Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
January 9, 2026
Winter Strikes Kiev

Last night Ukraine was finally confronted with the consequences of attacking Russian infrastructure.

And no, I do not mean last nights Oreshnik strike on the large gas storage facility in west Ukraine. The seismic impulse from that strike likely damaged the geological structure that allowed the gas to be stored in caverns. It can now escape and has been seen burning. Those were the Ukrainian reserves for the rest of the winter. The strike was in revenge for the late December drone strike on Russia’s strategic command facility and Putin’s home near Novgorod. It was also a warning, mostly to Europe.

But the real hurt came with a medium-sized drone and missile strike on Kiev. At least three combined-thermal-electric facilities were taken out. These used to provide water, heating and electricity to the blocks of Soviet era high rises that cover much of Kiev. These strikes, as the Russian Ministry of Defense empathizes in its reports, are in retaliation for strikes on Russian infrastructure facilities. Russia at a time, offered a ceasefire on infrastructure strikes. Ukraine did not keep to it.

Now nearly half of Kiev’s high-rise apartments have lost water, heating and electricity supplies. This while the temperature has gone down to minus 20° Celsius at night. Municipal workers have started to drain (in Russian) all water from intra-house systems. Otherwise the risers and pipes would freeze and break open. But it also means that water and heat supplies will not come back to those high-rises until the temperatures are back in a positive Celsius range.

The buildings have thus become unlivable. Hundreds of thousands if not millions will have to live elsewhere.

The mayor of Kiev Vladimir Klitschko has called on residents to leave the capital:

Half of Kyiv’s apartment buildings, almost 6,000, are currently without heat supply after critical infrastructure in the capital was damaged in a large-scale Russian attack.

“Municipal workers have connected social facilities – in particular hospitals and maternity hospitals – to mobile boiler houses. And together with energy workers they are working to bring electricity and heat supply back to Kyiv residents’ homes,” Klitschko said.

He added that the combined attack on Kyiv on the night of 8-9 January was the most painful for the capital’s critical infrastructure facilities.

“City services are operating under emergency conditions. And unfortunately weather conditions are forecast to be difficult in the coming days.

I also appeal to residents of the capital who have the opportunity to temporarily leave the city and go where there are alternative sources of power and heat, to do so,” Klitschko concluded.

A similar situation exist in Dnipro, one of Ukraine’s most industrial cities, since yesterday.

During the war the parts of the Ukrainian population that were not directly involved in fighting seemed to have little interest in what was happening. There was still a lot of nightlife in Kiev, all goods were available and even the few short interruptions of electricity were not much to bother with.

This will now change. Electricity is off for most of the time. Shops are closing because running business on generators is unprofitable. Local public transport is mostly down. Longer range tail transport is interrupted. Apartments are unlivable. The consequences of the war have become personal.

This will change the mood even of those who want to prolong the war. The numbers of those willing to accept the loss of territory in exchange for peace will rise.

After a while a change of policies will follow for this.

Comments

Outstanding. Great work. Hit them again and leave them with absolutely nothing. 

Posted by: Saint Jimmy | Jan 9 2026 16:08 utc | 1

Probably the only person who will not be found in Kiev for the forseeable future is Zelensky.

Posted by: Stonebird | Jan 9 2026 16:15 utc | 2

Better late than never.  The question now is…will the Galicians, English* & Angliphiliacs running this macabre cluster-fluck have running water and heat?  If so, the show must go on!

Posted by: S Brennan | Jan 9 2026 16:16 utc | 3

This will change the mood even of those who want to prolong the war. The numbers of those willing to accept the loss of territory in exchange for peace will rise.
After a while a change of policies will follow for this….
Is it possible that public opinion will change?
But since when does the people decide what their government does? Since when has a political caste cared what the people want?
Unless the people take up arms, and that COULD happen if the front breaks, if soldiers go home and realize they themselves have remained utterly destitute, while those sitting in positions of power back home, who have amassed millions, have not lost their children.
And then, only then, will something happen. BUT the elites will sacrifice their pawns, from Sylensky to (…) and direct the fire in the right direction…no matter how, no matter what the cost.
Ultimately, we’ll end up back where Putin, whether he wants to or not, has to take over the entire country first…what happens after that is another matter, but he can’t afford a rump Ukraine.
And a SMO without Odessa wouldn’t be accepted as a victory by his own soldiers; it could mean his political END.

Posted by: Genesis | Jan 9 2026 16:18 utc | 4

Scott Ritter .
The other day I wrote a post which made use of an analogy involving a camel and a tent—in short, to keep the camel from entering the tent once it stuck its nose under the tent, one needed to smack it on its nose.
Last night Russia punched the camel in the nose.
The use of the Oreshnik missile against strategic energy targets located near the western Ukrainian city of Lvov, combined with a massive strike on energy infrastructure targets in Kiev, represents a crystal clear response to the west’s ongoing targeting of Russian energy infrastructure, including CIA-backed drone strikes on Russian oil refineries and US Naval seizures of Russian-flagged oil tankers…..https://scottritter.substack.com/p/the-camels-bloody-nose?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=6892&post_id=184014956&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=3gd4ql&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email

Posted by: Genesis | Jan 9 2026 16:21 utc | 5

First, Zelensky has to give up his impossible dream of achieving a functional victory over Russia — including trying President Putin as a war criminal.   It looks like he may reluctantly be approaching that point.
 
Second, Zelensky has to be prepared to compromise — accept that international boundaries have changed;  commit to neutrality.  There is no sign that he is there yet.
 
Third, the EuroScum have to agree to Zelensky compromising, and give up their proxy war.  They are not going to do that, because their “leaders” are too unpopular already in their own countries to accept a defeat.  And since the EuroScum are Zelensky’s paymasters, the war will go on.  Tough to be a Ukrainian these days!

Posted by: Gavin Longmuir | Jan 9 2026 16:24 utc | 6

moods will change.  but Z can’t bc the nazis will make sure he goes to a cemetery.  everyone forgets there are nazis over his shoulders

Posted by: Toxik | Jan 9 2026 16:24 utc | 7

BINGO!…………….Thanks for the posting b
 
I asked before if the societal breakdown in Ukraine would occur before military defeat or negotiated settlement and now it looks quite likely that societal collapse may drive the coming bargain.
 
We are still in a MAD contextualized situation which forces some sort of conditional surrender………………………………………..by TRUMP
 
Stay tuned, the shit show continues until it doesn’t

Posted by: psychohistorian | Jan 9 2026 16:27 utc | 8

It’s a sign that Russia is evolving its approach.
 
None of this, “couldn’t capture Kiev in 3 days” stuff.
 
No, the Russians hold everyone’s lives in their hands. In Ukraine and the whole world.
 
FAFO.
 
