Ukrainian strikes hit fighter-jet hangars at Saky airbase in occupied Crimea and a military-instrumentation plant in Penza, a Russian city west of the Volga, around 1 July 1. A military-instrumentation plant makes the guidance and targeting hardware fitted to missiles and drones.
The two targets sit at opposite ends of Russia's strike chain. Saky houses aircraft that launch glide bombs and missiles at southern Ukraine; the Penza plant supplies the components that steer them. Hitting the airframes and the hardware that aims them degrades Russian strike capacity at both the delivery and the precision end.
The strikes extend a reach Volodymyr Zelenskyy confirmed on 21 June, when he said Ukrainian drones could now operate deep inside Russia . Saky and Penza both lie inside that map. Crimea has been under Russian occupation since 2014, and a strike on its airbases carries a symbolic charge beyond the hardware destroyed.
