Ukrainian officials reported that Russia unleashed one of the war’s largest ballistic missile barrages on Kyiv before sunrise on Sunday, marking the third major strike on the capital in the last five weeks.
With smoke lingering over the city and rescue crews rushing to impact sites, officials confirmed one fatality and over 15 injuries, warning that the casualty count could rise.
The ongoing assault on Kyiv parallels Ukraine’s stepped‑up strikes on Russian oil and gas infrastructure, which have fueled nationwide fuel shortages and brought the conflict closer to Russian soil. Over the weekend, Kyiv broadened this effort, hitting two warehouses operated by Russia’s leading e‑commerce platform, Wildberries.
Russian officials reported that the strikes left at least eight dead and 62 wounded.
President Volodymyr Zelensky described the warehouses as key logistics hubs that had been providing sanctioned parts for drone manufacturing and navigation systems.
Ukraine persisted in its effort to isolate Crimea, striking installations throughout the occupied peninsula and vessels in the Sea of Azov and the Black Sea.
Front‑line maneuvers have largely ground to a halt as both sides contend with drone‑filled skies, causing the air war over targets inside and outside Ukraine to intensify.
Besides the Sunday strike on Kyiv, Ukrainian officials said a Russian missile slammed into an amusement park in Odesa on Saturday, killing at least two people, including a child.
Zelensky stated that, over the past week, Russia deployed roughly 1,450 attack drones, over 1,640 guided aerial bombs, and 99 missiles of various types against Ukraine.
The Ukrainian Air Force said the Sunday night assault on Kyiv formed part of a larger barrage comprising at least 41 missiles and 125 drones of assorted types.
Ukrainian air defenses reported destroying or neutralizing 18 missiles and 108 drones. While the thunder of Patriot interceptors could be heard across Kyiv during the barrage, officials did not disclose how many of the American systems were employed.
Zelensky stressed that the attack highlighted the pressing need for additional interceptor missiles.
“We need interceptors every day, and I thank those who honor our agreements and secure the delivery of antiballistic capabilities,” he said. “At this moment, these shipments are literally saving lives during each major Russian assault.”
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