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Russian strike on Kyiv kills at least 12 in biggest attack on Ukrainian capital since last summer

A woman sits in a shelter with her head resting in her hand and her eyes closed.
A woman sits in a school basement being used as a shelter after a Russian airstrike on a residential neighborhood in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Thursday.
(Evgeniy Maloletka / Associated Press)

Russia pounded Kyiv with an hours-long barrage of missiles and drones Thursday, killing at least 12 people in its deadliest assault on the Ukrainian capital since July and drawing a rare rebuke from President Trump just as peace efforts were coming to a head.

The attack kept residents on edge for about 11 hours, with many staying awake all night while loud explosions reverberated around the city and flashes of light punctuated the sky. Families gathered in public air-raid shelters, some of them bringing cats and dogs. The strikes that began around 1 a.m. hit at least five neighborhoods and heavily damaged multiple residential buildings. Around 90 people were wounded.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said he would cut short his official trip to South Africa and return home as the city reeled. The bombardment appeared to be Russia’s biggest attack on Kyiv in nine months, and Zelensky called it one of Russia’s ”most outrageous.”

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Trump, who has long been reluctant to criticize the Kremlin, said he was “not happy” with the assault. He implored Russian President Vladimir Putin to cease the devastating strikes.

“Not necessary, and very bad timing. Vladimir, STOP!” Trump wrote on his social media platform, adding, “Lets get the Peace Deal DONE!”

Senior U.S. officials have warned that the Trump administration could soon give up its efforts to stop the war if the two sides do not come to agreement to halt the fighting.

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The Ukrainian air force said Russia fired 66 ballistic and cruise missiles, four plane-launched air-to-surface missiles and 145 Shahed and decoy drones at Kyiv and four other regions of Ukraine. Rescue workers with flashlights searched the charred rubble of partly collapsed homes as the blue lights of emergency vehicles illuminated the dark city streets.

President Trump and Vice President JD Vance publicly berated Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as an ungrateful ally risking global war in its ongoing defense against Russia.

The attack came as weeks of peace negotiations appeared to be culminating without an agreement in sight and hours after Trump lashed out at Zelensky. Trump accused him of prolonging the “killing field” by refusing to surrender the Russian-annexed Crimea peninsula as part of a possible deal.

Later Thursday during an Oval Office meeting with Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store, Trump said that Crimea was taken from Ukraine without a fight. He also noted that the annexation of the Ukrainian peninsula happened under President Obama’s watch.

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Asked what Putin is doing now to help forge a peace deal, Trump responded, “Stopping taking the whole country, pretty big concession.”

Zelensky says future of negotiations depends on Moscow

Zelensky has repeated many times during the war, now in its fourth year, that recognizing occupied territory as Russian is a red line for his country. He noted Thursday that Ukraine agreed to a U.S. ceasefire proposal 44 days ago, as a first step to a negotiated peace, but that Russian attacks continued.

He said in South Africa that the latest attack meant the future of negotiations “depends on Russia’s intention because it is in Moscow where they have to make a decision.”

During recent talks, Russia hit the city of Sumy, killing more than 30 civilians gathered to celebrate Palm Sunday, battered Odesa with drones and struck Zaporizhzhia with powerful glide bombs.

The European Union’s foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, said the latest attack underscored that the main obstacle to ending the war is Russia.

“While claiming to seek peace, Russia launched a deadly airstrike on Kyiv,” she wrote on social media. “This isn’t a pursuit of peace, it’s a mockery of it.”

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French President Emmanuel Macron said Putin should “stop lying” when he claims to want peace while continuing to bomb Ukraine.

“There is only one answer we are waiting for: Does President Putin agree to an unconditional ceasefire?” Macron said during a visit to Madagascar. He added that American “anger should focus on just one person: President Putin.”

The death toll from a Russian missile strike in the central Ukrainian city of Kryvyi Rih has risen to 18, including nine children, regional governor Serhii Lysak said.

Ukrainian Foreign Minister Andrii Sybiha said the attack showed that Putin is determined to press his bigger army’s advantage on the roughly 620-mile front line, where it currently holds the momentum.

“Putin demonstrates through his actions, not words, that he does not respect any peace efforts and only wants to continue the war,” Sybiha said on X. “Weakness and concessions will not stop his terror and aggression. Only strength and pressure will.”

Since Russia’s February 2022 full-scale invasion of its neighbor, Putin’s forces have killed about 13,000 civilians, including 618 children, Ukrainian Prime Minister Denis Shmyhal noted.

Kyiv residents spent the night in shelters

At least 42 people were hospitalized after the attack on residential suburbs of Kyiv, Ukraine’s State Emergency Service said.

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The dead included a brother and sister, ages 21 and 19, according to Zelensky.

At a Kyiv residential building that was almost entirely destroyed, emergency workers removed rubble with their hands, rescuing a trapped woman who emerged from the wreckage covered in white dust and moaning in pain.

An elderly woman sat against a brick wall, her face smeared with blood and her eyes fixed on the ground in shock as medics tended to her wounds.

Fires were reported in several residential buildings, said Tymur Tkachenko, the head of the city military administration.

Oksana Bilozir, a student, suffered a head injury in the attack. With blood seeping from her bandaged head, she said that she heard a loud explosion after the air alarm blared and began to grab her things to flee to a shelter when another blast caused her home’s walls to crumble and the lights to go off.

“I honestly don’t even know how this will all end, it’s very scary,” Bilozir said, referring to the war. “I only believe that if we can stop them on the battlefield, then that’s it. No diplomacy works here.”

Zelensky to return from South Africa

Zelensky said in a post on the messaging app Telegram that he would fly back to Kyiv after meeting with South African President Cyril Ramaphosa.

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The Ukrainian leader had hoped to recruit further South African support in efforts to end the war with Russia.

Anastasiia Zhuravlova, 33, a mother of two, was sheltering in a basement after multiple blasts damaged her home. Her family was sleeping when the first explosion shattered their windows and sent kitchen appliances flying in the air. Shards of glass rained down on them as they rushed to take cover in a corridor.

“After that, we came to the shelter because it was scary and dangerous at home,” she said.

In Kyiv’s Sviatoshynskyi district, the attack flattened a two-story residential building and heavily damaged nearby multistory buildings.

At a nearby school-turned-relief center, children helped parents cover blown-out windows with plastic while others queued for government compensation. Many stood in bloodstained clothes, still shaken.

Stepanenko and Kullab write for the Associated Press. AP journalist Michelle Gumede in Pretoria, South Africa, contributed to this report.

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