Bangkok Post

UKRAINE OPENS NEW FRONT IN WAR WITH MOSCOW

Drone strikes have been able to hit refineries deep in Russian territory.

- By Constant Méheut

With its army short of ammunition and troops to break the deadlock on the battlefiel­d, Ukraine has increasing­ly taken the fight behind Russian lines, attacking warships, railways and airfields in an attempt to diminish Moscow’s military operations. Most recently, that campaign has focused on oil infrastruc­ture, hitting refineries deep in Russian territory and driving home the country’s vulnerabil­ity to such attacks.

On Tuesday and Wednesday, Ukrainian drones hit four Russian refineries, officials on both sides said, adding to a series of recent attacks that have set fire to depots, fuel tanks and other oil infrastruc­ture across Russia.

Since the beginning of the year, Ukraine has claimed responsibi­lity for nearly a dozen such assaults, and local Russian authoritie­s have reported five more.

Experts and Ukrainian officials say Ukraine hopes to disrupt the Russian military’s logistical routes and combat operations by targeting refineries, which supply gasoline (petrol) , diesel and fuel for tanks, fighter jets and other critical military equipment.

Beyond that, they hope to chip away at the profits that Moscow makes from the exports of oil products and cause disruption­s in Russia’s domestic oil market.

Mikhail Krutikhin, an independen­t Russian energy analyst living in exile in Oslo, Norway, said the strikes had prompted Moscow to introduce a six-month ban on gasoline exports, starting March 1, to try to ensure that domestic demand is met while repairs are made to damaged refineries.

British military intelligen­ce said last week, “It is likely that Russia’s refining capacity has been temporaril­y reduced” by multiple Ukrainian attacks against refineries.

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday told the Russian state news agency RIA Novosti that the goal of the attacks, coupled with armed incursions by Ukraine-backed Russian groups into Russian territory, was “if not to disrupt the presidenti­al elections in Russia, then at least somehow interfere with the normal process of expressing the will of citizens.”

Mr Putin, who was on track to win a fifth term in the election this weekend, added that another goal was to get some kind of “trump card in a possible future negotiatio­n process.”

The appeal of Ukraine’s recent drone targets is obvious.

Oil plants are sprawling and hard to protect, and there are so many of them across Russia that Moscow cannot realistica­lly provide them all with air defences, according to Krutikhin and Damien Ernst, an energy expert and professor at the University of Liège in Belgium. Many of the plants that have been struck are in the west, closer to Ukraine.

Refineries in particular have been a prime focus, because they turn crude oil into valuable products like gasoline, diesel, kerosene and jet fuel.

Messrs Ernst and Krutikhin noted that unlike other oil infrastruc­ture such as pipelines, a lot of complex machinery and sophistica­ted engineerin­g goes into refineries, and they can take several months to fix. Some analysts say the repairs could take longer than usual because sanctions prohibit Western sales of certain components to Russia.

After this week’s attacks, Russian authoritie­s said operations had been temporaril­y halted at two of the refineries that were hit near Nizhny Novgorod, east of Moscow, and in the southern Rostov region. Fires also broke out at two other Russian refineries that were struck, according to local authoritie­s.

But such disruption­s don’t mean Ukraine can truly undermine the Russian energy behemoth, which is at the core of its economy and war efforts.

It remains unclear what impact, if any, the attacks will have on the fighting. Russia still has the advantage on the battlefiel­d and has been pressing along the front line in recent weeks.

Sergey Vakulenko, an energy expert at the Carnegie Endowment for Internatio­nal Peace, a research group, said Russia was producing far more diesel than it needed to supply its troops. “It will be quite a while before Ukraine manages to hit enough refining units to have an impact on Russia’s diesel capacity,” he said.

Mr Vakulenko, a former top manager at Gazprom Neft, one of Russia’s larger oil producers, added that the impact of the attacks this year on Russia’s exports of refined oil had been “quite minimal.”

Attempts have been made before to undermine Russia’s oil industry.

After Moscow invaded Ukraine in February 2022, Western nations introduced sanctions targeting Russian sales of hydrocarbo­ns — including oil, gas and coal. And most of Europe managed to wean itself off Russian gas.

But Russia has softened the blow by expanding sales to friendlier countries, primarily China and India, and even investing in a “shadow” fleet to export its oil clandestin­ely.

 ?? ?? OILY BLOW: In a satellite image provided by Maxar Technologi­es, shows an oil refinery on fire after a drone strike in Klintsy, Russia in January.
OILY BLOW: In a satellite image provided by Maxar Technologi­es, shows an oil refinery on fire after a drone strike in Klintsy, Russia in January.

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