Military | Europe
Ukrainian Drones Strike Moscow in Boldest Attack Since War Began
Ukraine's long-range drone programme reaches new levels of capability as a coordinated strike penetrates Russian air defences to hit targets near Moscow.
Distance No Longer a Shield: Ukraine Strikes at Russia's Heart
Ukraine's long-range drone programme reached a new level of strategic significance in early 2026 when a coordinated swarm attack penetrated multiple layers of Russian air defences to strike targets in the Moscow region — the boldest and most geographically ambitious Ukrainian strike since the full-scale invasion began in 2022. The attack caused damage to an oil refinery and several military logistics facilities, triggered extensive air raid warnings across multiple Russian oblasts, and demonstrated that Ukraine had developed — or received — drone capabilities significantly beyond what Russian defences had been designed to intercept.
The technological foundation for Ukraine's long-range drone programme has been built through a combination of domestic Ukrainian innovation, European technology transfers, and the ingenuity of Ukrainian engineers who have adapted commercial components to military purposes in ways that have impressed and sometimes alarmed Western partners. Ukrainian-designed drones are now capable of ranges exceeding 1,500 kilometres and can be programmed with GPS waypoints to navigate around known air defence positions, attacking from unexpected vectors that reduce the probability of interception.
Russia's response was characteristically angry and disproportionate. Within days of the Moscow strike, Russian missile and drone attacks on Ukrainian cities intensified, with Kyiv, Kharkiv, and Zaporizhzhia all suffering major bombardments. The pattern — Ukrainian strikes demonstrating escalating capability, Russian mass bombardment of civilian infrastructure — has characterised the war for over a year, with neither side able to achieve decisive military advantage but both inflicting enormous human and material costs on the other's civilian population.