Vladimir Putin unleashed a barrage of missiles and kamikaze drones at Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities overnight, a day after Russia accused Ukraine of carrying out a drone strike on the Kremlin.
Around 40 explosive-laden drones were fired at cities across Ukraine that were miles away from the front line, with explosions heard in Kyiv and the southern cities of Odesa and Zaporizhzhia.
The strikes came hours after Moscow accused Ukraine of trying to assassinate Putin in a double drone strike on the Kremlin – claims Kyiv has denied.
It is understood that the Ukrainian air defence is at work in Kyiv and residents have been urged to take shelter. Explosions were also reported in Zaporizhzhia and Odesa, according to reports on local Telegram channels.
The blasts come after Russia’s ex-president Dmitry Medvedev yesterday called for the ‘physical elimination’ of Ukraine’s president Volodymyr Zelensky amid accusations that Kyiv was trying to kill Putin.
Ukraine quickly responded to the claim, the most dramatic Russia has levelled against Kyiv since invading its neighbour more than 14 months ago, saying it had ‘nothing to do’ with the alleged attack.
Explosions were reported in Kyiv, Zaporizhzhia and Odesa this morning. The blast pictured above reportedly occurred in Odesa
It is understood that the Ukrainian air defence is at work in Kyiv and residents have been urged to take shelter. Pictured: Explosions in Odesa this morning
Pictured: A fireball is seen rising over the Kremlin after an alleged drone strike by Ukraine yesterday
Pictured: An explosion is seen (left) over the Kremlin. It was captured by a camera overlooking Moscow’s Red Square and St Basil’s Cathedral (right)
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky denied Moscow’s claims that Kyiv had attempted to assassinate Vladimir Putin
Moscow claimed a pair of Ukrainian kamikaze drones exploded over Putin’s Kremlin residence in the early hours
Moscow yesterday claimed a pair of Ukrainian drones exploded over Putin‘s Kremlin residence in the early hours.
Russia said it had foiled the attempt and called it a ‘planned terrorist act and an attempt to take the life of the President of the Russian Federation’. It has prompted demands from Russian lawmakers for the Kyiv government to be ‘destroyed’.
Medvedev, who has been increasingly hawkish since Moscow’s Ukraine offensive, said in response: ‘After today’s terrorist attack, there are no options left aside the physical elimination of Zelensky and his cabal.’
Zelensky yesterday denied Moscow’s claims that Kyiv had attempted to assassinate Putin, after Russia said the two drones were shot down.
‘We didn’t attack Putin. We leave it to the tribunal. We fight on our territory, we are defending our villages and cities,’ Zelensky told reporters at a joint press conference with Nordic leaders in Helsinki.
His senior aide said earlier: ‘We have no information about the so-called night attacks on the Kremlin. But, as President Zelensky has repeatedly stated, Ukraine directs all available forces and means to liberate its own territories, and not to attack others.’
The US embassy in Ukraine also warned of a ‘heightened threat of missile attacks’.
‘In light of the recent uptick in strikes across Ukraine and inflammatory rhetoric from Moscow, the Department of State cautions US citizens of an ongoing heightened threat of missile attacks, including in Kyiv and Kyiv Oblast,’ the embassy said in a statement yesterday.
Meanwhile, a chilling warning was issued by senior Russian official Vyacheslav Volodin, who called on Moscow to escalate Putin’s war and use ‘weapons capable of stopping and destroying the Kyiv terrorist regime’.
It was unclear which weapons Volodin was referring to, but Putin and other senior officials have threatened on several occasions to deploy nuclear weapons in Ukraine.
Night-time footage showed what appeared to be fireballs erupting above the roof of the government complex. There was no independent verification for the purported attack, with Russian authorities saying it occurred overnight but presenting no evidence to support it.
Putin wasn’t in the Kremlin at the time and was at his Novo-Ogaryovo residence outside Moscow, his spokesman Dmitry Peskov told Russia’s state news agency RIA Novosti.
The Kremlin said Russian military and security forces had stopped the drones before they could strike. Nobody was hurt, it added. Its official website said debris from the drones fell on the Kremlin grounds without causing any major damage.
One theory behind the attack is that it could be a cynical false flag operation by Russia seeking to unite people behind the under-pressure president, amid setbacks and a huge toll caused by unleashing a disastrous war on Ukraine.
The timing is certainly interesting, coming less than a week before the planned massive annual military parade in Red Square marking the defeat of Hitler – for which Putin has no victories to boast of in his ongoing assault across the border.
Foreign dignitaries are expected to attend and Russia has previously accused Ukraine of seeking to disrupt the parade.
Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said yesterday that the parade would go ahead despite the drone attack.
Pictured: Russia’s ex-president Dmitry Medvedev (file photo). ‘After today’s terrorist attack, there are no options left aside the physical elimination of Zelensky and his cabal,’ said Medvedev, who has been increasingly hawkish since Moscow’s Ukraine offensive
Russia has accused Ukraine of attempting to assassinate Vladimir Putin in a double drone strike on the Kremlin overnight. Moscow furiously decried the attack as ‘a planned terrorist act and an attempt on the life of the President of the Russian Federation’. Pictured: Video purportedly shows smoke rising over the Kremlin overnight
Pictured: A plume of smoke rises over the illuminated spires of the Kremlin overnight
The Kremlin has persistently attempted to persuade Russians that the present conflict is necessary to ‘denazify’ Ukraine.
