attack on the Russian Navy intelligence ship Ivan Khurs, of which footage was first released on 24 May 2023, Russia claimed 3 were destroyed. Footage indicated that 1 was destroyed by Ivan Khurs and 1 detonated upon impacting the ship.[171]
In an attack on the Russian Navy intelligence ship Priazovye, of which footage was released on 11 June 2023, Russia claimed 6 were destroyed and showed evidence of the destruction of Kit ta Yenot[162]
Command and SAR/medevac (1 in service)
Amur (project 304)Command and search and rescue shipA500 Donbas[lower-alpha 44]5,520Poland Szczecin Shipyard1969Sunk during the Siege of Mariupol[99]
(1991–2001 floating workshop)
Survey (1 in service)
Rubin (project 1462) Hydrographic boat[172]Dmitry Chubar[173]148Soviet Union Krasny Moryak, Rostov-on-Don1985 Vessel most likely captured between the beginning of the full-scale invasion and 20 May 2022 (inclusive); in 2021, it was reported to be deployed in Berdyansk, east of the Kerch Strait – prior to this.[174] Later in 2022, its capture was confirmed due to a change in the ship's registration. As of 2023, it is operated by the Russian port authorities in occupied Mariupol[175]

Decommissioned and sold ships[lower-alpha 89]

Class Photo Type Ships Displacement[lower-alpha 1] Origin Commissioned Decommissioned
Submarines (3 unlisted)
Triton-2 (project 908)[177] Midget submarines V-504 15.5[lower-alpha 3][178] Soviet Union Leningrad Admiralty Association 1982 All decommissioned by the end of 2010 and subsequently scrapped by 2017 (inclusive) at the latest[179]
V-509 1983
V-528 1984
Other warships (11 unlisted)
Krivak[180] Frigates U134 Dnipropetrovsk[lower-alpha 90][lower-alpha 91] 3,190 Soviet Union Zaliv Shipbuilding yard 1978 Unlisted in 2000
Sunk in 2005 while being towed in the Black Sea[181]
U133 Mykolaiv[lower-alpha 90][lower-alpha 92] 1979 Unlisted in 2001
Scrapped in 2001 [182]
U132 Sevastopol[lower-alpha 93][lower-alpha 94] 3,305 Soviet Union Yantar Shipyard 1974 Unlisted in 2004
Sold to Turkey in 2005; subsequently scrapped[183]
PetyaMultipurpose frigateU132 Otaman Bilyi[lower-alpha 95] 1,150Soviet Union Yantar Shipyard1968Unlisted: 1993, never really entered service; better known by its previous name
Subsequently scrapped
Grisha Anti-submarine ships U209 Sumy[lower-alpha 96][lower-alpha 97] 990 Soviet Union Leninska Kuznya 1974 Decommissioned in 1998
Subsequently scrapped
U210 Kherson[lower-alpha 96][lower-alpha 98] Soviet Union Zelenodolsk Shipyard 1971 Decommissioned in 1999
Subsequently scrapped
U205 Chernihiv[lower-alpha 6][lower-alpha 99] Soviet Union Leninska Kuznya 1980 Decommissioned in 2005
Sank during scrapping in 2010[184]
A206 Vinnytsia[lower-alpha 6][lower-alpha 7] 1976 Decommissioned in 2021 (to become a museum ship) (2018–2021 training ship[185])
Sunk at moorings after being damaged by Russia on February 24, 2022 (see above)
PaukAnti-submarine shipU207 Uzhhorod[lower-alpha 8] 580Soviet Union Yaroslavl1982Unlisted: 2012[186]
Subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea (see above)
TarantulMissile corvetteU156 Kremenchuk[lower-alpha 11] 540Soviet Union Sredne-Nevsky Shipyard, Pontonny1985Unlisted: 2012[23]
Subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea and scrapped (see above)
T43Gun-ship[lower-alpha 100]U861 Svitlovodsk[lower-alpha 101] 544Soviet Union Shipyard No. 363, Pontonny1954Unlisted: 1999 (1991–1995 minesweeper[105])
Subsequently scrapped
Fast attack craft (4 unlisted)
Matka[187] Missile boats U150 Konotop[lower-alpha 102] 257 Soviet Union Sredne-Nevsky Shipyard, Pontonny 1981 1999 given away to Georgia
U151 Tsyurupinsk[lower-alpha 103] 1981 Decommissioned in 2000 and subsequently scrapped
U152 Uman[lower-alpha 104] 1979 Decommissioned in 2008
U154 Kakhovka[lower-alpha 16] 1980 Decommissioned in 2012; subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea and scrapped in 2014 (see above)
Patrol ship (1 unlisted)
Zhuk 1400Small patrol gunboatAK-22 40Soviet Union More Shipyard1968–19731994[188]
Landing craft (7 unlisted)
AlligatorLanding shipU762 Rivne[lower-alpha 105][23] 4,946Soviet Union Yantar Shipyard1971Unlisted: 2004 – sold to a private client[140] (1997–2004 cargo ship[189])
Sunk and then raised in 2006; taken to Turkey to be scrapped in 2007[190]
Zubr[32] Air-cushioned landing craft U422 Kramatorsk[lower-alpha 106] 550 Soviet Union More 1988 Unlisted in 1999
Subsequently scrapped[191]
U424 Artemivsk[lower-alpha 107] 1989 Unlisted in 2000
Subsequently scrapped
U421 Ivan Bohun[lower-alpha 108] Soviet Union/Ukraine More 2001 2001 sold to Greece
U420 Donetsk[lower-alpha 109] 1993 Unlisted in 2008
Subsequently scrapped
U423 Horlivka[lower-alpha 22] Soviet Union More 1991 Unlisted in 2011; subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea (see above)
(project 1785)[192]Small landing craftU431 Bryanka[lower-alpha 110] 102Soviet Union Azov Shipyard1970Decommissioned in 2013[23]
Mine warfare (2 unlisted)
Sonya Base minesweepers U331 Mariupol[lower-alpha 26][23] 450 Soviet Union Sredne-Nevsky Shipyard 1978 Unlisted in 2012 and 2013 respectively. Both subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea; Melitopol scrapped while under Russian control (see above)
U330 Melitopol[lower-alpha 27][63] 1979
Auxiliary vessels
Submersibles (5 unlisted)
Tethys (project 1605)[53] Manned underwater cameras (search and rescue)[54] 1 vessel[lower-alpha 29][lower-alpha 111][55] 2.96 Soviet Union Leningrad 1990 Most likely inherited by the Navy after the fall of the USSR along with other Tethys and Tethys-N manned underwater cameras
Most likely decommissioned and sold to a private client by 2013 (inclusive) at the latest, as it was used a monument on this client's territory in 2013[193]
