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Sunday, August 3, 2025

Russia blasts Kyiv with another missile and drone barrage, killing at least 2

by

Newsdesk
24 days ago
20250710
People take cover on the platform of a metro station during a Russian attack on Kyiv, Ukraine, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka)

People take cover on the platform of a metro station during a Russian attack on Kyiv, Ukraine, on Thursday, July 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka)

Evgeniy Maloletka

Rus­sia pound­ed Ukraine’s cap­i­tal with an­oth­er ma­jor mis­sile and drone at­tack overnight in­to Thurs­day, killing at least two peo­ple and caus­ing fires across Kyiv a day af­ter the heav­i­est drone at­tack so far in the more than three-year war, Ukrain­ian of­fi­cials said.

In an­oth­er tense and sleep­less night for Kyiv res­i­dents, with many of them dash­ing in the dark with chil­dren, pets and blan­kets to the pro­tec­tion of sub­way sta­tions, at least 22 peo­ple were wound­ed, ac­cord­ing to Ty­mur Tkachenko, head of the Kyiv Re­gion­al Ad­min­is­tra­tion.

The night was punc­tu­at­ed with the chill­ing whine of ap­proach­ing drones that slammed in­to res­i­den­tial ar­eas, ex­plod­ed and sent balls of or­ange flames in­to the dark dur­ing the 10-hour bar­rage. Rus­sia fired 397 Sha­hed and de­coy drones as well as cruise and bal­lis­tic mis­siles at Kyiv and five oth­er re­gions, au­thor­i­ties said.

“This is a clear es­ca­la­tion of Russ­ian ter­ror: hun­dreds of Sha­hed drones every night, con­stant mis­sile strikes, mas­sive at­tacks on Ukrain­ian cities,” Pres­i­dent Volodymyr Ze­len­skyy said in a Telegram post.

June brought the high­est month­ly civil­ian ca­su­al­ties of the war, with 232 peo­ple killed and 1,343 wound­ed, the U.N. hu­man rights mis­sion in Ukraine said Thurs­day, as Rus­sia launched 10 times more drones and mis­siles than the same month last year.

At least 13,580 civil­ians, in­clud­ing 716 chil­dren, have been killed and more than 34,000 wound­ed since Rus­sia’s full-scale in­va­sion of its neigh­bor be­gan on Feb. 24, 2022, the U.N. said.

Two rounds of di­rect peace talks be­tween Russ­ian and Ukrain­ian del­e­ga­tions have yield­ed no progress on stop­ping the fight­ing. Krem­lin spokesper­son Dmit­ry Peskov said Thurs­day there is no date for a pos­si­ble third round of ne­go­ti­a­tions.

U.S. Sec­re­tary of State Mar­co Ru­bio said Thurs­day that the U.S. and Rus­sia have ex­changed new ideas for peace talks af­ter he met with his Russ­ian coun­ter­part, For­eign Min­is­ter Sergey Lavrov, in Malaysia on Thurs­day.

Rus­sia aims to sap Ukrain­ian morale

Rus­sia has re­cent­ly sought to over­whelm Ukraine’s air de­fens­es with ma­jor at­tacks that in­clude in­creas­ing num­bers of de­coy drones. The pre­vi­ous night, it fired more than 700 at­tack and de­coy drones, top­ping pre­vi­ous night­ly bar­rages for the third time in two weeks.

“The con­tin­ued in­crease in the size of strike pack­ages is like­ly in­tend­ed to sup­port Russ­ian ef­forts to de­grade Ukrain­ian morale in the face of con­stant Russ­ian ag­gres­sion,” the In­sti­tute for the Study of War, a Wash­ing­ton-based think tank, said late Wednes­day.

In tan­dem with the bom­bard­ments, Rus­sia’s army has start­ed a new dri­ve to break through parts of the 1,000-kilo­me­ter (620-mile) front line, where short-hand­ed Ukrain­ian forces are un­der heavy strain at what could prove to be a piv­otal pe­ri­od of the war.

“At present, the rate of Russ­ian ad­vance is ac­cel­er­at­ing and Rus­sia’s sum­mer of­fen­sive is like­ly to put the armed forces of Ukraine un­der in­tense pres­sure,” Jack Watling, a se­nior re­search fel­low at mil­i­tary think tank RUSI, wrote in an as­sess­ment pub­lished Wednes­day.

The pres­sure has caused alarm among Ukrain­ian of­fi­cials, who are un­cer­tain about con­tin­u­ing vi­tal mil­i­tary aid from the Unit­ed States and U.S. Pres­i­dent Don­ald Trump’s pol­i­cy to­ward Rus­sia.

