Russia targeted
Ukraine with more than 200 drones in a large-scale daytime assault on Wednesday, hours after a previous barrage of civilian areas had killed at least eight people.The strikes came as
Kyiv and Moscow traded long-range attacks after a brief ceasefire, and despite the latest suggestion from
Donald Trump that the war could soon come to an end.Ukrainian monitors detected at least eight salvoes of Russian drones, including some entering from
Belarus, with the apparent target being
Kyiv’s critical infrastructure.
Ukraine’s president,
Volodomyr Zelenskyy, who was visiting
Romania on Wednesday, wrote on X: “
Russia continues its strikes and is doing so brazenly – deliberately targeting our railway infrastructure and civilian sites in our cities.”In an apparent reference to world attention being focused on the Iran war, he wrote: “It is important to support
Ukraine and not remain silent about
Russia’s war. Every time the war disappears from the top of the news, it encourages
Russia to become even more savage.”Debris from a Ukrainian drone attack caused a fire at a gas processing plant in
Russia’s southern
Astrakhan region on Wednesday, the local governor said.Trump’s latest claims of progress in negotiations between
Kyiv and Moscow were offered with scant detail and follow similar unfounded claims. “The end of the war in
Ukraine I really think is getting very close,” the US president told reporters as he left the White House for a summit in
Beijing. “Believe it or not, it’s getting closer.”His comments follow remarks by
Vladimir Putin in a speech last weekend that
Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine was possibly coming to an end.A man inspects fragments of a drone in the courtyard of a residential building after an air attack in
Odesa on Wednesday. Photograph: Oleksandr Gimanov/AFP/Getty ImagesThe latest strikes came a day after one of Zelenskyy’s top aides, Andriy Yermak, appeared in a
Kyiv court after
Ukraine’s two anti-corruption agencies named him as a suspect in a money-laundering scheme.He was a close friend of Zelenskyy’s for years, and led
Ukraine’s talks with the US until an anti-corruption raid on his flat last November prompted his resignation. Yermak’s lawyer has described allegations that the former head of the presidential office had been caught up in a corruption scandal surrounding a $10.5m (£7.8m) luxury construction project as baseless.Yermak told reporters before the hearing: “I do not have any house, I only have one flat and one car,” adding later that he would comment afterwards.
Russia’s earlier strikes had targeted
Ukraine’s residential and railway infrastructure in the central Dnipro and north-eastern Kharkiv regions, port infrastructure in the southern
Odesa region and energy facilities in the central Poltava region, according to Zelenskyy. Fourteen regions had come under attack on Tuesday, he said.Fatalities and injuries were reported after Russian strikes on the Dnipropetrovsk region on Wednesday. Photograph: State Emergency Service of
Ukraine/Anadolu/Getty ImagesThe correlation of forces in the war has shifted in recent months.
Ukraine has gone from pleading for international help with its defence to offering other countries expertise on how to counter attacks thanks to its domestically developed drone technology.
Ukraine’s long-range drone and missile attacks have disrupted energy and manufacturing facilities deep inside
Russia. Three regions reported strikes Wednesday.
Russia’s defence ministry said it had intercepted and destroyed 286 Ukrainian drones over
Russia, the illegally annexed Crimea peninsula, the Azov Sea and the Black Sea.On the 780-mile (1,250-kilometre) frontline, the advance of
Russia’s bigger and better-equipped army has been slowing each month since last October, according to the Institute for the Study of War. Moscow’s spring offensive has floundered and its forces recorded a net loss of territory last month for the first time since 2024, the Washington-based thinktank said.“Not only are Ukrainian defensive lines holding, but Ukrainian forces have managed to contest the tactical initiative in several areas of the front line even as
Russia continues to lose disproportionate amounts of manpower to achieve minimal gains,” it said on Tuesday.