Kyiv: Russia has escalated its assault on Ukraine with a naval drone strike that hit the Ukrainian Navy’s largest reconnaissance vessel, the Simferopol. Ukrainian officials confirmed the attack, which killed one crew member and left several others missing, even as most of the crew were safely evacuated. The strike took place in the Danube River delta, within Ukraine’s Odesa region, underscoring Moscow’s determination to target critical military assets far beyond the front lines.
The Simferopol, a Laguna-class reconnaissance ship launched in 2019 and commissioned in 2021, had symbolic significance for Ukraine’s fleet, being the largest ship added in more than a decade. Equipped with advanced electronic, radar, and optical reconnaissance systems as well as a 30 mm AK-306 artillery gun, it represented a key node in Kyiv’s intelligence-gathering capabilities. Its disabling highlights Russia’s focus on undermining Ukraine’s naval and surveillance capacity at a time when Western allies are urging Kyiv to hold defensive lines.
The naval strike was followed by one of the heaviest overnight bombardments on Kyiv since the war began. Russian forces launched nearly 600 drones and 31 missiles in what Ukraine’s Air Force described as the Kremlin’s second-largest assault since February 2022. The scale of destruction was staggering—21 people killed, 48 injured, and four children among the dead. At least 33 sites across Kyiv’s 10 districts were struck, damaging nearly 100 buildings, including a central shopping mall, and even European Union diplomatic offices. Thousands of windows across the capital were blown out, leaving scenes of devastation and shattered glass.
The timing of the strikes appears designed to send a signal to Ukraine’s allies ahead of a United Nations Security Council meeting, scheduled at Kyiv’s request and backed by Britain, France, Slovenia, Denmark, and Greece. For Moscow, the message is clear: its campaign of aerial and naval terror will continue to intensify as Ukraine seeks international backing. For Kyiv, the loss of its largest naval ship and another wave of civilian casualties deepens the urgent need for stronger air defenses and greater Western support, as the war enters yet another brutal phase.














