The Kremlin’s war machine is running on fumes. British intelligence has confirmed a fresh wave of Ukrainian strikes on Russian fuel depots inside occupied territory. The attacks hit key supply nodes in Donetsk and Luhansk.
The result? A deepening fuel crisis for Putin’s forces. These are not pinprick raids.
They are systemic blows to logistics. The Ministry of Defence’s latest update points to a “significant degradation” of Russian fuel reserves. Tanks might look fearsome.
But they don’t move without diesel. The timing is brutal for Moscow. Winter is coming.
Fuel for heating, vehicles, and generators is now in short supply. The occupied territories are feeling the squeeze. Reports from within the Russian lines speak of rationing.
Truck convoys are being targeted. Ammunition and food deliveries are slowing. The impact on morale is obvious.
Soldiers without fuel are sitting ducks. The game has changed. Ukraine is no longer just defending.
It is systematically dismantling Russian logistics. Every depot hit is a vote of no confidence in the Kremlin’s ability to protect its own assets. The question in Whitehall now is: how much longer can the Russian army sustain this tempo?
The answer might be in weeks, not months. This is not just a battlefield update. It is a signal.
The West’s intelligence-sharing is paying off. Ukraine is hitting where it hurts. And British boots on the ground?
None. But British eyes in the sky are watching every move.








