






















On June 16 and 18, Ukrainian drones broke through defenses in southeastern Moscow and knocked out both primary oil distillation units at the Moscow oil refinery. During the second strike, several fuel storage tanks caught fire, and smoke from the blaze blanketed the surrounding residential neighborhoods. In carrying out the attack, Ukraine’s Armed Forces achieved several objectives at once: they continued their campaign of strikes against oil refineries; demonstrated their ability to penetrate Russia’s most powerful and layered air defense zone; and produced striking footage that they showed to Western allies. The footage was equally telling for Russian officials and military commanders: even in the Moscow region, the air defense system is plainly incapable of stopping a mass strike. Ukraine’s Armed Forces have learned to assemble the forces needed to overwhelm the radars and launch systems protecting the most heavily guarded facilities. Other defensive approaches are either used in limited ways or remain in the testing phase.
Since the spring of 2026, Ukraine has made sequential strikes on Russian oil refining infrastructure the top priority of its air campaign. The choice was deliberate:
Ukraine’s previous campaign against oil refining infrastructure in the fall of 2025 showed that maximum damage requires sustained, systematic pressure. When strikes were infrequent and targeted only the most vulnerable large primary distillation units — atmospheric vacuum distillation units, or AVTs — Russia was able to restore production relatively quickly. In the spring and summer of 2026, Ukraine’s Armed Forces are striking more often and hitting a wider range of targets. In addition to AVTs and fuel storage tanks, they are hitting deep-processing units that are harder to repair and require imported spare parts. According to Bloomberg, all of this has driven gasoline output down 13% year-on-year as of late May — close to the threshold at which the country would face a fuel shortage. Since then, strikes on refineries have continued, although repairs to the damaged plants are also underway.
The June 18 breakthrough appears to have involved a substantial drone formation. Russia’s Defense Ministry called it a record, claiming nearly a thousand UAVs were shot down — though those claims are not credible.
What can be said with certainty is that the attack was unusual.
In any case, Ukraine’s Armed Forces struck several units and fuel storage tanks at the refinery. Drones also came down on the grounds of the nearby Sadovod market, on apartment buildings, and on construction sites in adjacent residential neighborhoods. That last detail suggests that when Ukraine’s Armed Forces compiled the flight mission, they may have been working from outdated digital maps rather than fresh satellite imagery — maps on which new buildings and construction cranes had not been marked.
The full extent of damage to the refinery is not yet known. The Reuters news agency reported that one of the two AVT units — with a primary processing capacity of six million tons of oil per year — had been damaged as early as June 16 and was expected to be repaired within the week. But the June 18 strike hit the second unit and other facilities and pipelines at the plant. The refinery has likely halted processing entirely, at least for several days. Its longer-term fate will depend on how sustained Ukraine’s Armed Forces’ strikes prove to be.
Russia began facing mass drone attacks later than Ukraine did and still lacks an integrated air defense system for countering them.
The Russian military is developing other defensive tools and approaches, but most are still in the testing phase. Several variants of automatic turrets with rapid-fire cannons are being evaluated, including versions firing proximity-fused shells capable of destroying drones with a near-miss rather than a direct hit. Portable radars for detecting UAVs are also being produced, but there are clearly not enough of them even at the front.
Assembling these weapons into an integrated system could take many months — time during which Ukraine’s Armed Forces could further scale up drone production and acquire additional mass-strike capabilities.
At Meduza, we are committed to transparency about our use of artificial intelligence in the newsroom. The story you’re reading was written by one of our living, breathing journalists and translated from Russian using an AI model configured to follow our strict editorial standards. This translation process is the result of extensive testing and refinements to ensure our English-language coverage is timely and accurate. A Meduza editor reviews every draft before publication.
If you find any errors in this translation, please contact us at [email protected].
To read Meduza’s exclusive content in English, please subscribe to our newsletter.
The Analysis Desk
此内容由惯性聚合(RSS阅读器)自动聚合整理,仅供阅读参考。 原文来自 — 版权归原作者所有。