Spanish inflation remains above ECB’s 2% target after US-Iran deal
Spain's persistent inflation above ECB targets highlights the complex interplay between geopolitical events and economic stability in Europe. The post Spanish inflation…
The escalation in drone warfare heightens geopolitical tensions, potentially leading to stricter sanctions and impacting global energy markets. The post Ukraine drone strikes kill four in Moscow’s largest attack in…
Ukraine drone strikes kill four in Moscow’s largest attack in over a year
Over 550 Ukrainian drones targeted 14 Russian regions in a retaliatory wave that damaged infrastructure near a Moscow oil refinery and escalated an already brutal aerial exchange.
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Ukraine sent its largest drone swarm at Moscow in more than a year overnight, killing at least four people and rattling infrastructure across the Russian capital’s outskirts.
Russia’s defense ministry reported that 556 Ukrainian drones were intercepted or otherwise engaged across 14 regions, including Crimea and areas over the Black Sea. Of those, 81 were directed at the Moscow region alone.
Three of the four confirmed deaths occurred in the Moscow region. A fourth person was killed in Belgorod, the border region that has absorbed consistent Ukrainian strikes throughout the war. At least 12 people were reported injured.
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Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin confirmed that strikes landed near an oil refinery, causing damage to surrounding residential areas. Sobyanin claimed the refinery itself sustained no critical damage.
Zelensky explicitly framed the attack as retaliation for a significant Russian barrage that killed 24 Ukrainian civilians and damaged critical infrastructure. He vowed to intensify strikes on Russian soil.
Ukraine’s air force reported that Russia simultaneously launched 287 attack drones at Ukrainian targets, with 279 of those intercepted.
The sanctions architecture built around Russia has pushed significant volumes of cross-border financial activity into alternative channels, including digital assets. Every escalation raises the probability of tighter enforcement, new sanctions designations, or expanded secondary sanctions targeting countries and entities that facilitate Russian trade.
Energy infrastructure is the other thread worth watching. Russia remains a major global energy supplier, and sustained attacks on refineries can tighten supply margins. Energy price spikes feed into inflation expectations, which feed into central bank policy, which feeds into risk asset pricing.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.
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