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Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky is worried Russia will intensify its drone attacks. File photo: dpa

Ukraine: Moscow mulling more drones, says Zelensky, after rocket attack ‘kills 63 Russians’

  • ‘We have information Russia is planning a prolonged attack by exploding drones’, said Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky
  • His words came after another battlefield setback for Russian President Vladimir Putin, with strike reducing Donetsk region facility holding Russian soldiers to rubble
Ukraine war

Russia is preparing to step up its attacks on Ukraine using Iranian-made exploding drones, according to Ukraine’s president, as Moscow looks for ways to keep up the pressure on Kyiv after a Ukrainian attack killed at least 63 Russian soldiers in the latest battlefield setback for the Kremlin’s war strategy.

“We have information that Russia is planning a prolonged attack by Shaheds (exploding drones),” President Volodymyr Zelensky said in his nightly video address late on Monday.

He said the goal is to break Ukraine’s resistance by “exhausting our people, (our) air defence, our energy” more than 10 months after Russia invaded its neighbour.

Russian President Vladimir Putin appears to be exploring ways to regain momentum in his flawed war effort, which in recent months has been frustrated by a Ukrainian counteroffensive backed by Western-supplied weapons.

That has brought sharp rebukes in some Russian circles of the military’s performance.

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As Zelensky visits US, President Biden announces US$1.8 billion in military aid to Ukraine

As Zelensky visits US, President Biden announces US$1.8 billion in military aid to Ukraine

In the latest embarrassment for the Kremlin, Ukrainian forces fired rockets at a facility in the eastern Donetsk region where Russian soldiers were stationed, killing 63 of them, according to Russia’s Defence Ministry. Other, unconfirmed reports put the death toll much higher.

It was one of the deadliest attacks on the Kremlin’s forces since the war began in February.

In the attack, Ukrainian forces fired six rockets from a HIMARS launch system and two of them were shot down, a Russian Defence Ministry statement said.

However, the Strategic Communications Directorate of Ukraine’s Armed Forces claimed on Sunday that around 400 mobilised Russian soldiers were killed in a vocational school building in Makiivka and about 300 more were wounded.

That claim could not be independently verified. The Russian statement said the strike occurred “in the area of Makiivka” and did not mention the vocational school.

Satellite photos analysed by Associated Press show the apparent aftermath of the strike.

An image from December 20 showed the building standing. An image from January 2 showed the building reduced to rubble. Other days had intense cloud cover, making seeing the site by standard satellite imagery impossible.

Workers clean up rubble in Makiivka in the Russian-controlled Donetsk region of eastern Ukraine. Russia said 63 of its soldiers died when their facility was attacked. Photo: AP

Vigils for soldiers killed in the strike took place in two Russian cities on Tuesday, the state RIA Novosti agency reported.

In Samara, in southwestern Russia, locals gathered for an Orthodox service in memory of the dead. The service was followed by a minute’s silence, and flowers were laid at a Soviet-era war memorial, RIA reported.

Unconfirmed reports in Russian-language media said that the victims were mobilised reservists from the region.

For the Russian military, the Iranian-made exploding drones are a cheap weapon which also spread fear among troops and civilians. The United States and its allies have sparred with Iran over Tehran’s role in allegedly supplying Moscow with the drones.

Fury in Russia as scores of troops killed in Ukrainian HIMARS strike

The Institute for the Study of War said that Putin is looking to strengthen support for his strategy among key voices in Russia.

“Russia’s air and missile campaign against Ukraine is likely not generating the Kremlin’s desired information effects among Russia’s nationalists,” the think tank said on Monday.

“Such profound military failures will continue to complicate Putin’s efforts to appease the Russian pro-war community and retain the dominant narrative in the domestic information space,” it added.

Zelensky warned that in the coming weeks, “the nights may be quite restless”.

Putin’s additional reliance on drones might not help him achieve his goals, however, as Ukraine claims a high success rate against the weapons.

During the first two days of this year, marked by relentless nighttime drone attacks on Ukrainian cities and energy infrastructure, the country’s forces shot down more than 80 Iranian-made drones, Zelensky said.

Ukrainian soldiers aim at a drone in the sky above Kyiv. File photo: AP

Since September, Ukraine’s armed forces have shot down almost 500 drones, Ukrainian air force spokesman Yurii Ihnat claimed in a television interview on Tuesday, news website Ukrinform reported.

As well as hoping to wear down resistance to Russia’s invasion, the long-range bombardments have targeted the power grid to leave civilians at the mercy of biting winter weather as power outages ripple across the country.

“Every downed drone, every downed missile, every day with electricity for our people and minimal shutdown schedules are exactly such victories,” Zelensky said.

In the latest fighting, a Russian missile strike overnight on the city of Druzhkivka in the partially occupied eastern Donetsk region wounded two people, the deputy head of Ukraine’s presidential office, Kyrylo Tymoshenko, reported on Tuesday.

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A reporter with French broadcaster TF1 was live on television screens when a blast from one of the strikes erupted behind him in Druzhkivka. A German reporter with Bild newspaper suffered a minor injury from shrapnel in the same bombardment.

Officials said the attack ruined an ice hockey arena described as the largest hockey and figure skating school in Ukraine.

Overnight Russian shelling was also reported in the northeastern Kharkiv region and the southeastern Dnipropetrovsk region.

In the recently retaken areas of the southern Kherson region, Russian shelling on Monday killed two people and wounded nine others, Kherson’s Ukrainian governor, Yaroslav Yanushevich, said on Tuesday. He said the Russian forces fired at the city of Kherson 32 times on Monday.

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