2 Aug 2025

Russian drone strikes on Ukraine hits all-time record in July

5:03 pm on 2 August 2025
Ukrainian emergency work amid the rubble of a residential building after an air attack in Kyiv on July 31, 2025, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Russian strikes on Kyiv killed at least six people, officials said on July 31, 2025, as Moscow claimed the capture of a town that had been a key stronghold for the Ukrainian army in the east of the country. Drones and missile strikes hit at least 27 locations in Kyiv in the early hours, city officials said. (Photo by Sergii VOLSKYI / AFP)

Ukrainian emergency workers amid the rubble of a residential building after an air attack in Kyiv on 31 July 2025. Photo: Sergii Volsky / AFP

Russia fired more drones at Ukraine in July than in any month since it launched its 2022 invasion, intensifying its deadly bombardment of the country, as peace talks stalled, an AFP analysis shows.

The analysis released on Friday (local time) used data published by Ukraine's air force, showing Russia fired 6297 long-range drones into Ukraine last month - up nearly 16 percent compared with June and the third straight monthly increase.

Russia also fired 198 missiles into Ukraine in July, more than in any month this year except June, according to the data.

The attacks, which trigger air raid sirens and send civilians scrambling for shelter, took place every night of the month.

The Kremlin has consistently rejected a ceasefire in Ukraine, saying it saw no immediate diplomatic way out of its nearly three-and-a-half-year invasion.

Three rounds of direct negotiation between Moscow and Kyiv since May have failed to yield a peace deal.

Russia's escalation of drone and missile attacks on Ukraine led to a three-year high in the number of civilians killed or wounded in June, the United Nations said last month.

A combined drone and missile strike on the Ukrainian capital Kyiv early Thursday killed at least 31 people, 28 of whom were in a nine-storey apartment block partially reduced to rubble by a missile, authorities said.

Five of the dead were children, rescue service spokesperson Pavlo Petrov said.

US President Donald Trump, who has become increasingly frustrated with the Kremlin's refusal to accept a ceasefire, has given Moscow until next Friday to reach a deal or face sweeping sanctions.

Footage on Russian state TV from the military channel Zvezda shows deadly attack drones being assembled in what it calls the biggest drone factory in the world.

Footage on Russian state TV from the military channel Zvezda shows deadly attack drones being assembled in what it calls the biggest drone factory in the world. Photo: Zvezda / AFP

Russia has ramped up its drone production to an industrial scale since the war began.

Ukraine has sought to roll out new air defences in response, tasking manufacturers with producing thousands of cheap interceptor drones to destroy their Russian counterparts.

- AFP

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