Russia says its overnight Ukraine strike was a response to Kyiv's 'terrorist acts'


A damaged residential building after an overnight Russian missile and drone strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Kyiv, Ukraine June 2, 2026. REUTERS/Alina Smutko

MOSCOW, June 2 (Reuters) - The ⁠Russian Defence Ministry said on Tuesday that its massive overnight ⁠strike on Ukraine was a response to what it called "terrorist ‌acts" against targets inside Russia and said it had struck a range of Ukrainian military targets.

Ukrainian authorities said that Russian drones and missiles had pounded the Ukrainian ​capital Kyiv and other cities early on Tuesday, ⁠killing at least 11 ⁠people and wounding more than 100 following days of warnings about Moscow's ⁠plans ‌for a major assault.

"Overnight, in response to terrorist acts of the Kyiv regime, the armed forces of the Russian ⁠Federation carried out a massive strike using high-precision long-range ​air-, land-, and ‌sea-based weapons," the Russian Defence Ministry said in a statement.

It ⁠said Russia had ​used hypersonic missiles and drones to attack seven Ukrainian regions including Kyiv, Zaporizhzhia, and Kharkiv, successfully targeting sites useful to the Ukrainian armed forces ⁠such as fuel and transport facilities and ​military airfields.

The Kremlin warned last week that Russia would start to carry out "systematic strikes" on targets in Kyiv in retaliation for what it said ⁠was a devastating Ukrainian drone attack on a student dormitory in Russian-held Luhansk in eastern Ukraine, which killed 21 people.

Ukraine said it had targeted a drone command centre in the area not students. Putin ​said on Monday evening that Kyiv had "opened ⁠a new page in a series of crimes" with the dormitory strike ​and with a later strike on an ‌apartment building in a Russian-held part ​of Ukraine's Kherson region. Both sides deny deliberately targeting civilians.

(Reporting by Reuters; Writing by Alessandra Prentice; Editing by Andrew Osborn)

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