War reaches Vladimir Putin’s doorstep as suspected shadow tanker erupts in flames near his Black Sea mega-palace

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War reaches Vladimir Putin’s doorstep as suspected shadow tanker erupts in flames near his Black Sea mega-palace
War reaches Vladimir Putin’s doorstep as suspected shadow tanker erupts in flames near his Black Sea mega-palace

This marks the moment when the war finally reached the front gates of Vladimir Putin’s £1 billion clifftop mega-mansion.

Thick black smoke was seen billowing from a stricken vessel right off the coast of Gelendzhik.

The burning hulk is suspected to be a “shadow fleet” tanker used by Putin to dodge international oil sanctions.

The inferno broke out in full view of the tyrant’s palace, which is famously kitted out with high-tech underground bunkers.

Putin is said to be hiding out in his bolt-hole, terrified of a Ukrainian drone strike or a coup from his own inner circle.

The Russian tyrant is under fire at home as his “endless war” strategy continues to drain Russia dry.

This is the moment the war came in sight of Vladimir Putin’s £1 billion clifftop palace overlooking the Black Sea, as smoke poured from a  qhiukiuiqxhinv

Smoke pouring from the suspected shadow fleet tankers off Gelendzhik.Credit: East2West

Stricken vessel map

A map showing a stricken vessel is ten miles from Vladimir Putin’s £1 billion clifftop palace overlooking the Black SeaCredit: East2West 

Vladimir Putin’s £1 billion clifftop palace overlooking the Black Sea.

Vladimir Putin’s £1 billion clifftop palace fitted with high-tech secret bunkersCredit: East2West

The blazing ship was spotted just ten miles from his doorstep – well within eyesight of the dictator’s terrace.

Details of the “inferno vessel” are being kept under wraps by tight-lipped Russian officials.

But news of the blaze follows urgent alerts from monitoring groups over a fresh wave of Ukrainian aerial and marine drones.

In a typical show of defiance, Putin snubbed an olive branch ceasefire proposal from Volodymyr Zelensky that was set to start at midnight.

Russian President Putin meets General Director of KAMAZ Sergei Kogogin in Moscow

Putin at his desk in MoscowCredit: Reuters 

Twelve people killed and dozens injured in Russia’s attack on Zaporizhzhia on May 5, 2026.

The carnage after Russia’s attack on ZaporizhzhiaCredit: East2West

Instead, he offered a measly two-day truce on Friday and Saturday only.

His forces then launched a brutal blitz on Kharkiv and Zelensky’s home city of Kryvyi Rih early on Wednesday morning.

One civilian was killed in a Russian drone strike on the border region of Sumy.

Shockingly, many of these deadly attacks rained down just six hours after the “silence” regime was supposed to begin.

Russia attacked Nikopol in Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk region on May 5, 2026.

Russia also attacked Nikopol in Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk regionCredit: East2West 

Twelve people killed and dozens injured in Russia’s attack on Zaporizhzhia on May 5, 2026.

Emergency services respond after the Russian attack on ZaporizhzhiaCredit: East2West

Kyiv has now warned that if Russia won’t play ball with the ceasefire, Moscow could be in the crosshairs this weekend.

Ukraine could target Putin’s prized Victory Day military parade on Saturday as thousands of troops gather in the Red Square.

The Kremlin boss is set to give a tub-thumping speech amid a massive security ring-fencing of the Russian capital.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha blasted the move, saying it proves Putin has zero interest in real diplomacy.

Sybiha said: “Putin is only concerned with military parades, not human lives.”

Defiant Kyiv chiefs warned that since Russia rejected the May 6 truce, the Ukrainian military won’t be holding back on May 9.

Russia has hit back with chilling threats of nuclear-scale strikes on Kyiv if their parade is interrupted by drones.

The latest carnage follows a savage Russian assault that killed 25 people in a single day – the bloodiest of the year so far.

But Ukraine isn’t taking it lying down, reportedly smashing a Russian FSB command post in occupied Crimea with a flurry of drones.

James Thornton

James Thornton

Editor-in-Chief

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