Firefighters work on the site of a burning building after a Russian missile attack in Kyiv, Ukraine, June 2, 2026. (Efrem Lukatsky/AP)

Russia strikes Ukraine with drones, missiles in major attack; 11 dead, scores hurt

Kyiv resident talks of ‘apocalypse’ as capital pounded; people believed trapped under collapsed 24-story building; air force says hundreds of drones and dozens of missiles fired

by · The Times of Israel

KYIV — Russian drones and missiles pounded the Ukrainian capital Kyiv and other cities early on Tuesday, killing at least 11 people and wounding more than 100, authorities said, following days of warnings about Moscow’s plans for a major assault.

Russia has targeted Ukraine’s power supply and infrastructure in a war now more than four years old, while Ukraine has stepped up attacks this year on Russian oil facilities. Both deny targeting civilians.

Last week, the Kremlin warned that it intended “systematic strikes” on targets in Kyiv in response to a drone attack on a dormitory in Ukraine’s Russian-held region of Luhansk, which killed 21. Ukraine denied the attack.

Photographs showed large explosions and plumes of smoke billowing over high-rise buildings in Kyiv, where overnight strikes killed four people and wounded 65, including children, according to the capital’s mayor, Vitali Klitschko.

“We couldn’t understand what was happening — some kind of apocalypse?” said Olha Mudra, speaking at the site of one strike, accompanied by her six-year-old daughter Natalia.

“Everything was covered (with debris), everything in smoke, you could see nothing,” she added, as she stood in front of a destroyed residential building and damaged cars.

A resident looks at the site of a Russian missile strike that hit a residential building in Kyiv, Ukraine, June 2, 2026. (Efrem Lukatsky/AP)

Olena Dniprovska, 65, and her husband Yevhen, 64, were injured in their apartment in Kyiv’s Podilskyi district during the attack.

“I went out into the corridor with the phone, and before I understood what happened, everything fell on my head, the glass, and the door blew off,” said Dniprovska, dried blood streaked across her face and a bandage wrapped around her chin. “I ran out into the front door and started calling my husband from the room, but he was also blown out by the blast wave.”

“Now I have nowhere to live, the apartment is completely destroyed, no doors, no windows, no balcony. You can step straight from the room out onto the street,” she said.

A suspected missile strike on a 24-story apartment building triggered a collapse, leaving people probably trapped under the rubble, Klitschko added, while a nine-story apartment building was among other buildings set ablaze by suspected missile debris.

“In the Obolon district, cars are burning after being struck by falling missile debris,” Klitschko said. “There are also fires at two locations in open areas, including one near a kindergarten.”

Thousands seeking shelter flooded into the Kyiv subway system early on Tuesday, witnesses said, some carrying pets, belongings and mattresses, as the sound of defense systems repelling Russian attacks filled the air.

“I only dream that this (war) will end soon, but I’ve lost all hope. I don’t know, it’s hard,” 32-year-old Kyiv resident Valeriia Nafechinko, sheltering in a metro station, said with a heavy sigh. “Sorry for getting emotional.”

More explosions were heard in the capital after dawn, a Reuters witness said.

People react as they look at the site of a Russian missile strike that hit a residential building in Kyiv, Ukraine, June 2, 2026. (Efrem Lukatsky/AP)

Warnings of a major attack

Ukraine’s air force said Russia launched 656 drones and 73 missiles overnight, mainly targeting Kyiv. In a statement on Telegram, the air force said 40 missiles and 602 drones had been downed or neutralized.

An air force spokesman said the attack included eight Zircon hypersonic missiles, likely the largest number of those missiles used by Russia during the war. The Zircon has a range of 1,000 kilometers (625 miles) and travels at nine times the speed of sound, according to Moscow.

Hits of 30 ballistic missiles, three cruise missiles and 33 drones were recorded at at least 38 locations. Debris from destroyed drones fell on 15 locations, the air force said.

Russia’s defense ministry said it had carried out a “massive strike” on Ukraine’s defense industry facilities using high-precision long-range weapons.

Seven people were killed and 36 injured in a missile and drone attack on the southeastern city of Dnipro and its surroundings, regional governor Oleksandr Hanzha said on the Telegram messaging app.

All the injured were hospitalized in moderate condition, he added, posting pictures of destroyed residential buildings, burnt-out vehicles and a damaged children’s playground. One of the dead was a rescue worker who had been killed in a “double-tap” strike targeting responders, according to emergency services.

Air raid warnings sounded over much of the country early on Tuesday after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s warnings the previous day of a possible major assault.

In Ukraine’s northeastern region of Kharkiv, a child was among the 10 people injured in drone and missile attacks, Mayor Ihor Terekhov said on Telegram.

EU and NATO member Poland scrambled military jets on Tuesday to secure its airspace after the Russian strikes on Ukraine, Poland’s Operational Command of the Armed Forces said on X.

A man clears debris in his apartment building damaged after a Russian missile strike that hit in Kyiv, Ukraine, June 2, 2026. (Efrem Lukatsky/AP)

Russian regions also came under attack. The Ilsky oil refinery, in the southern Russian region of Krasnodar, caught fire after a drone attack, local authorities said on Telegram on Tuesday.

In Russia’s Belgorod region bordering Ukraine, an 11-year-old boy was injured after a Ukrainian drone hit a home, local authorities said on Telegram.

Russia downed a total of 148 Ukrainian drones overnight, Russian news agencies said, citing the defense ministry.

Air defense systems were also repelling drone attacks over Sevastopol, a Russian naval fleet base, in Russia-occupied Crimea, authorities there said.

Reuters could not independently verify all the reports.

The Ukraine war has ground on since Russia launched its full-scale invasion in February 2022. Efforts to end it have made little progress, with the administration of US President Donald Trump focused on conflicts in the Middle East.