Ukraine Strikes Russian Dark Fleet Tankers in Sea of Azov

Ukraine Strikes 8 Russian Dark Fleet Tankers in Sea of Azov

In a major overnight operation, Ukrainian drone forces struck eight Russian “shadow fleet” tankers in the Sea of Azov that were delivering fuel to occupied Crimea. The attack, described by Ukrainian commanders as achieving “industrial-scale results,” marks the latest and most concentrated blow in Kyiv’s sustained campaign to disrupt Russia’s energy exports and logistics supporting its war effort.

Ukraine’s Unmanned Systems Forces and the 414th Separate Unmanned Strike Aviation Brigade (“Magyar’s Birds,” Kairos unit) targeted the vessels on the night of July 6–7. Commander Robert “Madyar” Brovdi reported that the tankers — each with a deadweight of around 7,000 tons and under international sanctions — were carrying gasoline from the Taganrog area toward Crimea. The drones also hit a dry cargo ship and a ferry in the same convoy.

Named vessels included Venera-3, Sanar-1, Sanar-17, Klymena, Teti, Alexei Savrasov, Penelopa, and one additional tanker. Drone footage released by Ukrainian forces showed direct hits, with the tankers reportedly badly damaged and on fire. The operation reportedly extended to the Kerch oil depot, a Nebo-U radar, two S-400 launchers, and up to 58 other military sites, triggering blackouts and exacerbating fuel shortages across Crimea.

Russia has not publicly confirmed the losses.

Ongoing Ukrainian Strikes on Russian Oil Assets in 2026

The Sea of Azov attack fits into a broader and intensifying Ukrainian long-range drone and missile campaign against Russian energy infrastructure throughout 2026. Key targets have included:

Refineries: Multiple strikes on major facilities such as Tuapse (hit at least four times in short periods), Yaroslavl (NORSI, Russia’s fourth-largest), Moscow’s Kapotnya refinery (multiple hits in June), Sloviansk, Kirishi (KINEF, second-largest), Omsk (one of Russia’s largest, struck in a deep raid), and refineries in Tatarstan, Volgograd, Saratov, and Afipsky. Nearly 200 drone strikes on Russian oil refineries occurred in the first half of 2026 alone — 11 times more than the same period in 2025. Over 50 reported attacks on refineries, depots, terminals, and related infrastructure since late March 2026.

Export Terminals and Ports: Strikes on Baltic Sea hubs Primorsk and Ust-Luga (which together handle a large share of Russia’s seaborne crude exports), Novorossiysk, Tuapse, and facilities near St. Petersburg/Kronstadt.

Shadow Fleet Tankers: Repeated attacks on sanctioned vessels used to evade Western oil price caps and sanctions. Earlier 2026 incidents included the WEST Horizon (June, Black Sea), FINA A (June, Black Sea), and others. The July 7 strike represents the largest single-night operation against the fleet.

Other Assets: Oil depots, pumping stations, and related infrastructure.

Ukrainian forces have conducted thousands of strikes on Russian industrial targets overall, with hundreds focused on the oil and gas sector.

The resulting fuel crisis in Russia

These attacks have significantly reduced Russia’s refining capacity at peaks, with drops of 13% or more in refined product output and claims of up to 25–42% capacity impacts at times. Gasoline production has fallen sharply (around 25% year-on-year in some reports), leading to widespread shortages.

As of early July 2026, fuel supply disruptions and rationing affect nearly all of Russia’s regions (over 50 officially reporting issues, with unofficial reports covering almost the entire country). Long queues form at gas stations; some regions have imposed sales limits or declared states of emergency (notably occupied Crimea in June, which banned civilian fuel sales at points). The crisis has spread from occupied Ukrainian territories to mainland Russia, impacting tourism, logistics, and daily life.

Russian Retaliation: Strikes on Ukrainian Gas Stations and Energy Infrastructure

Russia has responded with intensified attacks on Ukrainian energy and civilian fuel infrastructure. In particular, Russian forces have escalated strikes on Ukrainian gas stations, disrupting supplies and exacerbating shortages.

Original Article: Ukraine Strikes 8 Russian Dark Fleet Tankers in Sea of Azov, Escalating Campaign Against Moscow’s Oil Lifeline — Energynewsbeat