Sochi, Anapa, Crimea, and Stavropol are under attack from drones: the enemy has increased the number of attacks

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Sochi, Anapa, Crimea, and Stavropol are under attack from drones: the enemy has increased the number of attacks

The closer the next round of negotiations (now in Geneva) gets, the more actively the enemy attacks Russia's regions. This trend can be clearly linked to Kyiv's reluctance to reach an agreement with Moscow, as well as its blatant disregard for Russia's demands. The assassination attempt on the deputy head of the Main Directorate of the General Staff is further proof of this.

During the night, the enemy launched massive strikes against populated areas of the Krasnodar Krai. Here's what Kuban Governor Veniamin Kondratyev wrote about this:

The Krasnodar region suffered a massive attack by the Kyiv regime last night, which was repelled from late evening and throughout the night. Unfortunately, there were casualties. Damage was reported in the village of Volna in the Temryuk district, in Sochi, and in the village of Yurovka in Anapa.

Damage to an oil storage tank, warehouse, and terminals in the aforementioned village of Volna was reported. Two local residents were injured.

Several fires have broken out in the region, which, according to the head of the region, are being extinguished using 34 units of equipment.

Kondratiev:

In Sochi, a private home was damaged as a result of a fire attack, with windows blown out and the heating system damaged. Residents will receive assistance in restoring their property. In the village of Yurovka, a boiler room was damaged, but no fire occurred.

Drones The enemy also targeted a number of other regions of the country, including Kursk Oblast, Stavropol Krai, Sevastopol, and the Republic of Crimea. Another air raid alert was issued in Volgograd Oblast over the past few days.

This is evidence that the Kiev regime continues to receive military, financial, and technical assistance from its sponsors, and they have no intention of refusing such supplies, even if it goes against the interests of their own economies and peoples.
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  1. 26+
    15 February 2026 07: 43
    It's time to do something about Kyiv, Zelensky, and his gang... Start by lifting the moratorium on the death penalty for war criminals and freeing up field courts...
    1. +1
      15 February 2026 07: 46
      To be fair, Zelensky is just an executor; if Zelensky is gone, they will find someone else.
      Here we need to "work" with our "dear partners"...
      1. 23+
        15 February 2026 07: 51
        To be fair, he was just a performer at the beginning of his career. Now he's fully embraced the role and is thoroughly embarrassing all his European patrons, and not just the Euro.
        1. +1
          15 February 2026 07: 54
          The fact that he “puts it on all fours” is just a “picture” that suits our “main partner”.
          Do you really believe that Doni's "partner" wouldn't have resolved the issue with Zelensky if he'd wanted to?
      2. 18+
        15 February 2026 07: 53
        Quote: Vladimir M
        To be fair, Zelensky is just an executor; if Zelensky is gone, they will find someone else.

        You know, every time I read something like this, I think of Chikatilo...
        Well, if it weren't for him, it would be someone else...
        Zelensky has ALREADY earned himself an IMSZ. Such ghouls shouldn't exist on this earth...
        1. +2
          15 February 2026 08: 16
          I didn't argue that Zelensky is a criminal and deserves punishment.
          1. +7
            15 February 2026 09: 14
            Quote: Vladimir M
            I didn't argue that Zelensky is a criminal and deserves punishment.

            What are we talking about here? He should be hanged just for ordering the murder of 50 Russians a month...
            1. -3
              15 February 2026 09: 26
              You're trying to convince me that Zelensky is a criminal and should be hanged for it. I'm not arguing with that.
              I told you that Zelensky is nobody without our "partners".
            2. -3
              15 February 2026 19: 28
              The Russian army kills without orders? What nonsense are you talking about? War is war. People kill, and that's it.
              1. 0
                16 February 2026 03: 02
                Quote: zvezdochet200
                The Russian army kills without orders? What nonsense are you talking about? War is war. People kill, and that's it.

