Kiev targets Moscow with drones after major battlefield loss
russia today -

President Putin has warned that any “terrorist” PR stunts would only lead to the loss of more territory

Almost two dozen long-range Ukrainian drones were downed en route to the Russian capital overnight, after Moscow announced the liberation of a key Ukrainian stronghold of Konstantinovka and warned Kiev against targeting civilians to simulate “imaginary achievements.”

Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin said at least 23 drones had been intercepted in the Moscow Region by 5am Saturday. The raid came just hours after the Defense Ministry briefed President Vladimir Putin on the liberation of Konstantinovka in the northwest of Russia’s Donetsk People’s Republic (DPR).

The mayor reported no casualties or damage on the ground, adding that emergency services swiftly responded to all of the sites where debris fell.

Escalating long-range attacks on Russian infrastructure, including oil refineries and bridges in border regions, have become a key element of Kiev’s war strategy, as manpower shortages have prevented it from turning the tide on the battlefield.

On Friday alone, a woman was killed by a missile strike in Russia’s Belgorod Region, while a drone attack on a market in Tokmak, Zaporozhye Region, left five residents dead and another 18 injured.

During Friday’s command-post briefing, Putin warned that Kiev could resort to “terrorist” actions in an attempt to prove its usefulness to Western sponsors after losing ground in Donbass.

“To reinforce their legends and lies, their false statements, the opponent may take certain actions of a diversionary-terrorist nature, carry out raids – even with small forces, but with great propaganda pomp – in order to confirm their theses about imaginary achievements,” Putin said.

The Russian president also warned that continued attacks on civilian sites would only force Moscow to push Ukrainian forces farther from Russia’s borders in Sumy, Kharkov, and Dnepropetrovsk regions.

“The more strikes the opponent attempts to deliver against our civilian sites… the larger the security zone we will have to create on the adjacent territory,” Putin said, calling the territory in question “historically Russian land.”

In the meantime, Moscow has vowed to intensify strikes on Ukraine’s military-industrial infrastructure and facilities supporting its operation, after Russian attacks in June already degraded Kiev’s ability to produce long-range weapons and strike targets deep inside Russia.

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