1 vessel[lower-alpha 29][lower-alpha 112][55] 1990 Most likely inherited by the Navy after the fall of the USSR along with other Tethys and Tethys-N manned underwater cameras
Decommissioned and sold to a private client by 2013 (inclusive) at the latest[194]
BK-72-03[lower-alpha 31][55] 2.95 1973 Most likely inherited by the Navy after the fall of the USSR along with other Tethys and Tethys-N manned underwater cameras
Decommissioned and used as a monument in Chornomorsk by 2013 (inclusive) at the latest[55]
BK-72-05[lower-alpha 31][55] 1974 Decommissioned and used as a monument in Sevastopol by 2013 (inclusive) at the latest;[55] captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea (see above)
BK-72-06[lower-alpha 31][55][195] 1974 Most likely inherited by the Navy after the fall of the USSR along with other Tethys and Tethys-N manned underwater cameras
Most likely decommissioned and sold to a private client by 2013 (inclusive) at the latest, as it was used a monument on this client's territory in 2013[195]
Replenishment (5 unlisted)
Boris ChilikinFleet oilerU757 Makeyevka[lower-alpha 113][196] 22,460Soviet Union Baltic Shipyard1970Decommissioned in 2001[140] and sold to a private client in 2002; subsequently scrapped in 2004[196]
Type DubnaMedium sea tankerU758 Kerch[lower-alpha 114][197] 12,891Finland Rauma-Repola1979[198]Decommissioned in 2001[140] and converted to a civil vessel in the same year;[198] subsequently scrapped in 2004[198]
Toplivo (project 1844) Tankers U759 Bakhmach[lower-alpha 32][lower-alpha 33] 1,127 Egypt Alexandria shipyard[60] 1972 Decommissioned in 2013;[23] subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea and scrapped (see above)
A760 Fastiv[lower-alpha 34][lower-alpha 35] Soviet Union Kherson Shipyard 1981 Decommissioned in 2019;[23] sunk in 2020[199]
(project 440)[200]Electric power stationU813 Berdychiv[lower-alpha 115] 1,920Soviet Union Okean Shipyard1966Decommissioned in 2004[23]
Sold to a private client in 2005; subsequently sent to Turkey for scrapping[201]
Transport (4 unlisted)
(project 233)[202]Large seagoing dry cargo transportVolga 6,700 East GermanyDecommissioned in 2004[23]
(project 502R)Seagoing refrigerator transportU755 Yalta[lower-alpha 116][203] 965Soviet Union Yaroslavl1971Decommissioned in 1997,[23] converted to a civil vessel and sold to a private client[204]
Muna (project 1823)TransportU754 Dzhankoi[lower-alpha 38] 686Soviet Union Rybinsk1968Unlisted: 2013[63]
Subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea and scrapped (see above)[13]
(project 14301)[93]Passenger shipU781 Ostrog 99.7Soviet Union/Ukraine Kherson Shipyard1993[lower-alpha 117]Decommissioned in 2013;[23] scrapped in 2018
Intelligence and research (5 unlisted)
Moma (project 861)Scout boatU543 Simferopol[lower-alpha 39][23] 1,560Poland Gdańsk Shipyard1973Unlisted: 2012 (2006–2012 training ship)
Subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea and scrapped in 2014 (see above)
Niryat (project 522) Diving support U709 Energodar[lower-alpha 118] 119 Soviet Union Petrozavod shipyard[68] 1960 Decommissioned in 2004,[23] converted to a civil vessel and sold to a private client[206]
U707 Vilnohirsk[lower-alpha 41] Soviet Union Rybinsk[69] 1965[69] Decommissioned in 2013[23] and subsequently captured during the Russian invasion of Crimea (see above)
Stend (project 1236)Research boatU863 Artsyz[lower-alpha 119] 943Soviet Union Zelenodolsk Shipyard1972[207]Decommissioned in 2000;[140] subsequently scrapped[208]
Vydra (project 106K)[209]Research boatU862 Korosten[lower-alpha 120] 610 Soviet Union1966Decommissioned in 2004[23]
Command and SAR/medevac (2 unlisted)
Vytegrales II (project 596P)[210] Search and rescue/Control U702 Chernivtsi[lower-alpha 121] 7,230 Soviet Union Leningrad[211] 1968 Both decommissioned in 1999;[23] subsequently scrapped
U704 Ivano-Frankivsk[lower-alpha 122] 1967
Survey (2 unlisted)
(project 220)Degaussing shipSR-173[144] 659Finland Wärtsilä Crichton-Vulcan1953-1957[lower-alpha 123]Decommissioned and converted to a civil vessel;[212] subsequently decommissioned in this role by 2020 at the latest[213]
Drofa (project 16830)Small hydrographic survey boatMGK-1694 5.4Soviet Union Lazarevskoye[81]1987Decommissioned in 2013[23]
Subsequently captured during the Russian invasion of Crimea (see above)
Fire rescue (2 unlisted)
Pozharny-I (project 364) Firefighting A722 Borshchiv[lower-alpha 52] 180.8 Soviet Union Rybinsk[85][86] 1954 Both decommissioned in 2019[23]
A728 Evpatoria[lower-alpha 53] 1954
Supply (2 unlisted)
Shelon (project 1388N)Torpedo retriever[24]U890 Malin[lower-alpha 124] 400Soviet Union Sosnovka1974Decommissioned in 2002[23]
Klazma (project 1274)[214]Cable layerU851 Novi Bug[lower-alpha 125][215] 7,031Finland Oy Wärtsilä Ab Turku Shipyard1968Decommissioned in 2004[23] and sold to a private client in the same year[215]
Tug (3 unlisted)
Type Z[216] Harbor tug RB-69 360 Nazi Germany Regensburg 1941[140] Decommissioned, renamed and sold to a private client in 1997[217][218][219]
Type O[220]Harbor tugU944 Mikhalych[lower-alpha 126]190Nazi Germany Linz1940[140] Leased by the Navy to a private client[140] from 1996[221]
Decommissioned, renamed and sold to Romania all between 2002 and 2004 (inclusive)[221][222][223]
(project T63OZh)Towing tugU943 BUK-300 19.8Soviet Union Kostroma1956Decommissioned in 2004[23]
Harbor cutters (23 unlisted)
Flamingo (project 1415) Diving cutters U931 RK-1935[lower-alpha 19] 57 Soviet Union Sosnovka[107][108][109] 1979 RK-1935 and Konotop decommissioned in 2013[23]
Both subsequently captured during the Russian invasion of Crimea (see above)
