Ukrainian drones hit Russian port, oil tankers and ships

· RTE.ie

Ukraine launched ⁠a wave of drone attacks on targets across Russia, hitting the Baltic Sea port of Primorsk and setting it on fire as well as striking a number of vessels, as it steps up attacks on energy infrastructure and other targets.

Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky said the strikes had caused significant damage to the oil terminal port.

They also hit an oil tanker, a small Russian Karakurt-class missile ship and a patrol boat in the Baltic Sea, he said on Telegram.

"Each such result further limits Russia's war potential," the Ukrainian president said.

Alexander Drozdenko, governor of the northwest region which hosts the port, said more than 60 drones were downed overnight.

He said the fire at Primorsk, a major ‌oil-exporting outlet, was quickly extinguished and there ⁠had been no oil spill following the attack.

Among numerous reports of other attacks elsewhere in Russia, the governor of the Belgorod region bordering Ukraine, Vyacheslav Gladkov, said a drone had hit a car, killing a 21-year-old man and his father on the spot.

Ukraine continues to develop long-range capabilities

Primorsk, one of Russia's largest export gateways, has capacity to handle 1 million barrels per day of oil supply.

It has been hit ‌multiple times in recent months as US-brokered talks to end the Ukraine war have stalled.

Mr Zelensky earlier said Ukrainian forces also struck two shadow-fleet tankers in waters at ⁠the entrance to the Russian Black Sea port of Novorossiysk.

"These tankers had been actively used to transport oil – not anymore," Mr ‌Zelensky said on Telegram.

"Ukraine's long-range capabilities will continue to be developed comprehensively – at sea, in the ⁠air, and on ‌land."

Russia unfased by the attacks

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said global oil prices may rise further if Ukraine continues to hit Russia's oil infrastructure, Russian TV reported.

"If additional volumes of our oil are dropped from the market, prices will rise further from current levels, which are already above $120 a barrel," ⁠Mr Peskov said.

"That would mean that even with lower export volumes, our companies would earn more money and the state would receive more revenue," he added.

Moscow ⁠regional governor Andrei Vorobyov said yesterday evening that a 77-year-old man had died in a village following a drone strike.

And Sergei Sobyanin, mayor of the city of Moscow, said four drones were downed on their way to the Russian capital.

Vasily Anokhin, governor of the western Smolensk region, said three people, including a child, were injured today after a drone attacked an apartment block there.

Russian troops were meanwhile inching towards the city of Kostiantynivka in Ukraine's eastern Donetsk region, ‌Ukraine's top army official said yesterday.

Tens of thousands have been killed in the four-year war, unleashed by Russia's February 2022 invasion.


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Zelensky thanks Charles for 'strong words' on Ukraine in US

Volodymyr Zelensky thanked Keir Starmer for the UK's sanctions against Russia

Mr Zelensky thanked the Britain's King Charles at a meeting with the UK prime minister for his "strong words" on the defence of Ukraine during his state visit to the United States.

The Ukrainian president expressed his gratitude for the monarch's comments in a meeting with Keir Starmer in Armenia.

"Best regards and thanks to His Majesty for strong words in the United States supporting our people," Mr Zelensky told Mr Starmer,

The two met earlier at a hotel in Armenia’s capital Yerevan, where leaders from across Europe are gathering for tomorrow's European Political Community (EPC) summit.

Charles, in a speech to Congress last week, spoke of the importance of Nato and support for Kyiv, amid concerns over Donald Trump’s waning interest in the conflict.

Charles' address has been widely interpreted as a gentle pushback against some of the US president’s peeves including Ukraine, from which his attention has been diverted by the Iran war.

In their meeting, Mr Zelensky also thanked Mr Starmer for the UK’s sanctions against Russia and efforts to counter its shadow fleet, saying the measures set a "great example" for other allies.

"I think that Russia’s economy feels it," Mr Zelensky said.