Russian drones and missiles have pounded the Ukrainian capital and other cities, killing two people in Kyiv and damaging key energy facilities.
The attacks lasted most of Tuesday night and into Wednesday morning as Kyiv was hit by at least four ballistic missiles. A series of loud detonations could be heard across the city.
Towards dawn and the beginning of the morning rush hour, air defences targeting Russian drones could be heard above the sound of traffic.
The latest attack came as it was reported that Ukraine had launched a substantial attack on a major chemical plant in Bryansk, in south-western Russia, with Storm Shadow missiles, which are supplied by Britain and France.
Explosions could be heard across Kyiv shortly after 1am and then more around half an hour later. Blasts were also reported in Zaporizhzhia, Poltava and Dnipro.
Among buildings damaged in the capital was a high-rise apartment block in the Dniprovskyi district, which was struck by a drone and set on fire. Russian strikes continued into the morning.
“The death toll in the capital has risen to two,” posted Tymur Tkachenko, the head of the city’s military administration, as other city officials reported a large drone attack.
Strikes in Ukraine’s eastern Poltava region damaged oil and gas facilities, said the local governor, Volodymyr Kohut.
Russia has sharply increased the number and intensity of attacks on the Ukrainian energy system in recent weeks, targeting both power plants and gas facilities.
The latest attack came as Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, was due in Sweden on Wednesday for talks with its prime minister, Ulf Kristersson, in the city of Linkoping at the beginning of an intense period of European diplomacy. Friday will see a meeting of the so-called “coalition of the willing” in London to shore up support for Ukraine in the face of the latest backsliding by Donald Trump, the US president.
“The prime minister and President Zelenskyy will hold a joint press conference to present news regarding defence exports,” the Swedish government said. In connection with the meeting, the leaders will also visit a company, it added.
The latest airstrikes underlined the failure of the most recent efforts by Trump to persuade the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, to agree to a ceasefire even as the US president tried to strong-arm Zelenskyy into giving up the key eastern Donbas region at an acrimonious meeting last week.
While Zelenskyy had flown to Washington hopeful of securing long-range Tomahawk cruise missiles, a two-hour phone conversation between Trump and Putin beforehand saw an abrupt U-turn and reports that Trump warned Zelenskyy that Putin would “destroy” Ukraine if he did not agree to Russia’s terms.
Trump announced his intention to meet Putin in the Hungarian capital within two weeks, triggering a scramble in Europe to show support for Kyiv, but that summit was just as quickly shelved with Trump saying on Tuesday he did not want a “wasted meeting”.
In remarks at the White House on Tuesday, Trump suggested that a key sticking point remained Moscow’s refusal to cease fighting along the current frontline. Earlier, a White House official had said there were “no plans” for a Trump-Putin meeting “in the immediate future”.