Ukraine strikes St. Petersburg oil terminal and Kronstadt naval base in largest-ever long-range drone operation
An overnight drone barrage hit the Vysotsk port oil terminal and Kronstadt naval facility, roughly 850 km from Ukraine's front lines; Russian governor confirmed a 'large-scale' attack and a major fire at the terminal
리스트에 추가
아직 리스트가 없습니다.
Summary
Ukraine launched its deepest and most sustained drone campaign against Russia's Baltic coast overnight on July 4, striking the Vysotsk port oil terminal in the Leningrad region and the Kronstadt naval base roughly 850 km from Ukraine's front lines. St. Petersburg Governor Alexander Beglov confirmed a "large-scale" attack; eyewitness footage showed a major fire at the Vysotsk terminal, which channels refined products into Baltic export routes. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy confirmed the operation via Telegram, stating Ukrainian forces targeted "port oil infrastructure that generates revenue for Russia's war." A separate report from the Kyiv Post confirmed a Ukrainian strike on a Russian helicopter over the Sea of Azov the same night, suggesting a coordinated long-range operation across two separate theatres. The strikes follow Ukraine's July 3 HIMARS attack on Belgorod's Luch thermal power plant, which knocked out power and water for much of that city.
The split
Ukrainian and Western sources frame the Vysotsk and Kronstadt strikes as legitimate military and economic targets: the oil terminal funds the Russian war machine, and Kronstadt is a named naval installation. Russian state media and regional authorities use the language of "terrorist attack on civilian infrastructure," a framing that has consistently failed to generate international condemnation given Russia's own sustained attacks on Ukraine's power grid. The Moscow Times exile press treats the events factually and without the state framing, while Gulf and Arab coverage situates it in the broader pattern of escalating mutual strikes on strategic infrastructure.
By the numbers
- 850 km, approximate straight-line distance from Ukraine's front lines to Vysotsk and Kronstadt
- 3, the number of distinct target systems hit overnight: Vysotsk oil terminal, Kronstadt naval base, Russian helicopter over the Sea of Azov
- 25+, HIMARS rockets Ukraine used to strike Belgorod on July 3, the preceding night
- 1, fatality confirmed in Belgorod from the parallel July 3 power-plant strike
- ~10 million bpd, the Strait of Hormuz oil flow partially restored under the June 17 US-Iran ceasefire framework, providing the broader energy context in which Russian Baltic oil infrastructure has gained pricing leverage
Why it matters
Vysotsk is one of the Baltic Sea terminals that allows Russia to export refined petroleum products to European markets that have not yet fully closed their own ports to Russian-flagged cargoes. Targeting oil terminals at this range demonstrates Ukraine's growing long-range drone capability and raises the economic cost to Russia of maintaining the war. Kronstadt's symbolic weight is also significant: the naval base has been a symbol of Russian maritime power since Peter the Great, and a confirmed strike sends a message about Ukrainian reach that no amount of official Russian denial fully erases.
What to watch
- Russian retaliatory strike on Ukrainian cities or energy infrastructure in the coming 48-72 hours.
- Assessment of damage at Vysotsk: whether the terminal fire caused a sustained export disruption or was contained quickly.
- Whether Ukraine conducts further Baltic coast strikes, signalling a new sustained campaign against Russia's northwestern energy export infrastructure.
- NATO Ankara summit response (July 7-8): whether allied leaders explicitly endorse or implicitly acknowledge Ukraine's long-range drone capability expansion.