Russia’s Drone and Missile Onslaught Hits Ukrainian Cities as Moscow Wavers on US Talks

By Matthias Binder
Russia fires barrage at Ukrainian cities as next round of US-brokered talks is unclear (Featured Image)

Overnight Barrage Targets Civilian Areas (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Ukraine reeled from a massive Russian aerial assault overnight that targeted key urban centers and infrastructure, coinciding with uncertainty over the next phase of US-mediated peace negotiations.

Overnight Barrage Targets Civilian Areas

Russian forces launched 219 long-range strike drones, 24 ballistic missiles, and one guided aircraft missile across Ukraine from late Wednesday into Thursday.[1][2]

Ukrainian air defenses intercepted 197 drones and 16 missiles, but impacts occurred in at least 13 locations.[2]

The strikes hit Kyiv, Kharkiv, Dnipro, and Odesa, among others, damaging residential buildings, energy facilities, and public spaces.

  • In Kyiv, two people suffered injuries, over 107,000 residents lost power, and nearly 2,600 buildings went without heating.
  • Dnipro saw four injuries, including two children, with the central heating system failing for about 10,000 people.
  • Odesa reported one injury, a partially destroyed high-rise, fires at a market and supermarket, and water outages for nearly 300,000 residents.
  • In Kharkiv’s Barvinkove, at least 13 people were hurt.

Officials described the attacks as terror against civilians, exacerbating winter hardships.[2]

Ukraine Commits to Upcoming Negotiations

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy announced that Kyiv immediately confirmed its participation in the proposed talks.[1]

The United States suggested a trilateral meeting for February 17-18, potentially in Miami or Abu Dhabi, building on prior discussions.[3][1]

Zelenskyy emphasized readiness in a late Wednesday messaging app interview with reporters.

“So far, as I understand it, Russia is hesitating,” he stated, highlighting Ukraine’s eagerness for progress despite the assaults.[1]

Moscow’s Silence Fuels Diplomatic Standoff

The Kremlin offered no firm commitment, with spokesman Dmitry Peskov noting only that another round could occur “soon” without specifics.[1]

Russia also ignored a separate US-backed proposal for an energy truce to spare power grids and oil facilities, responding instead with the latest strikes.

Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov dismissed recent Ukrainian-US frameworks as deviations from earlier American ideas.[3]

These talks form part of a yearlong Trump administration push, complete with a June deadline for a deal addressing territorial control, security guarantees, and reconstruction.[1]

Mutual Strikes Escalate Tensions

Ukraine mounted counterattacks, using drones to strike distant Russian targets like oil refineries in Ukhta and Volgograd, and a missile plant in Tambov.[1]

Russia reported downing 106 Ukrainian drones, with two deaths and 15 injuries in Belgorod, plus disruptions to multiple airports.[2]

UN human rights officials condemned hits on electricity infrastructure as violations of international law.

Key Takeaways

  • Russia’s 244 weapons barrage caused injuries, power cuts, and fires across four major cities.
  • Ukraine accepted US talk invitations for Feb. 17-18; Russia has yet to confirm.
  • Energy truce proposal remains unanswered amid ongoing mutual strikes.

As the war nears its fourth anniversary, these events underscore the fragile line between battlefield fury and diplomatic hope – Russia’s next move will signal whether talks advance or falter. What do you think about the prospects for peace? Tell us in the comments.

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