Large-Scale
Ukrainian Attack Targets Air Bases in Russia
Russia’s
Defense Ministry said on Sunday that Ukrainian drones attacked airfields in
five regions and that several aircraft had caught fire.
By Maria
VarenikovaAnastasia Kuznietsova and Nataliya Vasilyeva
Maria
Varenikova reported from Kyiv, Ukraine, Anastasia Kuznietsova from Mantua,
Italy, and Nataliya Vasilyeva from Istanbul.
June 1, 2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/01/world/europe/russia-ukraine-strikes.html
Ukraine on
Sunday launched one of its broadest assaults of the war against air bases
inside Russia, a coordinated operation that targeted sites from eastern Siberia
to Russia’s western border and that left several Russian aircraft in flames.
The
Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian airfields came as Kyiv suffered a damaging
blow of its own on Sunday, with Russia striking a Ukrainian military training
base and killing at least 12 soldiers.
Attacks
Across Russia
Ukraine
executed attacks in five regions across Russia, according to a statement from
Russia's Defense Ministry on Sunday. Several aircraft caught fire at air bases
in Murmansk and Irkutsk.
The day’s
violence showed that the fighting between the two adversaries was only
escalating even as they were expected to sit down for another round of
cease-fire negotiations on Monday in Istanbul. Russian forces have quickened
the pace of their advances in Ukraine and bombarded Ukrainian cities, as
Ukrainian leaders accuse Russia of stalling for time in the peace talks and
Moscow pushes for a breakthrough in the conflict after more than three years.
Russia’s
Defense Ministry said on Sunday that Ukrainian drones had attacked airfields in
five regions stretching across five time zones. Several aircraft caught fire in
the regions of Murmansk, near the border with Norway, and Irkutsk, in eastern
Siberia, the ministry said in a statement. It said that the other attacks were
repelled, and that there were no casualties.
The attack
in Irkutsk, on the Belaya air base, was the first time any place in Siberia had
come under attack by Ukraine’s drones since the war began in February 2022. The
Olenya base in the Murmansk region, which also came under attack, is one of
Russia’s key strategic airfields, hosting nuclear-capable aircraft.
An official
in Ukraine’s security services, known as the S.B.U., who spoke on the condition
of anonymity to discuss a sensitive intelligence operation, said that dozens of
aircraft had been damaged in the strikes. It was not immediately possible to
independently confirm that claim, or the details from Russia’s Defense
Ministry.
The official
said that Ukrainian officers had secretly transported drones into Russian
territory on trucks and launched them from those vehicles. That also could not
be confirmed, but Russia’s Defense Ministry said that drones used in the
Murmansk and Irkutsk attacks had been launched from the immediate vicinity of
the airfields.
President
Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine said on social media that planning for the
operation had begun a year and a half ago, and that those involved in the
attacks had been withdrawn from Russia before they took place.
He called
the results of the assault “absolutely brilliant” and added, “Ukraine is
defending itself, and rightly so — we are doing everything to make Russia feel
the need to end this war.”
A video
verified by The New York Times shows two drones being launched from containers
mounted on the back of a semi-truck less than four miles from the Belaya air
base. Both fly in the direction of large smoke plumes rising from the base.
Footage recorded shortly afterward shows the same containers ablaze.
Another
video shows drones flying less than four miles from the Olenya air base. The
man recording it suggests that the drones had been launched from a truck parked
just down the road. The Times could not confirm that these drones were part of
the assault.
Russian
military bloggers were quick to declare the Ukrainian attacks a significant
failure of Russia’s defenses.
“Today will
later be called a black day for Russian long-range aviation,” read a post on
the Telegram channel called Fighterbomber, which is believed to be run by Capt.
Ilya Tumanov of the Russian Army. It added, “And the day is not over yet.”
The deputy
head of Ukraine’s presidential office, Iryna Vereshchuk, said that the security
services had “set a new bar of skill in conducting large-scale combat
operations on enemy territory.”
She wrote on
Telegram, “This is not a knockout, but a very serious knockdown for the enemy.”
Earlier on
Sunday, Ukraine’s military said that a Russian missile attack on a training
base killed at least 12 soldiers and wounded more than 60 others — a rare
statement acknowledging casualties within its ranks.
The
commander of Ukraine’s ground forces, Maj. Gen. Mykhailo Drapatyi, submitted
his resignation after the attack on the base, in the Dnipro region, saying in a
statement that he felt a “personal sense of responsibility for the tragedy.”
“An army in
which commanders bear personal responsibility for the lives of their people is
alive. An army where no one is held accountable for losses dies from within,”
he said.
Ukraine’s
military said that it was investigating the circumstances but emphasized that
there was not a mass gathering at the time of the strike — an apparent attempt
to show lessons learned from previous instances.
“At the time
the air-raid alert was announced, all personnel were in shelters, except for
those who may not have had time to reach it,” Vitalii Sarantsev, a spokesman
for Ukraine’s ground forces, said in an interview with Ukrainian news media.
Ukraine’s
military does not typically disclose official casualty figures, which are
treated as a state secret and are a highly delicate topic in the country. Past
attacks with large numbers of military casualties — like when a Russian missile
killed soldiers gathered for an awards ceremony in southern Ukraine in late
2023 — have raised questions about security protocols.
Sunday’s
attacks came on the eve of another round of peace talks in Istanbul, proposed
by Moscow. While Kyiv had insisted it see a promised memorandum outlining
Russia’s cease-fire terms before sending any officials to the talks, Mr.
Zelensky announced Sunday that Kyiv would in fact send a delegation.
He did not
say whether Ukraine had received the memorandum. In a post on social media, Mr.
Zelensky said only that he had met with senior leadership and “defined our
positions” ahead of the talks on Monday in Istanbul, where Defense Minister
Rustem Umerov is to lead Ukraine’s delegation.
Ukrainian
officials have accused President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia of stalling for
time in the negotiations.
Hours before
the strike on the military training base, Russia launched what Ukrainian
officials said was the largest combined overnight aerial assault on the country
since the start of the war.
The
Ukrainian Air Force said that Russia launched 472 drones and seven missiles
overnight. It said that the majority of the drones and three of the incoming
missiles were intercepted but that at least 18 targets were struck.
While the
air force did not provide further details on what was struck, local officials
in the Kyiv region said that at least 10 homes had been damaged. The local
authorities also reported damage in the Kirovohrad region of central Ukraine
and in the northeastern Kharkiv region.
Devon Lum
contributed reporting.
Maria
Varenikova covers Ukraine and its war with Russia.
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