“Part­ners need to be faster with in­vest­ments in weapons pro­duc­tion and tech­nol­o­gy de­vel­op­ment,” Ze­len­skyy said Thurs­day. “We need to be faster with sanc­tions and put pres­sure on Rus­sia so that it feels the con­se­quences of its ter­ror.”

Chan­cel­lor Friedrich Merz said at a Ukrain­ian re­cov­ery con­fer­ence in Rome that Ger­man of­fi­cials “stand ready to ac­quire ad­di­tion­al Pa­tri­ot (air de­fense) sys­tems from the U.S. and make them avail­able to Ukraine.”

The U.S. last week halt­ed some ship­ments of weapons, in­clud­ing cru­cial Pa­tri­ot sys­tems, to Ukraine amid con­cerns that its own stock­piles have de­clined too much.

“The Amer­i­cans need them them­selves in part, but they al­so have a great many of them,” Merz said.

Mean­while, the U.K. gov­ern­ment an­nounced the de­liv­ery to Ukraine of more than 5,000 Thales air de­fense mis­siles un­der a 19-year fi­nanc­ing agree­ment, sup­port­ed by a 2.5 bil­lion-pound ($3.4 bil­lion) cred­it guar­an­tee.

Some Ukraini­ans lose al­most every­thing

In Kyiv, Kary­na Holf, 25, was in the liv­ing room near the win­dow when she heard a whistling sound from the in­com­ing weapon. Mo­ments lat­er, lit­tle was left of the room but de­bris.

“Af­ter such a shock, when you know from your own ex­pe­ri­ence what it’s like to lose every­thing,” she said. “I don’t even know what comes next. All I have now is a back­pack, a phone, a win­ter coat — that’s it. This is my whole life now.”

Holf said she was grate­ful to have her par­ents to turn to, but added, “There are peo­ple who have no one at all.”

One Kyiv sub­way sta­tion work­er said more than 1,000 peo­ple, in­clud­ing 70 chil­dren, took refuge there. One of them was 32-year-old Kyiv res­i­dent Ali­na Ka­ly­na.

“The drone at­tacks a year ago were one thing, and now they’re a com­plete­ly dif­fer­ent thing. We’re ex­haust­ed,” she said. “I sleep poor­ly, I re­cov­er poor­ly, in fact I no longer re­cov­er, I am just some­how on a re­serve of en­er­gy, of which I have a lit­tle left, I just some­how live and ex­ist,” Ka­ly­na said.

5,000 drones pro­duced a month

Rus­sia rou­tine­ly fires more drones in a night than in a whole month a year ago, and an­a­lysts say the drone bar­rages are un­like­ly to let up.

Rus­sia is now pro­duc­ing more and bet­ter drones, in­clud­ing some us­ing ar­ti­fi­cial in­tel­li­gence tech­nol­o­gy, ac­cord­ing to the At­lantic Coun­cil. Its fac­to­ries are man­u­fac­tur­ing more than 5,000 drones a month, the Wash­ing­ton-based think tank said this week.

“For the first few years of the war fol­low­ing (Rus­sia’s) 2022 in­va­sion, Ukraine’s dy­nam­ic tech sec­tor and vi­brant start­up cul­ture helped keep the coun­try a step ahead of Rus­sia de­spite the Krem­lin’s far greater re­sources,” the At­lantic Coun­cil said of the coun­tries’ drone de­vel­op­ment. “In re­cent months, how­ev­er, it has be­come in­creas­ing­ly ap­par­ent that the ini­tia­tive has passed to Moscow.”

Ukraine ur­gent­ly needs more in­ter­cep­tor drones to take down Rus­sia’s Sha­heds as well as Pa­tri­ot mis­sile sys­tems to counter Russ­ian mis­siles.

The U.S. has re­sumed de­liv­er­ies of cer­tain weapons, in­clud­ing 155 mm mu­ni­tions and pre­ci­sion-guid­ed rock­ets known as GMLRS, two U.S. of­fi­cials told The As­so­ci­at­ed Press on con­di­tion of anonymi­ty so that they could pro­vide de­tails that hadn’t been an­nounced pub­licly. It’s un­clear ex­act­ly when the weapons start­ed mov­ing.

Ukraine has al­so in­vest­ed in drones, de­vel­op­ing its own long-range weapons that can hit Russ­ian soil.

Rus­sia’s De­fense Min­istry said Thurs­day that it shot down 14 Ukrain­ian drones overnight. Two peo­ple in the Bel­go­rod re­gion were in­jured by falling de­bris, Gov. Vy­ach­eslav Glad­kov said.

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