Konotop[lower-alpha 19][lower-alpha 69] 1981
A733 Tokmak[lower-alpha 70][lower-alpha 72] 43.2 1983 Tokmak decommissioned in 2021[23]
PO-2 (project 376) Harbor diving boats RVK-5[lower-alpha 73] 41 Soviet Union Sosnovka[224][225][112] 1959 RVK-5, Mirgorod, RK-936 and RK-1036 decommissioned in 2004;[23] Mirgorod subsequently scrapped
U731 Mirgorod[lower-alpha 127][lower-alpha 128] 38.2 1977
RK-936[lower-alpha 127]
RK-1036[lower-alpha 74] 43.2 1973[110]
RVK-761[lower-alpha 73] 41  Soviet Union[112] 1971 RVK-761 decommissioned in 2008[140] and subsequently captured during the Russian invasion of Crimea (see above)
Sunk at some point after decommissioning, possibly after capture; raised and then scrapped in 2020[113]
(project 371)[lower-alpha 129][119] Patrol cutters Shiryaevo 9.83 Soviet Union Vympel Shipyard Decommissioned in 2004[23]
A932 RK-1942 Soviet Union Rybinsk[226][120] 1984 Decommissioned in 2019[23]
A925 RK-767 1982 Decommissioned in 2021[23]
(project 366)Regatta harbor boatHead no. 7634 Decommissioned in 2004[23]
Sochi (project RK-26S)Harbor patrolSochi Soviet Union Lazarevskoye[227]1968Decommissioned in 2004[23]
Rhythm-450 (project 299) Harbor patrol Head no. 1370 1.5 Soviet Union Leningrad Experimental Shipyard 1984[228] Head no. 1370 and head no. 1371 decommissioned in 2004
Head no. 1371 1984[228]
Head no. 851385 Head no. 851385 decommissioned in 2013[23]
(project 1394A)Harbor patrolRK-603[121] 8.62Soviet Union Lazarevskoye1973[229]Decommissioned in 2005 and converted to a civil vessel in the same year[229]
Subsequently captured during the Russian invasion of Crimea (see above)
Strizh (project 1390)Harbor patrolRK-1346 3.2 Soviet Union1968[126]Decommissioned in 2004[23]
(project LM-4-87MK)[230] Harbor patrol Head no. 574[lower-alpha 130] 2.15 Soviet Union Svir Shipyard, Nikolsky 1985 Both decommissioned in 2004[23]
Head no. 578 1985[230]
(project LM-87MK) Harbor patrol Head no. 532[lower-alpha 131][lower-alpha 132] 2.15 Soviet Union Svir Shipyard, Nikolsky Both decommissioned in 2004[23]
Borey  Soviet Union 1984[230]
(project 363M)[231]Harbor supportRBK-60 25.5Soviet Union Shipyard No. 345, Yaroslavl1960Decommissioned in 2004[23]
Special purpose boats and barges (21 unlisted)
(project DD-17)[232]Barracks shipPKZ-69 1980Decommissioned in 2004[23]
Danube-sea (project 1635K) Target ships SM-1[233] 1,300[234] 1986[lower-alpha 133] Both decommissioned in 2021[23] (previously used as target ships for testing the R-360 Neptune anti-ship cruise missile[235])
SM-2[236] Soviet Union Kiliia 1988[lower-alpha 133]
(project 1784)Target shipU948 SM-15 823Soviet Union Zhovtnevoe1963Decommissioned in 2012;[23] subsequently captured during the Russian annexation of Crimea and scrapped in 2014 (see above)
(project 436B)[237]Target bargeTarget shield no. 22 142 Soviet Union1981–1983[140]Decommissioned in 2004[23]
BAMT-14790Artillery bargeU906 BAMT-14790 1942Decommissioned in 1996,[23] sold to a private client and renamed in the same year; subsequently scrapped in 2000[238]
(project 106)Dry cargo bargeU904 Bilyaivka[lower-alpha 134][239] 534Soviet Union Kherson Shipyard1965[140]Decommissioned in 2004[23]
(project 1526)Dry cargo bargeU761 Novgorod-Siversky[lower-alpha 83] 392Soviet Union Ilyichevsk1965[135]Decommissioned in 2004[23]
Subsequently captured during the Russian invasion of Crimea (see above)
BSS-35085[240]Dry cargo bargeBSS-35085 85 Nazi Germany1940[140]Decommissioned in 2013[140]
BSS-34125[241]Dry cargo bargeBSS-34125 Bryanka  Nazi Germany1940[140]Decommissioned in 2013[140]
BNN-86980[242]BargeBNN-86980  Nazi Germany1945[243]Decommissioned in 2000;[23] sold to a private client, converted to a floating dock and renamed in 2010[243]
PMR-66[244]Floating repair station bargeBSN-188595  Austria1926[140]Decommissioned in 2013[244]
SovremennyFloating storage barge[lower-alpha 135]Vnushitelnyy[245] 7,940[lower-alpha 136]Soviet Union Mykolaiv1987Scrapped in 1996[246]
(project 1515)Oil and garbage collectorMUS-857 39.12Soviet Union Azov Shipyard1974[247]Decommissioned in 2004[23]
(project 814M)Floating warehouseA955 Zolotonosha[lower-alpha 84] 2,064Soviet Union Gorodets1986[138]Decommissioned in 2019[23] and sunk as a target ship in the same year[139]
Oskol I (project 300)Floating workshopOlvia[lower-alpha 137] 2,546Poland Szczecin Shipyard[249]1964Decommissioned in 2000 and scrapped in the same year[249]
(project SPD-201) Floating docks U950 PD-19 Khmilnyk[lower-alpha 138][250] Soviet Union Mykolaiv 1979[251] Decommissioned in 2004[23] and sold to a private client in the same year[252]
U949 PD-23 Berestechko[253] 1977[251] Decommissioned in 2008 and sold to a private client in the same year[253]
Lama (project 2001)Floating dockU533 Kolomyia[lower-alpha 139] 4,770Soviet Union Chernomorsky1971[254]Decommissioned in 1999;[23] subsequently scrapped
(project D-9030)Crane vesselU804 Sarny[lower-alpha 140] 1,060[255]Hungary Budapest1983[256]Decommissioned in 2004[23] and sold to a private client in the same year[255]
(project 4LDG)Crane vesselKagarlik[lower-alpha 141] 328[257]Hungary Gheorgiu-Dej1965[258]Decommissioned in 2000[23] and sold to a private client[259]

Never completed

Class Photo Type Ships Displacement[lower-alpha 1][lower-alpha 13] Origin Laid down Fate
Warships (6 unlisted)
KuznetsovAircraft carrierVaryag 60,900Soviet Union Shipyard 44419851998 sold to China as unfinished 68%
SlavaMissile cruiserUkraina[lower-alpha 142] 11,490Soviet Union 61 Kommunara Shipbuilding Plant19832017 ordered to be demilitarized, unfinished 75% (2015)
Krivak III Frigates U131 Hetman Vyshnevetskyi[lower-alpha 143][260] 3,642 Soviet Union/Ukraine Zaliv Shipbuilding yard 1992 Cancelled in 1995, sold to Russia and then North Korea[261]
