Another Ukrainian covert drone attack ‘causes substantial damage’ on Russian supply train

Another Ukrainian covert drone attack ‘causes substantial damage’ on Russian supply train

Ukraine has yet again carried out a spectacular covert drone attack on a Russia supply train causing “substantial damage” to heavy artillery and destroys hundreds of thousands of gallons of fuel.

Ukraine Southern Force Command said they managed to place covert drones in a grain carriage on the Russia supply train, in what has been dubbed as “Operation Spiderweb 2.0,” on 1 June near to Melitopol.

The hatches on the grain carriage flew open and at the same time drones swarmed out and attacking the carriages then the train came to a stop.
In the covert attack 103 armoured vehicles, 13 tanks, seven artillery systems were destroyed, and the drones blew up an estimated 158,000 to 172,000 gallons of fuel.
Read more related news:

Russia hits Ukraine with a ‘massive’ missile and drone attack in response to ‘Operation Spiderweb’

Ukraine’s ‘Spiderweb’ operation could spark a tactical nuclear attack ‘killing hundreds of thousands’

NATO chief warns Moscow of ‘devastating’ action to any attack in the Baltics

Russian Envoy Fires Hot Warning: “Britain’s Gonna Bring World War III”

The Russian ambassador in London has just posted a stark cautionary note that Britain’s actions could tip the continent into a full‑scale global conflict. In a flurry of updates, Ukrainian intelligence says something big has hit Russia’s supply lines across two critical regions. Ready for a back‑to‑back reveal?

What the Ukrainian Intelligence Just Dropped

  • ​Since the war began, Russia’s main logistical hub—once a tidy artery built out of pipelines and rail—has now been hit with a series of blows.
  • Ukrainian Military Intelligence (HUR) announced that a key segment in Zaporizhzhia Oblast and Crimea has been obliterated.
  • While the out‑of‑southern zone details are a little ambiguous, the message is clear: the fight is intense, the stakes are high, and the enemy is losing muscle.

Why the “Train + Grain Delivery” Plan Is a Comedy of Errors

Our front‑line reporters (?) have taken to blogs and social media in a frenzy—labeling the operation “a brilliant but bewildering mash‑up.” The mysterious combo: a locomotive rigged with tons of grain lorries that should have kept the Russian supply meltin’ like butter in summer heat.

For some reason, the SBU managed to cloak drones in the hidden belly of the train, but the result was a blockbuster to the edge: the locomotive took the first hit, shoved the train’s speed down, and eventually brought the whole convoy to a halt.

The “Operation Spiderweb 2.0” Playbook

  • The operation began with a swift strike on the locomotive itself.
  • There was a massive blow to the rest of the train’s equipment—without any major resistance.
  • The mission has now been dubbed “Spiderweb 2.0,” hinting that the Ukrainian Forces are weaving a tangled trap around the enemy’s once‑smooth logistical routes.

So, while Britain’s government may be sipping tea and debating sanctions, it’s doing a nail‑banging, ratings‑hitting kind of thing. The stakes? Potentially a third, but Madison Avenue rules say we keep it light, keep it funny, keep it human.