Russia Launches 114 Drones, Missiles Across Ukraine Ahead of Planned Peace Talks

Ukraine said it intercepted 69 drones and three missiles overnight Friday to Saturday, days ahead of Moscow-led peace talks on Monday, which Kyiv has not confirmed.

The Ukrainian military said on Saturday that Russia has launched a total of 114 drones and missiles across Ukraine between Friday evening and Saturday morning. 

The attacks, recorded since 7:30 p.m. on Friday, targeted eastern Ukraine’s Kharkiv, Sumy and Donetsk regions. 

As a result of the attack, fires broke out across multiple communities in the Sumy region, damaging a cultural center, a livestock farm, non-residential buildings and an agricultural enterprise, according to Ukraine’s State Emergency Service on Saturday.

The drone and missile attack consisted of 107 drones (including decoys), two S-300 missiles air defense repurposed for ground strikes and three Kh-59/69 air-launched cruise missiles, according to the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces (AFU). 

Russia also dropped aerial guided bombs in central Ukraine’s Zaporizhzhia region overnight, killing a nine-year-old girl and wounding a 16-year-old boy. 

Ukraine downed 69 drones and the three air-launched cruise missiles, out of which 42 were downed by conventional interception and the other 30 were downed by electronic warfare (EW) systems, the update says.

Russian troops also used two unspecified jet-powered drones launched from the Belgorod region bordering Ukraine, according to the update. 

The attack came just days before Monday’s planned peace talks in Istanbul unilaterally initiated by Moscow. 

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov announced the talks on Wednesday evening and said Moscow would present a memorandum towards a ceasefire to Kyiv at the talks. Kyiv has not confirmed its attendance and said the memorandum should be presented after last weekend’s prisoner swap as agreed, adding that the meeting would not yield results unless it saw a copy of the memorandum in advance.

Kyiv has presented its version of the document to Washington and Moscow, where unnamed Ukrainian officials reportedly told the New York Times that it centered on a full ceasefire monitored by international partners

Reuters, citing its Kremlin sources, said Moscow’s version contains maximalist demands such as a freeze on NATO expansion, removal of sanctions, and Ukraine’s permanent neutrality

Despite the lack of documents from Moscow before the talks, Washington’s Ukraine Envoy Keith Kellogg has urged Kyiv to attend Monday’s talks nonetheless.