Ukraine launches 400 drones toward Moscow, Russia says

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1–2 minutes

Summary

Russia said Ukraine launched more than 430 drones toward Moscow overnight ahead of a NATO summit in Ankara.

Why this matters

The reported strikes show the war continuing to expand beyond the front lines as NATO leaders meet to discuss support for Ukraine and European defense spending. They also underscore competing military pressure and diplomacy as Washington says it is pursuing peace efforts.

Ukraine launched more than 400 drones toward Moscow overnight ahead of a NATO summit in Ankara, Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said.

“From evening until 6:00am (0300 GMT), more than 430 drones were flying in the direction of Moscow region,” Sobyanin posted on the state-backed MAX platform. He said most were shot down “at distant approaches,” while 36 were “destroyed on approach to Moscow.”

In Russia’s Belgorod region, Ukrainian strikes killed one civilian, officials said Tuesday. Acting regional Gov. Aleksandr Shuvaev said several Ukrainian missile strikes hit Belgorod city and the surrounding district.

“In the village of Belovskoye, Belgorod district, a civilian resident was, sadly, killed as a result of the first missile strike,” Shuvaev said on MAX. He said the attacks also caused a fire at an infrastructure facility in Belgorod city and that emergency services were at the scene.

The attacks came after Russia struck Ukraine’s Kyiv region with ballistic missiles and drones on July 6, killing at least 11 people and wounding dozens, according to the input report.

Separately, the Kremlin said Russia maintained working-level contacts with the United States and hoped U.S. efforts to broker peace in Ukraine would succeed. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov made the comment when asked about President Donald Trump’s statement Monday that a resolution to the war was “getting closer than people realize.”

Ukraine’s military also said it struck two plants linked to Russia’s military-industrial complex in the Bryansk region overnight. In a Telegram statement, the General Staff said one of the targets was operated by Kremniy EL Group, a microelectronics company in Bryansk that makes components for military electronic warfare systems. It said a chemicals plant producing gunpowder, explosives, and rocket fuel components used in ammunition and missiles was also hit.

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