# [WARNING] Ukraine–Russia Truce Frays as New Drone Barrage Hits Russian Sites

*Friday, May 8, 2026 at 5:51 AM UTC — Hamer Intelligence Services Desk*

**Detected**: 2026-05-08T05:51:47.672Z (2h ago)
**Tags**: Russia, Ukraine, Ceasefire, Drones, Energy, Oil, Refineries
**Sources**: OSINT
**Permalink**: https://hamerintel.com/data/alerts/6140.md
**Source**: https://hamerintel.com/summaries

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**Summary**: Between roughly 05:00–05:25 UTC on 8 May, Ukrainian and Russian sources reported massive overnight drone activity, with Ukraine claiming 264 Russian UAVs downed over Russia as of eight hours into the ceasefire, and Russian channels citing 405 enemy UAVs shot down by late night. Concurrently, fresh strikes and fires are reported at multiple locations around Perm, likely again targeting refinery and pipeline dispatch infrastructure, while President Zelensky says Russia never even attempted to halt strikes on Ukrainian positions. This signals that the announced Victory Day ceasefire is largely nonfunctional and that Ukraine’s long‑range drone campaign against Russian energy assets is escalating, with implications for the war’s trajectory and global oil markets.

## Detail

1. What happened and confirmed details

From 05:05–05:24 UTC on 8 May 2026, multiple reports indicate a significant deterioration of the nominal Russia–Ukraine Victory Day ceasefire and renewed attacks on Russian energy infrastructure:

- At 05:05 UTC, President Zelensky stated that during the previous night Russian forces continued striking Ukrainian positions, with over 140 shelling incidents and 10 assault actions recorded by 07:00 local time, asserting there was not even an attempt by Russia to halt fire and that Ukraine would respond “mirror-like.”
- At 05:10 UTC, a Ukrainian OSINT channel reported 56 of 67 Russian drones shot down, with 11 strike UAV impacts at eight locations and debris falling in seven more inside Ukraine.
- At 05:14 UTC, the Russian Defense Ministry claimed 264 Ukrainian UAVs were shot down overnight over multiple Russian regions, roughly eight hours after the ceasefire began.
- At 05:22 UTC, a Russian‑language situation report stated that a total of 405 “enemy UAVs” had been downed just before midnight, and that overnight air defense continued to repel air raids over Sevastopol, Crimea, and towards Moscow, with drone alerts in a number of regions.
- At 05:24 UTC, Ukrainian sources reported fresh “arrivals” (strikes) at several locations in the Perm area, with firefighters from across Perm Krai rushing to the city; they assess that a linear production‑dispatch station and refinery have likely been attacked again.

These reports build on earlier alerts of Ukrainian drone strikes on the Perm and Yaroslavl refinery systems and show no effective ceasefire on either side.

2. Who is involved and chain of command

The engagement involves the Russian Armed Forces and Ukrainian Armed Forces, including Ukrainian long‑range UAV units conducting deep strikes, and Russian Aerospace Forces and air defense formations defending critical infrastructure and major cities (Perm, Sevastopol, Crimea, Moscow region). Strategic decisions on ceasefire observance and retaliatory strikes are controlled at the presidential and top defense leadership level in both Moscow and Kyiv. The Perm attacks target Russian energy infrastructure operated by large state‑linked entities, likely under regional and federal protective mandates.

3. Immediate military and security implications

The scale of reported drone activity—hundreds claimed shot down in a single night—indicates an intensification of the long‑range drone and air defense battle. Key implications:
- The Victory Day ceasefire is effectively void, eroding prospects for near‑term de‑escalation.
- Repeated hits near Perm and previously Yaroslavl suggest Ukraine is prioritizing Russian refining and pipeline infrastructure well beyond front‑line regions, aiming to degrade Russia’s fuel logistics and export capacity.
- Russian air defenses are being heavily tasked simultaneously over multiple strategic regions (Crimea, Sevastopol, Moscow corridor, industrial heartland), potentially stretching coverage and increasing the chance of successful future strikes.
- Civilian risk increases around targeted industrial zones, with large fires requiring multi‑regional emergency response.

In the next 24–48 hours, expect: continued Ukrainian drone operations against high‑value Russian infrastructure; potential Russian retaliation with missile and glide‑bomb strikes across Ukraine; and further political messaging that the other side “broke” the truce, hardening domestic war narratives.

4. Market and economic impact

Repeated strikes and fires at Russian refineries and associated dispatch infrastructure raise questions about sustained Russian refined product output and, at the margin, crude throughput. Even if individual facilities remain partially operational, the cumulative effect of Yaroslavl, Perm, and other attacks is to increase supply‑side uncertainty:
- Oil and refined products: Brent and WTI face upside risk as traders price in a higher probability of Russian export disruptions, particularly for diesel and gasoline flows to Europe, Africa, and Latin America. Crack spreads for middle distillates could widen.
- European energy and industrial equities: refiners and logistics firms may benefit from higher margins but face policy and sanction‑related volatility; broader European equities may see pressure from higher energy input costs.
- Currencies and rates: Safe‑haven flows to USD and CHF may strengthen, while EM currencies with high energy import dependence could weaken on higher oil prices. Russian assets (where traded) face further geopolitical risk premia.
- Shipping and insurance: If attacks begin to measurably reduce output at inland refineries, insurers may reassess risk pricing not only for Black Sea exports but also for logistics chains feeding and distributing Russian products.

5. Likely 24–48 hour developments

- Propaganda and narrative battle: Both sides will circulate footage (already noted from Rostov) to shape perceptions of the success or failure of the ceasefire and drone campaigns.
- Additional strikes: Ukraine is likely to continue probing Russian air defenses around key refineries, fuel depots, and possibly power infrastructure, while Russia intensifies missile and glide‑bomb strikes deep into Ukraine as reprisal.
- Diplomatic response: International actors may call for restoration of the ceasefire, but the on‑the‑ground dynamics suggest low probability of genuine adherence.
- Market reaction: Energy markets will watch for confirmation of actual offline capacity at Perm and other sites. Any verified multi‑week outage would become a clear bullish catalyst for oil and products.

Net assessment: The nominal Victory Day truce is collapsing into one of the heaviest nights of reciprocal long‑range drone and artillery activity, with Ukraine increasingly targeting Russian energy infrastructure. This trajectory points toward a more destructive, infrastructure‑focused phase of the war with growing implications for global energy security and market volatility.

**MARKET IMPACT ASSESSMENT:**
Sustained Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian refinery/energy infrastructure and visible ceasefire failure increase upside pressure on oil and refined product prices, support safe‑haven flows (gold, USD), and add headline risk for European equities and EM FX with Russia/Ukraine exposure.