What they did in Kiev, they can do to Berlin, Brussels, London, and Paris.
 
Will they have to? Tune in next week. Winter is a narrow window to inflict this exact type of pain.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 9 2026 16:28 utc | 9

What is better than capturing a city that would be costly to hold and impossible to govern?
 
Force evacuations.
 
If Russia can’t have Kiev, no one can.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 9 2026 16:30 utc | 10

“The numbers of those willing to accept the loss of territory in exchange for peace will rise.”
 

Last I saw, a Forbes poll had over ⅔ Ukrainian citizens want peace even at the chat of territory and other concessions. Did that stop anything? Of course not. 
 
The war will point end when there are so few Ukrainians left that it is physically impossible to obey their NATO slaveowners’ orders to keep fighting.

Posted by: Biswapriya Purkayastha | Jan 9 2026 16:31 utc | 11

Posted by b on January 9, 2026 at 16:04 UTC | Permalink

… This will change the mood even of those who want to prolong the war. The numbers of those willing to accept the loss of territory in exchange for peace will rise. After a while a change of policies will follow for this.

Accepting this premise raises the question of why didn’t Russia proceed with this show-ending action much sooner?
 
In any case, and in my opinion, the West’s perspective of this conflict is one of a manufactured civil war on the territory of a historical (and future) competitor. Destruction of Ukraine isn’t a loss, it’s a feature.

Posted by: robin | Jan 9 2026 16:33 utc | 12

What a fantastic piece of Oreshnik retaliation was the recent effort. Such a well-layered strategy. It showed:
 
Oreshnik is not some once off toy.
Oreshnik can happily reach all perimeters of Ukraine AND FURTHER if Moscow so desires (hint hint Europe).
That anything underground is not safe.
That all A-D is useless.
A warning to help Ukrainians, particularly those western region Banderist fuckers, to surrender to the inevitable outcome of an SMO loss.
A practical crushing of fuel and industrial war support capacity.
The US and Kiev and London and NATO that Moscow ain’t gunna take Ukie terrorism lying down. Revenge served cold is best!
That killing Z and flattening Kiev are not YET targets … but could be at ANY CHOSEN MOMENT.
Other diplomatic pressures we can’t even know.
 
All such a great strike. Love it!

Posted by: Indulis Kradzins | Jan 9 2026 16:35 utc | 13

Think about the disruptions. People can leave their home under duress in 30 minutes.
 
Thousands of homes will have standing water in toilets and food rotting in fridges without power. Without habitation, small animals will seek food scraps and shelter.
 
It will take weeks or months for people to return, if they can return at all, and things will never “go back to normal”.
 
As bang for a buck goes, the Russians are very efficient.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 9 2026 16:36 utc | 14

I haven’t gotten the impression that Zelensky and the “leaders” in the US and NATO would care much if everyone in Ukraine froze to death.  

Posted by: Perimetr | Jan 9 2026 16:48 utc | 15

I have argued in this bar before that the risk profile for the RF for use of Oreshnik now and strikes against Kiev has been significantly decreased because Trump has been so irrational as of late – putting a sack over Maduro and acting as hostis humanis  generis by attacking empty Russian flagged vessels.
 
The US acts no differently than Somali pirates (Who says that new ways of thinking from multiculturalism is a bad thing? The Somali frauds have taught Trump an thing or 2) but I digress.
 
Any response by the west to the present use of Oreshnik and Kiev damage will lack any moral indignation. The narrative makers will have their work cut out for them indeed. So the likelihood of organic support, if such a thing exists in Eurpoean thought controlled markets, for western escalation is more likely to fall flat. As an example, the fear porn in the early reporting calling Oreshnik “nookular capable” has disappeared from the vanguard (MSM headlines for example) of the narrative. I guess the focus groups didn’t buy it. 
 
I am guessing the thinking in “The Kremiln” is that the RF can act more boldly.

Posted by: frithguild | Jan 9 2026 16:50 utc | 16

Turn Kiev into glass so the Khazars can’t move back. 

Posted by: MarcusAurelius | Jan 9 2026 16:51 utc | 17

yikes, this sounds radical. 

Posted by: annie | Jan 9 2026 16:54 utc | 18

Posted by: MarcusAurelius | Jan 9 2026 16:51 utc | 19
 
####
 
No.
 
Let the city remain empty until Russia is ready to move in bloodlessly (relatively).
 
Kiev is now a point of leverage. Mess with Vlad and Dmitri shuts down Bankova.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 9 2026 16:55 utc | 19

I’m hoping that Russia will strike any remaining operational heating/electrical plants to force the complete evacuation of Kiev. Guessing they will have to transfer a good bit of the government to Western Ukraine, Lyvov maybe?  Keep up the good work, paralyze the Ukrainian war effort and economy!  

Posted by: ctiger | Jan 9 2026 16:57 utc | 20

Posted by: Simon | Jan 9 2026 16:50 utc | 17
 
######
 
The Russians have the most nukes, why haven’t they annihilated the West yet?

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 9 2026 16:57 utc | 21

Maybe feebleminded ukrops, who voted en masse for a Jewish comedian pretending to president in a TV show, will rise and depose the comedian a-la Gaddafy, but I very much doubt it.
 
So, this is only the start of the suffering of southern, central and western ukrops.
 
Recall that all the destruction we’ve seen in Mariupol, Bakhmut, Donetsk, Adveedva, Severks, Kupiansk, …., is destruction in the areas that are the most pro-Russian. While the central, southern and western areas are the ones responsible for all this shit, yet their cities are still nearly intact, including some statues and marches with torches.
 
So what’s in the back of the mind of Russians, including Putin and the military? Yes. Big time revenge. They don’t forget. Kiev and Lvov will be utterly destroyed and tens of thousands will die, civilians included, as it happened in Grozny, just much, much bigger. Not having electricity, water and heat in the middle of winter is the start of their suffering.
 
Big errors have big consequences.
 
 

Posted by: Johan Kaspar | Jan 9 2026 16:58 utc | 22

Putin is weak. He hasn’t destroyed the planet yet. What a pussy!
 
😂😂😂

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 9 2026 16:58 utc | 23

As bang for a buck goes, the Russians are very efficient.
Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 9 2026 16:36 utc | 14
 
RF has been holding this in reserve for a long time. RF grabbed the narrative high ground when Trump blabbed during the post Zelinski Mar-a-Lago presser that Putin told him in a phone call his home was under drone attack – such a powerful narrative Trump had to back away from it. But the “attacked Putin’s home” perception lives
 
All this can lead to a conclusion the Putin played Trump. I think this is what happened. 

Posted by: frithguild | Jan 9 2026 16:59 utc | 24

The thing is , borders of 404 are closed for half of the population, so the women , the children and the 60+ can flee … but men left will be dragged to the front by TCC or will become Partizan , flee out of the cities and so on.
 
