Objective of the strikes: disrupt supply chains
Defense Forces carried out a series of precision strikes on Russian facilities in temporarily occupied territories. The main goal is to reduce the enemy's ability to supply fuel and lubricants and to repair equipment, thereby limiting its offensive and operational actions.
What happened
In temporarily occupied Crimea, a train carrying fuel and lubricants at the loading rack of the "Hvardiyske" oil depot was struck. The scale of the damage is currently being clarified; the operation's task is to disrupt fuel and lubricant supplies to units of the "Dnipro" grouping.
In temporarily occupied Donetsk, the Defense Forces struck a Russian repair unit position in the area of the settlement of Hirne. The aim is to reduce the enemy's ability to rapidly restore equipment on the Orikhiv direction.
"The strikes are aimed at disrupting fuel and lubricant supplies and reducing the combat capabilities of the enemy's groupings"
— General Staff of the Armed Forces of Ukraine
Context: part of a systematic campaign
These strikes are not isolated actions. The General Staff and operational analysts describe them as part of a systematic effort to weaken the aggressor's military-economic potential. As evidence — a series of recent operations: on January 6 an oil depot in Lipetsk Oblast and three UAV control points were struck; on January 7 there were reports of strikes on an oil depot in Belgorod Oblast and a warehouse in temporarily occupied territory.
What it means for the front
In the short term — delays in fuel deliveries and a shortage of spare parts hurt the enemy's mobility and tempo of operations. In the medium term — slower repair rates for damaged equipment and increased logistical risks for its forward units. Analysts point out that consecutive strikes on logistics force the enemy to spend resources on compensating losses instead of building up offensive potential.
Conclusion
This is a strategic approach: not only striking combat units, but systematically severing their supply lines. The next move is up to the adversary: can it restore supplies and repairs within acceptable timeframes, or will these strikes result in a prolonged degradation of its operational capabilities.