
Ukraine Expands Long-Range Drone Campaign With Strikes on Russian Fuel Infrastructure
A Ukrainian drone attack killed one person and injured nine others in Russia's southwestern Oryol region , while separate strikes targeted strategic energy and industrial facilities hundreds of kilometres from the Ukrainian border, highlighting Kyiv's expanding campaign against infrastructure that supports Moscow's war effort.
Oryol regional Governor Andrei Klychkov said a drone struck a residential building in the city of Oryol overnight, leaving one person dead and nine wounded. Emergency services responded to the scene, and local authorities said the casualty figures remained unchanged later on Sunday.
In the Yaroslavl region , around 700 kilometres from Ukraine, authorities reported a fire at fuel storage facilities following a drone strike. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said the target was an oil depot that formed part of Russia's state reserve system and played an important role in maintaining strategic fuel stocks. Reports indicated the facility stored gasoline, diesel and other petroleum products used for logistics and industrial operations.
Zelenskyy also said Ukrainian forces struck the Azot chemical plant in Russia's Tula region, which Kyiv claims is involved in producing materials used in explosives. According to the Ukrainian leader, the overnight operation triggered air raid alerts across 28 Russian regions and led to temporary flight restrictions at six airports. He described the strikes as part of Ukraine's effort to weaken infrastructure supporting Russia's military campaign.
Ukraine has increasingly relied on long-range attacks against Russian energy infrastructure, arguing that oil and gas revenues help finance Moscow's more than four-year invasion. In recent months, Ukrainian drones have repeatedly targeted refineries, fuel depots, oil terminals and industrial sites linked to military supply chains deep inside Russian territory.
Russian authorities have reported a growing number of drone incursions far from the front line, reflecting Ukraine's expanding strike capabilities. Moscow has condemned such attacks as acts of terrorism, while Kyiv maintains that facilities supporting Russia's military operations are legitimate wartime targets. The latest strikes came as fighting continued along multiple sectors of the front and both sides reported renewed aerial attacks overnight.