                What you're saying... The Ukrainian Armed Forces don't even have such capabilities, but Russia does. And if the Supreme Commander-in-Chief issued such an order, there would be someone and something to carry it out... War kills, but not everyone fights in this war—there are civilians, too. I've never heard of Russian troops launching missiles at a market or a train station...
      3. +8
        15 February 2026 09: 53
        Quote: Vladimir M
        If Zelensky is gone, they will find another one.

        They'll find someone else and eliminate them immediately. Then the third one will think twice about signing up for this. And the "dear partners" have been asking for this for a long time...
        1. 0
          15 February 2026 14: 08
          That's right!
          Politics, we're not what we used to be, has shown its worst side for a long time now. But, as I understand it, nothing will change at this stage; the towers are happy with everything...
      4. +3
        15 February 2026 10: 05
        Systematic approach is key here. Each subsequent one will get a rocket in the tail for short-sighted words, and those willing to replace Zelensky will quickly run out.
      5. -1
        15 February 2026 10: 59
        Quote: Vladimir M
        To be fair, Zelensky is just an executor; if Zelensky is gone, they will find someone else.

        If we can't do anything about the head, then we need to constantly remove only the performers, because doing nothing under your excuse is stupid.
      6. -4
        15 February 2026 12: 07
        Drive the petrel into the caldera, and that's it. The most compelling peacekeeping argument.
      7. 0
        16 February 2026 01: 25
        To be fair, Zelensky is just an executor; if Zelensky is gone, they will find someone else.

        This answer is incorrect! At the front, a killed soldier is replaced by another soldier, and a destroyed tank, gun, plane, drone, etc. is replaced by another soldier, according to the same principle!
        Then, by your logic, there's no need to attack the Ukrainian Armed Forces, since they, as the executors, will be replaced by mobilization...
        We need to hit Zele! We'll destroy him, let them look for another suicide bomber to take his place.
        Fear is what's needed in war! And not just for Zelena, but for his generals and high-ranking officials, and for the Rada as well!
        The Ukrainian Armed Forces, Zelensky, and the Banderites should be afraid! Then they'll be accommodating and respectful!
        And the South, dear to my heart, burns so brightly!
      8. 0
        16 February 2026 10: 45
        Quote: Vladimir M
        If Zelensky is gone, they'll find someone else.

