Ukraine’s drones are eroding Putin’s vision for Crimea
Russian-installed authorities in Crimea have halted fuel distribution in vacation season as Ukraine isolates the peninsula. June 23, 2026 at 6:35 a.m. 7 min A gas station in Saki, Crimea, on Monday, closed amid a fuel crisis. (Alexey Pavlishak/Reuters) By Mary Ilyushina, David L. Stern and Natalia Abbakumova A middle-aged couple from Moscow and their teenage son began their summer vacation to the Black Sea beaches of Crimea this month by filling five-gallon gasoline canisters and stocking up on food — as if headed to a war zone. Because in many ways they were. Idealized as a land of Soviet-era youth camps and resorts, Crimea — the Ukrainian peninsula that Russia invaded and annexed illegally in 2014 — has become President Vladimir Putin’s prized possession, a symbol of his vision of Russia restored to superpower heights and a key logistics hub for his military operations across southeast Ukraine. Well into the fifth year of the war, however, that vision seems increasingly tenuous. [ j...