Ukraine says Russia launched largest drone, missile attack of war
AFP journalists in Kyiv heard explosions ringing out and drones buzzing over the capital during the barrage after air raid sirens sounded.
This handout photograph taken and released by Ukrainian State Emergency Service on July 9, 2025, shows firefighters taking a break after extinguishing a fire after a Russian attack in Kyiv region, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Picture: Handout / Ukrainian State Emergency Service / AFP.
KYIV, UKRAINE - Russia pummelled Ukraine early on Wednesday with its largest missile and drone attack in more than three years of war, claiming to have targeted an airfield in a region bordering Poland.
The strikes came after US President Donald Trump said he would ramp up arms deliveries to Ukraine and accused his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin of spouting "bullshit" on Ukraine.
AFP journalists in Kyiv heard explosions ringing out and drones buzzing over the capital during the barrage after air raid sirens sounded.
The latest strike, which regional officials said had killed one civilian in the Khmelnytsky region, beat a previous Russian record of firing 550 drones and missiles at Ukraine set last week.
The air force announced that Russia attacked with 728 drones and 13 missiles, specifying that its air defence systems intercepted 711 drones and destroyed seven missiles.
"This is a telling attack - and it comes precisely at a time when so many efforts have been made to achieve peace, to establish a ceasefire, and yet only Russia continues to rebuff them all," President Volodymyr Zelensky wrote on social media.
Zelensky, who was visiting Rome and met with Pope Leo XIV, called for Ukraine's allies to step up sanctions on Russia, particularly on its energy sector - an important revenue stream for the Russian war chest.
RUSSIA ADVANCES ON FRONT
"Our partners know how to apply pressure in a way that will force Russia to think about ending the war, not launching new strikes," Zelensky added.
Kyiv has repeatedly accused China of supplying parts and technologies central to the Russian drone and missile programme, and urged the West to step up secondary penalties.
On Wednesday, Kyiv's security services announced it had detained two Chinese nationals accused of attempting to smuggle missile technology out of the war-torn country.
The air force and regional authorities said that Wednesday's attack had primarily targeted Lutsk, a town in western Ukraine.
The Russian defence ministry said its "long-range" and "precision" strike had targeted military airfield infrastructure claiming that "all designated targets were destroyed". There was no response to that claim in Kyiv.
Russia's latest record barrage points to a trend of escalating attacks that have piled pressure on Ukraine's thinly stretched air defence capabilities and exhausted civilian population.
"We are adapting to this rhythm of life. Of course, it's difficult, but what can you do?" Sergiy Skrypka, a student, told AFP in Kyiv.
"It's not easy, but I think it's hard for everyone now. We're dealing with it," the 22-year-old added.
A representative of Ukraine's air force said that new Ukrainian drones had played an important role in thwarting the Russian attack. Another official said that most of the Russian drones launched were decoys.
Two rounds of direct talks between Russian and Ukrainian delegations since Trump returned to the White House have resulted in an increase in prisoner exchanges but no progress on securing a ceasefire, proposed by the United States and Ukraine.
CIVILIANS BURNT ALIVE
The Kremlin has since said that for now it sees no diplomatic path out of the conflict, launched by Moscow in February 2022, and vowed to pursue its war aims - effectively seeking to conquer Ukraine and remove its political leadership.
The Kremlin said on Wednesday that it was unfazed by Trump's comments about Putin.
"Let's just say that Trump in general has quite a harsh rhetorical style in terms of the phrases he uses," spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.
Ukraine has also sought to increase its own attacks on Russia, with Moscow's defence ministry saying on Wednesday that its air defence units had downed 86 unmanned aerial vehicles, mainly over western regions of the country.
The exchange of aerial broadsides came with Russian forces slowly but steadily gaining ground at key sectors of the sprawling front line in eastern Ukraine.
The Russian defence ministry announced the capture of another village, Tolstoy, on Wednesday in the eastern Donetsk region, which the Kremlin has claimed as part of Russia since 2022, despite not fully controlling it.
Ukrainian prosecutors in the region said that Russian drone and bombing attacks in two towns in Donetsk killed eight civilians on Wednesday.
Officials published images showing the charred remains of two people who burned to death in their car, which officials said was hit by a Russian drone.
A one-year-old boy was killed in a separate Russian attack on the village of Pravdyne in the southern Kherson region, local officials announced.