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A drone attack targeted an oil refinery in Russia’s Tyumen region in Western Siberia on Saturday, in what may represent one of Ukraine’s longest-range strikes of the war. Governor Alexander Moor said on Telegram that air defenses had repelled the assault and that the facility appeared undamaged, though local reports indicated explosions, smoke, and emergency services at the scene.reuters
Reuters reported that Moor wrote on Telegram: “The drone strike targeting the Tyumen oil refinery has been successfully repelled. Emergency teams are currently engaged at the location where debris has fallen. Initial reports indicate that the refinery remains intact and personnel have been evacuated.” Ukrainian media outlet PRM reported that explosions were heard in Tyumen on June 20, followed by smoke rising over the area near the refinery, located nearly 2,000 kilometers from Ukraine’s border.prm
The Tyumen region has been targeted before. In October 2025, authorities said they downed three drones near an industrial site in the region in what was described at the time as possibly the furthest Ukrainian drone incursion into Russian territory since the start of the war. A fire at the Antipinsky oil refinery in Tyumen was reported in early June, though local officials attributed that blaze to “process violations” rather than a drone strike.themoscowtimes
The strike comes amid a sustained Ukrainian campaign against Russian energy infrastructure that has intensified in 2026. On June 18, Ukraine launched what The Moscow Times called “the largest-ever attack” on Moscow, striking and setting fire to the Moscow Oil Refinery in the Kapotnya district. Russia’s Defense Ministry said 555 drones were intercepted across the country that night, and 17 people were wounded in the Moscow region.themoscowtimes
Reuters reported in May that Ukrainian drone strikes had taken around 700,000 barrels per day of Russian crude processing capacity offline across 16 facilities between January and May 2026. The cumulative effect of attacks on Russian and Middle Eastern refineries has knocked nearly 9 percent of global refining capacity offline, according to industry monitor IIR.reuters
If confirmed as a Ukrainian operation, the Tyumen strike underscores Kyiv’s growing ability to project force deep into Russian territory. The refinery lies approximately 1,900 kilometers from the Ukrainian border — far beyond the range of early-war drones and a demonstration of how Ukraine’s domestic defense industry has expanded its reach over the course of the conflict.themoscowtimes
Moscow has consistently downplayed damage from such attacks. Governor Moor’s claim that the refinery escaped unscathed on Saturday echoed similar official statements that have later been contradicted by satellite imagery and OSINT analysis.caliber