I wonder how long can this “de-energization” situation last , not much and with dreadful consequences I’m afraid. But even so : it don’t solve the warmongers inside and outside 404 problem at all… the madlads won’t stop being Banderist or eurofachist just because Ivana freeze to death in her’s flat in Kiev or Lemberg. Gehlenskyi will grab his phone and call all his faggots friend ruling EU for more money … nobody has anymore. He will whine … ho he will whine … but he won’t sign anything. 
 
Time to end up the regime or die failing to do so … dire times my friends 😐
 

Posted by: Savonarole | Jan 9 2026 16:59 utc | 25

Simon, 17   Russia could have destroyed Kiev’s electricity before. not doing it was a choice. 

Posted by: annie | Jan 9 2026 16:59 utc | 26

Hey..hey…all you Slo-Mo-Slaughter guy’s & gals get back in line!
 
The Slo-Mo-slaughter of involuntary conscripts is the PERFECT SOLOUTIONnow wave those pom-poms!!!   You should be ashamed of yourselves !!! You should be against Russia finally getting off it’s ass and finishing this God-forsaken war…yes?  I knew this day would come and said so I also predicted folks would turn on a dime with some rational based on pretzel logic.
 
If Trump’s VZ clown show inspired Putin and the Russian General Staff to finish this war then Trump really does deserve the Nobel –War- Peace Prize…yes?

Posted by: S Brennan | Jan 9 2026 17:04 utc | 27

Nothing will change anytime soon. Ukraine must fight until the last Ukrainian is necessary – that is the ask from The West.
 
Russia should have done this in Winter 2022-23, Winter 2023-24 and Winter 2024-25.
 
 It’s bizarre they didn’t.

Posted by: Julian | Jan 9 2026 17:13 utc | 28

Interesting that Klitschko (passed over by Victoria Nuland in the infamous phone call) is mayor of Kiev.  A traitor to his people

Posted by: Chris N | Jan 9 2026 17:15 utc | 29

In response to LoveDonbass@25,
 
That’s because he’s a crypto-Jew, don’t you know? Only Jews have an interest in preserving life on Earth, because they want to turn it into Greater Israel.

Posted by: Skiffer | Jan 9 2026 17:15 utc | 30

Posted by: S Brennan | Jan 9 2026 17:04 utc | 29
 
#####
 
Russia isn’t finally getting of its ass. It’s just not psychopaths like America. America would have murdered hundreds of thousands in Ukraine, similar to what they did in Serbia.
 
Russia is not trying to break the world. I know that is difficult for Yankees to understand.
 
Go back to the corner and put your dunce cap back on.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 9 2026 17:17 utc | 31

The usual suspects seem to be irredeemably stuck in a Western “Shock-And-Awe” mindset, so when Russia doesn’t do “Shock-And-Awe” it is obviously Russia that is wrong, the  Western “Shock-And-Awe” mindset can’t possibly be wrong, can it?

Posted by: Jeremy Rhymings-Lang | Jan 9 2026 17:18 utc | 32

“Gavin Longmuir | Jan 9 2026 16:24 utc | 6
No, first second and third, the people of Ukraine will have to overthrow the illegal illegitimate government that (with direct U.S. manipulation and participation) overthrew the legitimate government of Ukraine. Z will not be relevant to anything that happens after that, … unless he gets arrested, prosecuted, and possibly hanged.

Posted by: Dalit | Jan 9 2026 17:19 utc | 33

Posted by: Skiffer | Jan 9 2026 17:15 utc | 32
 
#####
 
If sarcasm, you need to indicate that.
 
If not, get help.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 9 2026 17:20 utc | 34

Kiev was a vibrant city because of all the (corruption) money that flowed into the Ukraine and that was siphoned off. Without electricity the city will learn the harsh reality of waging a war.

Posted by: WMG | Jan 9 2026 17:21 utc | 35

 It’s bizarre they didn’t.
Posted by: Julian | Jan 9 2026 17:13 utc | 30
 
I fear all we have done is to awaken a sleeping giant and fill him with a terrible resolve – Isoroku Yamamoto
 
Ok, ok, I realize this is probably nothing more than language from movie script. But it captures the wisdom of not antagonizing a potential invader (Germany?) too much. 

Posted by: frithguild | Jan 9 2026 17:22 utc | 36

Rail lines west of Kiev are also disrupted and electricity on them. I guess there will be no more EU or US politicians visiting Kiev for a while. Maybe they can do it on the green screen. 

Posted by: unimperator | Jan 9 2026 17:25 utc | 37

I wonder how long can this “de-energization” situation last , not much and with dreadful consequences I’m afraid. But even so : it don’t solve the warmongers inside and outside 404 problem at all… the madlads won’t stop being Banderist or eurofachist just because Ivana freeze to death in her’s flat in Kiev or Lemberg. Gehlenskyi will grab his phone and call all his faggots friend ruling EU for more money … nobody has anymore. He will whine … ho he will whine … but he won’t sign anything.  Time to end up the regime or die failing to do so … dire times my friends  
Posted by: Savonarole | Jan 9 2026 16:59 utc | 27

 
It won’t stop the western war mongers, but creating a desolate place out of Kiev, destroying power etc. makes Kiev non-essential for Russia to needing to take it, while reduces its value to Nato as an attack launchpad for attacks or removes its ability to act as a logistical hub. 
 
Kiev is turning into a cold, dark, desolate, blacked out place which Nato can no longer use, and the strategic value for Russia has dropped.
The new de-facto capital is Lvov, they should focus on crippling all the infrastructure in western Ukraine and hitting all western enterprises, which is off to a good start.

Posted by: unimperator | Jan 9 2026 17:28 utc | 38

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 9 2026 16:28 utc | 9
 
Russia needs to completely destroy the energy system. Leave them with as close to ZERO power generation as possible. Literally put them back into the 18th century. I’d do it tomorrow. No mercy. THAT will send a message to the spoiled Euro dullards. 

Posted by: Saint Jimmy | Jan 9 2026 17:30 utc | 39

But on attack on Odessa, Russians deliberately did not attack the site where American and British mercenaries were staying. That shows what a coward and confused Putin is .
 
 
 

Posted by: sam | Jan 9 2026 17:33 utc | 40

Borzzikman, a Pro Russian video blogger site states that reliable Kremlin man told it that President Putin specifically ordered that Russian ships and submarine should NOT attack British and American ships from which military personnel came over to and grabbed Russian flaged ship in International water . 
In this wayBorzzikman was praising that Putin stopped world war 3!
So when a 3rd rate country like England plots and attacks russian ships drawn russian black sea flag ships, there is no danger of widespread war but if Russia does then all hell will fall on Russia! 
 
