Multiple regions of Ukraine, including its capital, faced a large Russian missile attack Thursday, the largest wave of strikes in weeks targeting national infrastructure.
Air raid sirens rang out across the country. Mykhailo Podolyak, an adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, said Russia launched over 120 missiles.
Russia dispatched explosive drones to chose regions overnight before broadening the barrage with “air and sea-based cruise missiles launched from strategic aircraft and ships” within the morning, the Ukrainian air force reported.
The widespread attack was the most recent in a series of Russian strikes targeting vital infrastructure across Ukraine. Moscow has launched such attacks on a weekly basis since October as its ground forces got bogged down and even lost ground.
After earlier attacks, the Ukrainian military reported shooting down incoming Russian missiles and explosive drones, but some still reached their targets, damaging power and water supplies and increasing the suffering of the population amid freezing temperatures.
On Thursday, air defense systems were activated within the capital, Kyiv, to fend off the continued missile attack, in line with the regional administration. Sounds of explosions were heard in the town.
Not less than three people were wounded and hospitalized, including a 14-year- old girl, Mayor Vitali Klitschko said. He warned of power outages within the capital, asking people to stockpile water and to charge their electronic devices.
Quite a few explosions also took place in Kharkiv, which is situated in eastern Ukraine and the country’s second-largest city, and in the town of Lviv near the border with Poland, in line with their mayors.
About 90% of Lviv was without electricity, Mayor Andriy Sadovyi wrote on Telegram. Trams and trolley buses weren’t working, and residents might experience water interruptions, he said.
Ukrainian authorities in several regions said some incoming Russian missiles were intercepted.
The governor of southern Ukraine’s Mykolaiv province, Vitaliy Kim, said five missiles were shot down over the Black Sea. The Ukrainian military’s command North said two were downed over the Sumy region, situated on the border with Russia within the country’s northeast.
Fragments from downed Russian missiles damaged two private buildings within the Darnytskyi district of Kyiv, the town administration said. An industrial facility and a playground in neighborhoods situated across the Dnieper River also were damaged, city officials said. No casualties were immediately reported.
As the most recent wave of Russian strikes began Thursday, authorities within the Dnipro, Odesa and Kryvyi Rih regions said they switched off electricity to attenuate the damage to critical infrastructure facilities in the event that they were hit.
Earlier this month, the US agreed to provide a Patriot missile battery to Ukraine to spice up the country’s defense. The U.S. and other allies also pledged to offer energy-related equipment to assist Ukraine withstand the attacks on its infrastructure.
Podolyak, an adviser to Zelenskyy, said that Russia was aiming to “destroy critical infrastructure and kill civilians en masse.”
“We’re waiting for further proposals from ‘peacekeepers’ about ‘peaceful settlement,’ ‘security guarantees for RF’ and undesirability of provocations,” Podolyak wrote on Twitter, a sarcastic reference to statements from some within the West who urged Ukraine to hunt a political settlement of the conflict.
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said Monday that his nation wants a “peace” summit inside two months on the United Nations with Secretary-General António Guterres as mediator. Kuleba said Russia must face a war-crimes tribunal before his country directly talks with Moscow. He said, nonetheless, that other nations should be at liberty to have interaction with the Russians.
Commenting on the summit proposal Thursday, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova dismissed it as “delirious” and “hole,” describing the proposal as a “publicity stunt by Washington that tries to solid the Kyiv regime as a peacemaker.”
“It’s an attempt to provide a semblance of legitimacy to a meaningless discussion that is not going to be followed by any concrete steps,” Zakharova said during a briefing.
Russian officials have said that any peace plan can only proceed from Kyiv’s recognition of Russia’s sovereignty over the regions it illegally annexed from Ukraine in September