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Russia launches mass attack against Ukraine with hundreds of drones, Kyiv says

News RoomBy News RoomMay 13, 2026
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On a Wednesday morning in May, the familiar dread of air raid sirens swept across Ukraine, but this time with an unsettling difference. Instead of piercing the night, the warnings sounded under the stark light of midday, around 11:00 am local time. This was not a remnant of the previous night’s assault; it was the beginning of a massive, deliberate daytime attack. Military intelligence immediately alerted the nation to prepare for a “prolonged combined attack,” signaling that this was a coordinated effort designed to strain defenses and terrorize the civilian population. The initial wave consisted of hundreds of Iranian-designed Shahed drones, arriving in at least eight separate groups from multiple directions—a swarm intended to overwhelm and disorient.

The drones descended like a dark cloud from the north and south. Reports from monitoring groups indicated dozens entered from Belarus, their ominous buzz carrying over the abandoned landscapes of the Chernobyl exclusion zone as they headed toward northwestern Ukraine and the capital, Kyiv. Simultaneously, another group surged from the Black Sea in the south, vectored toward the western regions of Ivano-Frankivsk, Chernivtsi, and Ternopil. This multi-axis assault created a sense of besiegement from all quarters. For citizens in Kyiv, the theoretical threat became audibly real as the deep thud of explosions soon echoed through the city—the sound of air defense systems engaging the incoming threats overhead, a frantic effort to protect the heart of the nation.

This shift to a major daylight offensive marked a dangerous and calculated evolution in Russian tactics. For months, the large-scale bombardments had primarily occurred under cover of darkness. However, as analysts from the U.S.-based Institute for the Study of War noted, a change became apparent in March and April, culminating in this brazen daytime assault. The new strategy appears to involve following a significant night strike with an equally heavy attack the next day. This relentless pacing aims to keep Ukrainian air defense units in a constant state of exhaustion, depleting their finite resources of missiles and energy. It transforms the threat from periodic horror into a sustained, around-the-clock pressure, leaving little time for repair crews or civilians to recover.

The human cost of this tactical shift is profound and deliberate. By extending attacks into daylight hours, when streets are busier and civilian infrastructure is fully operational, the assaults disproportionately endanger everyday life. The objective is not just to hit military targets but to paralyze normalcy, to keep millions in a state of perpetual anxiety. In this particular attack, the grim tally included at least three lives lost and twelve people wounded, numbers that represent families shattered by explosions in the midst of an ordinary day. The drones and missiles that followed were directed toward “critical and civilian infrastructure,” a phrase that encompasses power plants, transit hubs, and residential areas—the very foundations of a functioning society.

As the drone waves continued, the situation grew even more dire. Ukrainian intelligence issued a stark follow-up warning: the initial drone swarm was merely the first act. Russia intended to follow with a second, potentially more devastating barrage of air- and sea-launched cruise missiles, along with ballistic missiles. This combination is designed to penetrate defenses that might have been softened or distracted by the initial drone assault. The scale is staggering, with analysts noting Russia’s previous capacity to launch over 700 aerial targets in a single night attack. A combined day-and-night operation of such magnitude represents an overwhelming challenge, threatening to inflict severe damage simply through the exhaustion of defensive capabilities and the law of averages.

In the end, this event was more than a single news report; it was a demonstration of a brutal new phase in the conflict. The switch to prolonged, combined, and daytime attacks reveals a strategy aimed at grinding down Ukrainian resilience through sheer endurance and terror. It moves the battlefield from the front lines into every city and town, making every citizen a potential target during their daily routine. The explosions over Kyiv and the drones fanning out across the country are a grim testament to a war that continues to adapt in its cruelty, seeking to break a nation’s spirit by relentlessly attacking the fabric of its everyday existence.

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