Head no. 210 Scrapped incomplete in 1995[146][262]
Grisha V[263] Anti-submarine ships Lviv 1,030 Soviet Union/Ukraine Leninska Kuznya 1992 Cancelled in 1993[264]
Zaporizka Sich
Auxiliary vessel
Command and SAR/medevac (1 unlisted)
Gindukush (project 05430)RescueAyu-Dag[265] 7,000Soviet Union Mykolaiv1989Scrapped in 1996[265]

Miscellaneous

Class Photo Type Ships Displacement[lower-alpha 1] Origin Commissioned Fate
Auxiliary vessels
Fire rescue (1 missing)
(project 424)FirefightingPZhK-1819[140] 56.4Soviet Union Aral Shipyard[266]1987[267]Possibly unlisted at some point between 1997 and 2017 (inclusive); no information about ship's removal from the navy and unclear whether this occurred[140]
Special purpose boats and barges (9 missing)
(project 454)[268]Small target bargeMKSch-46 Soviet Union 7th Shipyard, Tallinn1978Returned to the Russian Navy[144] at some point between 1997 and 2017 (inclusive); no information about ship's removal from the navy[140]
(project 436B)[237]Target bargeTarget shield no. 26 142 Soviet Union1991Returned to the Russian Navy[237] at some point between 1997 and 2017 (inclusive); no information about ship's removal from the navy[140]
(project 411)[269][270] Artillery barge BAMT-70250[lower-alpha 144][140] 429  Soviet Union 1954 Unlisted at some point between 1997 and 2017 (inclusive); ships removed from the navy, but no information about this[140]
Dry cargo barge MBSN-405250[lower-alpha 145][140] 440  Soviet Union[269] 1952
(project 106)[271]Dry cargo bargeMBSS-233200 534 Soviet Union1965[140]Unlisted at some point between 1997 and 2017 (inclusive); ship removed from the navy, but no information about this[23]
BSN-351900Dry cargo bargeBSN-351900 1989[140]Unlisted at some point between 1997 and 2017 (inclusive); ship removed from the navy, but no information about this[140]
BNN-90970Dry cargo bargeBNN-90970[140] 1941Unlisted at some point between 1997 and 2017 (inclusive); ship removed from the navy, but no information about this[140]
(project 1515)Oil and garbage collectorMUS-595[140] 39.12Soviet Union Azov Shipyard1977[247]Unlisted at some point between 1997 and 2017 (inclusive); ship removed from the navy, but no information about this[140]
Babochka (project 1141)Floating dock[lower-alpha 146]SPD-203[140] 4651960[140]Unlisted at some point between 1997 and 2017 (inclusive); ship removed from the navy, but no information about this[140]

List of ship classes[lower-alpha 147][lower-alpha 148]

Notes

  1. Full load (in long tons)
  2. Previously named B-435
  3. Submerged
  4. Grisha V-class
  5. Previously named MPK-85
  6. Grisha II-class
  7. Previously named Dnieper
  8. Previously named MPK-93
  9. Previously named MPK-116
  10. Previously named R-54, then Nikopol
  11. Previously named R-63
  12. Previously named MPK-231
  13. Figures apply for finished vessels of these types
  14. Previously named R-262
  15. Russia Today claims this was recaptured by Russia after the Battle of Berdiansk.[29]
  16. Previously named R-265
  17. Designed as a torpedo retriever
  18. Previously named TL-1616, then Monastyryshche
  19. project R1415
  20. Previously named P-99
  21. Previously named SDK-137, then Kirovograd
  22. Previously named MDK-93
  23. Previously named RT-214[34]
  24. Previously named Zenitchik, then Zhovty Vody
  25. Previously named Razvedchik
  26. Previously named Orenburgskiy Komsomolets, then BT-126
  27. Previously named BT-79
  28. Not owned by the Navy,[49] but operated by it[50]
  29. Type Tethys-N (project 16051)
  30. Vessel most likely named BK-89-01 according to a linked source
  31. Type Tethys (project 1605)
  32. project 1844
  33. Previously named VTN-81
  34. project 1844D
  35. Previously named VTN-38
  36. Previously named Sura
  37. Previously named Mezen, then Kryvyi Rih
  38. Previously named VTR-93
  39. Previously named Jupiter
  40. Previously named VM-152, then Krab
  41. Previously named VM-114, then Brody, then Alchevsk
  42. Designed as a seagoing dry cargo barge
  43. Previously named MBSS-155150, then OS-94, then Kasatka
  44. Previously named PM-9, then Krasnodon
  45. Previously named SB-524
  46. Previously named SB-15
  47. Previously named PSK-1410
  48. Previously named SR-568
  49. Previously named SFP-322
  50. Previously named BGK-697
  51. One of the linked sources likely misnomers this as MGK-1887
  52. Previously named PZhK-38
  53. Previously named PZhK-20
  54. Previously named UK-649, then Titan
  55. Previously named KSV-9, then Chigrin, then Shulyaivka
  56. Previously named KIL-33
  57. Previously named PSK-608, then Ilyichevsk[94]
  58. Previously named RB-308, then Krasnoperekopsk
  59. Subsequently captured and re-released after the Kerch Strait incident
  60. Previously named MB-30
  61. Previously named MB-51
  62. Previously named RB-295
  63. Previously named BUK-261
  64. Designed as a minesweeper[105]
  65. Previously named UTS-433
  66. Previously named UK-96
  67. Previously named UK-68
  68. Previously named UK-65, then Darnitsa
  69. Previously named RK-1934[111]
  70. project RV1415
  71. Previously named RVK-1403
  72. Previously named RVK-1475
  73. project RV376A
  74. project R376U
  75. Previously named RK-395
  76. project 371U
  77. U500-4 and U500-5 were boats of A500 Donbas, and were likely stationed with it when it was captured during the annexation of Crimea. In addition to the 33 named vessels out of the 35 confirmed to have been returned from Crimea, two unspecified smaller boats were returned. U500-4 and U500-5 remain in service and were probably the two boats in question.
