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Ukraine War

Drone War Escalates as Russia and Ukraine Trade ‘Hundreds of Strikes’

Drones
Switchblade Drone. Image Credit: Industry Handout.

Key Points and Summary – Russia and Ukraine are locked in an escalating drone war, trading massive overnight barrages of long-range UAVs. Early on Friday, June 27th, Russia launched 363 Shahed and decoy drones, along with eight missiles, primarily at the Khmelnytskyi region.

-While Ukraine claims to have intercepted or jammed the vast majority, the strikes reflect Russia’s strategy of using swarms of cheap, Iranian-designed drones to overwhelm defenses.

-In retaliation, Ukraine launched its own strikes, forcing temporary closures at three Russian airports and the Crimean Bridge.

-This attritional drone warfare continues to inflict a stark human cost, with a recent UN report attributing nearly 90% of over 3,000 civilian drone casualties to Russian attacks.

The New Normal? A Look at the Escalating Drone Arms Race in Ukraine

The skies over Eastern Europe lit up once again overnight, as both Russia and Ukraine launched and repelled massive barrages of long-range drones. According to Ukraine’s air force, Russian forces deployed 363 Shahed drones and decoy variants alongside eight cruise missiles.

The majority were intercepted or jammed, although  a pair of missiles and four drones penetrated Ukrainian defenses.

On the bright side, no casualties or significant damage have been reported.

Ukraine Strikes Back

Ukraine hit back with a fresh salvo of drone strikes. Some three Russian airports were forced to halt  operations as a result. Moscow even briefly temporarily shut the Crimean Bridge. Russia’s Defense Ministry claimed it downed 39 Ukrainian drones, including 19 over Rostov and 13 over Volgograd.

The drone arms race has accelerated rapidly. Russia continues mass production of its Shahed drones, a design based on Iranian models but increasingly modified with heavier warheads and improved guidance systems. These “kamikaze drones” dive straight into their targets with explosive payloads and are often deployed in swarms to overwhelm defenses. Their eerie buzz is now an unwelcome soundtrack across Ukrainian cities.

Ukraine’s Drone Innovation 

But Ukraine is catching up. Despite being outnumbered and outgunned, Kyiv has cultivated a decentralized drone warfare ecosystem, training thousands of drone operators and pioneering long-range sea drones.

Small, camera-equipped UAVs are now a staple on both sides of the 1,000-kilometer front line: guiding artillery fire, scouting enemy positions, and in many cases, targeting infrastructure and civilians alike.

The human cost is stark. A new U.N. report this week found that short-range drone attacks have killed at least 395 civilians and injured over 2,600 since the start of the war. Nearly 90% of those deaths were attributed to Russian strikes. The drones don’t just kill, they paralyze daily life, the U.N. said, blocking access to medicine, food, and shelter in areas under near-constant threat.

Are Tech Advancements Encouraging a Stalemate?

While both sides of this war are experiencing tactical advantages from these innovations, in reality it is likely contributing to a stalemate in which drones present more options for  psychological terror than strategic battlefield wins.

The war has become a testbed for new weapons that are cheap, scalable, and increasingly indiscriminate.

As world leaders meet at the NATO summit, President Trump has expressed frustration that the war continues at all. But on the ground, the low-cost drone war rages on, largely immune to speeches, sanctions, or diplomatic fatigue.

And for millions of civilians caught beneath the buzzing wings, peace feels as distant as ever.

About the Author:

Georgia Gilholy is a journalist based in the United Kingdom who has been published in Newsweek, The Times of Israel, and the Spectator. Gilholy writes about international politics, culture, and education.

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Georgia Gilholy
Written By

Georgia Gilholy is a journalist based in the United Kingdom who has been published in Newsweek, The Times of Israel, and the Spectator. Gilholy writes about international politics, culture, and education. Follow her on X: @llggeorgia.

1 Comment

1 Comment

  1. Swamplaw Yankee

    June 28, 2025 at 6:57 am

    The millions in the USA need to feel the air blast hit them from Putin’s muslim supplied drone factories. With women assembly workers from every tribe in Africa doing sweatshop hours for the orc muscovite elite.

    Only then, will the insulated inner beltway brains start to wonder if their children have been kidnapped by Putin’s “little green groomers” for free russian language and table top dancing instructions from very needy orcs.

    The USA just can not feel the pain of millions Ukrainians whose children have been kidnapped for the human trafficking pleasures of millions of unrepentant moscow deviates. The Jeffrey Epstein army of Moscow is not a reality to the MSM of the USA. -30-

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