        Yes.
        But if it's clear that "it's safe," there will be a sea of ​​people willing to do it.
        But when it's like there's a sign saying, "Don't enter. You'll get killed!"...
    2. +2
      15 February 2026 07: 49
      Excuse me, but do we already have military field courts? Or have commandants been tasked with that? Perhaps, to give field courts free rein, they should be established at least at commandant's offices. But the ambush isn't in the immediate rear or at the front; it's all a matter of politics.
      1. 0
        15 February 2026 21: 50
        And who are you going to judge by military field courts?
        1. 0
          16 February 2026 07: 29
          Excuse me, what's the matter? Well, after reading that I expressed surprise about military field courts, why are you so interested in my comment? Well, I thought I explained that we don't have military field courts.
    3. 12+
      15 February 2026 07: 58
      The death penalty is necessary not only for war crimes but also for corruption. But the death penalty in Russia is neither humane nor liberal. What is happening before our eyes? Why should we admire the vile, grinning face of the already arrested Timur Ivanov, for example? I think everyone who orchestrates this chaos will ultimately get what they deserve.
      1. 16+
        15 February 2026 08: 07
        The death penalty isn't a bad thing. But, in my opinion, to minimize the likelihood of error, it should be suspended. Like in the States, I think. There, executions take several years. And confiscation of property from the perpetrator and his or her relatives is absolutely necessary. But that's wishful thinking.
        1. 0
          15 February 2026 08: 10
          Here we go again with this endless rhetoric about the probability of error. The state is bursting at the seams with horrific corruption, and yet we've been sitting here for 35 years discussing the probability of error.
          1. +6
            15 February 2026 08: 13
            Well, what if someone gets shot, and then it turns out he shouldn't have been. Should I apologize to his family? Let him sit for 3-5-7 years, and then throw him up against the wall. What's the rush?
            1. +2
              15 February 2026 08: 16
              For starters, we could introduce the death penalty for embezzlers like Timur Ivanov. In my opinion, this case is obvious. Or do you still have some hope that the state will apologize to him?
              1. +6
                15 February 2026 08: 40
                If the law is passed, it should be the same for everyone. Whether the defendant is of this or that level. In my opinion, we have problems with this, as well as with the inevitability of punishment. For example, an old man picked up a bill at an ATM. They promised him seven years. I didn't bother to find out how it ended, but still. And the mayor of one city pulled out 850 million—the case was closed due to the expiration of the statute of limitations. This shouldn't happen.
                1. -1
                  15 February 2026 08: 49
                  What does that old man at the ATM have to do with it? Read Article 290 of the Russian Criminal Code. Is it really that hard to put someone in the electric chair for particularly large bribes? And then it goes down the line, to bribes of, say, 100 rubles.
                  1. +1
                    15 February 2026 10: 27
                    Grandfather is an example of the inevitability of punishment. This is the main pillar of the Law. This example has shown that it doesn't work. Now, to the point. Are you proposing to take the life of a skilled warrior, as I understand it, an outstanding commander, a patriot of his country – General Popov? After all, the court's decision is that he's a fraud! On an especially large scale! In the absence of victims, by the way. Where should we put this warrior? In a gas chamber? Hang him? Let's not act rashly.
                2. -4
                  15 February 2026 08: 53
                  For a bribe of 100 to 500 rubles, the gas chamber; for 500 to a million rubles, hanging; for over a million, the electric chair. And all executions are broadcast late on central television.
                  1. -1
                    15 February 2026 10: 39
                    Quote from Denissdaf
                    For a bribe of 100 to 500 rubles, the gas chamber; for 500 to a million rubles, hanging; for over a million, the electric chair. And all executions are broadcast late on central television.

                    Maybe it would be easier to send them to some quarries as punishment. Fresh, frosty Arctic air, intense physical labor for 14 hours a day, a strict diet, sleeping in glamping tents in permafrost areas, songs about the Great Omeriga will prolong the lives of embezzlers and traitors. hi
                  2. 0
                    16 February 2026 10: 50
                    Why put on a circus if there is a shooting?
                    By the way, it is faster, cheaper, and MORE HUMANE.
                    But 100 thousand rubles is not serious, it’s literally throwaway money for “respectable people”, they’ll take it out of their pocket to “set this guy up”.
                    Again, the level of bribe there would be something like "don't demolish my shell-like garage in the vacant lot." Executing someone for that would be ridiculous.

                    But of course, if the intention was to cause harm for this money, the punishment should be symmetrical.
              2. -1
                15 February 2026 09: 43
                Quote from Denissdaf
                For starters, it would be possible to introduce the death penalty for embezzlers at the level Timur Ivanov.

                What are you talking about? His house and land were recently returned to him. The Bentley was given back to his wife, registered in her name.
              3. 0
                16 February 2026 07: 46
                What are you talking about? There was a term in Soviet times called "socially close." It existed around the 1940s. That is, criminals, thieves, robbers, and the like were considered close to the proletariat based on their origins. Well, it's likely that Timur and other scum are close to the ruling class, maybe not by origin, but in essence, alas, yes.
          2. -3
            15 February 2026 09: 11
            Quote from Denissdaf
            Well, here we go again with this endless rhetoric about the probability of error.

            This is what I always try to talk about. There are crimes where guilt is simply obvious, but any financial crime leaves traces...
    4. -1
      15 February 2026 09: 40
      The blame is misplaced. Maybe it's time for a change at the top in Russia. Since they can't organize either defense or attack.
    5. +1
      15 February 2026 10: 32
      Quote: ROSS 42
      First, lift the moratorium on the death penalty...

