Fifty-three percent neutralized in a single strike
On June 16, 2026, the ELOU-AVT-6 unit was destroyed. Fifty-three percent of its total capacity was neutralized with a single strike.
A 53 percent strike leaves 47 percent intact. A second strike was inevitable—it would come 48 hours later.
A history of cumulative strikes on the MNPZ
The MNPZ had been struck in September 2024, March 2025, and May 2026. On May 17: twelve workers injured.
Each strike opened up breaches. June 2026 completed the job: complete operational collapse.
Striking the same refinery twice in three days to take out 100 percent of its capacity is industrial strategy. Ukraine has learned how to finish the job.
The night of June 17: Five simultaneous fires in Kapotnya
The Euro+ unit and the storage facility in flames
On the night of June 17–18, the strike targeted the Euro+ unit—the remaining 47 percent—triggering at least five simultaneous fires.
Three RVS-10,000 tanks and one RVS-30,000 tank were hit. Governor Vorobiev was forced to acknowledge the damage.
CyberBoroshno’s verdict: 100 percent neutralized
CyberBoroshno, June 18: Drones struck 100 percent of the MNPZ’s primary capacity. Operations have come to a halt.
A pro-Kremlin milblogger: 90 percent intercepted. The ISW corrects: substantial damage confirmed. The flames in Kapotnya don’t lie.
When a Russian governor admits to fires in the heart of the Moscow region, the reality is too obvious to deny. Black smoke cannot be dispelled by a press release.
527 flights disrupted at Moscow airports
Four Air Hubs Paralyzed Simultaneously
Kapotnya also produces jet fuel for Vnukovo, Domodedovo, Sheremetyevo, and Zhukovsky. The attack brought them all to a standstill simultaneously.
Five hundred twenty-seven flights were canceled or delayed. At Sheremetyevo alone: fifty departures and sixty arrivals were canceled. Aeroflot and Rossiya canceled one hundred seventy flights.
War has taken hold in Moscow’s airport terminals
Passengers stranded at Sheremetyevo—not because of a storm, but because of a refinery on fire fifteen kilometers away. Muscovites saw the smoke from their windows.
And yet, some are crying out that this is an escalation. Moscow has been striking Ukrainian cities for four years. This is a proportionate response.
Five hundred twenty-seven flights disrupted in the Russian capital—the war has knocked on the door of the average Muscovite. That is precisely the message Ukraine wanted to send.
Kapotnya's Strategic Dependence
Forty percent of the region’s gasoline and fifty percent of its diesel
MNPZ accounts for 40 percent of the region’s gasoline and 50 percent of its diesel. Having been shut down since June 19, the shortfall caused by its absence cannot be quickly made up.
Russian oil production had fallen to 8.74 million barrels per day in May 2026, down from 8.96 million in April.
Units that cannot be replaced in the short term
The destroyed units require imported parts that are blocked by Western sanctions. Repairs will take months. These long-repair-time facilities represent a perfect vulnerability.
The Russian government: 700 billion rubles ($9.7 billion) in subsidies in 2026. Without this injection, the fuel market would have collapsed.
Neutralizing infrastructure whose repairs depend on parts blocked by sanctions—that is the Ukrainian strategy at its most subtle and formidable.
Zelensky's Statement: Symmetry of Fire
A direct response to the bombing of the Lavra
Volodymyr Zelensky on June 18: “This is a fully justified response to Russian strikes on our cities and communities.”
A direct response to the June 15 bombing of the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra. His globally recognized statement: “If Ukraine burns, Moscow will burn too.”
The doctrine of overt reciprocity
Since 2022, Ukraine has shifted toward an overt doctrine of reciprocity. Striking 15 kilometers from the Kremlin, at a sustained pace.
As long as Moscow strikes Ukrainian cities, Kyiv will strike the infrastructure supporting this war. This is not revenge—it is active deterrence.