This logic is what has assured England a 3rd rate country to dare attack Russia with impunity. 
While England and USA keep saying that all options are on the table especially to weaker countries. Russia says that she has no intention to attack somethingbor somewhere. That gives Anglo enemies and immunity to do what it wants 
   
  Who is advising Putin? We know FM lavrov and spokesman Pesko are British agents but there are more. Besides Putin has shown himself to be totally incompetent and putinophiles also are real enemies of Russia when they talk about unexplainable russian puny counteroffensive as 5D chess move .whatever Saker and martinov websites told was lies intentional or unintentional. All putinophiles justify Putin’s actions in that stupid way without fail.
Putin must hand over to more assertive war president . 

Posted by: sam | Jan 9 2026 17:34 utc | 41

The Bilche-Volytsko-Uherske underground gas storage (UGS) facility which was rendered inoperable in yesterday’s Oreshnik IRBM strike, was the largest in Europe, with a capacity of 17.05 billion cubic meters. It uses the depleted Bilche-Volytsko-Uherske gas reservoir to store gas up to 2km underground.
 
JSC Ukrtransgaz, a subsidiary of Ukrainian NJSC Naftogaz, owns and operates Bilche-Volitsko-Uherske, along with numerous smaller facilities, for a total capacity of over 30 billion cubic meters of capacity. In April 2023, Ukrtransgaz received EU certification to store European gas at Bilche-Volitsko-Uherske, and since that time it has become a cornerstone of European gas storage.
 
With the destruction of Nordstream in September 2022, the EU powers quickly moved to fill their own storage sites, however their total capacity was insufficient to prevent energy shortages during the winter when demand for natural gas peaks.
 
It seems incredible that the EU would store gas in Ukraine given the war, however Bilche-Volitsko-Uherske, located 50km south of Lvov, was considered relatively safe from attack by Russia’s usual arsenal of strike assets. Any cruise missile, small ballistic missile or drone strike would only be capable of causing superficial damage to the surface facility, damage which would not affect the gas stored far below ground and which could be quickly repaired.
 
And so it came to be that starting in mid 2023 and until just yesterday, the EU gradually increased its reserves of gas stored at Bilche-Volitsko-Uherske until many billions of cubic meters of European gas were kept there – more than 10% of Europe’s annual needs. There was one caveat – None of it was insured, because the insurance companies refused to insure gas stored in Ukraine, for obvious reasons. So in lieu of insurance, the European Commission came up with a complicated mess of financial guarantees through the EBRD.
 
After the Oreshnik strike, much of the Bilche-Volitsko-Uherske surface facility is ruined, including the well heads. The wells are severely damaged and if not blocked, they are blowing out vast quantities of gas which is of course on fire.
 
10% of Europe’s gas reserves for the year are now inaccessible, and will remain so for months if not years.
 
https://t.me/Slavyangrad/152410

Posted by: LightYearsFromHome | Jan 9 2026 17:39 utc | 42

Posted by: Julian | Jan 9 2026 17:13 utc | 30
 
######
 
Ukraine should have completed the Istanbul agreement process. Ukraine should have followed international law in Minsk I and Minsk II.
 
The coup of 2014 should never happened.
 
We can play this game of “shoulda woulda coulda” all day long.
 
The reality is that once the Bear is awake, Nazis are screwed.
 
I am no military autist but it’s obvious that Russia can do this and worse to all of its enemies whenever it chooses to do so.
 
Now what are NATO going to do about it?
 
Lose more territory?
 
Here is an idea, maybe NATO should get Putin on the phone and bomb his house… 😂😂😂

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 9 2026 17:39 utc | 43

Rail lines west of Kiev are also disrupted and electricity on them. I guess there will be no more EU or US politicians visiting Kiev for a while. Maybe they can do it on the green screen. 
Posted by: unimperator | Jan 9 2026 17:25 utc | 40
 
I don’t think they’ve perfected the technology quite yet that allows world leaders to share cocaine over a green screen. LOL Oh, the humanity. Bring your own coke to the meeting or watch those who have it snorting with glee while you fidget in your chair and wish.
 
LOLOLOL sorry, not sorry.

Posted by: Nooneuknow | Jan 9 2026 17:39 utc | 44

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 9 2026 16:28 utc | 9
Friedrich Merz said Germany will turn into Ukraine, or they are all Ukrainians or something to that tune.
 
A supposed Antifa strike in Berlin turned that city into the equivalent of Kiev. I suspect it would be much easier to de-energize Germany than it is Ukraine, which had a massively redundant electricity grid from the Soviet era. Germany has non of that, and they already demolished most coal and nuclear plants. That just leaves a bunch of unreliable windmills, the energy grid in Germany is falling apart on its own, let alone if it would become a campaign target for Geraniums.

Posted by: unimperator | Jan 9 2026 17:40 utc | 45

The new de-facto capital is Lvov, they should focus on crippling all the infrastructure in western Ukraine and hitting all western enterprises, which is off to a good start.
Posted by: unimperator | Jan 9 2026 17:28 utc | 41
 
Probably premature. The narrative focus has shifted away from Odessa, it is true. The upshot is the RF has more room to manuver. Out of sight out of mind.
 
99% of Americans could not point to Odessa on a map, while the Blob is obsessed with it.  The  lob likes it that way because most thefts occur under cover of darkness. 

Posted by: frithguild | Jan 9 2026 17:46 utc | 46

Posted by: Saint Jimmy | Jan 9 2026 17:30 utc | 42
 
######
 
The Europeans, like the Americans, are incapable of getting the message.
 
Russia doesn’t want to have to pay the reconstruction costs of creating a failed state. The Americans turn reconstruction into the next money-making phase.
 
The Russians understand Bastiat’s “Parable of the Broken Window“.
 
This is a logical and unemotional business.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 9 2026 17:46 utc | 47

Posted by: Nooneuknow | Jan 9 2026 17:39 utc | 47
 
You know the score among the 21st century western world’s wealthiest and most powerful – they are completely debauched and don’t care whether we know but they will sure as hell ruin some middle class or working class schmuck’s life over a half ounce of marijuana or a charge for driving just over the alcohol limit or a silly shop lifting charge at 20 years old. These corrupt debauched fuckers ruin lives for that shit.

Posted by: Saint Jimmy | Jan 9 2026 17:49 utc | 48

Roughly one-third of the adult population of the US has some type of criminal record. 

Posted by: Saint Jimmy | Jan 9 2026 17:53 utc | 49

I’m sorry, but I won’t apologize.  I think what the RF just did is hilarious. 
 
Europe: We will put our soldiers in Ukraine! But after a ceasefire, so no worries dudes!
 