A staged explosion may have also been part of an internal public relations campaign designed to prepare Russians for Ukraine’s counter-offensive.
The thrust, using Western tanks and long-range missile systems, is likely to lead to a loss of Russian-held territory in eastern Ukraine and heavy casualties.
Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak said the accusation that Kyiv was behind the attack, as well as Russia’s arrest of alleged Ukrainian saboteurs, could indicate Moscow was preparing for a large-scale ‘terrorist’ attack of its own against Ukraine in the coming days.
Podolyak said the claims could provide a pretext for Russia ‘to justify massive strikes on Ukrainian cities, on the civilian population, on infrastructure facilities’.
He added that ‘Ukraine does not attack the Kremlin because, firstly, that does not solve any military aims’.
But soon after the accusation, officials called for an escalation in the conflict.
In a statement posted on Telegram, Volodin said Russia should not negotiate with Zelensky after the purported attack. Russia has said it is open to negotiations, while making clear it would only enter talks on its own terms.
The Pentagon is looking into the alleged attacks, according to a US official, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters.
US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said he is highly skeptical of any allegations made by Russia.
‘I’ve seen the reports. I cannot validate them, we simply don’t know,’ Blinken said at an event in Washington.
He added: ‘I would take anything coming out of the Kremlin with a very large shaker of salt.
‘We’ll see what the facts are and it’s really hard to comment or speculate on this without really knowing what the facts are.’
The allegation of the failed assassination attempt was made by Kremlin officials yesterday and reported by Russian news agencies hours after the strike last night.
The Kremlin said two drones had been used in the alleged attempt, but that they were disabled by Russian defences.
The Kremlin did not present any evidence to back up its account.
Extraordinary video posted by Baza, a Telegram channel with links to Russia’s law enforcement agencies, showed a flying object approaching the dome of a Kremlin building overlooking Red Square and exploding in a burst of light just before reaching it.
Seats could be seen set up for the Victory Day parade.
Pictured: What appears to be a drone is seen flying over the Kremlin overnight
Pictured: An explosion erupts over the Kremlin in a purported drone strike in Moscow
People are seen on the dome of the Kremlin Senate building in central Moscow, May 3, after the purported drone strike
Another video posted on a neighbourhood internet group appeared to show a plume of smoke over Kremlin spires filmed from across the Moskva River.
The second strike was also captured on video, which appeared to show another fireball erupt from the roof of the Kremlin.
In one of the clips, two people were seen climbing up the dome at the time of the strike. It was unclear who they were or why they were on the dome.
‘Two unmanned vehicles were aimed at the Kremlin… the devices were put out of action,’ Moscow’s statement read. In a chilling threat, Russia made clear it reserved the right to respond to the alleged drone strike.
‘The Kremlin has assessed these actions as a planned terrorist act and an assassination attempt on the president on the eve of Victory Day, the May 9 Parade,’ RIA reported. It noted Putin had not changed his schedule.
‘The Russian side reserves the right to take retaliatory measures where and when it sees fit,’ the Kremlin’s statement added.
Moscow’s mayor also announced a ban on unauthorised drone flights over the city.
Telegram channels shared videos of what appear to be anti-aircraft fire over the Kremlin, while there were reports of a noise like a ‘thunderclap’ in Moscow.
Other clips have shown a flash of what is said to be the drone as it flies in over Moscow and explodes over one of the vast Kremlin buildings.
Residents of Stalinist House on the Embankment ‘saw sparks in the sky and people with flashlights near the Kremlin wall after the claps’.
The Kremlin said on Wednesday it shot down two drones launched by Ukraine that it said were part of an attempt on the Russian president’s life. Pictured: Putin is seen in Moscow yesterday
RIA state news agency reported: ‘As a result of the terrorist act, the president was not injured. The schedule of his work has not changed and will continue as usual.
‘There were no casualties during the fall and scattering of UAV fragments on the territory of the Kremlin.’
The purported drone attack would be a significant escalation in the 14-month conflict, with Ukraine taking the war to the heart of Russian power.
Phillips O’Brien, professor of strategic studies at the University of St. Andrews, said: ‘It certainly wasn’t an attempt to assassinate Putin, because he doesn’t sleep in the roof and he probably never sleeps in the Kremlin.’
He added it was too soon to prove or disprove whether it was a Russian attempt ‘either to make Ukraine look reckless or to buck up Russian public opinion’ or if it was a Ukrainian operation to embarrass Russia.
Russia has massively increased air defences in Moscow and around Putin’s palaces and residences.
Russian pro-war analysts expressed shock that drones could penetrate defences to the Kremlin, the official residence of the Russian president.
