Ukraine claims $9 billion of damage to Russian bombers in major drone attack
Smoke rises above the area following what local authorities called a drone attack on a military unit in the Sredny settlement, Russia. PHOTO: REUTERS
KYIV - Ukraine said June 1 it destroyed Russian bombers worth billions of dollars in a 'large-scale' drone assault on enemy soil as it geared up for talks with Moscow counterparts to explore prospects for a ceasefire.
In a spectacular claim, Ukraine said it damaged US$7 billion (S$9 billion) worth of Russian aircraft parked at four airbases thousands of kilometres away, with unverified video footage showing the aircraft engulfed in flames and black smoke.
A source in the Ukrainian security services said the drones were concealed in the ceilings of shipping containers which were opened up to release them for the assault.
The long-planned operation came at a delicate moment three years into Russia's invasion.
Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky said on June 1 that he was sending a delegation to Istanbul led by his Defence Minister Rustem Umerov for talks on Monday with Russian officials.
Turkey is hosting the meeting, which was spurred by US President Donald Trump's push for a quick deal to end the three-year war.
Mr Zelensky, who previously voiced scepticism about whether Russia was serious in proposing June 2's meeting, said he had defined the Ukrainian delegation's position going into it.
Priorities included 'a complete and unconditional ceasefire' and the return of prisoners and abducted children, he said on social media.
Russia has rejected previous ceasefire demands.
It said it has formulated its own peace terms but refused to divulge them in advance. Russian President Vladimir Putin ruled out a Turkish proposal for the countries' leaders to attend the meeting.
Russian news agencies said the Russian delegation was headed to Istanbul on June 1 for the talks.
Drone attacks inside Russia
A source in Ukraine's SBU security service said the coordinated attacks inside Russia were 'aimed at destroying enemy bombers far from the front'.
Smoke rises following what local authorities called a Ukrainian drone attack in Olenegorsk of the Murmansk region, Russia.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Rybar, an account on the Telegram message platform that is close to the Russian military, called it a 'very heavy blow' for Moscow and pointed to what it called 'serious errors' by Russian intelligence.
The SBU source said strikes targeted Russian airbases in the eastern Siberian city of Belaya, in Olenya, in the Arctic near Finland, and in Ivanovo and Dyagilevo, both east of Moscow.
More than 40 aircraft had been hit at the Belaya base and a fire had broken out there, the source said, showing a video in which several aircraft could be seen in flames and black smoke rising.
AFP was not able to independently verify the claims or the video images.
The SBU claimed in a social media post to have hit Russian military planes worth a combined US$7 billion in a 'special operation'.
Russia's defence ministry confirmed on Telegram that several of its military aircraft 'caught fire', adding that there were no casualties and that several 'participants' had been arrested.
Mr Igor Kobzev, Governor of Russia's Irkutsk region, which hosts the targeted Belaya airbase, said it was 'the first attack of this sort in Siberia'.
He called on the population not to panic and posted an amateur video apparently showing a drone flying in the sky and a large cloud of grey smoke.
The governor of the Murmansk region where the Olenya base was located, Andrey Chibis, also said 'enemy drones' were flying overhead, and anti-aircraft defences were operating.
Russia has been announcing Ukrainian drone attacks on a near-daily basis, usually saying they had all been shot down. But it was rare for such drone strikes to be reported so deep within its territory.
At the same time, Russia has been carrying out constant attacks on Ukraine.
On June 1, Ukraine's air force said it was hit by 472 Russian drones and seven missiles overnight – a record since the beginning of the invasion.
In a rare admission of its military losses, the Ukraine army said Russia's 'missile strike on the location of one of the training units' had killed a dozen soldiers, most of whom had been in shelters during the attack, and wounded more than 60.
The attack led Ukrainian ground forces commander Mykhailo Drapaty to announce his resignation, saying he felt 'responsibility' for the soldiers' deaths.
Blasts fell bridges
Separately on June 1, the Russian army said it had captured another village in Ukraine's northern Sumy region, where Kyiv fears Moscow could mount a fresh ground assault.
