What they're not telling you: # What the Mainstream Won't Say About ukrainian-drone-attack-on-moscow-in-over-a-year-leaves-four-dead.html" title="Largest Ukrainian Drone Attack On Moscow In Over A Year Leaves Four Dead" style="color:#1a1a1a;text-decoration:underline;text-decoration-style:dotted;font-weight:500;">Moscow's Largest Drone Attack in Over a Year The Russian government has admitted to secrets it previously denied: Ukraine can penetrate Moscow's most heavily fortified defenses and strike critical infrastructure that Moscow claimed was impenetrable. Sunday's drone attack—the largest on the Russian capital in over a year—killed at least four people and marked the first time Ukraine successfully hit Moscow's oil refinery, described by authorities as "the most protected energy facility in the country." Multiple strikes landed directly on target. The scale of the assault went largely uncontested.
What the Documents Show
Regional airports shut down. Drones flew uncontested over Moscow airspace in broad daylight as fires spread across multiple facilities including the massive Solnechnogorsk oil installation, where blazes continued spreading eight hours after impact. A woman died in Khimki north of Moscow. A man and woman were killed in Pogorelki village. Another died in Belgorod region.
Follow the Money
An Indian citizen was also killed, with three others injured according to India's Moscow embassy. Dozens more were wounded across multiple locations as residences caught fire, including homes in Subbotino southwest of Moscow. The mainstream narrative has focused narrowly on casualty counts while downplaying what this attack reveals about Russian air defense failures and the vulnerability of Moscow's critical infrastructure. The timing carries geopolitical weight the press has largely ignored. The attack came exactly one week after President Zelensky signed onto a three-day Russian "Victory Day" ceasefire at President Trump's behest. It also followed several days of major Russian missile and drone attacks on Ukraine.
What Else We Know
This sequence suggests either Ukraine's rejection of the ceasefire framework or a fundamental inability to coordinate military operations with diplomatic initiatives—a reality that complicates narratives about peace negotiations. What makes this strike historically significant is not merely its size but what it proves technically possible. If Ukraine can strike Moscow's "most protected" oil refinery with multiple direct hits, it has breached a defensive perimeter Russia invested heavily in maintaining. The facility's status as maximally fortified makes its penetration a demonstration of either Ukrainian capability advancement or Russian defensive degradation—likely both. This isn't a minor tactical incident. It's evidence that Russia's ability to protect even its most critical assets from Ukrainian strikes is deteriorating.
Primary Sources
- Source: ZeroHedge
- Category: Government Secrets
- Cross-reference independently — don't take our word for it.
Disclosure: NewsAnarchist aggregates from public records, API feeds (Federal Register, CourtListener, MuckRock, Hacker News), and independent media. AI-assisted synthesis. Always verify primary sources linked above.

