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Kyiv Independent archive / original link - Kyiv Independent8 killed, 60 injured as Russia launches mass strike on Dnipro, other cities across Ukraine
April 25, 2026 4:14 am
(Updated: April 25, 2026 8:02 pm)
Editor's note: This is a developing story and is being updated.
Russia launched one of its largest aerial strikes on Ukraine overnight and during the day on April 25, killing at least eight people and injuring at least 57, officials reported.
Moscow's forces deployed 47 missiles and 619 drones overnight, primarily targeting the city of Dnipro while also striking the Kharkiv, Chernihiv, Sumy, Odesa, and Kyiv oblasts, the Air Force reported. Ukrainian air defenses reportedly intercepted 580 drones and 30 missiles.
Dnipropetrovsk Oblast Governor Oleksandr Hanzha reported that a four-story building and an unspecified "industrial infrastructure facility" were struck in Dnipro amid the attack.
At least four people have been killed during the attacks overnight, Hanzha said, with authorities previously reporting that more people may be trapped under the debris.
Attacks against the city continued during the day on April 25, killing another person. The daytime strike targeted the same residential area that was hit overnight, the governor reported......
Another almost routine communist crime. Ukraine is able to attack Russia every day with few to no civilian casualties, yet Russia hurts civilians without fail. Russia made a choice to do harm civilians for reasons of terror. It means Ukrainians go abroad and abroad they are usually less trouble to Russia, altho Canada's big Ukrainian immigrant population has played a role in Canada's unstinting support for Ukraine.
40 years after the Chornobyl, hundreds of small settlements cope with an existence which was not easy before it.
TLDR News EU on how Ukraine's prospects have improved. Among the factors are that the gypo Orbán is not obstructing the 90bn loan he had already agreed to, Ukraine's drone tech is improving. Autonomous drones don't need to worry about jamming. Long range strike capabilities also help. Ukraine has according to Reuters taken out 40% of Russia's crude export capacity. Production cut from 400k to 300k. This doesn't help finances with GDP shrinking and deficits soaring. Now if Hormuz remains closed, this will help Putin. Also Ukraine has cost effective interceptors now. Western systems are not always available and so Ukraine has systems covering 70% of drone interceptions that cost little more than $2000 per unit. This is far, far cheap than Patriots that are not as easily available and can be denied by an erratic US Administration. Also thanks to the war in Iran, Ukrainian interception is far cheaper. A Patriot is $4 million a missile and it could be hitting a $7000 Shaheed drone. Ukraine mass produces a cost effective alternative. Saudi Arabia, Qatar and UAE have signed security pacts with Ukraine in that connection. It means a welcome injection of greenbacks for Ukraine's drone industry. Ukrainian firms have also launched joint ventures with Denmark, Finland and Latvia and now Germany (despite the Rheinmetall's boss's foolish mockery of the Ukrainian drone industry, which suggests an MIC bossman is annoyed the extra military spending could be very carefully rationed). Italy is now discussing a deal too, so Ukraine is no longer a supplicant. Perhaps this result in Putin taking negotiations seriously.
The Bulwark original link / The Bulwark archiveTHE END OF 2024 LOOKED GRIM FOR UKRAINE: President Trump was promising no further aid, and Hungary under Viktor Orbán was vowing to block any further European Union financial support. Seeing an opportunity, Russia poured all the manpower possible into collapsing Ukrainian front lines, hoping to convince Trump that Russia’s victory and Ukraine’s defeat were inevitable, so that he would pressure Ukraine into a peace treaty favorable to Putin.
Instead, Ukraine dug in. They continued to innovate, and gained superiority in drone warfare at the short, medium, and long ranges. As a result, the front lines have remained essentially stabile, while Russia is scraping the bottom of the barrel for manpower and losing more people than it is recruiting.
Extending out from the front lines in both directions runs a zone ten to twenty kilometers wide where drones from both sides constantly prowl for new victims. Ukraine has achieved slight advantage in this part of the war. The Institute for the Study of War (ISW) finds that Ukraine now has a distinct numerical and technological edge in drones on the battlefield.
Russia has opted for producing large quantities of a few types of drones rather than investing in technical innovation, but at least for now, Ukrainian production of small drones appears to exceed Russia’s, with at least 3–4 million units produced in 2025 and a goal of up to 7 million in 2026. This is within spitting distance of the 10 million per year that Ukraine estimates it will need to completely overwhelm Russia and achieve decisive victory. It’s also a tremendous advantage. Drones are the dominant force on the lines today, causing approximately 75–80 percent of all casualties. Ukraine now has 1.3 drones at the front line for every 1 Russian drone, and they are of better quality. Additionally, Ukraine has reportedly begun operating AI powered small drone “swarms” that are semi-autonomous and coordinate their attacks.
For most of the war, Russia has had the advantage over Ukraine in number and quality of medium-range First Person View (FPV) drones than Ukraine, like the Lancet, which can hit up to 70 kilometers behind enemy lines. This range is similar to the GMLRS rockets used on HIMARS launchers. The last time Ukraine had the advantage in medium-range attacks was after the introduction of HIMARS to the battlefield in 2022. Over time, HIMARS gradually lost effectiveness, due to Russian electronic countermeasures and a lack of resupply of ammunition from the United States. The result is that Ukraine, unlike Russia, had struggled to hit moving targets more than 20–30 kilometers behind the front lines.
This is changing rapidly. Ukraine’s home-grown drone systems like the FP-2, RAM-2X, and Hornet can now strike targets at medium ranges. They are small enough to operate with near impunity against air defenses, and they are also more technologically advanced than Russia’s Lancet.
The latest Ukrainian medium-range drones reportedly have the ability use AI for navigation. Terrain-matching guidance systems have been around for decades—American Tomahawk cruise missiles use terrain contour mapping and digital scene matching area correlator systems to plot their paths to their targets. They compare the terrain they see below it with what they expect to see—but the use of AI makes the Ukrainian systems even more advanced and flexible. This autonomous navigation capability prevents them from being jammed. They can also find and lock onto targets visually using AI, making them impossible to jam during the terminal phase of their attack. Amazingly, the TFL-1 autonomy module has a unit cost of only $70.
Ukraine’s Hornets reportedly can navigate autonomously, identify targets using AI, and conduct attacks autonomously far behind Russian lines. They also reportedly can autonomously find and attack targets as well using optical recognition AI. This is beginning to have a significant impact on Russian logistics, and the situation will only get worse as production ramps up.
The Ukrainian army has increasingly been using medium-range drones to destroy out the high-value anti-aircraft radars and launch vehicles that Russian forces placed well behind the front lines. Eliminating Russian air defenses not only makes it easier for Ukrainian fighter-bombers to operate closer to the front lines, but also opens corridors for longer-range Ukrainian strikes into Russian-controlled territory and even into Russia itself.
There are signs this is working. Ukrainian drones have been spotted operating with impunity over Donetsk. With Russian defenses degraded, as well as increased Ukrainian production and continuous technical advancement, more Ukrainian drones appear to be getting through to important targets far behind the lines.......
The Bulwark also talks about Ukraine's changed prospects. While they're known not to be Trump superfans, the reference to POTUS are fairly slight and neutral for them.