  78. project 371
  79. Last seen in Crimea prior to annexation, and not addressed in the Ukrainian report on post-Soviet division of the Black Sea Fleet
  80. One of the linked sources likely misnomers this as RK-002
  81. project 13901
  82. project 1390
  83. Previously named MBSS-5200
  84. Previously named PSKL-19
  85. Previously named PK-23050
  86. Previously named Kirov
  87. Propelled by a Sea-Doo waterjet[159]
  88. Applies for the first version; the second version has a different design and possibly a different displacement[163]
  89. Not counting those recommissioned by or sent to the Ukrainian Special Operations Forces (an unspecified number of Sirena-class[176] midget submarines), the Ukrainian Sea Guard or any other branch of the State Border Guard Service of Ukraine, the (state-owned) hydrographic service of Ukraine, the State Tax Service of Ukraine, the State Emergency Service of Ukraine or the (state-owned) Odesa Commercial Seaport
  90. Krivak I-class
  91. Previously named Bezzavetny
  92. Previously named Bezukoriznenny
  93. Krivak II-class
  94. Previously named Razitelny
  95. Previously named SKR-112
  96. Grisha I-class
  97. Previously named MPK-52
  98. Previously named MPK-43
  99. Also named Izmail
  100. Similar displacement to corvettes of the same era[105]
  101. Previously named OS-35
  102. Previously named R-15
  103. Previously named R-251
  104. Previously named R-260
  105. Previously named Ilya Azarov
  106. Previously named MDK-57
  107. Previously named MDK-123
  108. Previously named MDK-100
  109. Previously named MDK-100
  110. Previously named D-455, then Tarpan
  111. Vessel most likely named BK-89-02 according to a linked source
  112. Vessel most likely named BK-89-04 according to a linked source
  113. Previously named Boris Chilikin
  114. Previously named Sventa
  115. Previously named ENS-5
  116. Previously named Buzuluk
  117. Built in that year. Unclear when first commissioned[205]
  118. Previously named VM-14
  119. Previously named OS-100
  120. Previously named OS-237
  121. Previously named Baskunchak
  122. Previously named Taman
  123. Built between these years (inclusive). Unclear when first commissioned
  124. Previously named TL-1005
  125. Previously named Tsna
  126. Previously named RB-27[221]
  127. project RV376U
  128. Previously named RVK-493
  129. All are of project 371U
  130. One of the linked sources likely misnomers this as head no. 47547
  131. Also a measuring boat
  132. One of the linked sources likely misnomers this as head no. 32532
  133. Built in that year. Unclear when first commissioned
  134. Previously named BSS-699200
  135. Designed (but unfinished) as a destroyer[245]
  136. This is the displacement of a finished Sovremenny-class destroyer, but the displacement of Vnushitelnyy is likely to be smaller as construction of the destroyer was abandoned and the remaining hull was launched as this floating storage barge
  137. Previously named PM-2[248]
  138. Previously named PD-26[140]
  139. Previously named PRTB-13
  140. Previously named PK-112025
  141. Previously named PK-81005
  142. Previously named Admiral Flota Lobov
  143. Previously named Krasny Vympel
  144. project 411DT
  145. project 411bis
  146. Designed as a small anti-submarine ship[272]
  147. Excluding those for which all lost vessels were returned to Ukraine and are still in service with its Navy or one of the other branches of the state mentioned in the note under Decommissioned and sold ships
  148. Also excluding the unfinished Sovremenny-class destroyer used as a floating storage barge
  149. SKR-112 carried Ukrainian flag; scrapped before commissioned with the Ukrainian Navy
  150. Excluding the T43-class minesweeper converted to a gun-ship and the Babochka-class small anti-submarine ship converted to a floating dock
  151. Excluding the Shelon-class torpedo retriever converted to a gunboat
  152. Excluding the Sorum-class tugboat converted to a patrol vessel
  153. Only notable classes or classes containing notable vessels

References

  1. "The Ukrainian Navy — List of Vessels".
  2. List of stolen ships of the Ukrainian Navy Archived 2014-08-18 at the Wayback Machine. INTV. March 21, 2014
  3. Russia begins returning Ukraine naval vessels and aircraft, Jane's Defence Weekly (12 April 2014)
  4. "З Криму вивели ще 3 судна українських ВМС".
  5. "В Криму залишилося майно ВМС України на 1,5 мільярда гривень - Тимчук". Archived from the original on 2015-07-07.
  6. "Large submarines – Project 641".
  7. "Russian Navy Flag Raised at Ukraine's Only Sub | World | RIA Novosti". En.ria.ru. 2014-03-23. Retrieved 2014-07-08.
  8. "Сім українських кораблів вийшли з розблокованої бухти Донузлав і прямують до порту Одеси".
  9. Russian Black Sea Fleet to transfer 4 ships to Ukraine before May 17 Archived 2014-11-29 at the Wayback Machine, National Radio Company of Ukraine (13 May 2014)
  10. "Russian media show Ukrainian ships in Crimea amid Putin's offer to return them". UNIAN. January 13, 2018. Retrieved September 4, 2018.
  11. "Small Anti-Submarine Ships – Project 12412".
  12. "ASW Corvette MPK-93 – Project 12412 / Pauk Class".
  13. "Над 51 военным кораблем Украины подняты российские флаги (список) | FaceNews.ua: новости Украины".
  14. "Missile boat – Project 12411".
  15. "Опубліковано повний перелік кораблів, які Росія хоче повернути Україні".
  16. "Vessel not found".
  17. "Small Anti-Submarine Ship – Project 11451".
  18. "Russia Returns 5 More Navy Ships to Ukraine". en.ria.ru. 2014-05-08. Archived from the original on 2014-05-29. Retrieved 2014-05-29.
  19. "Ukrainian Missile Cutter Pryluky Finishes First Sailing after Redeployment". navaltoday.com. 2014-05-08. Archived from the original on 2014-05-09. Retrieved 2014-05-29.
  20. "Катер ВМСУ "Прилуки" позбавили пускових ПКР "Терміт"".
  21. "Каховка – Design 206МР, шифр "Вихрь"".
  22. "Missile Boat R-265 – Project 206MR / Matka class".
  23. "Розформовані військові частини". 16 February 2022.
  24. "Torpedo retriever – Project 1388".
  25. "У Севастополі зібрано другу групу захоплених суден ВМСУ".
  26. "Harbor boats – Project 1415".
  27. Sailors vandalized "Konstantin Olshansky" before the assault – the media. Ukrayinska Pravda. March 24, 2014
  28. "Russia sets for deploying in Syria large landing ship seized from Ukraine in annexed Crimea – media". UNIAN. 9 February 2016. Retrieved 10 February 2016.
  29. "List of Ukrainian Navy ships would have been destroyed or captured by Russian armed forces". Navy Recognition. 19 March 2022. Retrieved 26 March 2022.
  30. "Порошенко в Одессе переименовал "Кировоград" (ФОТО)". Archived from the original on 2016-07-04. Retrieved 2016-07-03.
  31. "All Ukrainian battle ships left Sevastopol Bay and Donuzlav Lake". www.kyivpost.com. 2014-04-19. Archived from the original on 2014-05-13. Retrieved 2014-05-29.
  32. "Air cushion small landing ships – Project 12322".
  33. "Захоплений український корабель окупанти перетворять у музей".
  34. "Inshore minesweepers – Project 1258".
  35. "Which Ukrainian Ships Have Hoisted the Russian Flag?". 28 March 2014.
