Russia brushes off peace talks after largest assault on Ukraine

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Damaged cars near a school building in Kyiv, following an hours-long Russian bombardment of Ukraine on July 4.

Damaged cars near a school building in Kyiv, following an hours-long Russian bombardment of Ukraine on July 4.

PHOTO: EPA

Follow topic:
  • Russia sees no immediate diplomatic solution to the Ukraine war and continues its "special operation" despite international condemnation.
  • Kyiv experienced its largest drone and missile attack of the invasion, damaging infrastructure and prompting calls for increased air defence support.
  • Amid stalled peace talks, Ukraine and Russia exchanged prisoners while the EU urged to "step up" support due to reduced US aid.

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Russia on July 4 said it sees no immediate diplomatic way out of the war in Ukraine, hours after pummelling the war-torn country with its largest ever drone and missile barrage of the invasion.

The

hours-long bombardments

sent Ukrainians scurrying for shelters across the country and came after a call between US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin, which ended without a breakthrough.

Mr Trump also said

he had made no progress

in discussions with Mr Putin on ending more than three years of bitter fighting since the Kremlin ordered its troops into neighbouring Ukraine.

Earlier, AFP journalists in Kyiv heard drones buzzing over the capital and explosions ringing out throughout the night as Ukrainian air defence systems fended off the attack.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky

also spoke to Mr Trump

and said they agreed to work on bolstering the country’s defences against aerial bombardment.

“We spoke about opportunities in air defence and agreed that we will work together to strengthen protection of our skies,” Mr Zelensky said on social media after the call.

Kyiv resident Tymur, who said he had experienced previous Russian attacks, told AFP that the assault in the early hours of July 4 felt different from others.

“Nothing like this attack had ever happened before. There have never been so many explosions,” he said.

The Kremlin said on July 4 that it was “preferable” to achieve the goals of its invasion through political and diplomatic means.

“But as long as that is not possible, we are continuing the special operation,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said in a briefing, referring to Russia’s invasion.

‘War and terror’

Mr Zelensky said air alerts began echoing out across the country as the call between Mr Trump and Mr Putin was getting under way.

“Yet again, Russia is showing it has no intention of ending the war and terror,” he said on social media.

He urged the US in particular to increase pressure on Moscow, which on July 4 announced fresh territorial gains on the front line with the capture of a village in the Donetsk region.

Poland said its embassy building in Kyiv had been damaged in the attack, but that staff were unharmed.

Germany’s Foreign Ministry, meanwhile, said the timing of the attack showed that Moscow was continuing to “rely on brute force”.

“Ukraine needs more to defend itself, not less,” the ministry said on social media.

Berlin was exploring the possibility of purchasing more Patriot air defence systems from the US for Ukraine, a German government spokesman told reporters.

In Kyiv, one person was pulled from the rubble after the strikes, which also wounded at least 26 people, emergency services said.

The barrage, according to the air force, comprised 539 drones and 11 missiles.

A representative of Ukraine’s air force told Ukrainian media that the attack was the largest of the Russian invasion.

‘Complete disregard’

Overnight Russia attacks have escalated over recent weeks.

An AFP tally found Moscow launched a record number of drones and missiles at Ukraine in June, when direct peace talks between Kyiv and Moscow appeared to stall.

In Kyiv, AFP journalists saw dozens of residents of the capital taking shelter in a metro station.

Ms Yuliia Golovnina, who said she sheltered at the metro regularly, described the worry that came with hearing an explosion during an attack.

The 47-year-old said: “Will there be another one? Will something collapse on you?

“In those seconds, you just hold your breath and wait to see what happens next.”

Ukrainian rescuers working at the site of a drone strike on a five-storey residential building.

PHOTO: EPA

In Kyiv, concerns mounted over whether the US would continue delivering military aid, which is key to Ukraine’s ability to fend off the drone and missile barrages.

The US announced this week that it was reducing some of its aid deliveries.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said this was a clear signal that the 27-nation European Union needed to “step up”.

Ukraine has also ramped up its retaliatory strikes in Russia, where a woman was killed by a Ukrainian drone attack overnight, the acting governor of the Rostov region said.

Talks, spearheaded by the US to secure a ceasefire, have stalled.

Delegations from the two sides last met more than a month ago, when they agreed to exchange 1,000 prisoners each.

Russia announced a fresh swop of prisoners of war with Ukraine on July 4 as part of that agreement. AFP

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