The Russian president was preparing to address an audience of international business leaders and diplomats at the St Petersburg International Economic Forum when the air raid sirens began to wail. Ukrainian drones, flying low and fast over the Gulf of Finland, had breached the city’s defences. The forum, a showcase of Russian economic resilience, became the backdrop for a stark reminder that no corner of the country is safe from the conflict.
The attack, confirmed by local officials, targeted industrial zones near the city’s port. British intelligence, monitoring the incident from afar, noted the symbolic timing: the opening of an event designed to project normalcy and strength. For those on the ground, the drones were not just military hardware but messengers of a new reality. The war, once confined to the eastern front, now hums in the air above Russia’s second city.
At the forum, delegates were hurried into basements, their briefcases abandoned. One attendee, a Moscow-based banker, described the scene as a ‘sick joke’, a moment where the pretence of business-as-usual shattered. The human cost is not just in casualties but in the erosion of certainty. St Petersburg, a city of palaces and canals, now has a new rhythm: the whine of drones and the thud of explosions.
For ordinary residents, the attack is both terrifying and confusing. A local shopkeeper told me she spent the morning cleaning up shattered glass from a nearby strike. ‘We thought we were safe here,’ she said, her hands trembling. ‘Now we are all part of this war.’ The cultural shift is profound. The forum, meant to project stability, has become a stage for vulnerability. The Kremlin’s narrative of a contained conflict is undone by the hum of engines over the Neva River.
British intelligence’s involvement is a reminder of the war’s global dimensions. Analysts will dissect the attack for weeks, studying its implications for Russian air defence and Ukrainian reach. But for the people of St Petersburg, the analysis is simpler: the war has come to them. The economic forum will continue, speeches will be made, but the air is thick with a new fear. The drones have changed everything.









