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A massive Ukrainian air assault involving nearly 200 drones targeted the Russian capital, triggering a major fire at the Kapotnya oil refinery and prompting Moscow residents to report a fine, oily “black rain” coating their clothes and vehicles. The unprecedented strike, described as Kyiv’s largest drone offensive since the start of the full-scale war, wounded at least 17 people in the wider Moscow region, set ablaze a nearby shopping center, and forced the temporary closure of the city’s four major airports. While municipal authorities denied the existence of toxic fallout, the city’s official Telegram channels paradoxically warned vulnerable residents, the elderly, and families with children to urgently evacuate the affected southeastern districts and keep all windows tightly sealed.

The catastrophic bombardment caused massive explosions at the refinery—marking its third strike this month—with verified footage capturing the dramatic moment an oil silo roof was blown dozens of meters into the air. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky explicitly framed the operation as direct retaliation for a recent devastating Russian attack on Kyiv that desecrated the historic Pechersk Lavra monastery, warning, “If Ukraine burns, your Moscow will burn too.” In response, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov threatened immediate, mass-scale military reprisals, while Russia’s defense ministry claimed to have intercepted nearly 1,000 drones and four cruise missiles across the country over a 24-hour window, including an attack in the Rostov region that left one person dead.

The sophisticated multi-wave assault bypassed extensive anti-air networks by utilizing hundreds of reconnaissance decoy drones to exhaust local defenses before the primary explosive payloads struck. The scale of the breach has raised serious domestic questions regarding the defense capabilities protecting Russia’s most critical infrastructure, shattering the illusion of safety for ordinary Muscovites living 500 kilometers from the border. As the war of attrition intensifies, Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andriy Sybiha addressed the panic on social media, telling bewildered Moscow residents that the strikes are the direct consequence of their state’s ongoing aggression and urging them to demand an end to the conflict from Vladimir Putin.

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Russian President Vladimir Putin has vowed retaliation after accusing Ukraine of carrying out a deadly drone strike on a student dormitory in the Russian-occupied town of Starobilsk in eastern Ukraine’s Luhansk region. Russian-backed officials said at least 10 people were killed, dozens injured and several others remained missing after the overnight attack.

Ukraine’s military said it had targeted the headquarters of Russia’s elite Rubicon drone unit in Starobilsk, accusing the group of conducting repeated strikes on civilians and infrastructure inside Ukraine. However, Putin rejected claims that the site was linked to military activity, stating there were no military or intelligence facilities nearby and ordering Russia’s military to prepare response measures.

The incident marks another escalation in the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict, with both sides continuing to accuse each other of targeting civilians. Russia also reported fresh drone attacks overnight in the Black Sea port city of Novorossiysk, where falling debris sparked a fire at an oil depot and injured two people. Meanwhile, Ukraine said its strikes were carried out in accordance with international humanitarian law.

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The death toll from a drone strike on a student dormitory in the Russian-controlled Luhansk region of eastern Ukraine has climbed to 12, according to Russia’s emergency ministry. The attack took place in the town of Starobilsk, where rescue teams continue searching through the rubble for survivors.

Russian authorities accused Ukraine of carrying out a deliberate strike on the dorm building, with reports saying many of the victims were young students. Leonid Pasechnik, the Russian-installed head of the region, released a preliminary list of victims, most of whom were reportedly 19-year-old girls. Officials also said several people remained trapped beneath the debris.

Ukraine denied targeting the dormitory, stating its forces had struck an elite Russian drone command unit operating in the area and insisting that military operations were conducted in line with international humanitarian law. Following the incident, Russian President Vladimir Putin reportedly instructed the military to prepare possible retaliatory measures.

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A Russian drone attack in Bohodukhiv, Kharkiv region, killed three young children and their father, while injuring the pregnant mother, local officials reported. The victims were twin boys Ivan and Vladyslav, aged two, and their one-year-old sister Myroslava, along with their 34-year-old father, Hryhoriy. The mother, Olha, 35, sustained minor burns but survived. The family had recently relocated from a town near the Russian border, seeking refuge from ongoing shelling.

The attack marks a renewed wave of Russian strikes following a short pause, with the Kharkiv region under near-daily assaults. Regional authorities described the incident as “brutal,” noting that tens of thousands of residents face severe power outages and lack of heating, worsened by Moscow targeting energy and transport infrastructure.

In parallel, Russian forces hit other areas including Slovyansk, causing further casualties, while Ukraine launched retaliatory drone attacks on Volzhsky in Russia’s Volgograd region. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky emphasized the continued strain on civilians and noted ongoing international efforts, including upcoming U.S.-hosted talks, to end the war that began in February 2022.

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