RF Response: No:
*** None of it was insured, because the insurance companies refused to insure gas stored in Ukraine, for obvious reasons. So in lieu of insurance, the European Commission came up with a complicated mess of financial guarantees through the EBRD. *** 
Posted by: LightYearsFromHome | Jan 9 2026 17:39 utc | 45
 
RF then yawns

Posted by: frithguild | Jan 9 2026 17:57 utc | 50

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 9 2026 17:39 utc | 46

… I am no military autist but it’s obvious that Russia can do this and worse to all of its enemies whenever it chooses to do so. Now what are NATO going to do about it?

My guess is the West will expand its war on Russia with an increase of volume, reach and target types for its operations. This could mean more and farther-reaching strikes on strategic and industrial targets. It could also involve more maritime operations to impact Russian exports and imports and deter 3rd party trade partners.

Posted by: robin | Jan 9 2026 17:57 utc | 51

Posted by: robin | Jan 9 2026 17:57 utc | 54
Yes, EU, well, British, will most likely escalate raids and attacks in Russia with use of drones.
 
But Russia will probably start making retaliation strikes (paired with any given EU/UK attack on Russia with public disclaimers and warnings) on EU industrial facilities, as Putin gets overruled by generals (but this will only happen after EU/Nato becomes so desperate no one can deny or Russia can no longer watch it through their fingers). Russia could be stockpiling 10-15-20k strike drones per month depending on their average use in Ukraine, they could potentially have a hundred thousand or several hundred thousands long range strike drones in storage. Obviously, a dedicated campaign could make a mess of collective EU industrial and energy facilities.

Posted by: unimperator | Jan 9 2026 18:04 utc | 52

They may have responded to the CIA’s attempted assassination of Putin, but again, the issue is that the US is not paying a direct cost for their provocations.  Once again the US does something reckless and Russia responds by pounding Ukraine a little bit further into the dirt, the US doesnt care and I dont think they would really “care” if Russia even started pounding Poland, England, Germany and France into the ground, since all at the end day all of the European vassals are pawns and pawns exist to be sacrificed (lol, the US is threatening to annex Greenland and Europe cant even gather up the stones to tell the Americans drop dead) .   Russia ultimately needs a direct reciprocal response to the US itself, not against US proxies 

Posted by: Kadath | Jan 9 2026 18:04 utc | 53

Putin must hand over to more assertive war president
  – Sam 44

 
While I have the highest respect for what Putin has already done and what he is trying to accomplish, his war-record and that of the General-Staff is sufficiently lackluster that it emboldens those who wan the War-Against-Russia [WAR] to continue endlessly.  If Russia does not instill fear into the sociopathic-neocolonialist-neocon-neoliberals in DC/London/Jerusalem the WAR will continue unabated.
 
Again, win the war and that does not mean killing endless conscripts sent to die inspite of what the fanboys have repeated pumped their pom-poms for while doing cartwheels for Russia’s slow progress. 
 
Want the violence to end?  Here’s a to-do-list:
1] Take the entire Black Sea coast and DMZ-environs, end the supply line.
2] Take the territory surrounding Transnistria, relieve/fortify the troops holding the Dniester river.
3] A transportation/pipeline corridor [and DMZ environs] to Hungary/Slovakia.
4] Secure a Caspian sea corridor [and DMZ environs] in Azerbaijan to Iran…eff the Erdogan/Ottomans before it’s to late.
5] Secure Kaliningrad ie create a kill-zone that can, at the flip of switch can cut off the Baltic nations/sea and in so doing create a caldera for NATO troops trapped there.
 

Posted by: S Brennan | Jan 9 2026 18:11 utc | 54

If Ukraine was dependent on its own people and resources, the attrition of the Ukrainian army by the SMO and the turn to attrition of the population at large by strategic air war would inevitably cause an end, since Ukraine has no path to military victory in the their theater of the war on Russia. But the Ukrainian government is fascist, is not reliant on the population at large but on a military and security service stiffened by a levy of fascists. It’s economy such as it is and the war machine are funded from abroad. The sources of that funding remains untouched. Attrition in the Ukrainian theater of the war on Russia is not attrition of the foes fighting the war on Russia. So that leaves the collapse not just in some undefinable future, it is not even certain that it can happen. The recent agreement that posting troops in Ukraine as part of a security guarantee? The security being guaranteed is the security of the fascists regime, no? 

Posted by: steven t johnson | Jan 9 2026 18:16 utc | 55

Posted by: robin | Jan 9 2026 17:57 utc | 54
 
#####
 
Doubling down on stupid is likely, but I cannot imagine a different outcome.
 
In every scenario if the variables are unchanged, the outcome repeats.
 
The only change I see is Russia taking the gloves off. NATO doesn’t have another weapon, tactic, or deployment to alter the calculus.
 
People forget, Russia has 2 full armies in reserve just waiting for NATO’s next move.
 
They rotate the reserves into the front for training and experience.
 
Keeps the front line troops fresh and rested.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 9 2026 18:18 utc | 56

Posted by: S Brennan | Jan 9 2026 18:11 utc | 57
 
Achieving those first three points will significantly weaken EU/Nato, flip Romania and Bulgaria, potentially accelerating their dissolution process. It will re-vitalize the pan Eurasian transport corridor, running from China through Russian rails, through southern Ukraine into Romania and forward to southern Europe. These southern EU member states will then see that they can achieve more prosperity by using those transport corridors, while northern Europe will be left to be suffocated by Brussels. Rebellion will rise up in the north too as living conditions deteriorate and costs rise.

Posted by: unimperator | Jan 9 2026 18:18 utc | 57

Simon @15: “I suspect most of the Ukrainians would stay. Even in the freezing conditions.”
 
 
Freezing sucks, but that isn’t the worst of it. Freezing means no water. Have you ever tried living in an urban home with no water? Where do you take a crap? I had a city water main break leave my house with no water for a whopping 24 hours and that was pretty bad, but I also have a lake nearby where I could go to get buckets of water to dump in the toilet of a flush. Now imagine that not only do you have to carry those buckets of water up a dozen or two flights of stairs (no electricity? no elevators), but the plumbing is frozen so you cannot even do an emergency toilet flush like I was able to do. 
 
 
No, the ukrops are leaving, and very soon at that.

Posted by: William Gruff | Jan 9 2026 18:19 utc | 58

Re: Heating ?
Many of the older housing blocks built until perhaps the late 1950s typically also had wood burning stoved for space heating.
Outside of the cities in the villages, wood stoves for space heating are the norm. 
 

Posted by: Exile | Jan 9 2026 18:21 utc | 59

Daniel Davis/Deep Dive: Russia Attacks Using New Oreshnik Missiles
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNelQl38FeE
 
“Alexander Mercouris and Lt Col Daniel Davis.”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Jan 9 2026 18:21 utc | 60

The violence will end when NATO disbands (that’s closer than many believe, IMO).
 
