
Warehouse near three railway stations Īngarsk Petrochemical Plant (largest oil refinery in Russia) Steel plant owned by Putin ally Roman Abramovich LPG station (liquefied petroleum gas station) "Factor" timber terminal owned by oligarch Ramis Deberdeyev Zagorsk Optical-Mechanical Plant warehouse (optical, thermal & night-vision sighting systems) Rosatom (Nuclear) Institute of Digital Technologies Rosgvardia (National Guard of the Russian Federation) building Grand Setun Plaza Building, business center with Pension Fund of Russia offices įire at the substation in TsAGI (aviation institute) "Warehouse of a pro-Kremlin publishing house". Industrial zone where many enterprises of the space and rocket industry are located You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.

This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.

In May, a series of incidents on railway lines in Russia impeded the deployment of troops and military equipment to Ukraine responsibility for these incidents was claimed by the Internet movement " Stop the Wagons" (a reference to the Russian anti-war slogan "Stop the War"). There were allegations that some of the fires or explosions were the result of Ukrainian sabotage. The Ukrainian side refused to confirm or deny involvement in incidents at strategic locations. Russian officials reported mortar shelling, drone attacks, and helicopter gunship attacks allegedly coming "from the Ukrainian side".

Starting from the end of March, a series of incidents and explosions were reported in border regions of Bryansk, Kursk, Belgorod, and Voronezh Oblasts. OverviewĪ "yellow" (medium) terrorist threat level was introduced in Bryansk, Kursk, and Belgorod oblasts, as well as some districts of Voronezh Oblast, Krasnodar Krai, and northern Crimea. There have been many notable arson attacks on military recruitment offices in Russia since the beginning of the war, and there has been speculation that some of the fires or explosions have been the result of sabotage efforts by Ukraine. The 2022–2023 Russian mystery fires are a series of unusual fires and explosions that have occurred since the invasion of Ukraine, which have not been formally explained.
