As Russia’s assault continues, Ukraine’s politics shift and an old alliance begins to fray
Published by WarSignal Editorial · Last updated
Beneath the drone strikes and talk of ceasefires lies a battle over history that is testing Kyiv’s chances for an end to the conflict • Don’t get This Is Europe delivered to your inbox? Sign up here I’ve just come back from a trip to Kyiv, where after more than four years of war, it can feel like the political and diplomatic news agenda has become cyclical: a suggestion that some kind of peace deal could be around the corner, followed by the swift intervention of reality that the Kremlin has no interest in abandoning its maximalist goals, and we all go back to the drawing board.
We are now in a period where Russia has again stepped up its air attacks on the Ukrainian capital. Frequent mass drone and missile attacks keep Kyiv residents awake, and some even get through to the city centre, whereas in the past Ukrainian air defences were usually able to repel them. Nights can be noisy and scary: one attack while I was there killed 27 people. Thousands head into the metro to get some sleep. Continue reading...
Verification Status
reported — Reported — awaiting independent confirmation This event has been confirmed by 2 independent sources.
Location
Sources (2)
About This Report
This report is generated by WarSignal's multi-source intelligence pipeline. Information is collected from wire services, OSINT channels, and partner APIs, then clustered, verified, and published with editorial oversight. Source attribution and verification status are displayed for full transparency. For our complete methodology, visit our Sources & Methodology page.