Waves of Ukrainian explosive-laden drones on Saturday pounded e-commerce warehouses in the Moscow and Tambov regions, killing eight people and causing large fires that blackened the skies with thick smoke for hours.
Kyiv has, in recent months, intensified its strikes on Russian territory, disrupting the lives of ordinary Russians — strikes it calls retribution for more than four years of bombardments against its territory.
The campaign, which Kyiv calls “long-range sanctions”, has mostly targeted Russia’s oil infrastructure and triggered a full-blown fuel crisis in one of the world’s biggest oil-producing countries.

This time, Ukraine struck two key warehouses of Russia’s biggest online retailer Wildberries, killing eight night-shift workers and sparking fires that all but destroyed the facilities.
“A terrible night, terrible events for our company and for our country. It is a pain that cannot be put into words,” said Wildberries CEO Tatiana Kim.
An AFP journalist saw thick black smoke rising over the Moscow region on Saturday morning, which lingered until at least late afternoon.
“Seven night-shift employees were killed when enemy UAVs (unmanned aerial vehicles) hit a Wildberries logistics centre,” said Evgeny Pervyshov, the governor of the Tambov region, about 500 kilometres (300 miles) southeast of Moscow.
In the Moscow region — where an oil depot was struck in addition to another Wildberries warehouse — one person died in hospital, said regional governor Andrei Vorobyov.
READ ALSO: Ukraine Drone Strikes Kill Four, Wound Seven In Russia
Firefighters were still battling the blaze in the Moscow region’s Elektrostal, while the fire in Tambov had been extinguished, regional authorities said. In Elektrostal, an empty kindergarten was also hit, without any casualties, added Vorobyov.
Almost 60 people were wounded in the attacks on the two regions and taken to hospital, authorities said.
More than 370 drones were launched toward the Moscow region overnight, said the mayor of the Russian capital, Sergei Sobyanin. Between July 11 and 18, almost 1,892 Ukrainian drones heading towards Moscow were intercepted, he added.
‘Long-Range Sanctions’

Bystanders watch as smoke rises from a fire at the Russian e-commerce firm Wildberries’ logistics complexes in the town of Elektrostal outside Moscow on July 18, 2026.(Photo by TATYANA MAKEYEVA / AFP)
“In response to Russian strikes on our civilian infrastructure and on our cities and communities, two major logistics facilities were hit — in the Moscow and Tambov regions,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said on X.
He alleged the centres were used “to supply sanctioned components for drone production and navigation equipment”.
In Ukraine, Russian strikes left one person dead and 13 wounded in the Black Sea harbour of Odesa in escalating bombardments of port facilities.
Intensifying Ukrainian strikes on Russian oil infrastructure have disrupted daily life more visibly than at any point in the war, with fuel shortages hitting nearly 90 per cent of Russian regions since June.
In recent weeks, lining up at petrol stations has become a staple of life in Russia — a country where fuel had until now been readily available and far cheaper than in Europe.
Fighting on the front line has largely stalled, with Ukraine appearing to have slowed Russia’s summer offensive.
US-led diplomatic efforts to end the conflict remain frozen since Washington has shifted focus to its war against Iran.
AFP