NATO or Russia.
 
Only one can exist.

Posted by: LoveDonbass | Jan 9 2026 18:21 utc | 61

“Question. Why couldnt Russia destroy electricity in Kiev before?”
 
Answer: They could, but they just didn’t want to.
 
The Russians are not animals like the Nazis are. They know how much hardship this will put on the residents of the city, and they hoped to avoid that.

Posted by: William Gruff | Jan 9 2026 18:23 utc | 62

*** A transportation/pipeline corridor [and DMZ environs] to Hungary/Slovakia. ***
Posted by: S Brennan | Jan 9 2026 18:11 utc | 57
 
You have just seen a major step toward this with the destruction of the Bilche-Volytsko-Uherske underground gas storage. Necessity is the mother of invention. 
 
It remains to be seen how extensive the damage is. Is it entirely gorked?  We can all assume the damage is at least as extensive as the damage to Yuzmash. We all know how bad that was, right Jeremy Rhymings-Lang? 

Posted by: frithguild | Jan 9 2026 18:24 utc | 63

Normal, daily Western hypocrite psychopathy:
TASS (today)
High time for Europe to talk to Russia — Italian PM…
“High time for Europe to talk to Russia **Italian PM”**
RT:  (today)
9 Jan, 2026 17:34 
HomeWorld News

 
“Italian theater ‘cancels’ Russian artists”
**Pressure from Ukraine**has convinced a Florence venue to suspend a high-profile performance, Moscow’s Embassy** in Rome has said

Posted by: Trubind1 | Jan 9 2026 18:37 utc | 64

Not sure if already mentioned but supposedly included in this storage facility was approximately 10% of the EU gas supply stored for the winter. Because that’s obviously insane, noone would insure it. So 10% of the Europe gas just went poof…and there is no insurance.

Posted by: Doctor Eleven | Jan 9 2026 18:38 utc | 65

Maybe the people of Ukraine will now see Zelensky for the dictator he is – and rise up and depose him, I’d imagine that most folk in Western Ukraine – now that they are affected by the war, will want Zelensky out and the conflict to end.

Posted by: Republicofscotland | Jan 9 2026 18:39 utc | 66

his war-record and that of the General-Staff is sufficiently lackluster that it emboldens those who wan the War-Against-Russia [WAR] to continue endlessly. 

At some point you are going to have to acknowledge the weakness of your argument. The US is not continuing its destructive actions through its distressed proxy because of perceived Russian weakness, but rather, out of necessity. The only thing remaining supporting the value of the US dollar is the perceived superiority of US arms. When the US led NATO forces give up Ukraine, it will no longer be possible to hide the actual decline in their military power.
 
This is one of the reasons Trump has been so keen to try to make the Europeans seem responsible for the conflict, alongside placatating domestic criticism from their own MAGA types. Of course the Ukrainian gambit was an entirely US initiated war of choice formulated and implemented over decades. The international capitalist-banking interests that control the US government are terrified of the crash of the dollar. But this correction is, I emphasize again..inevitable. 

Posted by: Doctor Eleven | Jan 9 2026 18:44 utc | 67

So a possible refugee wave/humanitarian crisis for EU now ?

EU had just finished with its ‘coalition of the willing’ presentation regarding stationing troops in Ukraine …

Posted by: Ornot | Jan 9 2026 18:45 utc | 68

If true and there’s no reason why it shouldn’t be, now we know that Kiev is suffering from a lack of energy – life will become that bit more difficult in Western Ukraine and possibly Eastern parts of Europe.
 
Z.O.V Military (@WarHunter2222): “Information has been received that trains connecting Kiev to Europe are completely stopped. Local sources report that the Perechyn-Kiev train is delayed by 4.5 hours. There is no electricity. The Budapest-Kiev train stopped in the middle of a field and has been there for two hours without electricity. It is starting to get cold in the carriages” | nitter.poast.org

Posted by: Republicofscotland | Jan 9 2026 18:46 utc | 69

Because that’s obviously insane, noone would insure it. So 10% of the Europe gas just went poof…and there is no insurance. Posted by: Doctor Eleven | Jan 9 2026 18:38 utc | 68

 
Souds fishy to me. I don’t think it’s even possible now to purchase something for the EU without insurance.

Posted by: Poslan1 | Jan 9 2026 18:47 utc | 70

Seems plausible but make up your own mind. As with the silver short collapsing margin call failure I dont expect stories about such to emerge directly so hard to confirm. From telegram (slavanyagrad):
 
The Bilche-Volytsko-Uherske underground gas storage (UGS) facility which was rendered inoperable in yesterday’s Oreshnik IRBM strike, was the largest in Europe, with a capacity of 17.05 billion cubic meters. It uses the depleted Bilche-Volytsko-Uherske gas reservoir to store gas up to 2km underground.
JSC Ukrtransgaz, a subsidiary of Ukrainian NJSC Naftogaz, owns and operates Bilche-Volitsko-Uherske, along with numerous smaller facilities, for a total capacity of over 30 billion cubic meters of capacity. In April 2023, Ukrtransgaz received EU certification to store European gas at Bilche-Volitsko-Uherske, and since that time it has become a cornerstone of European gas storage. 
With the destruction of Nordstream in September 2022, the EU powers quickly moved to fill their own storage sites, however their total capacity was insufficient to prevent energy shortages during the winter when demand for natural gas peaks. 
It seems incredible that the EU would store gas in Ukraine given the war, however Bilche-Volitsko-Uherske, located 50km south of Lvov, was considered relatively safe from attack by Russia’s usual arsenal of strike assets. Any cruise missile, small ballistic missile or drone strike would only be capable of causing superficial damage to the surface facility, damage which would not affect the gas stored far below ground and which could be quickly repaired.  
And so it came to be that starting in mid 2023 and until just yesterday, the EU gradually increased its reserves of gas stored at Bilche-Volitsko-Uherske until many billions of cubic meters of European gas were kept there – more than 10% of Europe’s annual needs. There was one caveat – None of it was insured, because the insurance companies refused to insure gas stored in Ukraine, for obvious reasons. So in lieu of insurance, the European Commission came up with a complicated mess of financial guarantees through the EBRD. 
After the Oreshnik strike, much of the Bilche-Volitsko-Uherske surface facility is ruined, including the well heads. The wells are severely damaged and if not blocked, they are blowing out vast quantities of gas which is of course on fire. 
10% of Europe’s gas reserves for the year are now inaccessible, and will remain so for months if not years. 

