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Moscow oil refinery attack brings Russia's war with Ukraine closer to home
Moscow oil refinery attack brings Russia's war with Ukraine closer to home 18 minutes ago Share Save Add as preferred on Google Steve Rosenberg Russia editor, Moscow EPA Acrid black smoke billowed from the oil refinery after Thursday's attack There are moments when life in Moscow feels completely normal. Thursday morning wasn't one of them. In the south-east of the city an oil refinery had been hit during a Ukrainian drone attack - even from a distance the sight was surreal. Thick smoke billowing from the direction of the facility had turned the sky dark. Like a giant black shroud, it hung over the Moscow skyline. As extraordinary and eye-catching this was, so was the reaction of people near the refinery. Paying minimal attention to the huge clouds of smoke, an angler sat by the side of a pond, staring out across the water as he carried on fishing. At the playground opposite, children were having fun on the swings. Shoppers were heading to and from a supermarket, as if this was just another Thursday. I realised then that my sense of what's normal in Moscow and what's not, needed updating. Anadolu via Getty Images For so long, the war on Ukraine felt very distant to people in the Russian capital. Many pretended it wasn't happening at all, but that's harder to do as the front line creeps closer to the city. Over the past year-and-a-half, Muscovites have woken to news that army generals in Moscow have been assassinated, and drones have been targeting the capital. In a sense, abnormal is already the new normal. Thursday's attack was one of the largest aerial assaults on the Moscow region since Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine. As well as damage to the oil refinery, shopping centres and residential buildings were hit, too. According to the governor of the Moscow region, an eight-year-old girl was killed in a fire caused by one of the drone strikes. "I'm not totally surprised by what happened," says Slava, who lives in an apartment block opposite the oil refinery. "But I didn't expect such a big attack." "I heard explosions and saw lots of smoke. It's the kind of thing you normally see in the movies. I saw it from my apartment window." Reuters The fire at the Kapotnya refinery was visible to motorists on the Moscow ring road But another local resident, Nadezhda, saw nothing normal in what's happening. "It took us four years to win World War Two, even though our soldiers had little food and water," she told me. "Today we have all the resources we need. But this war goes on. I'm shocked." How do the Russian authorities respond to people like Nadezhda, to Russians struggling to understand why the Kremlin's so-called "special military operation" is taking so long, and how it can be that the war has come to their city? Russian officials regularly accuse the West of prolonging the war in Ukraine, blaming European leaders and Nato for supporting Kyiv. But on Thursday, President Vladimir Putin said nothing about the drone assault. The news bulletins on