Ukraine carries out one in all the most important drone attacks on Moscow

While Ukraine launched one in all its largest drone attacks on Moscow on Wednesday, Kyiv continues to launch counter-offensives on Russian soil.

The Russian Defense Ministry said it destroyed 45 Ukrainian drones overnight, including 11 over Moscow, in response to a Google translation Update on Telegram.

“This is one of the largest attempts to attack Moscow with drones. We continue to monitor the situation,” Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said in a separate Google translation. Telegram postafter previous updates on the offensives stated that the attacks had caused “no damage or casualties at the site of the debris fall”.

Some of the drones were neutralized over Podolsk, a close-by city south of Moscow. the official addedCiting the Russian aviation regulator Rosaviatsiya, the state news agency Tass said in a Google-translated report that airports within the Moscow region had resumed regular operations after transient restrictions had been imposed overnight.

CNBC has contacted the Ukrainian Ministry of Defense and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs for comment.

The offensive got here just as Russian President Vladimir Putin was visiting Chechnya for the primary time in 13 years to examine local troops and volunteers ready to participate within the war against Kiev. According to a Google-translated Kremlin edition.

Ukraine has endured its own spate of airstrikes, with the country's air force saying in its latest Google translation that it had destroyed 50 of 69 drones launched by Russia overnight. report.

CNBC was unable to independently confirm either development on the bottom.

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The course of the war between Russia and Ukraine, fought largely through artillery and drone strikes, modified earlier this month when Ukraine went on a counteroffensive with a surprise cross-border incursion into Russian territory.

In the greater than two years since Russia's invasion in February 2022, Kyiv has launched fewer military attacks on the capital Moscow, as a substitute focusing its firepower on the airfields and oil facilities of the world's second-largest oil exporter. The counteroffensive also raises questions on potential impacts on gas flows through the Soviet-era Urengoy-Pomary-Uzhgorod pipeline, which delivers gas from western Siberia via the Sudzha hub within the Kursk region before flowing into Ukraine and toward Slovakia.

The invasion has further reduced the probabilities of a diplomatic solution to the conflict. Russia had previously made its willingness to take a seat down on the negotiating table contingent on its ability to maintain 4 Ukrainian territories that it has illegally annexed since its invasion. Kyiv has repeatedly stated that it should not surrender any territories.

According to former Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, Moscow is now unlikely to fall into the “negotiation trap” following the Ukrainian attack on the Kursk region.

“No further negotiations until the enemy is completely defeated!” he demanded in a Google-translated Telegram post.

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