04/17/2026
Russia is now being forced to defend territory that was supposed to remain behind the war. The strike on the Tuapse oil terminal shows that Ukraine can reach critical infrastructure tied to fuel movement, exports, and the functioning of Russia’s interior. What was once treated as distant from the front is now part of the war itself.
These attacks are not isolated events. They are hitting systems that allow Russia to coordinate forces, move reserves, and sustain revenue. Radar coverage, drone control, communications links, fuel depots, and maritime terminals all belong to the same network. When one node is hit, the effects spread across multiple functions. Tuapse is one clear example of how disruption at a single point can affect logistics, coordination, and energy flows at the same time.
Each successful strike forces Russia to spend more defending its own interior while operating with less flexibility. Movement slows, fuel margins tighten, and coordination becomes harder to maintain. At the same time, the broader system faces labor shortages, export constraints, and financial strain. That combination leaves the state with less room to absorb shocks and keep the rear stable away from the front.
- CHAPTERS:
- 00:00 – Intro: Putin’s Energy Fortress Crumbles
- 01:24 – Ukraine’s Strategy: Disarming the Russian State
- 3:43 – Russia’s Oil Loss: Billions in Vanishing Revenue
- 05:43 – Kremlin Instability: Russia’s Failed Interior Defense
- 06:15 – Ukraine’s Missile Tempo: Overwhelming Russian Radar
- 09:04 – Russian Bankruptcy: Putin’s Careen into the Abyss
https://www.youtube.com/@JasonJaySmart
