Sources confirm a sweeping halt to fuel sales across occupied Crimea this morning, hours after British-guided missile strikes targeted Russian oil depots and refinery facilities near the Kerch Strait. The attacks, which Ukrainian officials describe as a precision operation using long-range Storm Shadow cruise missiles supplied by the UK, have plunged the peninsula into a fresh energy crisis.
Documents obtained by this newsroom and verified by satellite imagery show at least two major storage terminals in eastern Crimea were hit shortly before dawn. The strikes ignited a chain of explosions that sent black plumes of smoke visible from the coastal city of Feodosia. Local residents reported a thunderous blast wave that rattled windows across a five-mile radius.
An intelligence source with direct knowledge of the operation told me the goal was to sever the logistical artery feeding Russian forces in southern Ukraine. "The Russians have been running a shadow fleet of tankers through the Kerch Strait for months. These depots are the kidneys of their war machine. Take them out, and the whole system backs up." The source spoke on condition of anonymity due to operational security concerns.
Within hours of the strikes, announcements posted at petrol stations across Simferopol, Sevastopol, and Yalta stated that fuel would no longer be sold to civilians. Queues of desperate motorists formed at dawn, only to be turned away by armed guards. One resident who asked not to be named for fear of reprisals told me: "They say it's for the military only. But the soldiers are taking everything. We're walking now. We have no choice."
The halt in sales is the most severe disruption to civilian life in Crimea since Ukraine began targeting Russian energy infrastructure last year. It follows a pattern: each time Moscow scrambles to repair one facility, a new strike hits another. The UK Ministry of Defence has declined to comment on specific operations, but a Downing Street spokesperson reiterated that "Ukraine has the right to strike legitimate military targets on its sovereign territory, including Crimea."
Russia's occupation administration in Crimea has blamed "sabotage" and promised that fuel supplies will resume within a week. But independent analysts are sceptical. A former energy sector regulator who consulted for the Ukrainian government before the invasion noted that the damaged facilities store not just petrol and diesel, but also aviation fuel used by Russian warplanes. "This is a system shock. They can't just open a valve and fix it. You're looking at weeks, possibly months, before they restore capacity."
Meanwhile, financial records obtained from a leaked database of Russian military procurement show that the Kremlin has been routing payments for black-market fuel through shell companies in Cyprus and the UAE. The same records indicate that the Kerch Strait terminals were insured by a Russian state-backed firm, which now faces claims estimated at $200 million.
For the 2.3 million residents of Crimea, the crisis is existential. Eight years into the occupation, and 18 months since the full-scale invasion began, the peninsula is a fortress running on fumes. And every time Ukraine gets a new weapon from the West, the fortress walls crack a little more. This time, the cracks are in the fuel tanks. And the fire hasn't gone out yet.