Russia claims to have captured several settlements in the region in recent weeks, and has massed more than 50,000 soldiers on the other side of the border, according to Mr Zelensky.
Authorities in the region have evacuated more than 200 villages amid intensified shelling.
In Russia, officials said a blast brought down a road bridge in the Bryansk region bordering Ukraine on May 31, derailing a passenger train heading to Moscow and killing seven people.
A separate rail bridge in the neighbouring Kursk region was blown up hours later in the early hours of June 1, derailing a freight train and injuring the driver.
Authorities did not say who was behind the explosions, but investigators said a criminal inquiry was underway. AFP
Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
30 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Trump's tariffs are hurting US and global economy, OECD warns
OECD secretary-general Mathias Cormann at the presentation of the OECD Economic Outlook in Paris on June 3. The OECD has slashed its global forecasts for the second time in 2025. PHOTO: REUTERS PARIS – US President Donald Trump's combative trade policies have tipped the world economy into a downturn clouded in heightened uncertainty, with the United States among the hardest hit, the OECD has warned. The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) slashed its global forecasts for the second time in 2025, citing the impact of Mr Trump's tariff onslaught. The combination of trade barriers and uncertainty are hitting confidence and holding back investment, the Paris-based organisation said, while also warning that protectionism is adding to inflationary pressures. The OECD now forecasts global economic growth to slow to 2.9 per cent in 2025 from 3.3 per cent in 2024. It expects the rate of expansion in the US will tumble further, to 1.6 per cent from 2.8 per cent – an outlook that is significantly lower than its projection in March. 'Weakened economic prospects will be felt around the world, with almost no exception,' the OECD's chief economist Alvaro Pereira said. 'Lower growth and less trade will hit incomes and slow job growth.' The assessment indicates how Mr Trump's policies have become the most pressing problem for the global economy, with no easy solution in sight. The situation could yet be exacerbated by retaliation from US trading partners, a further erosion of confidence or another bout of repricing on financial markets, the OECD said. The club of 38 rich countries published its forecasts just as its members' ministers convene in Paris for an annual meeting. Top commerce officials are expected there, including US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer and EU Trade Commissioner Maros Sefcovic. Mr Lin Feng, a representative from China's Ministry of Commerce, is also scheduled to attend. 'Agreements to ease trade tensions and lower tariffs and other trade barriers will be instrumental to revive growth and investment and avoid rising prices,' the OECD said. 'This is by far the most important policy priority.' Yet, the organisation also said even if Mr Trump reverses course on tariffs, the bonus in terms of growth and reduced inflation would not materialise immediately, due to a persistent drag from heightened uncertainty over policy. For the US, the OECD said curbs on immigration and a sizable reduction in the federal workforce add to the trade-related drag on the economy. It also cautioned that the US budget deficit will expand further as the effect of weaker economic activity will more than offset spending cuts and revenues from tariffs. Inflation in the US will also move higher in 2025, making it likely that the Federal Reserve will not resume easing policy until 2026, according to the OECD. That process may even be derailed if consumer-price expectations get de-anchored, it added. For other central banks, the OECD also urged continued vigilance. While it expects inflation to ease to their targets in 2026, that process will now take longer, and the pace of price increases may even increase before easing again, it said. Besides the fallout from global trade, the OECD also warned that fiscal risks are intensifying around the world, with 'tremendous' pressures for more spending on defence, climate and aging populations. It called for governments to reduce non-essential spending and raise revenues by broadening tax bases. BLOOMBERG Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
33 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Soft-focus interview positions Bardella as leader-in-waiting of France's far-right
