Russia launched deadly strikes on Kyiv after a week of warnings, with the delay itself appearing to deepen anxiety in the Ukrainian capital.
Russia launched deadly strikes on Kyiv after spending a week warning Ukraine that a major attack was coming, according to a New York Times report.
The strikes put the Ukrainian capital back under immediate pressure and followed repeated signals from Moscow that suggested an assault was imminent. The timing matters not only because of the attack itself, but because the warnings and delay appeared to heighten the psychological strain on residents waiting for it.
The report did not include a detailed casualty count or a full assessment of damage in the material available. It described the strikes as deadly and framed them as the outcome of a weeklong period in which Russia repeatedly threatened a major attack.
Kyiv has endured repeated Russian attacks during the war, but the public warnings ahead of this strike gave the episode an added dimension: the threat became part of the pressure on the city before the weapons arrived.
Further details on the scale of the damage, the number of people killed or wounded, and Ukraine’s official response were not immediately clear from the initial account. The next key questions are how severe the toll is and whether Moscow follows the attack with further strikes.
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