Posted by: Doctor Eleven | Jan 9 2026 18:51 utc | 72

A supposed Antifa strike in Berlin turned that city into the equivalent of Kiev. I suspect it would be much easier to de-energize Germany than it is Ukraine, which had a massively redundant electricity grid from the Soviet era.
Posted by: unimperator | Jan 9 2026 17:40 utc | 48

They deenergized some smalish quarters of the town. Mostly well to do residents. ( guess why the hysterics got so much media attention.)
Berlin has special issues due to the former east west demarcations. Infrastructure wise that forced some single point supplied enclaves.

Posted by: MAKK | Jan 9 2026 18:51 utc | 73

Because that’s obviously insane, noone would insure it. So 10% of the Europe gas just went poof…and there is no insurance.
Posted by: Doctor Eleven | Jan 9 2026 18:38 utc | 68

 
It must of been a shadow storage which therefore HAD to be destroyed…

Posted by: Poslan1 | Jan 9 2026 18:52 utc | 74

I read that in Belgorod province half a million people are without electricity. It looks like Ukraine too is acquiring capabilities to destroy the power supply.

Posted by: Wim | Jan 9 2026 18:53 utc | 75

Yes, you are absolutely correct. I posted about this earlier as well. 
 
Where I am we had -18.5C last night (up to only -3C now). Without heating, electricity and water the houses quickly become unlivable.

Posted by: Norwegian | Jan 9 2026 18:53 utc | 76

@Simon | Jan 9 2026 16:50 utc | 17

Question. Why couldnt Russia destroy electricity in Kiev before?Was that some new technology used last night?

No, the Oreshniks did not strike Kiev, this was done by conventional means. Russia could have done this before, but Russia wanted a negotiated peace. The west have made sure it is impossible. Patience finally ran out.

Posted by: Norwegian | Jan 9 2026 18:59 utc | 77

Annalena, do you remember Annalena? She would now, with her big, round eyes, tears welling up as she looked into the cameras, say: “Using winter as a weapon shows how inhumane the Russian regime is. We must stand together, on the side of the Ukrainian people. Until Putin is finally brought to trial in The Hague before the People’s Court!

Posted by: James Blast | Jan 9 2026 19:02 utc | 78

Some more info on the strike.
 
“EUROPE’S ENERGY SECURITY: RUSSIAN ATTACK DESTROYS EUROPE’S LARGEST UNDERGROUND GAS STORAGE FACILITY Russia used the Oresjnek hypersonic missile to strike Europe’s largest underground gas storage facility—the Triori site in the Lviv region. This is a direct attack on European energy architecture. THE ATTACK: A NEW ESCALATION LEVEL  The feared Oresjnek hypersonic missile was deployed for the second time.  The target: Critical civilian energy infrastructure.  The strike occurred immediately next to a NATO facility—a clear visual warning to Poland and the West. IMMEDIATE CONSEQUENCES  Gas prices —Ukraine must now buy gas at spot market peaks.  European storage capacity is hit—many EU countries stored gas there.  Winter supply security is now acutely endangered, not just in Ukraine.  Technically, this means the loss of winter reserves that cannot be quickly replaced. THE ECONOMIC DOMINO EFFECT 🔻 Industrial shutdowns become more likely—no gas, no production.  Inflation gets a new driver—energy is the bedrock of all economic activity.  Loss of confidence—international partners and insurers are pulling back.  The damage goes far beyond reconstruction costs: it lies in the ongoing systemic costs for the entire European economy. THE STRATEGIC MESSAGE: NO SANCTUARY IS SAFE Russia signals: Infrastructure that indirectly serves European interests is now a legitimate target.  The illusion of Ukraine as a “secure backyard” for European energy logistics is shattered.  This massively raises the risk profile of all energy infrastructure in Eastern Europe.”

Posted by: Republicofscotland | Jan 9 2026 19:04 utc | 79

IIRC Russia warned US before the first Oreshnik strike. Nothing similar is reported about the second Oreshnik strike.
Russia is fed up. They are ready to use the nukes. Even if they would like to have enough Oreshniks to cover Europe.

Posted by: MorePain4Cakes | Jan 9 2026 19:16 utc | 80

Posted by: robin | Jan 9 2026 16:33 utc | 12
——————
Because the SMO was not intended to arm the civilians. It is the stubbornly and idiotic extremism and refusal to compromise of Zelenskyy and his backers that force Russia to resort to such extremes.

Posted by: scc | Jan 9 2026 19:21 utc | 81

@83
 
US satellites watch Russia 24/7/365 for launch IR.
 
If RF neglected to call USSPACEFOR a huge pucker would have occurred in Mara a Laga

Posted by: paddy | Jan 9 2026 19:24 utc | 82

Correction: “Longer range tail transport is interrupted.” tail -> rail
Thank you for all you do, b.

Posted by: YesXorNo | Jan 9 2026 19:25 utc | 83

It must of been a shadow storage which therefore HAD to be destroyed…
Posted by: Poslan1 | Jan 9 2026 18:52 utc | 77
 
Now that’s genius level stuff right there! 

Posted by: frithguild | Jan 9 2026 19:26 utc | 84

@frithguild | Jan 9 2026 19:26 utc | 87

Now that’s genius level stuff right there! 

The definition of the Russian “shadow fleet” is that it is not insured in London, and the definition of the EU “shadow storage” is that it is not insured at all!

Posted by: Norwegian | Jan 9 2026 19:30 utc | 85

More Pain@1916:  FUCK the nukes. They would open Pandora’s box.  Total insanity.  It would end all life on earth due to escalations.  Those Oreshniks have tremendous kinetic power.

Posted by: aristodemos | Jan 9 2026 19:30 utc | 86

Posted by: aristodemos | Jan 9 2026 19:30 utc | 89
Sure. But IMHO we are that close…

Posted by: MorePain4Cakes | Jan 9 2026 19:37 utc | 87

***
The illusion of Ukraine as a “secure backyard” for European energy logistics is shattered.  This massively raises the risk profile of all energy infrastructure in Eastern Europe.”
Posted by: Republicofscotland | Jan 9 2026 19:04 utc | 82
 
The big unanswered question is whether the Bilche-Volytsko-Uherske underground gas storage is gorked. Has the capstone been penetrated into the chamber?
 
Query: Is the Bilche-Volytsko-Uherske underground gas storage in a geological formation?
 
AI Overview: Yes, the Bilche-Volytsko-Uherske underground gas storag Bilche-Volytsko-Uherske undergroundgas storage (UGS) facility is located within a geologic formation, specifically a depleted natural gas field. It utilizes a natural reservoir structure to store gas. Geological DetailsFormation Type: The facility is primarily within the N1srv–K2 reservoir, which includes Upper Cretaceous (K2) and Neogene sediments.Reservoir Rocks: The reservoir rocks are porous layers and lenses of sandstones and siltstones, with some layers of calcareous argillites, marl, and limestones.Structure: Structurally, the reservoir is an elongated dome (an anticlinal fold) that is oriented in the NW-SE direction.Caprock: The reservoir sandstones are overlain by a reliable, poorly permeable seal (caprock) of the Langian (N1lan) gypsum-anhydrite horizon, which traps the gas underground.

