
Russia Battles Two-Wave Drone Barrage as Moscow Refinery Burns
Overnight and daytime salvos of Ukrainian drones targeted the capital and eleven other regions, while a separate strike set a major oil facility ablaze.
Russia’s air defences intercepted more than 200 Ukrainian drones in a sustained two-wave assault that stretched from the evening of 16 June deep into the following afternoon, marking one of the most intense aerial bombardments of the war on Russian territory. The defence ministry in Moscow reported that 157 fixed-wing drones were destroyed overnight across fifteen regions and the Black Sea, followed by a further 72 shot down during a five-hour daytime salvo that reached as far as Vladimir and Tver oblasts. Viewed from Western capitals, the scale and persistence of the operation signal a deliberate Ukrainian effort to overwhelm Russia’s layered air-defence network and bring the conflict home to the Moscow metropolitan area.
The capital itself became a focal point. Mayor Sergei Sobyanin issued a cascade of updates as the night wore on, with the tally of drones downed on approach to the city climbing from 18 to at least 20. Emergency crews were dispatched to multiple debris sites, though no casualties or ground damage were reported from the overnight wave. That outcome contrasted sharply with the previous morning, when a drone struck the Kapotniya refinery in southeast Moscow—a facility that supplies roughly 40 percent of the capital’s hydrocarbons—igniting a large fire and sending a thick column of black smoke over the city. The twin episodes forced temporary restrictions at Vnukovo and Domodedovo airports, where flights were accepted only under coordination with security services.
The geographic spread of the attacks underscored the breadth of the campaign. Beyond Moscow, drones were downed over Belgorod, Bryansk, Kursk, Kaluga, Tula, Oryol, Smolensk, Lipetsk, Tver, Ryazan, Rostov, Astrakhan, Krasnodar, and occupied Crimea, as well as over the Sea of Azov and the Black Sea. In parallel, the Russian military claimed to have destroyed 101 Ukrainian drone command posts along the front line in a single day, suggesting a coordinated effort to degrade the command-and-control infrastructure behind the long-range strikes. Analysts in London note that such a multi-domain response—kinetic interceptions paired with counter-battery strikes on launch and control nodes—reflects a doctrinal shift in Moscow’s approach to the drone threat.
From Kyiv’s perspective, the attacks serve both a military and a psychological purpose: they stretch Russian air defences, disrupt economic activity, and erode the sense of invulnerability that the Kremlin has sought to project. In Washington, the tempo of strikes is being read as a complication for any renewed ceasefire diplomacy, hardening positions on both sides. With Ukraine demonstrating an ability to launch successive waves of dozens of drones deep into Russian airspace, the coming weeks are likely to test whether Moscow’s much-vaunted protective dome over the capital can adapt to an adversary that is learning with each salvo.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 1 languages
Russian air defenses successfully neutralized a massive Ukrainian drone attack, shooting down over 150 in one night, including dozens heading for Moscow. Authorities report minimal damage and emphasize the effectiveness of the capital's protection systems.
Russia stated it intercepted and destroyed 172 Ukrainian drones overnight, including 60 in the Moscow region. The reports stick to official figures without additional commentary, describing the attack as one of the largest ever targeting the capital.
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