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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Russia puts out new video of admiral Ukraine claims to have killed

By Valeriya Safronova and Oleg Matsnev New York Times

Russia released new videos Wednesday of a Russian admiral Ukraine claimed to have killed, with the footage showing him apparently alive and well, hoisting a trophy into the air to celebrate a soccer victory and stoically telling a local interviewer that “life goes on.”

It was the second day in a row that Russia offered imagery of the admiral, Viktor Sokolov, in what seemed to be a calculated rebuttal of Ukraine’s claim.

On Monday, Ukrainian officials said Sokolov, the commander of Russia’s Black Sea Fleet, had been killed along with 33 other officers in a missile strike on Sevastopol, Crimea. But the following day they hedged on their claim after Russia released video that appeared to show the admiral attending a large military meeting remotely.

On Wednesday, still more unverified videos of him began circulating in Russia — and in these, unlike the one a day earlier, he can be heard speaking.

In one video posted by Zvezda, a TV network run by the Russian Ministry of Defense, a man identified as Sokolov praises the Black Sea Fleet for “fulfilling goals that are set by the command.” The video is not dated.

And in Crimea, which Russia seized in 2014, years before it unleashed its full-scale invasion in Ukraine, a local news outlet posted an account in which Sokolov seemingly responds to a reporter’s question about the Ukrainian strike. “What happened to us?” he says. “Nothing happened to us. Life goes on.”

Whether Sokolov is alive or dead, other evidence makes clear that something major did happen at the fleet’s headquarters in Sevastopol on Friday. Witnesses’ videos and photos, along with satellite imagery, show the building smoking and partly caved in after an apparent missile strike.

Ukraine has repeatedly targeted Russia’s warships in the Black Sea and their base at Sevastopol, trying to degrade the fleet’s effectiveness and force it to keep a wary distance from Ukrainian shores. The ships are one of the main platforms for firing cruise missiles into Ukraine, and they have tried to enforce Moscow’s blockade of Ukrainian ports.

It is unclear how much stock should be placed in the videos released by Russia. Moscow has a well-established history of trying to sweep military embarrassments under the rug, most notably during this war when the flagship of its Black Sea Fleet was sunk.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.