“If Ukraine burns, Moscow will burn too”—I hear a dignity long denied. Zelensky is finally saying: we are not your punching bag.
The ISW: Growing Vulnerabilities in Russian Defenses
An unequivocal verdict on air defense
ISW on June 18: “The increasing frequency, scale, and depth of the Ukrainian campaign demonstrate growing vulnerabilities in Russian air defenses.”
The ISW adds: The campaign is creating dilemmas for the Kremlin. Putin is now managing a war that is visible and costly to his own population.
Red Spark and the Russian Internal Resistance
Ukrainian Special Forces confirmed the strike on Rostovnefteprodukt in Gukovo, carried out with Red Spark (Krasnaya Iskra). One person was killed.
A military storage facility near Chebekino (Belgorod) was targeted. Striking multiple regions simultaneously forces the defense forces to spread out.
Red Spark, which is collaborating from Russian soil with Ukrainian special operations—this is what Putin cannot admit without shattering one of his foundational narratives.
The oil spill and the 17 people injured in the region
Civilian casualties acknowledged by Russian authorities
Russian authorities: seventeen people injured, including two children. Damage reported in Zhukovsky, Lyubertsy, Chekhov, and Pavlovsky Posad.
Moscow residents reported a “rain of oil”—droplets of hydrocarbons on cars. Black smoke visible from residential neighborhoods.
The Kremlin cannot completely deny the situation
When smoke drifts in through your windows and the rain smells like oil, war ceases to be a television abstraction.
The Kremlin sticks to its narrative: victorious defenses. The Russian people know what that narrative is worth—the oil on their car bodies.
A rain of oil over Moscow: the perfect metaphor for a war the Kremlin claims to be in control of, while oil falls on its own citizens.
June 19: Thirty-seven more drones—the pace remains steady
A sustained campaign, not an isolated incident
On June 19, Sobyanin: Thirty-seven drones intercepted in the afternoon. The pressure continues unabated—a sustained strategic campaign.
Russia, the world’s third-largest producer, is forced to import petroleum products by sea—a symbolic turnaround documented by Reuters.
The fuel crisis in Russian daily life
The shortage affects fifty-three Russian regions, according to Al Jazeera. In occupied Crimea, Governor Aksyonov suspended all sales to civilians on June 21.
A driver in Sevastopol named Alyona told Reuters: “How can this be resolved? Only if the special military operation ends.”
Thirty-seven drones the next day, compared to one hundred ninety-four the day before—Ukraine tells Moscow: That wasn’t our best shot. We have others.
What Moscow Claims, What the Facts Show
The “Partial Denial” Defense
Russia: successful defenses, high interception rate, minimal damage. Sobyanin announces the figures with mechanical precision.
When 100 percent of a refinery is shut down and 527 flights are disrupted, propaganda clashes with arithmetic.
The Message Sent to the Authoritarian Coalition
This message resonates in Beijing, Tehran, and Pyongyang: Ukraine strikes deep, hard, and repeatedly. Supporting Moscow means supporting an actor with well-documented vulnerabilities.
And yet, China persists. Iran supplies the Geran missiles that set cathedrals ablaze. Every night—like June 17—cracks appear in this authoritarian coalition.
Moscow strikes Kyiv with drones of Iranian origin; Kyiv responds by targeting Russian refineries. This symmetry says it all: an authoritarian coalition against a people defending themselves.
Ukraine's technical capabilities in the operation
Three Types of Drones, an Insurmountable Defense Dilemma
The June 18 strike: the FP-1 Firepoint, the An-196 Liutyi, and the jet-powered Bars—radically different speeds and altitudes.
Confirmed range: 1,750 km, as demonstrated by the strike on Ukhta (Komis) in February 2026. Kapotnya is 800 km away.
The cumulative pressure on Russian refining
Ukrainian drones: sixteen strikes on refineries in May 2026, including eight of the ten largest. Thirty strikes in total in May.
Russian refining in May 2026: 4.58 million barrels per day, the lowest since 2009. Early June: below four million, the lowest in twenty-one years.
