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Ukraine launched its largest coordinated drone swarm of the war — and Moscow’s air defense network was forced into a full-scale stress test it could not contain. On December 11, 2025, Russia reported intercepting 287 Ukrainian drones across 12 regions. Yet Moscow’s four major airports — Sheremetyevo, Domodedovo, Vnukovo, and Zhukovsky — were shut down for more than seven hours. Industrial facilities burned. Oil refineries were hit. And for the first time, Ukrainian drones struck energy infrastructure in the Caspian Sea. This video breaks down what really happened that night and why it matters far beyond a single drone attack. Inside this analysis: The largest multi-region Ukrainian drone swarm recorded in the war • Why Russia’s S-400 and Pantsir air defense layers were overwhelmed • The structural weaknesses in Russia’s low-altitude radar coverage • The strike on the Acron chemical plant in Novgorod • The Dorogobuzh thermal power plant hit in Smolensk • Oil refinery and fuel depot fires across Samara, Saratov, Volgograd, and Krasnodar • The unprecedented Caspian Sea strike on the Filanovsky oil platform • Why the airport shutdown in Moscow is the real signal of failure • Russia’s interceptor depletion problem and production limits • What this means for peace talks, sanctions, and the war economy This was not just a mass drone attack. It was a saturation event designed to force Russia’s air defense network to fire everywhere at once. When you stretch a layered system across 2,000 kilometers of airspace simultaneously, something gives. Ukraine’s strategy is no longer limited to frontline attrition. It is targeting oil export revenue, refinery capacity, and the industrial backbone that funds Russia’s defense budget. At the same time, Russian short-range interceptor systems like the Pantsir-S1 are being consumed faster than they can be replaced. If you follow the Russia Ukraine war, Moscow drone attacks, S-400 air defense systems, Pantsir failures, Caspian oil infrastructure strikes, or geopolitical escalation in 2025–2026, this breakdown connects the operational, economic, and strategic layers in one clear timeline. This is not a headline recap. It’s a structural analysis of what happens when a national air shield is forced past its saturation threshold. Subscribe for evidence-driven coverage that tracks patterns, capability shifts, and the economic realities behind military operations. Disclaimer: This video is for informational and analytical purposes only. All information discussed is based on publicly available reporting, official statements, open-source intelligence, and media coverage available at the time of publication. The analysis reflects interpretation of documented events and does not claim access to classified government intelligence.