Russia Strikes Kyiv in Huge Drone Attack Hours After Trump Win

Luke Harding and Dan Sabbagh / Guardian UK
Russia Strikes Kyiv in Huge Drone Attack Hours After Trump Win Donald Trump sits in Manhattan Criminal Court in May during his trial on charges of falsifying documents related to a hush money payment. (photo: Victor J. Blue/The Washington Post)

Attack on Ukrainian capital lasts eight hours with five districts hit and high-rise building set on fire

Russia has carried out a massive drone attack on Kyiv, hours after Donald Trump’s victory in the US presidential election, as the Kremlin called on the west to stop backing the Ukrainian government in order to save its people.

The moped-like whine of Iranian shahed drones could be heard at 6am local time on Wednesday above the Ukrainian capital. There was machine gunfire and explosions in the centre of Kyiv as air defence tried to shoot the missiles down. The attack lasted eight hours.

Kyiv’s mayor, Vitali Klitschko, said five districts were hit. About 30 drones were intercepted. Falling debris set fire to a high-rise building and blew out windows. One person was injured. There were further air attacks in Odesa and Kherson and Sumy provinces, with two people killed.

The raids came as Russia’s security council secretary, Sergei Shoigu, said the west should accept Russia was winning the war in Ukraine and negotiate an end to fighting.

Ukrainian commentators said the raids – a near nightly occurrence in recent weeks – suggested Moscow was not interested in peace. “Ending the war, huh? That’s what everyone here wants – except Putin has other plans,” Maria Avdeeva posted on X.

The Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, at a summit of European leaders in Hungary, on Thursday rejected offering the Kremlin any concessions in Ukraine, saying such moves would be detrimental to his country and Europe more broadly.

“There has been much talk about the need to yield to Putin, to back down, to make some concessions. It’s unacceptable for Ukraine and suicidal for all Europe,” he said.

The Russian president has demanded Ukraine cede swathes more territory in its east and south as a precondition to peace talks, while Kyiv has repeatedly ruled out ceding any land to Moscow in exchange for peace.

The future of western support for Ukraine and the possibility of talks with Russia has been thrown into relief by the election this week of Trump as US president, who once said he could end the war in 24 hours. The outgoing US president, Joe Biden, had said Ukraine should decide when and how to negotiate.

Ukrainian officials have expressed cautious optimism about continued support from a Trump White House. Most observers, however, believe the president-elect is likely to end or cut US military assistance to Ukraine, further weakening its already precarious position on the battlefield.

In a post on social media, Zelenskyy, said he had had a great phone conversation with Trump on Wednesday night and had congratulated him on his “historic and decisive victory”. The result was made possible by Trump’s impressive campaign, he added.

Zelenskyy wrote: “We agreed to maintain close dialogue and strengthen our cooperation. Strong and unwavering US leadership is essential for the world and for a just peace.”

Shoigu, who served as defence minister from 2012 to 2024, claimed on Thursday the US and other nations had tried to use Ukraine to inflict a strategic defeat on Russia, but the plan had failed.

“Now, when the situation in the theatre of military operations is not in the favour of the Kyiv regime, the west is faced with a choice – to continue financing it and destroying the Ukrainian population or to recognise the current realities and start negotiating,” Shoigu said.

He added that Moscow viewed Ukraine’s leadership as “terrorists”, controlled by outside powers. His comments suggest the Kremlin may demand the removal of Zelenskyy as part of any “peace deal” – something it attempted in spring 2022, when Russian troops tried and failed to occupy Kyiv.

In 2022 Putin “annexed” four Ukrainian oblasts: Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporizhzhia and Kherson. Russia only fully controls Luhansk. The Kremlin is likely to call for the handover of further territory, as well as “reparations”, a buffer zone and guarantees of Ukraine’s non-Nato “neutrality”.

Zelenskyy’s visit to Hungary for the European Political Community summit is his first to the country since Russia’s full-scale invasion. He will meet Hungary’s pro-Kremlin leader, Viktor Orbán, and the European council president, Charles Michel.

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