Ukraine sets fire to a Russian oil pipeline 1,500 km away: the war drags on
Something just happened that sounds like a spy movie, but it’s real. Ukraine launched a drone attack against an oil pumping station in Perm, Russia. Yes, you read correctly: more than 1,500 kilometers from its border. The facility went up in flames, according to the Security Service of Ukraine (SBU).
How is it possible? Well, with technology that you previously only saw in military manuals. These drones are not toys. They hit a key piece of the Russian energy machine, right in the heart of the Urals. The local governor, Dmitry Makhonin, confirmed the impact, although without giving many details. Typical: Moscow does not want to admit that it is being touched upon.
“A drone hit the site, causing a fire,” Makhonin said, without confirming whether it was a systematic attack.
This is not a whim. kyiv is playing to wear down the machinery that finances Putin’s war. Every barrel of oil that is not pumped is one dollar less for tanks and missiles. But be careful, this is also a message: “We can go wherever you want.”
The Russian authorities, for their part, adopt a cautious tone. They promise to investigate and protect critical facilities. But the question I ask myself as a mother and journalist is: what’s next? Because when attacks drag on like this, families on both sides pay the price. The war no longer has clear borders, only smoke and ashes.




