Ukraine has successfully disabled approximately 20% of Russia's oil refining capacity through precision drone and missile strikes on 16 of the country's 38 refineries.
Russia's weekend bombardment killed at least nine Ukrainian civilians, including a family of four in western Lviv Oblast, as Czech voters elected populist Andrej Babiš on promises to cut aid to Kyiv. The attacks featured Chinese-provided satellite targeting data, while Ukraine achieved its first FPV drone kill of a flying helicopter and destroyed North Korean artillery near the front lines.
Russian forces struck a passenger train at Shostka railway station in Sumy Oblast, injuring dozens including three children. Meanwhile, Czech anti-Ukrainian Babiš's party won the country's election, threatening to cut off Prague's military support for Kyiv.
Russia deployed 381 drones and 35 missiles in its biggest attack yet on Ukraine's energy sector overnight, while Ukrainian forces demonstrated their expanding reach by striking the Orsk refinery 1,400 kilometers inside Russian territory — part of a campaign that has now hit 21 refineries since January and created nationwide fuel shortages in energy-rich Russia.
Ukrainian forces are systematically eliminating Russian pockets near Pokrovsk while drone strikes devastate fuel infrastructure across Russia from the frontlines to Moscow. As the Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Plant enters a record seventh day without external power, international developments reveal the war's broader complexities—from Denmark's quiet reservist mobilization over mystery drones to renewed debate over EU nations still funding Russia's war machine through energy purchases.
Europe's largest nuclear plant continues running on backup diesel generators under Russian occupation, pushing the continent closer to catastrophe with each passing hour.
As Ukraine demonstrates its ability to hit targets across Russia's industrial heartland and mysterious drones probe European defenses from the Baltic to the North Sea, the conflict is entering a new phase where hybrid warfare tactics are reshaping security across the continent - even as diplomatic channels quietly reopen.
The systematic erasure of Crimean Tatar identity under Russian occupation has reached genocidal proportions, with 50,000 people expelled from their ancestral homeland.