The Boston Globe

Russia pounds Kyiv in large-scale missile attack

At least 5 killed as intense air attacks increase

- By Constant Méheut and Anatoly Kurmanaev

KYIV — Russian missiles and drones hammered Kyiv on Tuesday morning, officials said, in a large-scale attack on the Ukrainian capital and other cities that killed at least five people and injured nearly 130 others, a day after President Vladimir Putin of Russia promised to retaliate for a Ukrainian assault on a Russian city.

The barrage — which the Ukrainian air force said involved about 100 missiles, including hypersonic weapons that fly at several times the speed of sound — was the latest in an escalating cycle of air assaults between the two countries, as both sides look for ways to inflict damage away from the largely deadlocked front line.

Moscow claimed Ukraine retaliated hours later Tuesday, firing at least eight missiles on the Russian city of Belgorod. The attack killed one civilian and injured four others, according to the local governor. Later in the day, a strike hit the nearby town of Shebekino, the governor said, damaging an administra­tive building but causing no injuries.

The recent strikes against Ukraine may also be the start of another Russian air campaign against critical infrastruc­ture. Ukrainian authoritie­s had warned for months that Russia was stockpilin­g high-precision missiles to pound cities once the weather turned cold in a repeat of last year’s bombing campaign. Experts believe that strategy is aimed at diminishin­g Ukrainian morale and weakening its military and industrial capacities.

Both sides have improved their air defenses in the past year, but they have also expanded their military capacity to hit targets away from the front lines. And as the past week’s cycle of strikes and counterstr­ikes escalates, Moscow and Kyiv are showing growing readiness to deploy these capabiliti­es.

“This is a competitio­n of endurance,” said Serhii Kuzan, chair of the research group Ukrainian Security and Cooperatio­n Center. He said Ukraine’s powerful air defenses were now forcing Russia to launch massive air assaults with multiple weapons systems to be able to evade intercepto­r missiles and hit some targets.

General Valery Zaluzhny, Ukraine’s top commander, said the Ukrainian army had shot down about three-quarters of the Russian missiles fired Tuesday, including all 10 hypersonic missiles, with the help of Western-delivered Patriot missile batteries.

Kuzan said Ukraine was also now more willing, and capable, of responding.

With each new attack, he added, Russia increasing­ly legitimize­s “Ukraine’s retaliator­y strikes against Russian air and naval bases, ammunition depots, defense enterprise­s, and enemy oil bases.”

Both sides appear to be trying to justify the airstrikes as retaliatio­n for previous attacks, in an escalating tit-for-tat that risks causing more civilian casualties, either from direct targeting or falling debris. Since the start of the war Russia has regularly targeted civilian areas in Ukraine, resulting in thousands of casualties.

In Kyiv on Tuesday, most of the casualties were reported at a nine-floor residentia­l building that was damaged and caught fire. Vitali Klitschko, the mayor, said at least two people died and 49 others were injured there.

Residents of the building could be seen streaming out of the neighborho­od Tuesday morning, bags in hand, stepping onto piles of rubble, between smashed cars, and into large puddles caused by damage to water pumps, as firefighte­rs with smoke-blackened faces sprayed water on the blaze.

The recent wave of missile attacks intensifie­d Friday, when a ferocious Russian missile barrage killed at least 39 people, wounded about 160 others, and hit industrial and military infrastruc­ture as well as hospitals and schools, Ukrainian officials said.

The next day — in what a Ukrainian official said was a response to Russia’s attack Friday — a barrage of missiles killed 24 people in the Russian city of Belgorod — the deadliest attack on the Russian territory since the start of the war.

Hitting Kyiv on Tuesday appeared to be a prime objective. Air-raid alerts sounded throughout the morning, as wave after wave of missiles rained down, punctuated by loud bangs of air defense systems trying to destroy them. Massive plumes of black and white smoke rose over the capital, cutting through the gray early morning sky, as several buildings were hit.

Kharkiv, near the border with Russia, also came under a large-scale missile attack, according to its mayor, Ihor Terekhov. One person was killed there and 45 were injured, he said.

It was not immediatel­y clear what, exactly, the Russian military tried to hit in its attacks against Kyiv on Tuesday. At least two facilities located in an industrial zone in the north of the capital were hit, and remained shrouded in billows of smoke by midday.

 ?? KOSTIANTYN LIBEROV/LIBKOS/GETTY IMAGES ?? A resident carried his belongings through the debris after a rocket hit an apartment building in the center of Kyiv on Tuesday.
KOSTIANTYN LIBEROV/LIBKOS/GETTY IMAGES A resident carried his belongings through the debris after a rocket hit an apartment building in the center of Kyiv on Tuesday.

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