Editor’s note: This is a developing story and is being updated.
Russia launched waves of missile and drone attacks across Ukraine overnight on July 4, striking a residential building in Kyiv, officials reported.
Kyiv Independent journalists on the ground reported hearing multiple rounds of explosions in the capital beginning around 10 p.m. local time and lasting into the early morning of July 4. Ukraine’s Air Force reported Russia had launched a ballistic misile towards the capital around 12:30 a.m.
Tymur Tkachenko, head of the Kyiv City Military Administration, confirmed that a fire had broken out on the roof of a residential building in the Obolon district of Kyiv as a result of an earlier drone strike. Mayor Vitalii Klitschko said that there did not appear to be heavy damage or casualties as a result of the fire, however, the details are still being confirmed.
In the Dniprovskyi district of Kyiv, Tkachenko said that drone debris had fallen near a school and several residential buildings. Debris from a downed drone also landed in an open area of the city’s Solomianskyi district. Preliminary reports indicate no casualties.
Later in the evening amid a subsequent drone wave, a fire had broken out at a “non-residential building” in the Solomianskyi district of the city, Tkachenko added. Emergency crews are currently on-scene.
Information was not immediately available as to the extent of the damage caused amid the attack.
“Stay in shelters,” Tkachenko wrote on Telegram, urging residents to remain cautious.
Elsewhere in the country, downed drones struck property as well as a vehicle in the city of Poltava, regional Governor Volodymyr Kohut said. The attack injured two people.
The drone assault comes hours after a phone call between Russian President Vladimir Putin and U.S. President Donald Trump, during which the Kremlin said Putin reaffirmed that “Russia will continue to pursue its goals” in Ukraine despite calls for a ceasefire from the West.
Kyiv and other major Ukrainian cities have faced intensified drone and missile strikes in recent weeks, with Russia deploying Iranian-designed Shahed drones in record numbers.
Ukrainian officials have warned that continued attacks are aimed at wearing down air defense systems and terrorizing civilians.
Ukraine scrambles to clarify extent of U.S. military aid pause and ‘whether everything will continue’
When the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) halted the transfer of critical air defense missiles and other weapons to Ukraine, Kyiv and its partners were caught off-guard and are now left scrambling for clarity on the scope and length of the Trump administration’s decision. The White House confirmed the halt after a July 1 report by Politico said shipments were paused due to concerns over the size of domestic stockpiles. The decision “was made to put America’s interests first following a DOD rev
