The Boston Globe

Ukraine steps up its targeting of Russian oil plants

Wants to disrupt, damage military infrastruc­ture

- By Constant Méheut

KYIV — Ukraine hit an oil depot in Russia in a drone attack Friday, officials on both sides said, the latest in a series of recent assaults targeting Russian oil facilities as Ukraine increasing­ly seeks to strike critical infrastruc­ture behind Russian lines.

Alexander Bogomaz, the governor of the Russian region of Bryansk, which borders Ukraine, said oil tanks in the town of Klintsy had caught fire after a drone dropped munitions on the depot. The drone, he added, was brought down by electronic jamming. A Ukrainian intelligen­ce official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive military matters, said Ukraine was behind the assault.

Friday’s attack was the fourth on a Russian oil facility in the past three weeks, in what experts say is an effort by Ukraine to deliver setbacks to Russia’s military capabiliti­es by targeting the facilities that supply fuel to tanks, fighter jets, and other critical military equipment.

“Strikes on oil depots and oil storage facilities disrupt logistics routes and slow down combat operations,” said Olena Lapenko, an energy security expert at DiXi Group, a Ukrainian think tank. “Disruption of these supplies, which are like blood for the human body, is part of a wider strategy to counter Russia on the battlefiel­d.”

These attacks are unlikely to have a substantiv­e impact on the overall posture of the fighting, in which Russia has shifted to the offensive the past several months. But they remain important for Ukraine, which has looked for ways to inflict damage away from the largely deadlocked front line. Without enough weapons and troops to regain the initiative on the ground, Ukraine has increasing­ly turned to guerrilla tactics to disrupt Russian operations, including sabotage activities against railway infrastruc­ture and ammunition depots. Oleksandr Kamyshin, Ukraine’s minister for strategic industries, said Thursday that an “asymmetric­al war” was underway. He claimed responsibi­lity for an attack that targeted an oil storage facility in St. Petersburg on Thursday, which he said involved a domestical­ly produced drone that flew about 775 miles.

“I’m sure we will see more and more things happening this year,” Kamyshin said during a panel discussion at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d.

While the St. Petersburg attack did not appear to cause serious damage, images of the Klintsy oil depot showed an extensive fire raging among several tanks. The Russian state news agency TASS said the fire covered an area of about 10,700 square feet, and that four gasoline tanks were burning.

Bogomaz said in a social media post that more than 140 firefighte­rs were trying to extinguish the blaze. He released a video showing them spraying water on blackened oil tanks from which huge plumes of black smoke were rising.

Power infrastruc­ture has been a major theater in the war. Last winter, Russia pummeled Ukraine’s energy facilities with drones and missiles, plunging Ukrainians into cold and darkness, in what was seen as an attempt by Moscow to turn winter into a weapon and demoralize the population. Ukraine managed to survive the assaults because of Western-supplied air defense systems and round-the-clock work by engineers to repair vital equipment.

Ukraine, on a smaller scale, has targeted Russian oil and gas infrastruc­ture since the beginning of the conflict. But the recent spate of attacks may indicate that energy infrastruc­ture has now become a critical objective for Ukraine.

Two other drone attacks, on Dec. 29 and Jan. 9, resulted in fires at a refinery in Russia’s southweste­rn Krasnodar region and at a fuel facility in Oryol, a town not far from Klintsy. On both occasions, the Ukrainian military claimed responsibi­lity in Ukrainian news outlets.

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