Russian Drone Blitz Targets Central Kharkiv, Poltava, and Odesa Port Infrastructure

Overnight May 15-16, Russian forces executed a coordinated drone campaign targeting multiple Ukrainian regions. In southern Odesa, a massive strike severely damaged port infrastructure – including a warehouse and an administrative building – and hit a five-story residential high-rise, leaving several civilians injured. Concurrently, a morning drone strike targeted the central Shevchenkivskyi district of Kharkiv, disabling key subway exits and public transit networks, while separate attacks in the Poltava region damaged private homes.

Russian forces executed a sweeping, multi-regional drone assault overnight Friday-Saturday, hitting critical port assets in the Odesa region, public transit networks in central Kharkiv, and residential sectors in Poltava.

Massive overnight strike on Odesa

The southern Odesa region bore the brunt of an intensive overnight bombardment utilizing wave after wave of attack UAVs. According to Odesa Regional Military Administration Chief Oleh Kiper, the assault deliberately targeted both shipping infrastructure and civilian living spaces.

The strikes hit Odesa’s port infrastructure, heavily damaging a warehouse facility and an administrative office building. Debris from an intercepted drone also crashed onto the grounds of a local educational institution.

One drone directly struck a five-story apartment building, significantly damaging the facade, shattering windows, and setting fire to balconies and a ground-floor auto parts store. A separate single-family home was also hit, leaving at least two people injured as emergency crews worked to pull residents from the debris.

Damage in central Kharkiv

As the assault in the south subsided, Russian forces launched a morning drone strike directly targeting the central Shevchenkivskyi district of Kharkiv.

A drone detonated on a main roadway, injuring at least one person and systematically crippling local transit infrastructure. According to Kharkiv Mayor Ihor Terekhov, the blast severely damaged three separate subway entrances, three public transport stations, and the overhead electrical grid for the city’s tram and trolleybus systems, injuring one person.

Additionally, drone debris was cleared from a children’s playground in the neighboring Kyivskyi district.

Poltava region under fire

The aerial assault extended into central Ukraine, where the Poltava and Myrhorod districts came under fire.

Vitaliy Diakivnych, head of the Poltava Regional Military Administration, confirmed that multiple private residential homes were damaged during the strikes.

Strategic context and assembly line trends

These weekend strikes follow a massive, multi-day aerial campaign against Ukrainian urban centers. Rescuers in Kyiv recently concluded operations at a residential building in the Darnytskyi district, where a Thursday missile strike claimed the lives of 24 civilians, including three children.

Sanctions commissioner Vladyslav Vlasiuk noted that recovered fragments of advanced weapons, such as the Kh-101 cruise missile used in the Kyiv attack, indicate they were manufactured late last year or even in early 2026.

Despite international sanctions, newly produced Russian hardware continues to show an integration of more than 100 Western-made components – including microchips from prominent US, Dutch, and German tech brands.

Vlasiuk warned that the rapid utilization of weapons “straight off the assembly line” demonstrates why short-term ceasefire proposals are heavily exploited by the Kremlin to accumulate stockpiles.