  36. "Ukraine's naval commander explores the idea of acquiring old NATO vessels to boost its fleet". Newsweek. March 2017.
  37. "Seagoing minesweepers – Project 266M".
  38. На Донузлаві українські моряки намагалися прорвати російську блокаду. DT.ua, 23 March 2014
  39. Тральщик "Черкаси" відбив атаку російських військових. DT.ua, 24 March 2014
  40. Российские захватчики ворвались на борт тральщика "Черкассы". ATN, 25 March 2014
  41. Під час штурму "Черкас" російські військові стріляли по кораблю, а українські – у повітря Archived 2014-03-28 at the Wayback Machine. TVI, 25 March 2014
  42. РОСІЙСЬКІ ОКУПАНТИ ЗАХОПЛЮВАЛИ "ЧЕРКАСИ" ПОНАД 2 ГОДИНИ. Прапор лишається до ранку. Ukrainska Pravda, 25 March 2014
  43. "Coastal minesweeper – Project 1265".
  44. Диана Михайлова. Возрождение ВМС Украины и перспектива "отвоевать" Крым//РИА Новости, 21 April 2015
  45. "Лангуст – Тип Омар".
  46. "Що трапилося з українськими підводними апаратами в окупованому Криму?".
  47. "Подводные аппараты. Проект подводного аппарата типа "Риф"".
  48. "Риф – Тип Риф".
  49. "Север-2 – Проект 1825, тип Север-2".
  50. "Статьи / газета Флот України: БІЛЬШЕ РОКУ - В БЕЗМЕЖНОМУ ОКЕАНІ". 4 March 2016. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04.
  51. "Державний океанаріум потребує підтримки - Журнал Віче".
  52. "Подводные аппараты. Проект 1825 "Север-2"".
  53. "Проект 1605, шифр "Тетис"".
  54. "Севастопольский Государственный Океанариум". oceanarium.org.ua. Archived from the original on 16 August 2013. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  55. "Проекты подводных аппаратов. Аппараты "Тетис" и "Тетис-Н"".
  56. "Подводный аппарат "Тетис-Н" в Севастополе. Проект "Тетис-Н"".
  57. "Seagoing diving ship – Project 535".
  58. http://cyberneticzoo.com/underwater-robotics/1987c-mtc-200-submersible-мтк-200-soviet/
  59. https://tass.ru/v-strane/10848417/
  60. "Бахмач – 1844 всех модификаций design, 1844 class".
  61. "Medium seagoing dry-cargo transport – Project 1849".
  62. "Seagoing armament transport – Project 1823".
  63. A poor fleet 9 ships will be retired from the Navy of Ukraine – through technical unsuitability. Finance. October 18, 2014
  64. "Hydrographic survey vessel – Project 861".
  65. "Сiмферополь – Design 861, 861М, 861М2, 861МВ".
  66. "Средний разведывательный корабль "Юпитер" Черноморского Флота".
  67. "Статьи / газета Флот України: РОСІЯНИ ПОВЕРНУЛИ СК "СОКАЛЬ", ХОЧА І ДЕЩО "ЗАШТОРМИЛИМ"". fleet.sebastopol.ua. Archived from the original on 9 May 2014. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  68. "Seagoing diving boat – Project 522".
  69. "Вiльногорськ – 522 design".
  70. "Seagoing self-propelled dry-cargo barge – Project 431".
  71. "Floating workshops – Project 304".
  72. "Submarine-search ship – Project 10221".
  73. Ukrainian Warship Thwarts Attack in Sevastopol, NavalToday.com, 4 March 2014
  74. "Seagoing tug – Project 563, 714".
  75. "Николаевский завод отремонтирует суда для украинских войск | Новини". www.0512.com.ua. Archived from the original on 3 March 2022. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  76. "Medical, passenger and seagoing boats – Project SK620".
  77. "Degaussing ship – Project 130".
  78. "Як судно ВМСУ "Балта" допомогло не пропустити кораблі рашистів до Одеси (відео)". Defense Express. 2 June 2022. Retrieved 7 October 2022.
  79. "Physical fields control vessel – Project 1806".
  80. "Large hydrographic survey boat – Project 1896".
  81. "Small hydrographic survey boat – Project 16830".
  82. "МГК-1877 – 16830, шифр «Дрофа» design".
  83. "Navy". 9 February 2022.
  84. "Firefighting boats – Project 364".
  85. "Євпаторiя – 364 design".
  86. "Борщiв – 364 design".
  87. "Семь украинских кораблей вернулись из оккупированного Крыма". 20 April 2014.
  88. "Еще одна партия кораблей возвращена Украине из Крыма". 3 May 2014.
  89. "Passenger boats, training boats – Project 722".
  90. "Возвращение украинских кораблей из Крыма отложено из-за шторма". 14 May 2014.
  91. "Communications boat – Project 1387".
  92. "Mooring-buoy tender – Project 419".
  93. "Passenger boat – Project 1430".
  94. "Ilyichevsk renamed Chornomorsk".
  95. "Harbor tug – Project 498".
  96. "Ukrainian Navy returned A947 Yany Kapu sea tug to service".
  97. "Париж стоит встречи". Коммерсантъ. 18 November 2019. Archived from the original on 19 November 2019. Retrieved 18 November 2019.
  98. "Seagoing tug – Project 745".
  99. "ВМС України втратили у Маріуполі корабель управління "Донбас" та МБАК "Кременчук"". Ukrainian MOD (in Ukrainian). 16 April 2022.
  100. "Військово-Морські Сили". www.ukrmilitary.com. Archived from the original on 26 November 2021. Retrieved 27 April 2022.
  101. Борис Рожин. "Итоги "Крымской войны" для Украины / Борис Рожин - ИА REX". Iarex.ru. Retrieved 2022-08-17.
  102. "Seagoing tug – Project 733".
  103. "Harbor tug – Project 737".
  104. "Tugboats – Project T63OZh".
  105. "Seagoing minesweeper – Project 254".
  106. "Велика Олександрiвка – Design 254, 254К, 254М, 254МА, 254А".
  107. "РК-1935 – Фламинго (пр. 1415 всех модификаций) type, Р-1415 (14151) design".
  108. "Конотоп – Фламинго (пр. 1415 всех модификаций) design".
  109. "Токмак – Фламинго (пр. 1415 всех модификаций) type, design РВ-1415 (14152)".
  110. "Катера :: Черноморский Флот".
  111. "Рейдовый катер "РК-1934" Черноморского Флота".
  112. "Harbor boat – Project 376".
  113. "Рейдовый водолазный катер РВК-761 Черноморского Флота".
  114. "Дельфин – Тип Ярославец (пр. 376 всех модификаций), проект Р-376У".
  115. "U926 – Ярославец (пр. 376 всех модификаций) type, Р-376У design".
