MOSCOW—Ukraine launched its biggest ever drone attack on Moscow on Tuesday but air defenses destroyed all eight of the drones, Russia said.
Drone attacks deep inside Russia have intensified in recent weeks with strikes on oil pipelines and even the Kremlin earlier this month that Moscow has blamed on Ukraine.
Drone debris hit some of Moscow most prestigious areas including Leninsky Prospekt, a grand avenue crafted under Josef Stalin, and the area of western Moscow.
Residents in south-western Moscow said they heard loud bangs at around 0200 to 0300 GMT, followed by the smell of petrol. Some filmed a drone being shot down and a plume of smoke rising over the Moscow skyline.
Putin was briefed early in the morning on the drone attacks, the Kremlin said, adding that Russia’s air defenses and military had worked well so there was no threat to the Moscow residents.
“It is, of course, obvious that this is an attack by the Kyiv regime,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters. “And this must be absolutely clearly understood.”
The Russian president does not at present have any plans to make a special address to the Russian people, Peskov said, adding that Putin was working in the Kremlin.
Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said two people were injured, one of whom was hospitalized, in the early morning attack. Moscow’s airports remained open. No deaths were reported.
The defense ministry said electronic counter-drone technology was used to divert three of the Ukrainian drones while five more were shot down, including by Pantsir missile systems which help defend Moscow.
A Ukrainian presidential aide denied Kyiv was directly involved in the Moscow attack, but said Ukraine was enjoying watching events and forecast more to come.
“Of course we are pleased to watch and predict an increase in the number of attacks. But of course we have nothing directly to do with this,” Ukrainian presidential adviser Mykhailo Podolyak claimed.
There is little sign of peace in one of the deadliest wars in Europe since World War Two, and Moscow has repeatedly warned that the West is escalating the war by supplying Kyiv with so much weaponry.
It was unclear how Putin will react to the drone attack, which brings the war in Ukraine to the capital of the world’s biggest nuclear power.
So far Putin has kept the war in Ukraine far from Moscow, where life has continued relatively normally despite the biggest crisis in Russia’s ties with the West since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis.
Russia began attacking the Ukrainian capital with swarms of cheaply produced loitering munitions often known as “kamikaze drones” last October and uses them extensively during its regular air strikes across Ukraine.
Prosecutors said incidents occurred in the Odintsovsky District of western Moscow region. The area, the most expensive in Russia, is the home to the country’s elite.
Russian state television gave the attacks some coverage but it was not extensive.
Putin has repeatedly cast the conflict in Ukraine as a struggle with what he says is an arrogant and aggressive West that is risking a global war by supporting Ukraine.
Russian lawmaker Alexander Khinshtein, from the ruling United Russia bloc, said the attacks on Moscow were likely to increase.
“The sabotage and terrorist attacks of Ukraine will only increase,” Khinshtein said. “It is necessary to radically strengthen defence and security measures, especially in terms of countering drones. This includes finally passing the necessary laws.”