
Nation / PlaceUA
Armyansk
Northern Crimea city; became the main reroute point after Ukraine severed the Chonhar Bridge supply corridor.
Last refreshed: 9 June 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Key Question
Can Russia keep Crimea supplied if Armyansk becomes the only viable land route?
Timeline for Armyansk
#197 Jun
Rerouted supply route checkpoint in northern Crimea
Russia-Ukraine War 2026: Ukraine cuts into Crimea's supply spineCommon Questions
- Why is Armyansk important for Russian supply lines into Crimea?
- Armyansk sits at the base of the Perekop Isthmus, the narrow land bridge between mainland Ukraine and Crimea. After Ukraine struck the Chonhar Bridge in June 2026, all supply convoys had to reroute via Armyansk, adding roughly 130km per run.Source: ISW
- What happened to Russian supply routes into Crimea after the Chonhar Bridge was struck?
- Ukraine's Code 9.2 drone unit struck the Chonhar Bridge on 7 June 2026, forcing all traffic to reroute via Armyansk in northern Crimea, adding ~130km to Russian supply runs and worsening an existing petrol rationing crisis.Source: ISW
- Where is Armyansk in Crimea?
- Armyansk is a city of ~25,000 people at the northern tip of Crimea, on the Perekop Isthmus. It is the main entry point from the Russian-controlled mainland into the peninsula.
Background
Armyansk is a city of ~25,000 at the base of the Perekop Isthmus in northern Crimea, on the main road corridor connecting Crimea to the Russian mainland. It hosts the Crimean Titan chemical plant.
After Ukraine's Code 9.2 drone unit struck the Chonhar Bridge on 7 June 2026, all Crimea-bound traffic was rerouted via Armyansk, adding ~130km to Russian supply runs. By that date petrol rationing had fallen to 20 litres per vehicle per week.
How the World Sees Them
Russia
Occupation authorities rerouted all supply convoys via Armyansk following the Chonhar strike, adding cost and time; the diversion fed into the petrol rationing crisis spreading across Crimea.
Ukraine
Ukraine's Code 9.2 drone strike on Chonhar deliberately funnelled Russian logistics through Armyansk, making the narrow Perekop Isthmus the supply bottleneck Ukraine's drones could then monitor.
Crimean residents
The reroute added fuel and food delivery delays. Petrol rationing at 20 litres per vehicle per week by June 2026 reflected the compounding effect of the supply squeeze.