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TUE · 2026-06-30 · 14:15 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0630-88692
News/‘The crisis is deep’: The view from Russ/WATCH: Fights break out at Russian gas stations as Putin adm…
NSR-2026-0630-88692News Report·EN·Conflict

WATCH: Fights break out at Russian gas stations as Putin admits fuel shortages

Russian President Vladimir Putin has acknowledged that Ukrainian long-range strikes on energy infrastructure are causing fuel shortages across Russia. Videos show long lines and fights erupting at gas stations in various regions, including Siberia and Moscow.

Fox News - WorldFiled 2026-06-30 · 14:15 GMTLean · Center-RightRead · 4 min
WATCH: Fights break out at Russian gas stations as Putin admits fuel shortages
Fox News - WorldFIG 01
Reading time
4min
Word count
960words
Sources cited
3cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Russian President Vladimir Putin has acknowledged that Ukrainian long-range strikes on energy infrastructure are causing fuel shortages across Russia. Videos show long lines and fights erupting at gas stations in various regions, including Siberia and Moscow. Ukraine has been increasingly targeting Russian oil refineries and supply routes with drones, hitting at least two overnight. These attacks are creating visible problems for motorists, businesses, and agricultural producers, forcing Moscow to consider emergency measures like allowing lower-quality fuel. Opposition figures confirm the reality and difficulty of these shortages, attributing them directly to Ukraine's effective strikes on refining capacity.

Confidence 0.90Sources 3Claims 5Entities 12
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Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Conflict
Economic Impact
Tone
Mixed Tone
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.70 / 1.00
Factual
LowHigh
Sources cited
3
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

Maxim Katz stated that fuel problems in Russia are real and difficult for Russians to ignore, with long lines and limited fuel availability.

quoteMaxim Katz
Confidence
1.00
02

Russian President Vladimir Putin acknowledged that Ukrainian strikes are causing fuel supply problems in Russia.

quoteVladimir Putin
Confidence
1.00
03

Ukraine has increasingly used long-range drones to target Russian oil refineries, depots, and supply routes.

factualReuters
Confidence
0.90
04

Videos show long lines, angry motorists, and fights erupting at gas stations across several Russian regions.

factualFox News Digital
Confidence
0.90
05

Fuel shortages have spread across Russia, including occupied Crimea, southern Russia, Siberia, and Moscow.

factualarticle
Confidence
0.80
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Full report

