logo
Ukrainian terror plot targeting Russian military plant busted

Ukrainian terror plot targeting Russian military plant busted

Russia Today09-06-2025

Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) has detained two Russian nationals suspected of planning a sabotage attack at a defense industry facility in the Moscow region, the agency announced on Monday.
The suspects allegedly established contacts with representatives of a known Ukrainian terrorist organization in Russia, the FSB said.
The men, acting independently, reportedly made contact via the Telegram messaging app and secured jobs at one of Moscow's defense enterprises to carry out reconnaissance.
They are accused of photographing key infrastructure at the facility and sending the images to their handlers. According to the FSB, the suspects retrieved components from pre-arranged caches and assembled improvised explosive devices (IEDs) with the intent of disrupting operations at the plant.
They were detained while attempting to smuggle the devices onto the premises. Both men have reportedly confessed to carrying out terrorist assignments aimed at halting the plant's activity.
The devices were reportedly disguised as power banks, one of the suspects said in a video released by the FSB. 'I was supposed to place them on two installations, but I only delivered them and was detained afterwards,' he said.
The other suspect said he had been recruited 'to conduct surveillance and sabotage operations,' including tracking engineering infrastructure and photographing license plates of unknown vehicles. 'Then I was ordered to carry out a sabotage act.'
The investigation to determine the full extent of the sabotage plot, collect evidence of potential high treason, and identify those who orchestrated the attack, is ongoing, according to the agency.
Last week, the FSB detained two women accused of working on behalf of Ukraine. One allegedly collected intelligence on air defense systems near the Crimean Bridge for Kiev.
The agency also reported the arrest of a 59-year-old man in Crimea who it has accused of assembling an improvised explosive device, under instructions from Ukrainian handlers.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Russia strikes targets in Kiev Region
Russia strikes targets in Kiev Region

Russia Today

time3 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Russia strikes targets in Kiev Region

The Russian military carried out a large strike on a number of Ukrainian military facilities in the Kiev region overnight, the Russian Defense Ministry reported on Monday. The ministry stated that the attack was conducted using high-precision weapons and unmanned aerial vehicles. The strikes targeted Ukraine's military industrial enterprises, as well as the infrastructure at a military airfield and an arsenal of mine-torpedo weapons of the Ukrainian Navy. 'The strike goals were achieved. All designated targets were hit,' the ministry said in a post on its Telegram channel. Kiev residents told the media that the attacks apparently targeted drone assembly plants. Ukrainian officials claim that residential buildings were hit during the latest attack and that at least six people were killed in the capital and surrounding region, while more than 20 were injured. It is unknown whether the damage was caused by direct hits or by debris from shot down missiles and drones. Moscow has repeatedly stressed that such strikes only target facilities connected with the Ukrainian military and that it never attacks civilians or residential buildings. DETAILS TO FOLLOW

Suicide bomber attacks Orthodox church in Syrian capital
Suicide bomber attacks Orthodox church in Syrian capital

Russia Today

time6 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Suicide bomber attacks Orthodox church in Syrian capital

An explosion has occurred at Mar Elias Church in the Syrian capital of Damascus, multiple media outlets reported on Sunday. The Orthodox Christian church was reportedly struck by a suicide bomber during mass. At least 20 people were killed and 52 others wounded, the Syrian Health Ministry told SANA news agency in a statement. Graphic footage circulating online shows the church interior sustained considerable damage, with mangled bodies and large puddles of blood inside. The blast was followed by gunshots, eyewitnesses told the UAE-based English-language newspaper The National. The origin of the weapons fire was not immediately clear. 'I was in my car driving when I heard an explosion just as I passed the church. People started screaming and I heard gunshots,' an eyewitness told the newspaper. 'Cars and ambulances started arriving. I saw many people injured and others may have been killed.' The Syrian Interior Ministry has attributed the attack to Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) terrorist group, stating that the assailant opened fire on church goers before detonating an explosive belt, according to SANA news agency. A priest at the church gave a different account of events, stating that there were two attackers, who opened fire outside before entering and blowing themselves up. 'There were around 400 people inside the church' at the moment of the attack, he told The National.

Zelensky makes new threats against Russia
Zelensky makes new threats against Russia

Russia Today

time17 hours ago

  • Russia Today

Zelensky makes new threats against Russia

Ukraine's Vladimir Zelensky has suggested that Kiev's forces will conduct more long-range strikes targeting facilities deep inside Russian territory. Ukraine has significantly escalated drone attacks deep into Russia in recent weeks, despite ongoing diplomatic efforts to end the conflict. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has described the actions as an attempt to derail the peace process. In a post on his Telegram channel on Sunday, Zelensky wrote that he had held a meeting with the head of Ukraine's military intelligence, Kirill Budanov, claiming that Kiev was keeping tabs on Russia's 'main pain points.' He pledged to 'strike appropriate blows' with a view to 'significantly reducing' Moscow's military potential. Zelensky also stated that Kiev was sharing its intelligence on Russia with its Western backers, with which it is 'preparing joint defense solutions.' Speaking to reporters also on Sunday, Ukraine's commander-in-chief, Aleksandr Syrsky, similarly said that Kiev 'will increase the scale and depth' of its strikes on Russian military facilities deep inside the country. On June 1, Ukrainian intelligence conducted a coordinated attack on several Russian airbases across five regions, from Murmansk in the Arctic, to Irkutsk in Siberia. Ukrainian media later reported that the operation codenamed 'Spiderweb' involved dozens of first-person view (PFV) kamikaze drones. At least some of them were reportedly launched in close proximity to the targets, from commercial trucks that had been covertly brought into Russia. The strikes were said to have been prepared for more than a year and a half and focused on Russia's 'strategic aviation.' The Defense Ministry in Moscow said that a number of aircraft in Murmansk and Irkutsk regions had caught fire as a result of the attack. Kiev claimed that the strikes had damaged or destroyed approximately 40 Russian military aircraft, including Tu-95 and Tu-22 long-range bombers. Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Ryabkov later dismissed these estimates as incorrect. 'The equipment in question… was not destroyed, but damaged. It will be restored,' the diplomat told TASS in early June. Around the same time, Keith Kellogg, US President Donald Trump's special envoy, cautioned that 'when you attack an opponent's part of their national survival system, which is their nuclear triad… that means your risk level goes up because you don't know what the other side's going to do.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store