      "Special-regime penal colony No. 6 in Mordovia (Torbeyevsky Central) has purchased cotton candy and popcorn machines to organize movie screenings for life-sentenced prisoners. This was reported by the Telegram channel Mash."

      https://ura.news/news/1053068968
      Something like this.
    6. -1
      15 February 2026 17: 08
      He said it like a god, and those who came out of suspended animation gave a powerful upvote.
  2. 12+
    15 February 2026 07: 44
    .
    The closer the next round of negotiations (now in Geneva) gets, the more actively the enemy attacks Russia's regions.

    I think the increase in the number of strikes is not connected with the negotiations in Geneva, but with the approach of February 24th, when it will be exactly 4 (four!) years since the beginning of the war.
    Shame and disgrace. And yet, not a single high-ranking official has come forward and apologized to the people for the mistakes in planning and implementing their actions. As if that's the way it should be.
    1. +6
      15 February 2026 08: 18
      Quote: Alexander Elizarov
      as February 24th approaches,

      Don't forget February 23rd either. Our holiday is like a sickle to the balls for all of Europe! They smirk secretly. Ah!! Where is the Soviet Red Army!
    2. +1
      15 February 2026 09: 00
      What mistakes were made? Do you want a quick victory, like in WWII—forward and forward, regardless of losses? You, of course, aren't ready to see yourself or any of your family members among those losses. Or are you? Are you ready, instead of just criticizing and indignantly demanding victory, to get off the couch and go and sign up as a volunteer, or work in a factory or some other production facility 12 hours a day, seven days a week, for the sake of victory?
      1. -2
        15 February 2026 09: 49
        Quote: maximkrivihin
        You need a quick victory, like in WWII - forward and forward, regardless of losses ?

        What do you know about the losses? Do you think they are smaller (for the area that was liberated)?

        And don't denigrate the victors of the Great Patriotic War—the Soviet leadership. There were all sorts of things during the Great Patriotic War, just as there are now. But overall, they tried to protect the soldier.
        1. +4
          15 February 2026 09: 58
          Yes, there are fewer of them. During WWII, the Red Army lost an average of 5,000 men per day, and over four years of war, the USSR's military losses amounted to 10 million men, while the Germans suffered practically the same losses. Now, our losses are many times, if not an order of magnitude, less than Ukraine's.
          1. 0
            15 February 2026 10: 15
            Quote: maximkrivihin
            Yes, there are fewer of them. During WWII, the Red Army lost an average of 5 people a day.

            Are you deliberately misunderstanding me? I wasn't focusing on time, but on the unit of area. That can be calculated, too! If you calculate the amount of liberated territory (and the price that had to be paid), the result could be the opposite.
            There were casualties in both places. But what about the outcome?
            1. 0
              15 February 2026 11: 19
              And who counted these losses per unit of area? What if we measure them not in hectares and square kilometers, but in thousands of units of destroyed and disabled military hardware? So, the goal of the SVO was and remains not the seizure of Ukraine per se, but its demilitarization and denazification. Denazification, judging by the endless fields of yellow-and-blue flags and countless obituaries of slain heroes in the Ukrainian media, is proceeding quite successfully – there are almost no ideological, active fighters left; even Geraskevich's helmet, with its suffocated Nazi athletes, is proof of that. And the demilitarization of Ukraine has smoothly transitioned into the demilitarization of NATO.
              1. 0
                15 February 2026 11: 26
                Quote: maximkrivihin
                And who counted these losses per unit area?

                But you're counting the losses! And the area liberated during WWII and the Central Military District is known. That's certainly no secret. Divide the losses by the known area and you'll get the result. And from this result, you can calculate the losses per unit area.
                1. 0
                  15 February 2026 11: 31
                  But what if we look at it from the other side? What if we calculate how much Ukraine lost defending these areas? Moreover, if we believe their experts, our forces should have lost three times more than they did – "after all, attackers always lose three times more."
                  1. -1
                    15 February 2026 11: 34
                    Quote: maximkrivihin
                    If you count, how Did Ukraine lose while defending these areas?