4 min read · 960 words
close Video Videos show Russians fighting at gas stations as Putin admits Ukraine strikes are causing fuel problems Long lines, shortages and confrontations at pumps are spreading across Russia after Ukrainian drones targeted key oil refineries and fuel infrastructure. (Credit: East2West) NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! Hören Sie sich diesen Artikel an 4 Min Russian President Vladimir Putin has publicly acknowledged that Ukrainian long-range strikes are creating fuel supply problems inside Russia, as videos obtained by Fox News Digital show long lines, angry motorists and fights erupting at filling stations across several Russian regions. Speaking at a meeting with government ministers and other officials after a wave of Ukrainian attacks on Russian oil infrastructure, Putin said on Sunday that strikes on "critical infrastructure" and energy facilities were creating "problems," including shortages affecting motorists, businesses and agricultural producers, but said Russia was dealing with them, according to Reuters. The remarks marked a rare admission from the Kremlin that Ukraine’s long-range campaign is having an impact beyond the battlefield. Ukraine LAUNCHES WHAT APPEARS TO BE ONE OF ITS LARGEST DRONE ATTACKS AGAINST Russia: REPORT For Ukraine, the fuel crisis is evidence that its long-range strike campaign is doing more than damaging individual facilities. The attacks are forcing Moscow to manage visible problems at home, exposing a vulnerability in a country whose global power has long rested on its energy sector. 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) Ukraine increasingly has used long-range drones to target Russian oil refineries, depots and supply routes hundreds of miles from its border. Ukraine hit two Russian oil refineries overnight, Reuters reported Sunday, including one in Krasnodar, Russia, and another in Yaroslavl, Russia, as Kyiv continues targeting infrastructure linked to Moscow’s war effort. fuel shortages have spread across Russia, including occupied Crimea, southern Russia, Siberia and Moscow. Moscow also is weighing emergency measures, including temporarily allowing the production and import of lower-quality fuel, according to a draft government document reported by the Kommersant daily newspaper. Maxim Katz, a Russian opposition figure and former Moscow municipal deputy, told Fox News Digital that the fuel shortages are real and increasingly difficult for Russians to ignore. "There are fuel problems in Russia right now — real ones," Katz told Fox News Digital. "I’m getting a lot of reports, and I can see it too: It’s hard. You can’t find fuel, or you have to stand in line. In some cities, you have to spend half a day looking for fuel, and then they give you only a little, and you have to get back in line again." Fights are erupting in filling station queues across Russia after Ukrainian drone strikes triggered chronic fuel shortages. (East2West) Katz said the shortages appear tied directly to Ukraine’s attacks on Russian refining capacity. "They are bombing the refineries very effectively," he said. "Putin doesn’t have a way to defend them. Right now, it looks like there is no way to defend them, and that is a major pressure point on Putin." Videos obtained by Fox News Digital from East2West news agency show scenes of frustration at Russian filling stations, where drivers are seen waiting in long queues and arguing as shortages bite. In one video, two women appear to argue over a place in line, with one insisting, "I was in the queue," before the confrontation escalates into shouting and threats. 'PURE HELL' IN Moscow AS UKRAINIAN DRONES STRIKE MAJOR REFINERY SUPPLYING CAPITAL'S FUEL MARKET Russian President Vladimir Putin chairs a meeting on securing fuel supplies for the domestic market in Moscow, June 28, 2026. (Sputnik/Gavriil Grigorov/Pool via Reuters) In Serov, Russia, police were called after a male driver was seen shouting obscenities at several women before punching one of them, according to a video. In Ryazan, Russia, video shows a fight breaking out near a forecourt as drivers waited for fuel. In Irkutsk, Russia, a man is seen leaning into the open window of a hatchback and repeatedly hitting another motorist. One woman, identified only as Tanya, 29, told east2west she waited 13 hours in Siberia to get half a tank of fuel and blamed Putin’s war for the chaos. "He should stop this senseless conflict and let us live normally," she told the outlet. 'PURE HELL' IN Moscow AS UKRAINIAN DRONES STRIKE MAJOR REFINERY SUPPLYING CAPITAL'S FUEL MARKET The Moscow Oil Refinery in Kapotnya burns after being hit during Ukraine’s June 18, 2026, drone attack on the Russian capital. (East2West) Katz said the fuel disruption comes alongside deeper economic pressure caused by the RussiaUkraine war, including high domestic borrowing, steep interest rates and a budget increasingly built around military spending. "The whole economy is now built on war," Katz said. "War does not produce anything. Nothing comes back from it. So what remains is a big hole." He said Russia is not yet on the verge of collapse, but the strain is "growing and growing," with economic officials warning that spending may need to be cut as the budget deficit becomes harder to close. This assessment was also confirmed to Fox News Digital by a European intelligence source, who said the economic pressure is effectively working. Cars queue for fuel at a gas station after the authorities restricted fuel sales amid a supply shortage following Ukrainian attacks on logistics routes in the course of Russia-Ukraine conflict, in Sevastopol, Crimea June 1, 2026. (Reuters) Fox News Digital reached out to Russian and Ukrainian spokespeople for comment. Reuters contributed to this story. 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.
§ 05

Entities

12 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

10 terms
ukrainian drone attacks
1.00
fuel shortages
1.00
oil infrastructure
0.90
russia
0.80
ukraine
0.80
vladimir putin
0.70
energy sector
0.60
gas stations
0.50
supply problems
0.50
long-range strikes
0.40
§ 07

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