Moscow launched 71 missiles and 450 drones at Ukraine on the night of February 3 in an attack that cost $324.8 million but saw nearly 80% of the weapons destroyed by Ukrainian air defense ...
The test completed a key phase for missiles being produced under a program approved by the State Department for sale of up to 3,550 units to Ukraine; delivery is reportedly expected in October 2026 ...
Ukrainian officials say the Darnytsia combined heat and power plant suffered severe damage in Russia's overnight attack, with Deputy Prime Minister Oleksii Kuleba reporting that 63 additional repair ...
On 4 February, a new round of trilateral talks among Ukraine, the US, and Russia began in the United Arab Emirates, according to Secretary of the National Security and Defense Council of Ukraine ...
The overnight barrage on 3 February included Zircon anti-ship missiles as temperatures dropped past -20°C. Nordic nations rush drone-killing systems to Ukraine.
Russian strike on Zaporizhzhia kills two 18-year-olds, wounds eight including three children. 15-year-old girl in critical condition after evening attack.
Fog and rain could help Russian troops sever Kostyantynivka's main supply line. If the city falls, Kramatorsk and Sloviansk are in trouble.
The IEA says decentralize. Physics says Ukraine needs large storage. Why this matters—for Kyiv and any country facing infrastructure attacks.
Russia's largest 2026 energy attack devastates DTEK plants with 70 missiles and 450 drones. Emergency blackouts hit Kyiv in -20°C cold.
The overnight attack on 3 February was already underway when the US President addressed reporters, with temperatures across Ukraine dropping past -20°C.
Russia's overnight strike damaged Kyiv's WWII museum beneath the Motherland Monument—a site preserving memory of the fight against Nazi aggression.
Russia has redirected its military focus from energy infrastructure to civilian targets after Trump's proposed "energy truce," with attacks killing 20 people.