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On February 7, 2026, Ukrainian forces struck deep inside Russia, hitting a critical facility that produces fuel components for Russian cruise missiles. This attack on the Redkino Chemical Plant represents a major escalation in Ukraine's strategic strike campaign—and it's just one piece of a larger pattern. 🌍 IN THIS VIDEO: • The February 7th drone strike on Russia's Redkino Chemical Plant in Tver Oblast • Why this facility is critical to Russia's Kh-55 and Kh-101 cruise missile program • How Ukraine carried out 371 confirmed strikes on Russian territory in 2025 • The development of Ukrainian long-range weapons including Neptune and Flamingo missiles • Russia's $13 billion in losses to its oil sector from Ukrainian attacks • What these strikes reveal about Russian air defense vulnerabilities • Strategic implications for how this conflict is evolving Ukraine has shifted from purely defensive operations to systematically targeting the infrastructure that enables Russian attacks. The Redkino plant produces Decilin-M rocket fuel components essential for Russia's most advanced cruise missiles—the same weapons Russia fired at Ukraine's energy grid just hours before the plant was hit. This strike, carried out by Ukraine's SBU Alpha Special Operations Center using drones over 130 kilometers inside Russian territory, demonstrates capabilities that are reshaping this conflict. Throughout 2025, Ukraine conducted a sustained campaign against Russian military-industrial targets, oil refineries, and ammunition depots. The cumulative impact has cost Russia billions of dollars and forced difficult choices about resource allocation. This isn't just tactical warfare—it's a strategic effort to make continuing the war economically and operationally unsustainable for Moscow. This analysis examines what happened, why it matters, and what it tells us about where this conflict is heading. From the technical details of missile fuel production to the broader implications for international security, we break down the stories mainstream media often misses.