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On July 4, Ukraine launched an attack on the Kronstadt naval base located in St Petersburg, which serves as the command center for Russia's Baltic Fleet, marking an incursion of roughly 900 kilometers into Russian land in the most extensive strike of the conflict to date. The president confirmed that the operation also targeted an oil facility that supports Russia's military endeavors. It is thought that US-provided targeting technology and drone capabilities played a crucial role in achieving such a significant range and accuracy. Military experts caution that this development exposes Russia's Baltic Fleet to a new set of vulnerabilities, with serious ramifications for European security and US military presence in NATO countries along the Baltic, including Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Finland.

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00:00Ukraine just hit Russia where it has never been hit before.
00:03The Kronstadt naval base in St. Petersburg,
00:05the headquarters of Russia's Baltic fleet
00:08and home to some of its most powerful warships,
00:11was struck by Ukrainian drones on July 4th.
00:14That is 900 kilometers inside Russia.
00:17It is Putin's home city.
00:19Zelensky confirmed the attack also destroyed an oil terminal
00:22directly funding the Russian war effort.
00:25Here is the strategic significance for Americans.
00:28Kronstadt sits in the Baltic Sea,
00:30adjacent to Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, and Finland,
00:35all NATO member states.
00:37Russia's Baltic fleet is supposed to be the military buffer
00:39between Moscow and NATO's northern flank.
00:42Ukraine just showed it can be struck at will.
00:45U.S.-supplied targeting systems and drone technology
00:48are believed to have enabled this strike.
00:51What happens when Russia decides to escalate
00:53against the NATO states that share the Baltic with it?
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