Russia snubs Ukraine’s unilateral ceasefire, firing dozens of drones

As the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine entered its third year, hopes for a temporary halt to hostilities collapsed almost immediately this week after Russia launched a massive overnight drone assault that defied Ukraine’s unilateral ceasefire declaration, Ukrainian authorities confirmed Wednesday.

Kyiv’s ceasefire, which came into force at midnight on Wednesday, was a reciprocal response to Russia’s own planned two-day truce scheduled for Friday and Saturday to mark the 81st anniversary of Nazi Germany’s defeat in World War II. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had announced the unilateral pause, warning that any violation of the truce would draw a swift military retaliation from Kyiv’s forces. But the truce was breached before it could even take full hold.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha confirmed that Russian forces launched 108 drones and three guided missiles across Ukrainian territory, with attacks running continuously through the night and into Wednesday morning. In an official post on social platform X, Sybiha condemned Moscow’s choice to ignore a de-escalatory proposal that had garnered backing from multiple states and global governing bodies. “Moscow once again ignored a realistic and fair call to end hostilities, supported by other states and international organizations,” Sybiha wrote, adding that Russia’s overnight attacks exposed the insincerity of its own upcoming planned May 9 ceasefire. “Putin only cares about military parades, not human lives,” he said.

In Moscow’s official response to the strikes, the Russian Defense Ministry claimed that it was Ukraine that had violated the truce. The ministry asserted that Russian air defense systems intercepted and shot down 53 Ukrainian drones across multiple Russian regions, the illegally annexed Crimean Peninsula, and Black Sea waters between Tuesday evening and early Wednesday dawn.

Prior to the launch of Kyiv’s ceasefire, Moscow had given no public indication it would respect the pause in fighting. Analysts and diplomatic observers have held little optimism for any de-escalation of the conflict in the near term, as the war shows no sign of abating and a full year of U.S.-led diplomatic efforts to end the hostilities have produced no breakthroughs.

The overnight assault comes just one day after a previous round of Russian strikes across Ukraine left at least 22 civilians dead and more than 80 others injured, according to Ukrainian emergency officials. This sequence of events follows a long-established pattern throughout the war: Russia has repeatedly announced short unilateral ceasefires timed for major national and religious holidays, including most recently Orthodox Easter, but these temporary pauses have never led to lasting de-escalation, undermined by deep mutual distrust between the two warring nations.

In the wake of Russia’s violation of Kyiv’s ceasefire, Sybiha called for the international community to ramp up pressure on the Kremlin. His demands include the imposition of new economic sanctions, broader diplomatic isolation of Moscow, formal accountability measures for alleged war crimes committed by Russian forces, and increased military and humanitarian aid for Ukraine.

The Associated Press continues ongoing coverage of the Russia-Ukraine conflict, with full reporting available at its dedicated war hub.