Telegram channel VChK-OGPU stated that if Putin had been at the Kremlin, his spokesman would not have admitted it.
Russian pro-war reporter Alexander Kots called for retaliation against Ukraine’s leadership. ‘They must be destroyed,’ he said.
‘We should not hit the centres, but the people who make decisions. Methodically, systematically and ruthlessly.
‘The enemy is doing this systematically on our territory.’
Retired colonel and military expert Anatoly Matviychuk said the alleged bid to assassinate Putin will lead to a massive Russian response.
‘I think that we will strike at the decision-making centre [of Ukraine] like… the presidential palace in Kyiv,’ he said.
Matviychuk claimed the US and Britain would have approved the drone strike on the Kremlin.
He said: ‘I think this attack was made on the advice of our Anglo-Saxon “friends” in order to test our government’s response.
‘How will we react – let’s wait a couple more hours… Either there will be a political statement or there will be physical actions by our fighters. They [the Armed Forces of Ukraine] have already crossed not even the red line but the crimson line.’
Pro-war reporter Sergey Karnaukhov said NATO planes were active over the Black Sea in the aftermath of the ‘Ukrainian drone strike’ on the Kremlin.
The Russian outrage comes despite Putin’s special forces attempting to assassinate Zelensky in the first days of his invasion.
Gun battles broke out on the streets of Kyiv, and the Russian saboteurs – who were understood to have been ordered to capture or kill Ukraine’s first family – were repelled from the capital, before Russia retreated fully a month later.
The drone strike in Moscow last night came a week after Ukrainian secret service agents tried to assassinate Putin with a kamikaze drone carrying explosives as he was due to visit a newly built industrial site outside Moscow.
In this file photo taken on March 15, 2023 a ‘No Drone Zone’ sign sits in central Moscow as it prohibits unmanned aerial vehicles (drones) flying over the area
A group of police officers stand at the corner of the GUM department store in the empty Red Square, closed for Victory Parade preparation with the Spasskaya Tower and the Kremlin Wall in the background in Moscow, Russia, Friday, April 28
The Ukrainian forces reportedly launched the UJ-22 drone, laden with 17 kilograms of C4 plastic explosives, from Ukraine on Sunday, April 23.
But before the deadly drone reached the Rudnevo industrial park on its alleged mission to take out the Russian despot, it crashed a few miles short of their target, it was claimed.
German tabloid Bild cited a tweet by Ukrainian activist Yuriy Romanenko, who claims to have close ties to Kyiv’s intelligence services, alleging Ukrainian secret service agents had received ‘information’ about Putin’s apparent trip.
They decided to launch the deadly drone in an attempt to assassinate the president.
He claimed that a kamikaze drone that had crashed in Voroskogo village, 12 miles east of the Rudnevo industrial park, was the one that Ukrainian forces had launched as part of the assassination plot.
The news of the alleged assassination attempt came as Ukraine prepared for a fresh offensive against Russian troops that has been months in planning.
In a possible sign that preparations are being stepped up, the frontline city of Kherson in southern Ukraine announced a long curfew for residents and sabotage acts behind Russian lines intensified.
Yesterday, Kyiv said Russian strikes had killed 21 people in the southern Ukrainian region of Kherson – including on a supermarket and a train station.
Officials said they were dealing with a major fire that broke out at a fuel depot near a crucial bridge linking Russia’s mainland with Crimea earlier in the day.
Kherson, which was re-taken by Ukrainian troops in November, will be under curfew from Friday evening until Monday morning.
Regional officials said this was ‘for law enforcement officers to do their job’, but similar long curfews have also been used in the past for troop and arms movements.
‘During these 58 hours, it is forbidden to move on the streets of the city. The city will also be closed for entry and exit,’ the head of Kherson’s regional military administration, Oleksandr Prokudin, said on Telegram.
He advised residents to stock up on food and medicine and said people could go for short walks near their houses or visit shops but should carry identity documents with them at all times.
Kherson was captured by Russian troops last year in the first days of the invasion and remained under Russian occupation until November 2022.
After a sustained campaign of sabotage attacks behind Russian lines, Russian forces withdrew from the city.
They crossed to the eastern side of the Dnipro River which now delineates part of the front line in southern Ukraine.
An explosion also caused a freight train to derail in the western region of Bryansk bordering Ukraine on Monday, governor Alexander Bogomaz said on Telegram.
Ukraine says it has been preparing for months for a counteroffensive aimed at repelling Russian forces from the territory they currently hold in the east and south.
Head of pro-Putin Wagner private army Yevgeny Prigozhin said: ‘I believe that the offensive of the Ukrainian army has already commenced, basically.
‘We see an extremely intensive activity of enemy aviation on the perimeter and inside the frontline.’
Meanwhile in Finland, NATO’s newest member, Zelensky, was on a surprise visit to take part in a summit with the leaders of the five Nordic nations which have been key providers of military aid.
‘In order to be in NATO and support alliances to gain support, fundamental diplomatic work must be done. Ukraine is doing it today,’ Daria Zarivna, Ukraine’s presidential communications adviser, wrote on Telegram yesterday.