Russian guided bombs tore into civilian infrastructure in Sumy. Kyiv confirmed a second strike on a strategic space communications center near Moscow. And in Monaco, a bomb ripped through the home of a sanctioned Ukrainian businessman — while back in Russia, fuel shortages are now severe enough that the Kremlin is reportedly shopping abroad for gasoline.


Sumy Under the Bombs

Russian forces dropped four guided aerial bombs (KABs) on civilian infrastructure in Sumy, regional authorities reported. At least 11 people were injured, according to the Sumy Regional Military Administration, with rescuers pulling at least one person from the rubble. Several outlets, including Ukrinform, confirmed the toll. Sumy has become a near-constant target in recent weeks, with this strike fitting an established pattern rather than marking a one-off escalation.

Elsewhere in the country, Russian strikes also hit DTEK energy facilities in Dnipropetrovsk Oblast, though power was reportedly restored quickly. In Zaporizhzhia, a drone strike damaged a historic building — the Zaporizhzhia Regional Museum — along with several other structures, injuring at least four people, according to regional head Ivan Fedorov.

A Second Hit on Dubna — and the Kremlin's Response

President Volodymyr Zelensky confirmed that Ukrainian forces struck the Dubna Space Communications Center in Moscow Oblast for the second time, calling it a "special object." Multiple Ukrainian channels, including state and military-linked sources, described the facility as a high-value strategic target.

Moscow did not deny the strike outright. Instead, the Kremlin pivoted to a political framing: spokesperson Dmitry Peskov's office called on the international community to react to Ukraine's drone strikes, according to RBC. The contrast is notable — rather than contesting whether the facility was hit, Russian officials are working the diplomatic angle, which suggests the strike's military impact is not in serious dispute, even as the broader narrative battle continues.

Moscow's Drone Numbers Don't Add Up — And a Baby Dies

Russian sources reported a mass drone attack on Moscow and surrounding regions overnight, but the casualty and intercept numbers diverge sharply depending on the source. Mayor Sergei Sobyanin reported 61 drones shot down approaching Moscow alone. Russia's Defense Ministry, cited separately, claimed a nationwide total of 806 downed drones, while another military channel put the regional figure at 419 — a gap wide enough to suggest these are competing claims rather than a single verified count.

What is consistent across Russian sources: a six-month-old infant died in Yegoryevsk, in Moscow Oblast, after a drone reportedly struck a private house. The death was reported independently by Novaya Gazeta, TASS, and WarGonzo, with similar details — a fire at the house, the infant among the casualties. No Ukrainian source has commented on or confirmed the strike. In Tver Oblast, a woman was reported killed by falling drone debris, and additional injuries were reported in Belgorod Oblast.

The Energy War Continues on Both Sides

Russian military channels claimed strikes on fuel depots and refineries in Poltava and Kremenchuk, as well as a fuel storage site in Kropyvnytskyi — part of a broader campaign Russian sources describe as targeting Ukraine's fuel infrastructure. Russian sources also claimed to have hit 25 gas stations and several fuel tankers inside Ukraine.

Meanwhile, Russia's own fuel crisis appears to be deepening. Novaya Gazeta reported that the Kremlin has begun negotiations to import gasoline from abroad, with Kazakhstan floated as one option — alongside a possible return to lower-quality fuel grades. Peskov confirmed talks are underway, describing any import agreement as "another step toward stabilizing the market" — an unusually direct admission of strain from an official channel.

Monaco: A Bombing, Not (Yet) Ruled a Terror Attack

A powerful explosion struck a residential building in Monaco, wounding Vadym Yermolaiev, a sanctioned businessman from Dnipro, and his family — his wife reportedly suffered severe leg injuries. French investigators have reportedly ruled out the terrorism theory, according to Korrespondent, though the investigation continues and no alternative motive has been confirmed.

Russian commentary moved quickly to politicize the incident: former Ukrainian MP Yevhen Oleynik suggested without evidence that Zelensky could have ordered the attack. This claim has no independent confirmation and should be treated strictly as a partisan allegation, not a verified fact.

Background

Poland's defense minister confirmed the country will not transfer MiG-29 fighter jets to Ukraine. Separately, the Institute for the Study of War (ISW) published an analysis disputing Russian President Vladimir Putin's claims of battlefield gains across the front, citing mapped territorial data that contradicts the Kremlin's account.