What Are The Chances Of Russia Attacking The Foreign Companies Supplying Ukraine With Drones?
Typically cautious Putin isn’t going to risk World War III over foreign drone companies when he wouldn’t risk it after Ukraine attacked his country’s nuclear triad with Western support last summer.

Former Russian President and incumbent Deputy Chair of the Security Council Dmitry Medvedev warned on X that “Russian Defence Ministry’s statement must be taken literally: the list of European facilities which make drones & other equipment is a list of potential targets for the Russian armed forces. When strikes become a reality depends on what comes next. Sleep well, European partners!” This follows the Defense Ministry publishing the addresses of the foreign companies producing drones for Ukraine.
In their words, they did this because “The European public should not only clearly understand the underlying causes of the threats to their safety but also know the addresses, as well as the location of ‘Ukrainian’ and ‘joint’ companies producing UAVs and their components for Ukraine in their countries.” The innuendo is that antiwar activists should target these facilities just like they earlier torched one of Czechia’s Israeli arms partners. It’s also possible that Russia could recruit saboteurs for this purpose too.
Nevertheless, by publishing these drone companies’ addresses, insinuating that antiwar activists should target them, and Medvedev ensuring that the world is aware of all this, they can now ramp up security to foil any attempted sabotage. This observation in turn lent credence among some to Medvedev’s related innuendo that they’re actually “a list of potential targets for the Russian armed forces” instead of sabotage targets. The insinuation is that they might therefore soon launch attacks against them.
For as much as many of Russia’s supporters at home and abroad might want that to happen, it would risk World War III, and typically (some believe overly) cautious Putin likely isn’t going to do that over foreign drone companies supplying Ukraine when he wouldn’t do it over “Operation Spider Web”. To remind readers, that was Ukraine’s Western-backed spree of drone attacks against Russia’s nuclear triad last summer, which wasn’t the first time it was attacked either but was by far the largest such attack.
Casual members of the Alt-Media Community might imagine that Medvedev’s position as Deputy Chair of the Security Council means that he’s speaking on Putin’s behalf but that’s not the case at all. As was explained here in late February when comparing top experts Sergey Karaganov’s and Timofei Bordachev’s polar opposite proposals, respectively to launch conventional strikes against NATO and strike a deal with the US, different factions clearly exist within Russia’s policymaking community.
Medvedev and Karaganov can be considered hawks while Bordachev and Putin for that matter can be considered moderates. As proven over the past four years of the special operation, the hawks’ proposals are always ignored by Putin, so precedent suggest that Medvedev’s latest insinuation will once again amount to nothing. He routinely suggests the most hawkish things that never materialize, but that’s probably because he intends to scare the West, both policymakers and especially the public.
All in all, the Defense Ministry’s sharing of foreign drone companies’ addresses is most likely meant to show their countries that Russian intelligence has penetrated Ukraine’s supply lines, not warn them of an impending attack by Russia like Medvedev insinuated. His posts should always be taken with a grain of salt since Putin never did any of the dramatic things that he suggested he might. Medvedev is a hawk while Putin is a moderate, so Putin is therefore naturally disinclined to listen to him.
Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are author’s own and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Voice of East.
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Categories: Analysis, Geopolitics, Russia
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