  116. "РК-1931 – Тип Ярославец (пр. 376 всех модификаций), проект Р-376У".
  117. "U500-5 – 371, 371бис, 371У (03712), 03713, тип Адмиралтеец design".
  118. "РК-1362 – 371, 371бис, 371У (03712), 03713, тип Адмиралтеец design".
  119. "Harbor boat – Project 371".
  120. "РК-767 – 371, 371бис, 371У (03712), 03713, тип Адмиралтеец design".
  121. "Всі документи бази даних "Законодавство України" (станом на 1 травня 2022 р.)".
  122. "РК-1695 – Conrad-900 Aramis design".
  123. "Harbor boat – Type Conrad-900 Aramis".
  124. "РК U500-4 – Проект 13901".
  125. "Рейдовый катер РК-735 Черноморского Флота".
  126. "Harbor boat – Project 1390".
  127. "Yacht – Type Tsetus-136R".
  128. "Yacht – Type Alkor".
  129. "Yacht – Type Tallin 1/4 ton".
  130. "Yacht – Type Conrad-25RT".
  131. "Target ship – Project 1784".
  132. "Uzhgorod".
  133. "Судно-мишень СМ-15 Черноморского Флота".
  134. "Seagoing self-propelled dry-cargo barge – Project 1526".
  135. "Новгород-Сiверський – Design 1526, type S-201".
  136. "МУС-482 – 14630 design".
  137. "Oil/Debris skimmer – Project 14630".
  138. "Коломия – 323, 323А, 323Б, 1798, 2001 design".
  139. "Floating warehouse – Project 814".
  140. "Розподіл кораблів, військової техніки та озброєння ЧФ СРСР, а також рух корабельного складу ВМСУ – звіт ТСК".
  141. "ПМР-152 – 889 design".
  142. "Medium floating dock – Project 1758".
  143. "ПД-51 – 1758 design".
  144. "Вспомогательные суда :: Черноморский Флот".
  145. "Floating crane – Project 771".
  146. "Coast guard patrol ship – Project 11351".
  147. "The Ukrainian Navy's Flagship Appears To Have Been Scuttled". The Drive. 3 March 2022.
  148. https://www.twitter.com/Capt_Navy/status/1535232353567707138
  149. "Ukrainian patrol vessel Sloviansk reportedly destroyed". 7 March 2022.
  150. MardukSyria (2022-05-15). "In the seaport of Mariupol, the Ukrainian artillery boat BK-05 "Lubny" was raised from the bottom. – NY Dolls.org". Nydolls.org. Retrieved 2022-08-17.
  151. "Harbor boat – Project 376".
  152. @UAWeapons (17 April 2023). "#Ukraine: A Ukrainian boat was destroyed by a Russian Lancet loitering munition on the Dnipro river in the city of #Zaporizhzhia" (Tweet). Retrieved 2 June 2023 via Twitter.
  153. "Швидкісний штурмовий катер пр. 58503, «Кентавр-ЛК»" (in Ukrainian). 30 November 2018.
  154. "Посадовець Міноборони визнав провину за закупівлю непридатних катерів «Кентавр» і антиснайперських систем" (in Ukrainian). 12 December 2021.
  155. @zhemchuzhnykova (24 April 2022). "- Що по "Кентаврах" для розмінув. акваторії Чорного моря?" (Tweet). Retrieved 9 November 2022 via Twitter.
  156. РОМАНЮК, РОМАН (7 November 2022). "Битва за Зміїний. Героїчна історія: як Україна втратила і повернула надважливий острів. Реконструкція". Ukrainska Pravda (in Ukrainian). Retrieved 7 November 2022.
  157. "Матері та дружини зниклих моряків із потоплених катерів ВМСУ просять пролити світло на долі їхніх близьких: «Ми на 100% впевнені, що вони в полоні»". Dumskaya (in Ukrainian). 29 November 2022. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  158. "Володимир Зеленський вручив високі державні нагороди людям, завдяки яким Україна зберігає свою незалежність". 24 August 2022. Retrieved 1 September 2022.
  159. HI Sutton (11 October 2022). "Suspected Ukrainian Explosive Sea Drone Made From Recreational Watercraft Parts". USNI News. Retrieved 7 November 2022.
  160. "The Naval Fleet of Drones". United24. 11 November 2022. Retrieved 11 November 2022.
  161. HI Sutton (22 September 2022). "Ukraine's New USV Compared". Covert Shores. Retrieved 3 November 2022.
  162. HI Sutton (13 June 2023). "Spy Ship Attacked: Russia Implies Ukrainian/NATO Threat To TurkStream Gas Pipeline". Naval News. Retrieved 13 June 2023.
  163. HI Sutton (22 March 2023). "Ukraine's New Maritime Drone Revealed". Covert Shores. Retrieved 2 June 2023.
  164. "Морские дроны-камикадзе, атаковавшие российские корабли в бухте Севастополя, могли быть произведены в Украине". Dumskaya. 30 October 2022. Retrieved 2 November 2022.
  165. Ozberk, Tayfun (30 October 2022). "Analysis: Ukraine Strikes With Kamikaze USVs – Russian Bases Are Not Safe Anymore". NavalNews. Retrieved 3 November 2022.
  166. "Sevastopol: Unmanned surface vehicles hit Admiral Makarov, flagship of Russian Black Sea Fleet". Yahoo News. 30 October 2022. Retrieved 3 November 2022.
  167. @TpyxaNews (18 November 2022). "Russian media publish footage of a naval drone strike on the Sheskharis oil harbor in Novorossiysk" (Tweet). Retrieved 18 November 2022 via Twitter.
  168. HI Sutton (18 November 2022). "Ukraine's Maritime Drone Strikes Again: Reports Indicate Attack On Novorossiysk". Naval News. Retrieved 18 November 2022.
  169. "Russia Repels Ukraine's Drone Attack On Sevastopol". Naval News. 23 March 2023. Retrieved 2 June 2023.
  170. HI Sutton (24 April 2023). "New Defenses Show Russia On Defensive In Sevastopol As Ukraine Attacks". Naval News. Retrieved 2 June 2023.
  171. Ozberk, Tayfun (25 May 2023). "Russian Intelligence Ship Seemingly Hit By Ukrainian USV". Naval News. Retrieved 2 June 2023.
  172. "До складу ВМСУ зараховано теплохід і річковий катер". 7 May 2021.
  173. "Дмитро Чубар – Проект 1462, тип Рейдовый".
  174. "ВМС отримали рейдовий катер".
  175. "Дмитрий Чубарь". FleetPhoto. Retrieved 2 June 2023.
  176. "Carrier of divers – Shifr Sirena".
  177. "Midget submarines – Project 908".
  178. "Проект 908 (09080) "Тритон-2" (NATO - "?")". Deepstorm. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
  179. "оля українських Тритонів". Militarnyi. 16 October 2017. Retrieved 9 November 2022.
