
Ukraine Hits Russian Satellite Hub and Factory as Civilian Toll Mounts on Both Sides
Overnight strikes saw Kyiv target a space communications centre near Moscow and a microelectronics plant in Voronezh, while Russian drones killed a family in Sumy and struck cargo ships in the Black Sea.
Ukraine launched a large-scale drone and missile attack deep into Russian territory overnight, striking the Dubna satellite communications centre north of Moscow and an electronics factory in Voronezh that produces components for Iskander, Kalibr and S-400 missile systems. Russian air defences claimed to have intercepted 301 drones nationwide, including 84 over the capital, forcing a temporary suspension of flights at all four Moscow airports. The governor of the Voronezh region, Alexander Gusev, reported that a missile strike on an industrial facility killed five people and wounded dozens.
Simultaneously, Russian drone and missile attacks killed at least six civilians in Ukraine and one crew member at sea. In the Sumy region, a drone hit a residential home, killing a 13-year-old boy, his 36-year-old father and his 73-year-old grandmother; the mother and two other children survived with injuries. A separate strike on Zaporizhzhia killed a woman and wounded three others, including an 11-year-old boy, while an Iskander ballistic missile struck an agricultural facility in the Odesa region, leaving one dead. In the Black Sea, Russian drones attacked three civilian cargo vessels, killing an Egyptian cook aboard the Panama-flagged Victress and forcing the evacuation of eight crew members; the ship was rendered unseaworthy.
From Kyiv, President Volodymyr Zelensky described the long-range strikes as part of a deliberate strategy to “bring the war to Russia,” targeting military logistics, oil refining and air-defence production. The Ukrainian general staff confirmed the Dubna facility—one of Europe’s largest satellite ground stations, originally built for the 1980 Moscow Olympics—and the Voronezh microelectronics plant were hit. Moscow, through its defence ministry and regional governors, emphasised the scale of interceptions while acknowledging damage and casualties. The Kremlin also announced that Presidents Vladimir Putin and Alexander Lukashenko would discuss what it termed Zelensky’s “aggressive threats” against Belarus, after the Ukrainian leader warned of action if Minsk did not dismantle relay systems allegedly used to guide Russian drones.
The strikes carry immediate operational and humanitarian consequences. In Russian-annexed Crimea, Governor Sergei Aksyonov suspended fuel sales to civilians and businesses, restricted supplies to essential services, and closed summer camps until September, citing a fuel crisis caused by repeated Ukrainian attacks on supply routes and energy facilities. The port city of Sevastopol cancelled all open-air public events and switched off street lighting. Western-led peace efforts remain stalled, with Washington and European capitals unable to bridge the gap between Moscow’s demand for territorial concessions and Kyiv’s insistence on full sovereignty. The UN Human Rights Monitoring Mission recently recorded the highest monthly civilian casualty toll since April 2022, with 274 killed in May alone. As both sides expand their strike capabilities, the conflict’s geographic scope widens, and diplomatic channels show no sign of yielding a ceasefire.
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Moscow claims to have shot down more than 80 drones in a single night, demonstrating its air defense capabilities. Meanwhile, Russian attacks on Ukrainian cities and a ship in the Black Sea killed at least six civilians, including a child. The exchange highlights the ongoing intensity of cross-border strikes.
Ukrainian forces carried out a massive drone attack on a space communications center near Moscow and a missile strike on a factory in Voronezh, killing five. President Zelensky declared that Ukraine is bringing the war back to Russian territory. At the same time, Russian bombardments in Zaporizhzhia and Sumy claimed civilian lives.
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