Moscow airports disrupted as Russia says Ukraine launches drone assault

Moscow airports disrupted as Russia says Ukraine launches drone assault


First-person view drones are seen at a front line position of the servicemen of the Ukrainian Armed Forces. File picture used for representation
| Photo Credit: Ukrainian Armed Forces/Handout via Reuters

Russian authorities said they had battled a major Ukrainian drone attack late Tuesday (May 27, 2025) and early Wednesday (May 28, 2025), with at least two Moscow airports forced to suspend flights.

The Defence Ministry said in a Telegram post that 112 Ukrainian drones had been “destroyed and intercepted” in six different regions in the three hours up to midnight.

Moscow’s mayor, Sergei Sobyanin, said on Telegram that 12 drones heading for the Russian capital had been shot down.

Some 59 had targeted the southwestern region of Bryansk, the Defence Ministry said. Others were fired at the Kursk, Belgorod, Tula, Oryol and Kaluga regions.

The attack comes after Ukraine said it had faced the most intense three days of Russian drone attacks since Moscow launched its military offensive in 2022.

The Russian military announces Ukrainian drone attacks most days but rarely of this intensity over such a short period of time.

Moscow, several hundred kilometres from the frontier, is not often the target of such a big attack.

But authorities have been increasingly forced to divert flights from Moscow airports in recent weeks.

This time, the Federal Aviation Transport Agency said restrictions had been introduced at Moscow’s Vnukovo and Zhukovsky airports.

Ukraine said that Russia launched more than 900 drones over three days up to Monday (May 26, 2025). Thirteen civilians were killed in attacks on Sunday (May 25, 2025), including three children.

Russia’s Defence Ministry said Tuesday (May 27, 2025) that it had responded to Ukraine’s “provocation” by launching drone and missile attacks on Russian civilian installations.



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