  180. "Guard Ships – Project 1135".
  181. "Guided Missile Frigate Bezzavetny".
  182. "Сторожевой корабль "Безукоризненный" Черноморского Флота".
  183. "Сторожевой корабль "Разительный" Черноморского Флота".
  184. "Фирмы и новости Севастополя. Социальная сеть Севастополя". 15 May 2014. Archived from the original on 15 May 2014. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
  185. ""Винницу" обшили – и отпустили".
  186. Cabinet wrote off six warships of the Ukrainian Navy. Bigmir. November 8, 2012
  187. "Missile boat – Project 206MR".
  188. "Coast guard patrol boat – Project 1400".
  189. "Large landing ships – Project 1171".
  190. "Большой десантный корабль БДК-104 ("Илья Азаров") Черноморского Флота".
  191. "Малый десантный корабль на воздушной подушке "МДК-57" Черноморского флота".
  192. "Landing craft – Project 1785".
  193. "Подводный аппарат "Тетис-Н" в Севастополе. Проект "Тетис-Н"".
  194. "Подводный аппарат "Тетис-Н" в Севастополе. Проект "Тетис-Н"".
  195. "Оружие Отечества, Weapons of the Fatherland. Информационный Ресурс По Оружию И Военной Технике. Information Resource on Weapons and Military Equipment".
  196. "Asia – Design 1559В, тип Борис Чиликин".
  197. "Керч – Дубна, проект (Финляндия) type".
  198. "Medium seagoing tanker – Type Dubna".
  199. "В Очакові затонув колишній танкер ВМСУ "Фастів"". 5 June 2020.
  200. "Electric power station – Project 440".
  201. "Энергетическое судно ЭНС-5 Черноморского Флота".
  202. "Large seagoing dry-cargo transport – Project 233".
  203. "Small anti-submarine ships, small intelligence ships – Project 502".
  204. "Морской рефрижераторный транспорт "Бузулук" Черноморского Флота".
  205. "Острог – 14301, тип ОМ-101 design".
  206. "Водолазный морской бот "ВМ-14" Черноморского флота".
  207. "Trials ship – Project 1236".
  208. "Опытовое судно ОС-100 Черноморского Флота".
  209. "Small landing ships – Project 106K".
  210. "Rescue and salvage ship – Project 596P".
  211. "Чернiвцi – 596П design".
  212. "Degaussing ship – Project 220".
  213. "Корабли и суда ВМФ СССР и России :: Последние обновления на нашем сайте".
  214. "Large cable-laying ship – Project 1274".
  215. "Академик Андреев – Design 1274".
  216. "Виктория – Z type".
  217. "Victoria". fleetphoto.ru (in Russian). 2 April 2022. Archived from the original on 12 April 2022. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
  218. "NZ 8 TIMISOARA NR (=> TIMIS => Umbau zum Schubschiff)" (in German). 4 January 2021. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
  219. "Viktoriya - MS - RUA 215715" (in German). 6 April 2021. Retrieved 9 June 2023.
  220. "Harbor Tug RB-27".
  221. "RB - 27 MZS" (in German). 9 April 2021. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
  222. "Dragos - MZS -" (in German). 5 January 2021. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
  223. "Motorschlepper vom Typ "O" und Nachbauten an der Donau" (in German). 5 January 2021. Retrieved 8 June 2023.
  224. "РВК-5 – Ярославец (пр. 376 всех модификаций) type, РВ-376 design".
  225. "Миргород – Ярославец (пр. 376 всех модификаций) type, РВ-376У design".
  226. "РК-1942 – 371, 371бис, 371У (03712), 03713, тип Адмиралтеец design".
  227. "Boat – Project PK-26 Sochi".
  228. "Harbor boats – Project 299".
  229. "Harbor boat – Project 1394A".
  230. "Harbor boat – Project LM-4-87, Project 87MK".
  231. "Harbor boats – Project 363".
  232. "Barracks ship – Project LM-4-87MK".
  233. "СМ-1 – Дунай-море, проект 1635, 1635К type".
  234. "Тип Дунай-море, проект 1635, 1635К".
  235. "Зі складу ВМС України виключені два судна забезпечення". 27 September 2021.
  236. "СМ-2 – Дунай-море, проект 1635, 1635К type".
  237. "Large target barge – Project 436".
  238. "Рейдовая баржа БАМТ-14790 Черноморского Флота".
  239. "Рейдовая самоходная сухогрузная баржа БCС-699200 Черноморского флота".
  240. "Базовое судно снабжения БСС-35085 Черноморского Флота".
  241. "Базовое судно снабжения БСС-34125 Черноморского Флота".
  242. "Базовая несамоходная наливная баржа БНН-86980 Черноморского Флота".
  243. "ДТМ-0004 – non propelled tanker barges".
  244. "Сухогрузная баржа БСН-188595 Черноморского флота".
  245. "Sovremenny class".
  246. "Destroyers – Project 956".
  247. "Oil/Debris skimmer – Project 1515".
  248. "Плавучая мастерская ПМ-2 Черноморского Флота".
  249. "Floating workshops – Project 300".
  250. "Равелин – СПД-201 design".
  251. "Small floating dock – Project SPD-201".
  252. "Малый плавучий док ПД-26 Черноморского Флота".
  253. "ПД-23 – СПД-201 design".
  254. "Floating missile technical base – Project 323".
  255. "Seagoing self-propelled floating crane – Project D-9030".
  256. "Сарни – Design D-9030".
  257. "Floating crane – Project 4LDG".
  258. "Кагарлик – 4ЛДГ design".
  259. "Плавучий кран ПК-81005 Черноморского флота".
  260. "Заблоцкий В. П. Корабли и суда военно-морских сил Украины (1998)". Irbis-nbuv.gov.ua. Retrieved 2022-08-17.
  261. About the fate of the second Krivak-III class frigate that had to enter home Navy (Про долю другого корабля проекту 11351 “Нерей” яким мав поповниться вітчизняні ВМС.). Ukrainian Military Portal. 14 April 2017
  262. "Ukrainian frigate "Hetman Sagaidachny" flooded in Nikolaev". 7 March 2022.
  263. "Small anti-submarine ships – Project 1124".
  264. "Grisha II/V Corvette".
  265. "Rescue ship – Project 05430".
  266. "Противопожарный катер ПЖК-1819 Черноморского Флота".
  267. "Firefighting boat – Project 424".
  268. "Small target barge – Project 454".
  269. "Seagoing non-self-propelled dry-cargo barges – Project 411".
  270. "Рейдовая несамоходная артиллерийско-минно-торпедная баржа БАМТ-70250 Черноморского Флота".
  271. "Small landing ships – Project 106".
  272. "Small Anti-Submarine Ship – Project 1141".
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