Russia unleashed a massive daytime drone attack on Ukraine on Wednesday, targeting critical infrastructure in the west, killing at least six people and prompting NATO-member Poland to scramble fighter jets, officials said.
Hungary, now led by a government more in line with the European mainstream, condemned the strikes on areas of Ukraine with ethnic Hungarian communities and summoned the Russian ambassador. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy praised the Hungarian action as an “important message”.
Zelenskiy, writing on Telegram while attending a security conference in Romania, said the Russian attack was continuing through the evening, with Moscow now deploying missiles.
Zelenskiy had earlier said that since midnight Moscow had launched at least 800 drones, with the attack deliberately targeting regions closest to the borders of NATO countries.
“It certainly cannot be called a coincidence that one of the longest massive Russian attacks against Ukraine takes place precisely at the time when the President of the United States arrived for a visit to China,” Zelenskiy said on Telegram.
Zelenskiy said six people were killed and dozens injured in the attack, which spanned other regions. Ukraine’s railway infrastructure was struck 23 times during the barrage, a presidential advisor said, though traffic was maintained.
A late evening statement issued by Ukraine’s military said 187 combat clashes had been recorded over 24 hours along the 1,200-km (750-mile) front line, with 55 air strikes and 178 guided bombs deployed by Russian forces.
The heaviest fighting occurred near Pokrovsk in the east, under Russian attack for many months, with 24 clashes recorded and near Huliaipole further south, with 22 Russian attacks.
Wednesday’s drone strikes were the first such major attack after a three-day U.S.-brokered ceasefire between Ukraine and Russia, which ended on Monday.
Poland scrambled fighter jets as a preventative measure due to the Russian air strikes on Ukraine, the Polish army said.

Hungarian Prime Minister Peter Magyar, speaking after the new government’s first cabinet meeting, said the Russian ambassador had been summoned to the foreign ministry on Thursday morning to meet foreign minister Anita Orban.
Orban will condemn the attack at the meeting and ask the ambassador when Russia plans to end the more than four-year-old war, he added. Under the outgoing government voted out of office this month, Hungary blocked aid for Ukraine and tried to slow its efforts to join the EU.
Slovakia closed border crossings with Ukraine for security reasons.
The defence ministry in Moldova, which has repeatedly denounced Russia’s invasion of its eastern neighbour, said a drone had crossed into its airspace and flown for about 300 km before disappearing from radar screens. The foreign ministry said the intrusion “posed a threat to our citizens.”
Ukraine’s HUR military intelligence said the drone assault was designed to overwhelm Ukrainian air defences, warning of subsequent missile strikes. It said that Moscow targeted critical infrastructure and essential services in major cities.
ATTACKS IN WESTERN UKRAINE
Ukraine’s air force said Russia had used the territory of Belarus and Moldova to fly the drones towards Ukraine.
State-owned oil and gas company Naftogaz said that Russian strikes had damaged two of its facilities in the northeastern region of Kharkiv and in Zhytomyr region, west of Kyiv. Governors and mayors reported strikes across western Ukraine.