Ukraine Strikes Russia’s Shadow Fleet in International Waters
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Ukraine hits Russia's energy fleet in international waters, marking a decisive escalation in its campaign to disrupt Moscow's wartime revenue. In late November, Ukrainian naval drones struck two tankers — the Kairos and the Virat — as they transited through the Black Sea off the coast of Turkey, far outside Russian territorial waters. Both vessels are tied to Russia's so-called “shadow fleet,” the network of aging, sanctions-dodging tankers that keep Russian oil flowing despite Western restrictions. Ukrainian security officials said the ships were not carrying crude at the time but were en route to load sanctioned Russian exports, making them high-value targets in Kyiv's effort to undermine Moscow's financial lifeline. The strikes disabled both tankers and forced emergency responses from regional maritime authorities, underscoring that this was not a domestic act of sabotage but a cross-border, maritime operation in a strategically sensitive international corridor.

After the initial strikes disabled the two targeted tankers, the full extent of the damage became clear as emergency responders approached the vessels. The drones had not merely halted their transit — they had torn into the lower sections of the hulls, causing progressive flooding that forced crews to shut down power systems to avoid electrical fires. Maritime traffic records show both ships drifting for hours, signaling distress as regional authorities issued navigation alerts to prevent collisions. Tugboats dispatched from nearby ports struggled to stabilize the tankers, whose compromised ballast systems left them listing sharply in the swells. Preliminary assessments shared with insurers indicated that the engine rooms of both vessels had taken on significant water, making short-term repairs nearly impossible and raising the likelihood that they will be sidelined for months. The aftermath underscored how a single precisely executed strike can ripple outward — halting operations, triggering costly recovery efforts, and inserting new uncertainty into Russia's tightly stretched export chain.

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Over the past year, Ukraine has repeatedly targeted Russia's energy infrastructure in strikes confirmed by Russian regional officials and independent reporting. Ukrainian drones have hit oil refineries in regions such as Ryazan, Krasnodar, and St. Petersburg, temporarily disrupting processing operations according to regional authorities and Russian state media. Several fuel depots and oil-handling facilities have also been struck in attacks attributed to Ukraine, including sites near St. Petersburg and in Russia's southern regions. Kyiv has stated that these operations are intended to reduce Russia's ability to finance its war through energy exports. Western intelligence assessments and Reuters analyses have noted that repeated strikes have forced temporary shutdowns at multiple refineries, prompting Russia to reroute some crude supply and accelerate repair efforts. These confirmed incidents form the backdrop for Ukraine's recent expansion of attacks to maritime targets linked to Russia's oil-export system.

«The most radical solution is to cut Ukraine off from the sea, then piracy will be impossible in principle.»

-Vladimir Putin

Ukraine's latest strikes unfold against a backdrop of intense controversy surrounding the Trump–Russia peace plan, which major U.S. and European media have described as deeply destabilizing for Kyiv. According to The New York Times and France 24, the proposal being discussed between Trump and Vladimir Putin would require Ukraine to cede territory and abandon its long-standing bid for NATO membership — conditions Ukrainian officials have publicly and firmly rejected. The Washington Post has reported that the plan has alarmed European governments, who fear it would legitimize Russia's territorial gains and weaken collective security arrangements on the continent. Reuters has similarly noted that Ukrainian leaders view the negotiations with deep suspicion, interpreting them as a diplomatic framework built largely without Ukraine's participation. As these debates unfold, Ukraine continues to carry out strikes on Russian energy infrastructure — actions that underscore Kyiv's determination to assert its own leverage and agency at a moment when international discussions about its future are taking place largely above its head.

Following the November 29 drone strikes on the Russian-linked tankers Kairos and Virat, the Ukrainian government confirmed the operation, framing it as a blow to Moscow's capacity to fund the war through oil exports. While President Zelenskyy has previously urged international partners to blacklist and block Russia's shadow fleet — calling these vessels a major mechanism of sanctions evasion — he has not issued a specific public comment on this particular attack. Putin, by contrast, responded with explicit threats, denouncing the strike as piracy and declaring: «The most radical solution is to cut Ukraine off from the sea, then piracy will be impossible in principle.» He further warned that Russia would “intensify strikes on Ukrainian facilities and vessels … and take measures against tankers of countries that help Ukraine.” As of now, there is no verified record of Donald Trump commenting on the tanker strikes.