Earlier, it was repeatedly noted that the “unblocking” of the North Crimean Canal as a result of large-scale Russian aggression and occupation of the adjacent areas of the Kherson Region has become one of the “fetishes” of the aggressor’s propaganda.
However, having announced today, on the bloody anniversary of the capture of the Canal, about supposedly “new opportunities for the development of agriculture and other industries”, the Russian occupiers cannot actually boast of some “achievements” in the field of land reclamation and melioration, which has also been written about many times.
But now the aggressor has a “new problem”: the occupying troops of the Russian Federation on the left bank of Dnipro are gradually lowering the water level in the Kakhovka Reservoir, which carries the prospect of the Canal drying up, which will thus soon remain above the water level.
At the same time, the aggressor’ command is obviously not so much worried about the “Crimean canal” propaganda as about the prospect of flooding the invaders’ positions in the event of a sharp and large-scale destruction of the dam of the Kakhovska Hydroelectric Power Station.
In this situation, the criminal “head of Crimea” Aksyonov did not come up with anything better than to declare on February 26 that “one year after the unblocking of the hydrotechnical unit of the North Crimean Canal, located in the Kherson Region, bypass channels were built and other measures were taken in case of the destruction of the dam” .
Naturally, in fact, the occupiers and collaborators did not build any “bypass channels” in a year, and they did not take any measures, and in principle they obviously could not take them.
Their current “construction potential” is limited to digging “defensive structures”, and since the deadlines previously announced by Aksyonov for the “professional holiday”, April 1, are obviously being missed, the Russian invaders involve own soldiers in digging structures and also frantically search all over Crimea for “carpenters and common laborers”, promising them 3,000 rubles a day on all occupiers-controlled “media resources”.