Three types of drones, three regions struck simultaneously, 100% of a refinery neutralized—the Ukrainian strategy is no longer improvised. It is systematic and formidable.
Western support: a key factor
Germany and the Funding of Ukrainian Drones
The MNPZ was destroyed in 2025 using technology funded by Germany. The results: concrete, quantifiable, and visible from the windows of Moscow.
And yet, some capitals are hesitating. Supporting Ukraine only halfway means prolonging the war. Supporting it fully means bringing it to a quicker end.
The campaign continues; the next target has already been chosen
The TANECO refinery (Tatarstan) was struck on June 12, 2026. Ukraine can keep going. Will its allies have the will to stand with it?
Russia was planning to import fuel by sea in June 2026—a symbolic humiliation for the world’s third-largest producer.
An oil giant forced to import its own fuel—that is the image Ukraine has imposed. This reversal says more about this war than any speech ever could.
Russia's War Economy Faces Its Contradictions
A Budget Deficit Skyrocketing Due to Military Spending
The Russian economy: contracted for the first time in three years in Q1 2026. Deficit: six trillion rubles, 2.6% of GDP, exceeding the projected level by 60%.
Russian associations have asked the Bank of Russia to cut the interest rate by one percentage point—to prevent the economy from “freezing up completely.”
Subsidies to mask the collapse
The 700 billion rubles in subsidies in April–May 2026 are keeping fuel prices artificially high. Without this injection, the market would have collapsed.
Putin: Growth has “only fallen to the level of eurozone countries.” A growing disconnect between the official narrative and industrial reality.
Subsidizing its refineries with billions to offset the damage caused by enemy drones—you don’t win an economic war that way. Ukraine is striking where it hurts.
The Strategic Significance of the Ukrainian Campaign
A surge in intensity that Russia did not anticipate
The campaign is intensifying in frequency, scale, and depth. Ukrainian capabilities now extend 1,750 km—all major Russian refineries are within range.
Each wave forces Russian defenses to choose: cities or infrastructure. When Moscow, Rostov, and Belgorod are targeted simultaneously, spreading resources thin is inevitable.
The question of allied support as the final variable
The more advanced systems and local funding the allies provide, the better Ukraine can hold both fronts.
Kapotnya was destroyed thanks to capabilities built with Germany. The next target will be destroyed depending on the allies’ resolve.
Kapotnya in flames, 100 percent neutralized—that’s the best argument for Ukraine’s allies to stop dithering. The results prove that it works.
Conclusion: With Kapotnya out of action, the war takes on a new face
What That Night Proved
The night of June 17–18, 2026, proved it all. One hundred ninety-four drones intercepted. One hundred percent of the MNPZ neutralized in two strikes.
527 flights disrupted. Twelve million metric tons grounded. Forty percent of the region’s gasoline supply depleted. A night in June 2026 that went down in history.
The question that remains unanswered
And yet, the war continues. Moscow is still striking Kyiv. Victory is not yet in sight. But Kapotnya has changed the game.
The question is no longer: Can Ukraine reach Moscow? It has proven it can. Will the free world have the will to achieve a just peace?
By Maxime Marquette, columnist
Sources
Primary Sources
ISW: Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment, June 18, 2026 — June 19, 2026
Kyiv Independent: Ukraine Launches Largest Drone Attack on Moscow, Hits Oil Refinery — June 18, 2026
Secondary sources
Militarnyi: The Largest-Scale Strike on the Moscow Oil Refinery — June 18, 2026
Ukrainska Pravda: Ukrainian drones paralyze Moscow as over 500 flights are canceled — June 18, 2026
Defence Ukraine: Moscow Shrouded in Smoke as Ukraine Launches Largest Drone Attack — June 18, 2026
Euromaidan Press: Moscow refinery supplying 50% of the region’s diesel hit by drones — June 18, 2026
This content was created with the help of AI.