                    I think there are a lot. But I don't want Ukraine to just stand there. We need results.
                    1. 0
                      15 February 2026 18: 44
                      Quote: Stas157
                      I focused not on time, but on the unit area... Divide the losses by the known area and you'll get the result. And from this result, you can find the losses per unit area.

                      Calculating losses per unit area is a uniquely delusional idea. It's nevertheless, for some reason, popular among the alas-patriotic.
    3. -2
      15 February 2026 10: 01
      So there is no planning or strategy, there is none, only the export of hard-earned wealth abroad.
  3. +7
    15 February 2026 07: 45
    The Kiev regime continues to receive military, financial and technical assistance from its sponsors, and they have no intention of refusing such supplies.

    Europe and the United States invested $200 billion in the Nazi regime in Kyiv... the term that Ukraine is a battering ram in the hands of the West against Russia is not an empty phrase.
    Negotiations will not solve this problem now...only capitulation and strategic defeat of Ukraine will knock this instrument out of the hands of the West.
    1. -1
      15 February 2026 17: 43
      Why is this? Did the Soviet Union's complete conquest of Afghanistan make the Afghan people peace-loving? If Russia somehow magically manages to capture Ukraine, will there be guerrilla warfare, with weapons supplied from Europe?
  4. +1
    15 February 2026 07: 54
    Keep hammering, hammering, hammering... Maybe the talks will get back on track...
    Maybe they won't be needed at all...
  5. -2
    15 February 2026 08: 17
    All of Kyiv needs to be demolished except for the historic districts and Orthodox churches. Then Kyiv needs to be turned into a regional settlement. Lviv needs to be completely razed as well. They'll attack Russia again and raze the next Bandera city. There's no other way. Just as Nazism was driven into Ukrainian minds, so it can be driven out. Or let them flee to Canada.
    It is already necessary to choose the capital of Little Russia, form governing bodies, and select governors for the new provinces. hi
  6. -1
    15 February 2026 08: 31
    Quote: V.
    All of Kyiv needs to be demolished except for the historic districts and Orthodox churches. Then Kyiv needs to be turned into a regional settlement. Lviv needs to be completely razed as well. They'll attack Russia again to raze the next Bandera-era city.

    How? This requires air power and air supremacy. And to achieve this, one must understand the modern realities of war, something the multi-star, stripe-wearing jets lack. We criticize America and Israel, but be that as it may, they can ensure air supremacy.
    1. -2
      15 February 2026 17: 43
      The Iran story proves that stealth is still a thing.
  7. +1
    15 February 2026 08: 52
    Quote from Denissdaf
    For starters, we could introduce the death penalty for embezzlers like Timur Ivanov.
    A public show! Just like in China! And show it all on TV.
    1. -2
      15 February 2026 17: 44
      Do you think they will shoot their own?
  8. +1
    15 February 2026 09: 01
    Everything in the world is wrong. This post should start with a different phrase.
    "The closer the next round of negotiations (now in Geneva) gets, the more actively Russia attacks Ukraine."
  9. 0
    15 February 2026 09: 05
    Quote: ROSS 42
    It's time to do something about Kyiv, Zelensky, and his gang... Start by lifting the moratorium on the death penalty for war criminals and freeing up field courts...

