Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
Foreign Affairs
Related: About this forumMillions freezing: Russian governors declare emergency as millions need to be evacuated fast - RFU News
Today, there are important updates from the Russian Federation.
Here, Ukraine started knocking out Russias energy system region by region in response to Russian strikes on Ukrainian power plants and substations. However, as the Ukrainians unleashed their long-range arsenal, the Russian government was forced to declare an emergency, as millions were left to freeze without light and heating.
Recently, Ukrainian strikes have significantly broadened in scope, destroying Russian infrastructure across multiple regions in the coldest time of the year. Despite initial attacks being confined to Russian-controlled territories and regions near the border, they have now extended to the deep Russian rear, reaching even the Far East.
First, Ukraine conducted a Himars strike on the Luch thermal power plant in Belgorod, along with a hit on a local electrical substation, leaving approximately 80,000 people without heating. Further north, a substation caught fire in Moscows Tushino district, prompting the local authorities to speak of sabotage. A temporary blackout struck the town of Sestroretsk following an accident at the local substation, causing power disruptions before being restored. Several settlements in the Vyborgsky District of Russias Leningrad region were partially cut off from electricity due to another accident at a substation. Although unclear if it was caused by a Ukrainian strike, the strain on Russias energy grid produces failures even in the absence of direct attacks. Later, an explosion occurred at a combined heat and power plant in the city of Chita, in Russias Zabaykalsky Krai in the Far East, leaving most of the city without electricity. Although Chita is located more than 2,000 kilometers from Ukraine, this falls within the 3,000 kilometer range of the Ukrainian Flamingo missile.
The results of Ukraines campaign were immediate, as blackouts have expanded from border regions such as Belgorod to areas deeper inside Russia, including Moscows outskirts and the Leningrad region, the richest cities in Russia that have more or less avoided war-related problems so far. Disruptions now extend even to the Russian Far East, underscoring how energy instability is spreading well beyond the immediate theater of operations, leaving no one safe.
In response to these cascading energy disruptions, regional authorities have begun declaring emergency measures as restoration efforts repeatedly fail. Belgorod region head Vyacheslav Gladkov stated that the heating outage is now the most acute problem and ordered water to be drained from the heating systems to prevent further infrastructure damage amid freezing temperatures, reaching as low as minus 20 Celsius. The crisis has reached such a level that officials are openly discussing sending school-aged children to other regions where heating systems remain operational.
Beyond the immediate power cuts, a bigger impact follows, as what used to be a limited problem has turned into a nationwide weakness, with civilian energy systems becoming an easy target. Last year, Russia lost hundreds of key air defense elements, like radars, launchers, and command posts, and the remaining systems are stretched thinly and powerless to defend the frontline and the rear simultaneously. As a result, everyday infrastructure has become a vulnerable pressure point, increasing public hardship and making it harder for the Kremlin to keep the wars consequences away from ordinary citizens.
Ironically, Russia is now facing the same kind of systematic energy disruption it has repeatedly inflicted on Ukraine in the coldest winter since the start of the war. Just as Ukrainian cities endured rolling blackouts, heating failures, and damage to critical infrastructure, Russian regions are beginning to experience similar instability and uncertainty. These problems are no longer distant consequences of the war that the Russian public liked to cheer on about when hearing about them in Ukraine, but the new reality at home. The strategy of targeting energy systems has come full circle, bringing the hardship once imposed on Ukraine back onto Russian territory, punishing directly those who thought cold weather would once again become Russias best weapon.
Overall, the expanding wave of strikes and the resulting infrastructure failures signal a widening vulnerability within Russias energy network. As Ukraine continues to scale up domestic drone and missile production, extending both range and payload capacity, the depth and frequency of such strikes are likely to increase. This trajectory suggests that critical infrastructure deeper inside Russia may face sustained pressure, further complicating Moscows ability to stabilize its rear areas.
2 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Millions freezing: Russian governors declare emergency as millions need to be evacuated fast - RFU News (Original Post)
TexasTowelie
2 hrs ago
OP
ultralite001
(2,448 posts)1. Is Vlad shipping folks...
to Florida???
Grins
(9,353 posts)2. About time. Hoping for this.
Russians so cockey earlier in the war and indifferent to suffering in Ukraine when Russia hit their water and power.
So good. Let the Russians feel what Ukraine has been feeling since 2022.