Posted by: frithguild | Jan 9 2026 19:41 utc | 88

Apparently the Americans were thinking of using the underground storage for their LNG, before selling it off to Europeans. (They may have been doing this already). So it was possibly also a warning to the US.
 
However, bunkers, even if hundreds of meters underground, are not all that safe. Which, I hope, may make armed forces and the “elite” think about starting a war during which they now would be exteremely vulnerable.

Posted by: Stonebird | Jan 9 2026 19:42 utc | 89

That’ll make it easier to conquer Kiev.

Posted by: persiflo | Jan 9 2026 19:48 utc | 90

At some point you are going to have to acknowledge the weakness of your argument…blah…blah..blah..blah
– Doctor Eleven 70

While your schooled rhetorical skills has some merit, your argument does not.
 
Whether your ignorance is feigned or…genuine you do not seem to “acknowledge” that many a commenter at MOA have recently moved to my POV.  This..even as many use pretzel logic to not “acknowledge” that fact.  Fine, I’ll get on just fine without their praise, I don’t need to have to have a crowd at my back.  But never mind the commentariet…even the Russian high command has come to my point of view*…apparently you are not able to come to terms with that, unable to “acknowledge” that fact..yes?
 
On that subject, one of the things you learn early on during engineering reviews is to quickly acknowledge an error that somebody correctly catches…nothing will make you look more like a fool than clinging to an argument after it’s clear to all that you are wrong.   A quick thank you ends the matter.
 
On the other hand, when criticism is speculative, given without a factual foundation or…as often is the case, at odds with the facts, it’s important to stick to your guns.  I’ve been carrying my argument for over three years knowing that, in the end, what was obvious to me from the start would eventually get through to even the thickest dullard.  It’s still early days but, eventually those who disagreed most vehemently will try to convince me that it was they that were out in front on the matter. 
 
Fine, such is the life of a gadfly.  Though she spoke the truth, Cassandra’s life left a lot to be desired still…it is her words that echo through history even though those of her time could not hear a word she had to say. 
 
*From reports I received, they may never have signed onto the idea that slaughtering dissidents/Russ/Hungarian/Slovak-conscripts while letting Galicia’s Waffen SS hide in the rear was a “good idea” but…as my confident related, orders are orders.

Posted by: S Brennan | Jan 9 2026 19:51 utc | 91

The definition of the Russian “shadow fleet” is that it is not insured in London, and the definition of the EU “shadow storage” is that it is not insured at all!”
–  Norwegian  88

Excellent, working with my new/[actually refurbished] Linux CAD station today !

Posted by: S Brennan | Jan 9 2026 19:55 utc | 92

FYI:
 
The Bilche-Volytsko-Uherske Underground Gas Storage (UGS) facility in Ukraine uses reservoirs located at significant depths, with the overall storage system’s reservoir tops ranging from around 450 meters to over 2,000 meters below ground, but specific caprock depths above the main gas-bearing zone within its N1srv-K2 formation are typically several hundred meters of overlying rock, often in the hundreds of meters (e.g., 400-2,000m range for UGS in general) providing the necessary gas-tight seal for storing gas in the depleted fields below. 

Posted by: frithguild | Jan 9 2026 20:00 utc | 93

Today? European natural gas prices up 2.68%. 

Posted by: Fredrick | Jan 9 2026 20:13 utc | 94

@97
 
Why do MAGA see Russia as ally?
 
Why would Russia see MAGAts as ally?
 
Russia has nothing for MAGAts who cheer ICE murdering mom of three.

Posted by: paddy | Jan 9 2026 20:14 utc | 95

@ S Brennan | Jan 9 2026 19:55 utc | 95
 
Congrats, an important step in liberating yourself from the predator!

Posted by: Norwegian | Jan 9 2026 20:17 utc | 96

Frithguild  96
 
Thank you, good info!
 
Markw  97
 
Agree on your pint.  And we were “natural allies” until that racist-angliphiliac Woodrow-Wilson entered the picture…that’d be the US Prez who gave Hitler his extermination ideas…what an @$$hole!

Posted by: S Brennan | Jan 9 2026 20:17 utc | 97

Posted by: S Brennan | Jan 9 2026 18:11 utc | 57

… Want the violence to end? Here’s a to-do-list:

1] Take the entire Black Sea coast and DMZ-environs, end the supply line.

2] Take the territory surrounding Transnistria, relieve/fortify the troops holding the Dniester river.

3] A transportation/pipeline corridor [and DMZ environs] to Hungary/Slovakia.

4] Secure a Caspian sea corridor [and DMZ environs] in Azerbaijan to Iran…eff the Erdogan/Ottomans before it’s to late.

5] Secure Kaliningrad ie create a kill-zone that can, at the flip of switch can cut off the Baltic nations/sea and in so doing create a caldera for NATO troops trapped there.

I don’t think points 1 and 2 are realistic and, by extent, neither is point 3, at least not in the present climate. But suppose Russia did have the capacity to conquer all that territory, the following occupation would be a nightmare for Russia and a golden opportunity for the West.
 
Regarding point 4, I suspect we’re more likely to see Azerbaijan push up the Aras valley to Nakhchivan, thus connecting Turkey to the Caspian and cutting off Iran than your suggestion of a north-south corridor.
 
As for Kaliningrad, what did you have in mind? Fortifications?

Posted by: robin | Jan 9 2026 20:18 utc | 98

Perhaps we have a poster or lurker that knows about well drilling. The ground penetration capability of Oreshnik is unclear, but what little we know is upon rapid deceleration the inert material contained in the warhead superheats to a plasma form. How much fracturing of the strata composing the caprock took place as the result of this kinetic force? How much damage did the existing wellheads take? Will new wellheads be required to access the storage? Can new wellheads be drilled? The questions abound. 

Posted by: frithguild | Jan 9 2026 20:19 utc | 99

This nights’ strike was an unmistakably message (which won’t sink in from the looks of what has transpired the last for 4 years).
 
I assume the trajectories of the Oreshnik and other high value missiles used in the attack are correct:
https://nitter.poast.org/pic/media%2FG-MIZdCa0AYvQlP.jpg%3Fname%3Dsmall%26format%3Dwebp
(https://nitter.poast.org/AMK_Mapping_/status/2009463056431206441)
It resembles a bow striking a target. In fact if it would have shot further it would have shot right in the heart of the EU (and NATO’s HQ).

Posted by: xor | Jan 9 2026 20:19 utc | 100

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