Cobasna ammunition depot

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Cobasna is located in Moldova
Cobasna
Cobasna
Location of Cobasna, where the Cobasna ammunition depot is located, in Moldova.

The Cobasna ammunition depot is a large ammunition depot located in the village of Cobasna. Legally and internationally recognized as part of Moldova as a whole, the unrecognized breakaway state of Transnistria controls the village and the ammunition depot and has denied access to international observers,[1] an exception being the so-called peacekeeping military forces of Russia located in the region ever since the end of the Transnistria War in 1992.[2] Currently, civilian access to the ammunition depot is restricted and only the Russian and Transnistrian authorities have detailed information regarding the amount and situation of the stored weapons.[3] The ammunition depot was created in the 1940s, when Transnistria was under the former Soviet Union (USSR). At the time, it held important strategic value.[1]

The Cobasna ammunition depot has been referred to as one of the largest[2] or the largest ammunition depot in Eastern Europe[1] and contains up to 20,000 tons of Soviet-era weapons from the 14th Guards Army of the USSR and also from the former states of Czechoslovakia and East Germany. Currently, it is guarded by around 1,500 Russian soldiers. Ever since Russia's conflict with Ukraine, there has been growing distress in Moldova for the Cobasna ammunition depot, with some believing that the weapons there could be used in a potential future military conflict. Additionally, the Academy of Sciences of Moldova determined that an explosion of the weapons located in the ammunition depot, which passed their expiration date long ago, would be equivalent to the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.[2] Concern for such an event increased following the 2020 Beirut explosion.[1]

There have been several attempts and calls to withdraw the weapons from the Cobasna ammunition depot and the Russian soldiers in Transnistria. During the 1999 Istanbul summit, Russia promised to completely withdraw its weapons and soldiers. Some progess was made, but following a request from the Transnistrian authorities asking Russia to maintain its army, the process stopped in 2003. Thus, to this day, Russia maintains its military presence in Transnistria and in the ammunition depot, with Russia having been accused of using the latter as a method of geopolitical blackmail against Moldova.[4]

Moldova continues to insist on the need to evacuate the weapons from Cobasna, with the most recent official declarations coming from Maia Sandu, the current president of Moldova, and having been made as recently as in 2021.[5] In fact, on 11 August of the same year, Sandu met with the then Deputy Kremlin Chief of Staff of Russia Dmitry Kozak and discussed several important issues in the bilateral relations between both countries, including the Transnistria conflict and the situation of the Cobasna ammunition depot. Regarding the latter, Kozak showed willingness to cooperate with Moldova to destroy the weapons at the depot and declared that it was within Russia's interests to do this. The then President of Transnistria, Vadim Krasnoselsky, also expressed support to the initiative.[6]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d Dulgher, Maria (9 August 2020). "The Russian ammunition depot from Cobasna discussed against the backdrop of the Beirut explosion". Moldova.org.
  2. ^ a b c Ciochină, Simion; Schwartz, Robert (1 December 2015). "Transnistria's explosive inheritance from the Soviet era". Deutsche Welle.
  3. ^ Ciochină, Simion (27 November 2015). "Cel mai mare depozit ilegal de arme din Europa de Est". Deutsche Welle (in Romanian).
  4. ^ "Depozitul militar cât "o bombă atomică de 10 tone" cu care Moscova menține separatismul în Rep. Moldova". Digi24 (in Romanian). 21 July 2017.
  5. ^ "Maia Sandu insistă pe retragerea trupelor ruse din Transnistria, dar și evacuarea armamentului din Cobasna". Național 4 (in Romanian). 23 June 2021.
  6. ^ Necșuțu, Mădălin (12 August 2021). "Russia and Moldova agree to resume trade, destroy ammunition". Balkan Insight.
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