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Ukraine brings war to
Moscow as drones blast major oil refinery Resident-shot footage shows blasts striking the
Kapotnya refinery and a nearby building during
Ukraine’s massive
drone attack on
Moscow, June 18, 2026. (Credit:
East2West News)
Ukraine launched one of its largest drone attacks on
Moscow since the start of
Russia’s full-scale invasion, striking a major oil refinery in the Russian capital and sending thick black smoke over parts of the city, according to Russian officials and multiple reports. The
Moscow Oil Refinery in the Kapotnya district — one of the capital region’s key fuel facilities — was hit overnight Thursday, marking the second reported strike on the site in three days. Videos circulating online showed large flames and black smoke rising from the facility, while Russian officials said air defenses intercepted waves of incoming drones. Kyiv says its strikes deep inside
Russia are evidence that it is turning the tide of the war — a message President
Volodymyr Zelenskyy took this week to President
Donald Trump and other
G7 leaders at a summit in
France. The latest strikes underscore a new phase of the war, with
Ukraine increasingly able to hit high-value targets deep inside
Russia while
Moscow struggles to prevent drones from reaching politically sensitive and economically important sites near the capital. 'A NEW KIND OF WAR': INSIDE
Ukraine'S HIDDEN FACTORIES MASS-PRODUCING COMBAT DRONES Smoke and flames rise over
Moscow on June 18, 2026, following a Ukrainian
drone attack that hit the Kapotnya oil refinery and other targets in the Russian capital. (East2West) "This is pure hell, I’ve never felt such terror," one
Moscow resident said after the attack, according to
East2West News. Another resident, according to the outlet, asked: "Why won’t this madman stop his crazy and pointless war and end the death and destruction?"
East2West News agency also reported that a heavy security presence was deployed around the Kremlin, with Red Square sealed off and machine-gunners positioned on towers, ramparts and near Bolsheviks' founder Vladimir Lenin’s Mausoleum.
Moscow Mayor
Sergey Sobyanin said air defenses shot down more than 130 drones approaching the city.
Russia’s Defense Ministry claimed more than 550 Ukrainian drones were intercepted overnight across several regions, though battlefield claims from either side could not be independently verified. PUTIN RESIDENCE ATTACK VIDEO SLAMMED AS US OFFICIALS SAY
Ukraine DID NOT TARGET LEADER The
Moscow Oil Refinery in Kapotnya burns after being hit during
Ukraine’s June 18, 2026,
drone attack on the Russian capital. (East2West) The attack disrupted daily life across
Moscow, forcing temporary flight suspensions at major airports and traffic restrictions near the refinery. Russian officials said debris also fell near the Sadovod shopping center, damaging a building. The
Moscow region governor said 16 people were injured in the broader attack.
Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha mocked the confusion in
Moscow, writing on X: "One of the most popular questions asked by Muscovites this morning is ‘What is going on?’ I can answer. Your country started a war of aggression against ours. For years, it has been killing our people. Now that you know what’s going on, ask Putin when he is planning to end it." The strike appeared to expose vulnerabilities in
Moscow’s heavily promoted air defense network, bringing the war deeper into the Russian capital even as the Kremlin continues its long-range missile and drone attacks on Ukrainian cities.
Russia SAYS UKRAINIAN DRONES HIT NUCLEAR POWER PLANT DURING INDEPENDENCE DAY STRIKES Explosion seen over
Moscow after Ukrainian drones struck the Russian capital, including the Kapotnya oil refinery, June 18, 2026. (East2West) The
Kapotnya refinery is a strategically significant target. A prior Ukrainian drone strike damaged part of the refinery in recent days, according to Reuters, and forced a halt in some operations. East2West reported that the refinery supplies 40% of
Moscow’s fuel market and 70% of the surrounding region’s gasoline and aviation fuel needs.
Ukraine increasingly has targeted Russian energy infrastructure in an effort to undermine
Moscow’s war machine and increase the domestic cost of the war inside
Russia. Kyiv has described such strikes as part of its campaign of "long-range sanctions" against
Russia’s oil and military infrastructure. The
Moscow attack came as President Vladimir Putin hosted leaders from the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations bloc in Kazan,
Russia.
Ukraine also reportedly struck targets linked to
Russia’s supply routes to occupied Crimea, including road and rail infrastructure. Ukrainian officials have repeatedly said isolating Crimea is a key military objective as Kyiv seeks to weaken
Russia’s hold on the peninsula, which
Moscow illegally annexed in 2014.
Russia, meanwhile, continued its own strikes on
Ukraine. Ukrainian officials reported Russian attacks on energy and oil facilities in the Poltava region and near Kyiv. East2West reported that
Russia was moving Tu-95MS strategic bombers across the country, raising concerns that
Moscow could be preparing another major strike on
Ukraine in the coming days. Emergency services personnel work to extinguish a vehicle fire following a Russian
drone attack in the Kyiv region,
Ukraine, on May 5, 2026. (Ukrainian Emergency Service/AP) Zelenskyy has said the war could end if Putin agrees to genuine peace talks, while accusing
Moscow of prolonging the conflict and using negotiations as cover for continued attacks. Efrat Lachter is a reporter for Fox News Digital covering international affairs and the United Nations. Follow her on X @efratlachter. Stories can be sent to efrat.lachter@fox.com.