Russian forces unleashed one of the largest overnight aerial assaults of the war, hammering Kyiv and other parts of Ukraine with hundreds of drones and more than 20 missiles in a barrage that overwhelmed utilities, injured civilians, and deepened pressure on the country’s energy system in the dead of winter. Ukrainian officials said the capital absorbed some of the most severe fallout. Explosions rolled across the city before dawn, emergency crews fanned out to damaged districts, and large sections of Kyiv were left without heat or electricity as temperatures stayed well below freezing. By the end of the day, the attack had become more than another night of alarms. It had turned into a fresh test of how much strain the capital could absorb while talks on a possible path toward ending the war continued abroad.
One of the biggest air attacks in months

According to Reuters, Ukraine’s air force said Russia launched 375 drones and 21 missiles overnight in the assault. That alone made it one of the broadest single-night attacks in recent memory, combining large drone waves with missiles designed to complicate interception and stretch air defenses across multiple regions. A more detailed tally carried by Ukrinform, citing preliminary Ukrainian Air Force data, said air defenses shot down or jammed 372 targets, including 357 drones and 15 missiles. That still left enough incoming fire, debris, and secondary damage to knock out critical services and ignite fires in and around the capital. The broad picture was consistent across reporting: this was not a narrow strike on one installation or district. It was a large, coordinated attack aimed at Ukraine’s infrastructure and at cities already worn down by repeated winter bombardment.
Kyiv took the hardest hit

Kyiv’s immediate problem was not only damage from impacts, but the cascading effect on daily life. Reuters reported that more than 3,200 buildings in the capital were still without heating late in the day, down from roughly 6,000 earlier, as more than 160 emergency crews worked to restore service. The same report said more than 800,000 Kyiv households remained without power, with outages also spreading into the surrounding north. Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko said one person was killed in the capital and four others were injured, with three requiring hospitalization, according to Reuters. City officials also reported damage from falling drone debris, interrupted water and heat service in parts of the city, and new pressure on a district heating system that had already been weakened by earlier strikes. That last point matters. In a city built around centralized heating, even short-term disruption quickly becomes a public safety issue when temperatures drop into the teens Fahrenheit. Apartment blocks cool fast. Elevators stop. Water systems become unreliable. Residents who can withstand a blackout for a few hours face a much harder reality when heat disappears at the same time.
The damage reached beyond the capital
Kyiv was not alone. Reuters said the strikes also hit other parts of northern and eastern Ukraine, while later official reporting pointed to broader damage across the energy network. In Kharkiv, more than 30 people were reported injured in the same overnight wave, underscoring how widely the barrage was felt. The national toll was severe. Reuters reported that 1.2 million properties across Ukraine were left without electricity during sub-zero cold. For a country already navigating repeated strikes on substations, transmission lines, and heating infrastructure, that scale of disruption carried consequences far beyond the first blast sites. The attack also fit a familiar pattern. Russia has spent much of the winter targeting Ukraine’s energy system, trying to turn each new barrage into a multiplier by forcing authorities to divert repair crews, ration power, and protect civilians from the effects of outages as much as from the strikes themselves.
The timing sharpened the political message
The barrage landed while U.S.-brokered talks involving Ukraine and Russia were underway in the United Arab Emirates. That timing immediately shaped how the strike was interpreted in Kyiv. RFE/RL reported that negotiations in Abu Dhabi were expected to continue the same day, even as Ukrainian officials argued the attack undercut diplomacy. That point was strong enough on its own without overreaching. A strike of this size, launched while peace contacts were still active, was always going to raise doubts in Ukraine about how seriously Moscow was treating negotiations. Reuters reported that the talks later adjourned without any immediate breakthrough, though further discussions were expected. The Guardian likewise reported that negotiations resumed despite the attacks, even as outages spread across Ukrainian cities.
What the strike says about the war right now

The overnight barrage offered a clear snapshot of the war’s current logic. Russia did not need to collapse Ukraine’s defenses entirely to make the attack count. It only needed enough drones and missiles to force expensive interceptions, slip some fire through, and keep civilian infrastructure unstable. Even a high interception rate still left Kyiv with a dead resident, wounded civilians, darkened homes, and thousands of buildings without heat. For Ukraine, the attack reinforced two realities at once. Air defenses remain capable of blunting even huge assaults, but they cannot make a barrage of this size cost-free. For civilians, the measure of a strike is not only how many projectiles are shot down. It is whether the lights stay on, whether the radiators are warm, and whether another night in the shelter turns into another morning without basic services. That is why the scale of the attack mattered as much as the headline number. This was not simply a large overnight strike. It was a reminder that Russia can still combine mass drone launches with missile fire to put Kyiv under pressure, shake the energy network, and inject fresh doubt into every conversation about whether diplomacy can move faster than the next barrage.