    ...Or maybe we should excommunicate Zelechka? No?...
    ...We need to catch him first, and then decide what to do with him... When they talk about the death penalty for Banderovites, for some reason, I always think of "extraction." Don't fight before you kill the bear. And don't say "hop" until you've jumped over it. And don't talk about the Red Lines.
  10. -1
    15 February 2026 09: 20
    This is what the white-glove war has led to. Some people don't care because they have a well-developed system of shelters built during the Soviet era. But ordinary citizens have already become outright hostages of this "wise" policy.
  11. -1
    15 February 2026 09: 22
    "This is evidence that the Kiev regime continues to receive military, financial, and technical assistance from its sponsors, and they have no intention of refusing such supplies, even if it goes against the interests of their own economies and peoples."
    Well, well...! So, did the regime promise someone not to receive it, and "they" were going to stop it on principle... I don't think so... so what's the "news"? Ah, well, yes - we're concerned about the interests of their own economies and peoples. request
  12. +2
    15 February 2026 09: 57
    Last night I broke Borzov's record for the shortest distance, almost opening a door that opens in the opposite direction. The air defense worked perfectly. We'll see the details in the official media; they've hit a lot of drones.
    So 404 begged for extra rations. I don't think their PPO will be that effective. Kill the bastards.
  13. +1
    15 February 2026 10: 46
    Perhaps it should be correctly written that the combined forces of NATO and Ukraine have increased the number of strikes and attacks on Russia. soldier
  14. 0
    15 February 2026 10: 57
    Quote: tralflot1832
    We've got a lot of UAVs
    They recently opened a joint venture with the Germans. That's where I'd like to hit it during the assembly process!
  15. +2
    15 February 2026 12: 55
    High-tech air defense weapons, operated by qualified, experienced specialists, are crucial in defending cities from UAVs. For example, when our naval bases were defended with machine guns and cannons, they were regularly attacked by Ukrainian UAVs. With the arrival of high-tech missile weapons and experienced, tough fighters who shot down Ukrainian UAVs like they were shooting at a shooting gallery, the attacks virtually ceased. The Ukrainian Armed Forces switched to targeting cities with weak air defenses.
  16. +1
    15 February 2026 12: 56
    First, lift the moratorium on the death penalty for war criminals and free up field courts...
    1. -1
      15 February 2026 17: 45
      I had the same thought. And why did you decide there's no execution in Russia? A bad person would play with a grenade.
  17. -1
    15 February 2026 17: 01
    Listen to our king, we haven't even started fighting yet. When are you going to start doing anything? The whole world is laughing their heads off and guys are dying there, there's not even any communication.
  18. +1
    15 February 2026 17: 55
    The Ukrainian Armed Forces have a thug philosophy. They swarmed into Hero Cities with their UAVs, only to have their jaws blown off by air defense forces. It's beyond comprehension when salvos of smart pencils, arcing at incredible speed over high-rise buildings, beautifully shot down low-altitude targets, each one unique. The future doesn't belong to carts with machine guns, but to these AI-powered missiles, controlled by cold-blooded professionals.
    1. 0
      15 February 2026 20: 36
      Most people can't imagine the level of sophistication of these tiny missiles. Imagine a missile launching, circling high-rise buildings, hitting its target, and then a second later, the sound of launch, breaking the sound barrier, the passing of a mere sound, and the explosion of a warhead that actually happened just seconds ago. In other words, the missile is long gone, but the sound lives on.
  19. -1
    15 February 2026 19: 38
    The Russian bourgeoisie has no problems. The number of oligarchs is growing. The bourgeoisie's incomes are growing. No one is bombing them. They fly all over the world via the south. Rublyovka sleeps in silence. The authorities are in power and have money. Now they are preparing for the State Duma elections. For them, the people of Russia are expendable.
    The Moscow bourgeoisie dances and sings.
    The main bourgeois is busy with yet another round of negotiations, another round of pulling the wool over the eyes of the people.
    There's no need to worry. Crimea, Anapa, Volgograd, and Donetsk are all far from the Kremlin.
  20. -1
    15 February 2026 21: 47
    I read the comments, Zelensky said something, ordered something.
    Besides the media, does anyone believe that Zelensky (a drug addict and hostage of the West) can order anyone to do anything without the West (USA) knowing?
    He's worse than Maduro, he could at least talk. But this one, for a fix... He'll do anything.
  21. -1
    16 February 2026 10: 49
    Sochi, Anapa, Crimea, and Stavropol are under attack from drones: the enemy has increased the number of attacks

    And we will act as always, according to the established plan - we will pretend that nothing happened, and wait for it to resolve itself.