French far-right leader Jordan Bardella, president of the National Rally (RN) party, addresses the audience at a political rally for May Day in Narbonne, France, May 1, 2025. REUTERS/Manon Cruz/File Photo PARIS - Jordan Bardella, the 29-year-old wunderkind of France's far right National Rally (RN), says he grew up wanting to be Superman, or James Bond. These days, he dreams of marrying a tall brunette with a strong personality. Bardella was profiled on "An Intimate Ambition", a Sunday night primetime TV show short on tough political questions but long on the kind of personal vignettes that could broaden his appeal for 2027, when he could well be the RN's presidential candidate at the expense of his mentor, Marine Le Pen. She and Bardella have forged one of France's most formidable political tag teams in recent years, fusing her experience with his youthful drive to transform the once-taboo RN into France's largest single parliamentary party. But the woman once widely seen as a front-runner for 2027 has seen her chances of contesting a fourth presidential election collapse after receiving a five-year political ban in March for party financing offences. She has appealed and insists she remains the RN's 2027 candidate. But Bardella, who spearheaded the RN's parliamentary election campaign last year, has been quick to say he will run if she cannot, and the French press has been awash with speculation about a rift. Stephane Rozes, head of the political consultancy Cap, said Le Pen's ban had boosted the RN's free-market wing, who prefer Bardella's pro-business views to her more statist, socially oriented policies. "The uncertainties surrounding the candidacy have sharpened the differences in approach," Rozes said. Audience data suggested over a million people watched Sunday's show, which presented a softer, more approachable version of Bardella, featuring teary chats with his parents and workouts in the gym. Recent trips to the United States, Israel and Abu Dhabi appear designed to counter suggestions that Bardella lacks foreign policy experience. REAL OR IMAGINED, LE PEN-BARDELLA RIVALRY LOOMS Several opinion polls taken since Le Pen's conviction have put her neck-and-neck with Bardella in a putative 2027 first-round vote, suggesting voters do not view her as irreplaceable. Le Pen has become increasingly prickly about Bardella. Last week, during a visit to the restive French overseas territory of New Caledonia, she sneered: "I'm not sure Jordan knows New Caledonia's problems very well." "I assure you," Bardella replied the same day, "I understand the overseas issues very well." RN officials dismiss talk of tensions. "The media are on the lookout for a statement from Marine or Jordan to support the story they're imagining," said RN lawmaker and spokesperson Laurent Jacobelli. "They support each other, and I don't think the rumours affect our leaders." Louis Aliot, RN mayor of the southern city of Perpignan, said Le Pen's focus on New Caledonia demonstrated how they complemented each other. "Marine has been following the New Caledonia situation for almost 20 years," he said. "Jordan has never been there. That means he doesn't know it like she does." But while RN officials deny the idea of a rift in private too, they acknowledge Le Pen may be unable to overturn her ban, and say Bardella would be a formidable candidate. "Either can win," said a senior RN official, declining to be named. In "An Intimate Ambition", which was filmed before Le Pen's conviction, Bardella was coy about 2027, but less so about his competitiveness in sport. "I really like to win," he said. "I don't like to lose." REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Straits Times
an hour ago
- Straits Times
Medvedev says Russia seeks victory, not compromise, in talks with Ukraine
FILE PHOTO: Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev talks to Vietnamese General Secretary, President Nguyen Phu Trong (not pictured) during their meeting at the Party's headquarter in Hanoi, Vietnam November 19, 2018. Luong Thai Linh/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo Medvedev says Russia seeks victory, not compromise, in talks with Ukraine MOSCOW - Senior Russian security official Dmitry Medvedev said on Tuesday that the point of holding peace talks with Ukraine was to ensure a swift and complete Russian victory. "The Istanbul talks are not for striking a compromise peace on someone else's delusional terms but for ensuring our swift victory and the complete destruction of the neo-Nazi regime," the hawkish deputy chairman of Russia's Security Council said on Telegram. "That's what the Russian Memorandum published yesterday is about." Medvedev was referring to a set of Russian demands presented to Ukraine at talks in Istanbul on Monday. They included handing over more territory, becoming a neutral country, accepting limits on the size of the Ukrainian army and holding new parliamentary and presidential elections. At the talks, which lasted only an hour, the two sides agreed on a new prisoner-of-war swap and an exchange of 12,000 dead soldiers, but not on the ceasefire that Ukraine and its allies are pressing Russia to accept. Medvedev added, in an apparent response to Ukraine's weekend strikes on Russian strategic bomber bases, that Moscow would take revenge. "Retribution is inevitable," he said. "Our Army is pushing forward and will continue to advance. Everything that needs to be blown up will be blown up, and those who must be eliminated will be." REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.