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Granit enterprise

Russian military air-defence repair facility in Sevastopol, destroyed by Ukrainian drones in March 2026.

Last refreshed: 30 March 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

Can Russia repair its Crimean air defences after Ukraine destroyed their only local service hub?

Latest on Granit enterprise

Common Questions
What is the Granit enterprise?
Granit enterprise is a Russian state-owned military repair facility in Sevastopol, Crimea. It operates within the Almaz-Antey concern and services S-400, S-300PM2, Buk-M2/M3, and Tor-M2 air-defence systems for the Russian military.Source: Ukrainian MoD
What happened to the Granit enterprise in Sevastopol?
On 19 March 2026, Ukrainian drones struck Granit with at least five projectiles, heavily damaging part of the building. Ukraine's MoD said the strike creates a gap in Russian air defences and opens space for missile and air operations over Crimea.Source: Ukrainian MoD
Why did Ukraine target the Granit repair facility?
Ukraine follows a two-step logic: destroy air-defence launchers, then destroy the repair base that would restore them. Hitting Granit prevents Russia returning battle-damaged S-400 and Buk systems to service, extending degradation beyond the original launcher strikes.Source: Ukrainian MoD
Is the Granit enterprise part of Almaz-Antey?
Yes. Granit operates within the Almaz-Antey concern, Russia's primary state-owned air-defence conglomerate. Almaz-Antey designs and manufactures the S-400 and Buk systems that Granit maintains in Crimea.Source: Ukrainian MoD
How does destroying Granit affect Russian air defences in Crimea?
Without a local repair hub, Russia must transport damaged air-defence batteries to mainland facilities, a slower and riskier process. Ukraine's MoD assessed the strike as opening space for missile strikes and air operations across the Black Sea region.Source: Ukrainian MoD

Background

Granit enterprise is a state-owned repair facility based in Sevastopol, Crimea, operating within the Almaz-Antey concern, Russia's principal air-defence conglomerate. The facility services S-400, S-300PM2, Buk-M2/M3, and Tor-M2 air-defence systems, making it a critical node in sustaining Russia's layered air defences across the Black Sea region.

On 19 March 2026, Ukrainian drones struck the facility with at least five projectiles, heavily damaging part of the building. Ukraine's Ministry of Defence stated the strike 'creates a gap in the enemy's air defence, opening space for missile strikes and air operations,' framing Granit as a deliberate priority target.

The strike embodies a coherent Ukrainian targeting logic: destroy air-defence launchers first, then eliminate the repair infrastructure that would restore them. With Granit damaged, Russia's capacity to return battle-worn batteries to service in Crimea is degraded, extending the operational effect of earlier launcher strikes well beyond their initial impact.

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