Ukrainian Drones Strike Major Russian Oil Refinery in Perm, 1,500km From Front Line
SBU claims attack on Lukoil facility as Ukraine deepens strikes on Russian energy infrastructure; Putin proposes one-day ceasefire for Victory Day
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- Ukrainian drones struck a major Lukoil-owned oil refinery in Perm, central Russia, over 1,500km from the front line, marking another successful deep strike on Russian energy infrastructure.
- The Security Service of Ukraine claimed responsibility, stating it was one of Russia's largest refineries.
- The attack follows a series of Ukrainian strikes on Russian oil facilities, including Tuapse earlier this month.
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Warum es wichtig ist
Ukraine has been conducting increasingly sophisticated drone strikes deep into Russian territory, targeting energy infrastructure as part of its response to Russia's full-scale invasion. Russia has continued its bombing campaign against Ukrainian cities while proposing limited temporary ceasefires around holidays. The strikes on Perm represent a significant escalation in Ukraine's ability to project power far from the front lines.
Ukrainian drones have again hit oil infrastructure in the city of Perm in central Russia, more than 1,500km from the front line. Ukraine's Security Service (SBU) said the target in Perm was an Lukoil-owned oil refinery - one of the largest in Russia. Dramatic images shared on social media showed huge columns of black smoke and flames rising into the air, and a chemical emergency alert was issued for some parts of Perm. City authorities later claimed the alert was merely a test. The attack on the Lukoil facility in Perm is the latest in a series of successful strikes launched by Ukraine on Russian oil infrastructure in response to Russia's continued aggression. Moscow continues to target Ukrainian cities with aerial attacks on a regular basis and on Wednesday night killed at least three people and injured 79, including a child. Earlier this week, the SBU said it had hit a strategic hub for Russia's sprawling oil pipeline system, also in Perm. But the fact Ukrainian drones can now regularly reach deep into Russian territory is difficult to conceal, and has been a cause for concern for Moscow. Earlier this month a number of strikes were carried out on oil infrastructure in the city of Tuapse on the Black Sea, leading to significant oil spills. On local Telegram chat groups, people shared photos of oil slicks in the sea, black puddles on the road and stray animals covered in oily droplets. Despite Moscow's downplaying of the seriousness of the attacks, on Wednesday the Kremlin announced it was paring back its yearly military parade to mark Victory Day - the defeat of Nazi Germany in WW2, on 9 May - due to what it said was the "terrorist threat" from Ukraine. In a 90-minute phone call with Donald Trump later that evening, Vladimir Putin proposed a one-day ceasefire to be observed that day. Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelensky said Kyiv would ask the US for more information about the Kremlin's ceasefire offer. "We will clarify what exactly this is about - a few hours of security for a parade in Moscow, or something more," Zelensky said. But he added that Ukraine's proposal was still of a long-time ceasefire and a "lasting peace". Since launching its full-scale invasion of Ukraine over four years ago, Russia has been continuously bombing Ukrainian cities as well as deploying hundreds of thousands of troops on a long front line in the east of the country. Thousands of civilians have died and many more have been displaced. A number of limited, temporary truces have been held since 2022 - many held around holidays or only involving applying to energy infrastructure or the Black Sea. Ukraine has continued to push for a peace deal, while Russia dismisses that idea unless Kyiv agrees to give up sovereign Ukrainian territories to Moscow. Kremlin adviser Ushakov said that Trump had asked Putin for his assessment of the situation on the front line in Ukraine. Putin reportedly told the US president that Russian troops were "holding the strategic initiative and pushing back the enemy's positions".
Worauf zu achten ist
KI-Ausblick — Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten
Ukraine will likely continue deep-strike drone operations against Russian energy infrastructure
Sehr wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Wochen
Russia may increase air defense deployment around critical infrastructure but faces geographic challenges
Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Wochen
Extended ceasefire negotiations unlikely to succeed given incompatible positions on territorial demands
Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten
Offene Fragen
- Will Ukraine accept Putin's one-day ceasefire proposal?
- What specific air defense failures allowed drones to reach Perm?
- Will Russia escalate responses to Ukrainian deep strikes?
- What is the actual extent of damage to Russian oil infrastructure?






