Ukraine strikes eight Russian 'shadow fleet' tankers, Kyiv says


Smoke rises after what the Ukranian authorities say was during a strike as Ukrainian UAVs hit a Russian dark fleet tanker at a location given as Sea of Azov in this screengrab taken from a handout video released on July 7, 2026. Commander of Unmanned Aerial Systems Force/Handout via REUTERS

July 7 (Reuters) - Ukrainian drones struck ⁠eight tankers from Russia's so-called "shadow fleet" that were delivering fuel to ⁠Crimea overnight, Kyiv's military said on Tuesday, part of a ‌mounting effort to isolate the Russian-occupied peninsula.

In a statement on Telegram, Ukraine's drone forces said they had struck the vessels - each under international sanctions and with a deadweight of around 7,000 ​tons - in the Sea of Azov.

It came a ⁠day after the same forces ⁠said they had hit two other shadow-fleet vessels around the same area.

Ukraine has ⁠stepped ‌up attacks on logistics and energy infrastructure in Crimea in recent weeks, sparking fuel shortages and a state of emergency in the ⁠territory, which is critical to Russia's war on its ​smaller neighbour, now in ‌its fifth year.

Russia annexed Crimea in 2014, ahead of its full-scale ⁠invasion in 2022.

"Striking ​the enemy's naval logistics complicates the supply of fuel and ammunition necessary to support the activities of Russian troops, primarily in the temporarily occupied territory of Crimea," ⁠the drone forces said.

The unit posted black-and-white, drone-view ​footage showing ships being targeted and erupting into flames. Reuters could not independently verify the information.

Kyiv has long urged its international allies to crack down on ⁠vessels skirting sanctions by delivering Russian oil to international markets.

Ukrainian forces have attacked with sea drones to disable some tankers transporting Russian oil in the Black Sea, part of a campaign to reduce Moscow's revenue streams.

There have also ​been a series of unexplained blasts on tankers ⁠that have called at Russian ports. Ukraine has not confirmed or denied its ​role in those attacks, though maritime security sources ‌suspect Ukraine is behind them.

(Reporting by Anna ​Pruchnicka and Dan Peleschuk; Additional reporting by Tom Balmforth; Writing by Dan Peleschuk; Editing by Daniel Flynn, Andrew Heavens and Sharon Singleton)

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