Translation is being generated — showing English version for now.Checking in 45s…
Politics6 sources analysées
Ukraine strikes Russian oil near St. Petersburg
Over the night of July 3-4, 2026, Ukraine launched a large-scale drone attack targeting oil infrastructure and military facilities near St. Petersburg, Russia's second-largest city. The strikes hit oil terminals in the port of Vysotsk and the military base at Kronstadt, about 850 km from the Ukrainian border. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed the operation, framing it as a precision strike to disrupt Russian energy revenues funding the war. Russian officials, including St. Petersburg Governor Alexander Beglov and Leningrad Governor Alexander Drozdenko, reported that 72 drones were shot down over the Leningrad region and that only debris caused minor damage, with no casualties. The Russian Defense Ministry claimed 389 Ukrainian drones were intercepted nationwide.
Simultaneously, Russian forces carried out a guided bomb attack on the Ukrainian city of Sumy, killing at least four people, including a child, and wounding 27 others. This attack came two days after a devastating Russian strike on Kyiv that killed 30. In the Donbas, Russia claimed to have captured the strategic city of Kostyantynivka, but Ukraine denied this, calling it a false claim. The Ukrainian long-range drone campaign against Russian oil facilities has been ongoing for months, leading to gasoline shortages in Russia, as acknowledged by President Putin.
Points clés
Ukrainian drones struck oil terminals near St. Petersburg, including the port of Vysotsk and the Kronstadt naval base.
President Zelensky confirmed the strikes, calling them part of a plan to reduce Russian war revenues.
Russian officials claimed 72 drones were shot down over the Leningrad region and that only debris caused minor damage.
A Russian guided bomb attack on Sumy killed at least four people and wounded 27 others.
Russia claimed capture of Kostyantynivka in Donbas, but Ukraine denied it and said fighting continues.
The strikes are part of a wider Ukrainian campaign against Russian oil facilities that has caused fuel shortages in Russia.
Couverture des sources
Radio Free EuropePréoccupéCentre-Left
Russian Bomb Attack Kills At Least 4 In Sumy; Ukraine Rejects Kremlin Claim It Captured Key City
Frames the oil strike within the context of Russian attacks on Ukrainian cities, emphasizes civilian casualties in Sumy, and highlights the competing claims over Kostyantynivka.
DW EnglishNeutreCentre-Left
Ukraine strikes oil terminals near St. Petersburg in Russia
Covers the attack as a Ukrainian strategy to disrupt Russian energy revenues, includes Zelensky's confirmation and Russian officials' claims of intercepting drones, also reports on Russian capture of Kostyantynivka and broader attacks.
NOSNeutreCentre-Left
Oekraïne valt Russische olie-installaties bij Sint-Petersburg aan
Reports the attack with a focus on the fuel crisis in Russia and the Ukrainian strategy, also covers the Russian attack on Sumy and the disputed claim over Kostyantynivka.
NZZNeutreCentre-Right
Ölhafen bei St. Petersburg getroffen
In a live ticker format, reports the oil port strike as part of broader war updates, includes Zelensky's statement and Ukraine's denial of Russian claim on Kostyantynivka, also covers German support for Patriot systems.
The IndependentNeutreCentre-Left
St Petersburg oil port and 'important military target' struck by Kyiv
Reports on the large-scale drone attack, quotes both Russian and Ukrainian authorities, includes context of Putin's remarks on continued strikes and Ukraine's targeting of railways.
Radio Free EuropeFavorableCentre-Left
Ukraine Is Winning Its War On Russian Oil Refineries. On The Front Line, It's A Bloody Slugfest.
Provides analytical depth, contrasting Ukraine's success in long-range drone attacks on Russian oil facilities with the difficult ground situation in Donbas, particularly around Kostyantynivka.
Conclusion
The event illustrates the intensifying long-range strike capabilities of both sides in the war, with Ukraine systematically targeting Russian energy infrastructure to undermine Moscow's war finances, while Russia continues to batter Ukrainian cities. Ukrainian officials frame the attacks as part of a 'long-range sanctions plan,' while Russian authorities downplay the damage. The contrasting coverage by outlets highlights different priorities: Western media often emphasize Ukrainian strategic successes and Russian civilian harm, while Russian-affiliated sources stress effective defense and minimal impact. The conflict remains a high-stakes contest of retaliation and attrition.
Analyse logique
Ce sur quoi les sources s’accordent
Broad agreement that Ukraine conducted a large-scale drone attack on oil infrastructure near St. Petersburg.
Zelensky confirmed the strikes as part of a strategy to disrupt Russian energy revenues.
Russian officials claimed most drones were intercepted and damage was minimal.
The attack occurred alongside a Russian bomb strike on Sumy and competing claims over Kostyantynivka.
Control of Kostyantynivka: Russia claims capture, Ukraine denies.
Outlet
Claim
DW English
Reports Russian claim of capture without comment from Ukraine.
Radio Free Europe (first)
Quotes Ukrainian denial, calling it 'just another Russian lie'.
NZZ
Reports Ukrainian general staff denying the capture.
Russian vs Ukrainian claims on whether the oil strikes caused significant damage.
Outlet
Claim
DW English
Reports both sides: Zelensky says strikes hit infrastructure; Russian governor says only debris caused damage.
The Independent
Quotes Zelensky confirming successful strikes on port oil infrastructure and Kronstadt.
NOS
Notes that the Russian governor's claim that all drones were shot down is unsubstantiated.
No detailed assessment of the actual damage inflicted on the oil terminals or the military impact.
International reactions (e.g., US, EU) are not mentioned.
Lack of independent verification of Russian claims about intercepting drones.
The coverage consistently presents the oil strike as a significant Ukrainian operation deep inside Russia, but opinions diverge on its effectiveness. Ukrainian and Western sources portray it as a strategic win that weakens Russia's war economy, while Russian sources downplay the damage. The simultaneous Russian attack on Sumy and the Kostyantynivka dispute show the tit-for-tat nature of the conflict. The lack of independent damage assessment leaves the actual impact unclear, but the overall narrative reinforces that Ukraine is increasingly capable of hitting sensitive targets far from the front lines.