Ukraine has launched drone attacks on at least three oil refineries deep inside Russia, as the Kyiv government intensifies its cross-border strikes days before President Vladimir Putin’s anticipated re-election.
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Ukrainian defense said on Wednesday that Ukraine is “implementing a
well-planned strategy to decrease Russian economic potential.”
Ukraine
struck three Russian oil refineries targeted in the cities of Ryazan,
about 130 miles southeast of Moscow; Kstovo, in the Nizhny Novgorod
region, nearly 300 miles east of the capital; and Kirishi in Russia’s
northwest. The trio of facilities are among Russia’s largest refineries,
the source said to CNN.
A fourth facility, the
Novoshakhtinsky oil refinery in Rostov-on-Don, was also hit, a
representative of the Defense Intelligence of Ukraine said on Wednesday.
It
marked the second consecutive day of Ukrainian attacks on Russian
energy sites, and the locations targeted represent a spate of attacks
well within Russia’s territory.
“Our goal is to take away our enemy’s resources and decrease the flow of oil money and fuel Russia is using directly on the war,” the source added.
The attacks come after a chaotic day on the Russian side of the Ukrainian border, during which pro-Ukrainian groups of Russian fighters said they launched cross-border attacks and claimed to have gained control of the village of Tyotkino in Russia’s Kursk region.
The village remained under fire “all day” on Wednesday, the regional governor said.
The fallout from the attack continued into Wednesday. The Freedom for Russia Legion, a group of Russian dissidents fighting for Ukraine which has previously claimed responsibility for incursions into Russia, said in a series of posts on Telegram on Wednesday that its fighters had destroyed a command center in the village of Tyotkino in the Kursk region, and were advancing further.
“There was a control center and there is no control center,” the group said. “We are bringing a crisis to the bloody regime’s defense industry closer.”
Russia’s defense ministry said Wednesday its air defenses destroyed 58 Ukrainian drones overnight, including some that travelled as far as the Leningrad region, which borders Finland, supporting Kyiv’s claims.
The
regional governor in Ryazan, Pavel Malkov, said a fire broke out at the
facility there but has since been extinguished. He said two people were
injured.
Social media video from the refinery complex, one of
Russia’s largest, showed a large plume of smoke coming out from a
building in the distance.
Later on Wednesday, Andrii Yusov of
the Defense Intelligence of Ukraine said the Novoshakhtinsky oil
refinery in Rostov-on-Don had been attacked but that Kyiv has not
confirmed involvement.
“Despite the fact that it seems to be an oil plant, it is a military facility used to supply and maintain the occupation forces,” Yusov said during an interview on national television.
“The company’s operations are currently suspended. This means that the enemy will have problems and disruptions in their plans and our defenders will have additional opportunities and time.”
As well as targeting Russia’s deep oil reserves, Kyiv’s latest strikes may be partially intended to bring home to Russians the impact of the war just as the country prepares for a presidential election.
The election is
certain to hand Putin a fifth term, extending his rule into 2030. Voting
will take place over three days from Friday, with the president sailing
towards another time in power in a ballot that is not considered free
or fair as he faces no genuine competition.
During a lengthy interview on state television channel Rossiya 1 on Wednesday, Putin said Ukrainian attacks on Belgorod and Kursk are happening amid Kyiv’s “failures” on the battlefield.
“All this is happening against the backdrop of failures on the line of contact, on the front line. They did not achieve any of the goals they set for themselves last year,” Putin said.
“Against the backdrop of those failures, they need to show at least something, and, mainly, attention should be focused on the information side of the matter.”