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Russia’s Black Sea Fleet has effectively retreated from Sevastopol — the naval base Moscow seized in 2014 to guarantee permanent dominance in Crimea. Satellite imagery, official statements, and Ukrainian intelligence reports now confirm what once seemed impossible: the fleet that enforced the blockade of Ukraine is operating from Novorossiysk, behind defensive barriers, after sustained missile and drone strikes made Crimea untenable. This video breaks down the documented collapse of Russia’s Black Sea naval posture and why the shift is not temporary — it’s structural. Inside this analysis: How Ukraine sank the Moskva, the flagship of the Black Sea Fleet • The Storm Shadow strikes that hit Sevastopol dry docks and fleet headquarters • The sea drone campaign that forced warships out of Crimea • The relocation of Kilo-class submarines and guided missile frigates to Novorossiysk • The Sub Sea Baby underwater drone strike inside Novorossiysk harbor • Why Russia sealed its own port with barges after the submarine attack • The destruction of Ropucha-class landing ships and collapse of amphibious assault capability • The degradation of Kalibr cruise missile launch capacity • The Montreux Convention blocking reinforcements through the Turkish Straits • The impact on Russian oil exports and the Caspian Pipeline Consortium terminal • What this means for NATO, Romania’s Black Sea energy expansion, and regional balance of power Sevastopol was not just a port. It was the strategic anchor of Russia’s southern military doctrine. From there, the Black Sea Fleet could threaten Odesa, enforce a grain blockade, and launch Kalibr cruise missiles across Ukraine. Today, that base is largely empty. The retreat to Novorossiysk was supposed to create distance from Ukrainian strikes. Instead, Ukraine demonstrated it could reach inside the harbor itself using underwater drones — forcing Russia to deploy physical barriers that now restrict its own fleet’s operational freedom. The result is a naval force that has lost ships, lost its primary base, lost amphibious assault capability, and now operates within defensive constraints it did not face at the start of the war. If you follow the Russia Ukraine war, Black Sea Fleet collapse, Sevastopol strikes, Novorossiysk submarine attack, Kalibr missile launches, Storm Shadow missile strikes, sea drone warfare, Montreux Convention, or geopolitical shifts in the Black Sea region, this breakdown connects the military, economic, and strategic consequences into one clear timeline. This is not a headline recap. It’s a structural analysis of how a major naval power was pushed out of its historic stronghold by asymmetric warfare. Subscribe for evidence-based analysis focused on documented operational shifts, satellite-confirmed movements, and the long-term strategic impact of this war. Disclaimer: This video is for informational and analytical purposes only. All information discussed is based on publicly available reporting, satellite imagery analysis, official statements, and open-source intelligence available at the time of publication. The analysis reflects interpretation of documented events and does not claim access to classified military intelligence.