The latest(?) was one of two ships that I think were in the Med (from the Baltic, apparently taking equipment to Vladivostok, via the Suez, if I recall the story correctly; though there were also suspicions that it was headed to/stopping off at one of the Syrian ports to do something with/for the Russian base there). It was loaded atop with two huge cranes, which probably didn't help.
And another ship (not technically Russian, but seemingly operating on their behalf by a flag of convenience) seems to have dragged its anchor through a submarine power cable laid between Finland and Estonia! (No reported damage to it, if it turns out to be responsible at all, but creates an infrastructure issue.) There were telecom cables damaged, similarly, around that way in previous months, and pipelines I think within the last year...
I couldn't tell you if any of these things are deliberate or incompetance (or nobody's fault, even, just something that happened). You'd think that if they were trying to shoot the plane down, it wouldn't have (semi-)survivably crashed on the other side of the Caspian Sea, though it could have been a nearly averted "friendly fire" where the full extent of the limited damage became too much when almost feet-dry and on approach. The cinematic version of the ship in the Med is that it was sabotaged by 'our side', but blame might be on the ship not being docked for (reputable) maintenance/patch-up in any Western port, to avoid possible seizure. The dragging anchor could just be error, not helped by the nations involved being on all sides of their own high tensions. I'm fairly sure the broken oil tanker was probably just bad weather and poor capabilities to handle it, but the story could be more complicated.
Note that there are probably far more accidents/incidents totally away from such points of contact (fully internal to Russia or entirely unrelated national or international 'collisions' of craft, infrastructure and/or territory), and analysing whether there are actually more in Russia-vs-RoW circumstances, than you'd expect, probably takes very serious people whose jobs are to assess these things (and, if not try to determine each event's exact circumstance, at least present a wider picture). But it doesn't shine too rosy on the Russians (those who are in at the top of the responsibility tree, I mean, not the likes of Max[1]...) whatever the causes/effects actually are.
[1] "Last Active: 2024-11-25, 16:13:26"... Hope you're Ok! Had to check as someone I thought I hadn't seen very recently