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Related: About this forumUkraine unleashes Storm Shadow missiles on Russian strategic objects - RFU News
Today, the biggest news comes from the Russian Federation.
Here, Ukraines winter strike campaign is expanding in scope just as Moscow enters the most demanding phase of the season. And now, the newly delivered Storm Shadow missiles from the United Kingdom are being brought into the campaign, as winter demand peaks, repair cycles become exhausted, and repeated damage becomes impossible to absorb across Russias energy system.
The use of Storm Shadow in recent strikes reveals how Ukraine has been managing these missiles, as they appear to have been held in reserve for a concentrated blow, rather than expended immediately with reduced effectiveness. The arrival of the new batch from the UK reinforced the airpower even more, allowing Ukraine to treat refineries, ports, and gas facilities as high-value military targets, sharply increasing the defensive burden to Russia just as stability in fuel supply, transport, and export flows is most critical.
The clearest example is the strike on the Novoshakhtinsk oil refinery, where multiple impacts and secondary explosions point to a missile strike aimed at processing units. Novoshakhtinsk plays a central role in supplying southern regions and military logistics. The strike was designed to halt production and extend repair time through hitting pipeline junctions, power supply units, and control systems needed to bring processing units back online. This is the optimal moment to deploy Storm Shadow because winter fuel demand is peaking, repair crews and spare parts are already overstretched, and any disruption to processing units now compounds faster than Russia can restore capacity. The pattern of damage suggests attention to chokepoints such as pipelines, control systems, and power connections, which delays the restart of the facility for weeks. The Orenburg gas processing plant, the largest facility of its kind in the world, was also struck during this wave. Available reporting indicates a long-range drone was used as opposed to Storm Shadow, highlighting that Ukraine is deliberately mixing tools, using missiles to disable processing units, whilst drones are used to force air defenses to cover distant regions at the same time.
The sequence of strikes shows that Ukraine is applying hard pressure rather than waiting for weeks. As Ukraine hit the Syzran oil refinery in Samara Oblast, with Russian sources acknowledging disruptions that again point to processing units and targeting control infrastructure, instead of storage tanks alone. As Ukraine linked the refinery directly to military fuel supply, suggesting that Syzran remains on the target list instead of being considered a completed strike. On December 26, the Volgograd refinery supplying Lukoil was struck, with reports indicating damage to infrastructure used to produce lubricants and pipeline systems, a category of output that directly affects both civilian transport and military equipment maintenance.
At the same time, strikes on Novorossiysks port infrastructure destroyed multiple offshore terminals, and as a result, the port is now operating with only a single remaining loading point, turning one of Russias most important export hubs into a fragile bottleneck. The same day, Temryuk port in Krasnodar Krai was hit, with large product tanks set ablaze, a type of target that removes buffer storage and amplifies the impact of future strikes on refineries and pipelines feeding the port. A day earlier, strikes hit an oil tanker and port infrastructure along the Krasnodar Krai coastline, further tightening pressure on storage and shipping capacity in the region.
The fire at the Saratov refinery, which occurred without a new strike, is one of the clearest signs of how degraded Russias refining system has become. Saratov has been hit repeatedly over time, and while Russia has managed to restore partial output after earlier attacks, those repairs have increasingly relied on temporary fixes and equipment taken from other facilities. As spare parts run out and maintenance windows shrink, failures are no longer showing up as leaks or reduced efficiency, but as uncontrolled fires and full shutdowns. This shows a shift from recoverable damage to structural breakdown, where facilities begin to fail under their own accumulated stress
Overall, Ukraines winter campaign is pushing Russias energy system past the point where damage can be managed through rotation and repair. Repeated strikes, delayed maintenance, and the collapse of...