LATEST: Kyiv: ‘Drone Attacks on Moscow Will Continue and Increase in Scale’
Two explosions rocked Moscow in the early hours of Monday morning in what Russia has claimed was a “terrorist” drone attack on the capital by Ukraine.
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The TASS news agency reported one drone crashed in Komsomolsky Prospekt, near the defense ministry, while another hit a business center on Likhacheva Street by one of Moscow's main ring roads.
Pictures and video posted to social media showed the business center with some damage visible to the top of the tall building.
Drone attack on Moscow ❗️
— Maria Drutska 🇺🇦 (@maria_drutska) July 24, 2023
The second drone hit the business center. Windows were shattered in some buildings. Traffic was blocked. pic.twitter.com/bvxzhpHxBv
It comes a day after President Zelensky vowed to “retaliate” for Sunday’s Russian missile strike on the port city of Odesa.
“A Kyiv regime attempt to carry out a terrorist act using two drones on objects on the territory of the city of Moscow was stopped,” Russia’s defense ministry said.
“Two Ukrainian drones were suppressed and crashed. There are no casualties.”
Drones also struck an ammunition dump in Russian-occupied Crimea in the early hours of Monday morning.
AFP reporters at the scene in Moscow saw a building with a damaged roof on Komsomolsky Prospekt, where police had cordoned off the area.
Several police cars and fire engines and an ambulance could be seen, and an AFP reporter was instructed by a police officer to stop filming or face detention.
“I wasn’t asleep. It was 3:39 a.m. The house really shook,” Vladimir, a 70-year-old local resident, told AFP about the moment of impact.
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“It is scandalous that a Ukrainian drone almost flew into the defense ministry,” said Vladimir, who declined to give his last name, as he took pictures at the scene.
Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said the drone strikes occurred at around 4:00 a.m. local time (01:00 GMT).
He said emergency services were working at the scene and also reported no casualties.
Moscow and its environs lie around 500 kilometers (310 miles) from the Ukrainian border but have been hit by several drone attacks this year, with one even hitting the Kremlin in May.
Earlier this month, Russia said it had downed five Ukrainian drones that disrupted the functioning of Moscow’s Vnukovo international airport.
Russian forces have pounded the Ukrainian port city of Odesa since Moscow quit a deal allowing Ukrainian grain to be exported through the Black Sea last week.
The latest strike on the city on Sunday killed two people and severely damaged a historic cathedral.
Clergymen rescued icons from rubble inside the badly damaged Transfiguration Cathedral, which was demolished under Stalin in 1936 and rebuilt in the 1990s after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
The Ukrainian government condemned the cathedral strike as a “war crime,” saying it had been “destroyed twice: by Stalin and Putin.”
President Zelensky vowed retaliation: “They will definitely feel this,” he said.
“We cannot allow people around the world to get used to terrorist attacks,” Zelensky added in his evening speech late on Sunday.
“The target of all these missiles is not just cities, villages or people. Their target is humanity and the foundations of our entire European culture.”
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