Russia launched a vast series of strikes on several cities in Ukraine, including the capital kyiv, on Friday morning, with “a record number of missiles”, which, according to Ukrainian authorities, left at least 18 dead and 132 injured.
NATO member Poland said Friday that an unidentified flying object had entered its airspace from Ukraine, an incident that could be linked to the strikes.
“Today, Russia has used almost every type of weapon in its arsenal“, declared Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, on the social network
According to the Air Force, 158 missiles and drones were fired at Ukraine, of which 114 were destroyed.
“This is the most massive missile attack in general,” excluding the first days of the war, the air force spokesperson told AFP Yuri Ignat.
The strikes targeted “civilian installations, civilian buildings,” assured Andriï Iermak, Mr. Zelensky’s chief of staff.
“We are doing everything possible to strengthen our air shield. But the world must see that we need more help and means to stop this terror“, he added on the social network Telegram.
A statement echoed by American Ambassador Bridget Brink, according to whom “Ukraine needs funds now to continue fighting to free itself from such horror in 2024“.
On Wednesday, Washington released the last tranche of military aid granted to kyiv until further notice by the American Congress.
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said that these strikes demonstrated that Vladimir Putin “will stop at nothing“. France condemned “with the greatest firmness” a “strategy of terror”.
The head of diplomacy of the European Union, Josep Borrell, denounced “loose strikes“and promised that the EU would stand by Ukraine for as long as it takes.”
“Horrible reality”
Russian fire left at least 18 dead and 132 injured, according to the national police, who said that people may still be under the rubble.
Russia limited itself to indicating in its daily briefing that “all targets have been reached”, as it does every day.
She claimed to have targeted military infrastructure, ammunition depots and places of deployment of Ukrainian soldiers in more than 50 strikes, including a “major” one in Ukraine between December 23 and 29.
The UN humanitarian coordinator for Ukraine, Denise Brown, condemned on X “a hateful wave of attacks”, illustrating the “horrible reality” experienced by Ukrainians.
In kyiv, where the “anti-aircraft defense is actively functioning” according to its mayor Vitali Klitschko, AFP journalists heard several loud explosions in the early hours.
In the Podil district, in the north of kyiv, a 3,000 m2 hangar was engulfed in flames. A metro station used as an air raid shelter was damaged, as well as several apartment buildings and other hangars.
A maternity hospital in Dnipro was also “seriously damaged“, but without victims, according to the Ministry of Health.
“Critical and urgent” needs
In Poland, search operations are underway after a flying object, “arrived from the border with Ukraine”, was spotted by radar near the border town of Zamosc, in the east of the country.
In November 2022, a Ukrainian missile fell on the Polish village of Przewodow, near the border with Ukraine, killing two civilians. The incident briefly sparked fears of an extension of the conflict.
The wave of Russian strikes ends a difficult year for Ukraine, marked by the failure of its summer counter-offensive and a resumption of initiative by Moscow’s forces, who this week claimed the capture of the town of Marinka on the eastern front.
They also come in a context of running out of Western aid to kyiv, both in Europe and in the United States. A situation which threatens the country to run out of ammunition and funds.
US Ambassador Bridget Brink said on Thursday that Ukraine’s financial needs were “critical and urgent”.
President Zelensky once again urged the United States on Thursday to maintain its “essential” assistance, after the release of a new tranche of 250 million dollars (225 million EUR), the last without a new vote in the American Congress, which refuses for the moment to allocate more money.
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban vetoed a new EU aid package, a problem that Europeans hope to resolve at a new summit in early February 2024.