Ukraine launches a large-scale overnight attack on Russia
Kyiv hit targets across more than a dozen Russian regions and Crimea, in a night that again widened the war beyond the front line.
The war that many people now treat as background noise rose in volume again this week. In a single night, Ukraine launched a large-scale attack against more than a dozen Russian regions, occupied Crimea and the surrounding seas. Russia answered with strikes on several Ukrainian areas.
The pattern is familiar, but the scale of these crossfire attacks shows neither side is anywhere near standing down. Long-range drones and missiles have turned the rear into a combat zone: refineries, depots and energy infrastructure are targets again, and civilians are back to spending nights in shelters.
Why it matters here
For Portugal and Europe, each escalation has practical effects. It moves energy prices, keeps pressure on defence budgets and helps explain why the supermarket bill is not falling as fast as everyone would like. A war far away is still felt at the end of the month.
Diplomatically, ceasefire talks remain stuck: every round of attacks empties the next round of negotiations. Without credible security guarantees, Kyiv refuses to freeze the front line, and Moscow will not let go of the territory it occupies.
See also: the fragile ceasefire and sanctions on Iran. Follow the United Nations’ official position at un.org.
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