Ukraine targets Moscow daily with drones this year, Russia says, in apparent escalation

Servicemen of the 65th Infantry Division practice firing a MILAN lightweight infantry anti-tank missile system during exercises in the Zaporizhzhia region on January 4, 2026, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine. (AFP)
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Updated 05 January 2026
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Ukraine targets Moscow daily with drones this year, Russia says, in apparent escalation

  • The attacks have forced temporary closures ⁠at Moscow airports and at scores of other Russian airports for safety reasons, Russia’s aviation watchdog Rosaviatsiya said on Telegram
  • Moscow Mayor ‍Sergei Sobyanin has reported multiple interceptions since New ‍Year’s Eve without giving further details

MOSCOW: Ukraine has targeted Moscow with drones every day of 2026 so far, according to data published by Russia’s Defense Ministry, in what appeared to ​mark an escalation from earlier, more sporadic attacks on the Russian capital.
By midnight on Sunday alone, Russian air defense systems had destroyed 57 drones over the Moscow region out of 437 downed over Russia, the ministry said on its Telegram messaging app.
The daily activity suggests a shift from past patterns, ‌when Moscow was hit ‌more intermittently, often around ‌symbolic ⁠dates or ​as a ‌form of signalling rather than a near routine pressure campaign.
There was no immediate comment from Ukraine, but Kyiv has increasingly used long range drones to strike targets deep inside Russia. Ukraine says such attacks aim to disrupt military logistics and energy infrastructure, raise costs for Moscow’s ⁠war effort and respond to repeated Russian missile and drone attacks ‌in the war that Russia launched nearly ‍four years ago.
Moscow Mayor ‍Sergei Sobyanin has reported multiple interceptions since New ‍Year’s Eve without giving further details.
Russia typically reports only how many drones its air defenses say they downed, not how many Ukraine launched, and rarely discloses the full extent of ​damage unless civilians are killed or civilian sites are hit.
The attacks have forced temporary closures ⁠at Moscow airports and at scores of other Russian airports for safety reasons, Russia’s aviation watchdog Rosaviatsiya said on Telegram.
The disruption comes during Russia’s extended New Year and Orthodox Christmas break, which this year runs through January 9, when many Russians take vacations and travel domestically and abroad, making it one of the country’s busiest periods for transport and tourism.
According to RIA state news calculations, Russia’s air defenses intercepted and destroyed at least ‌1,548 Ukrainian drones over Russian territory and the Crimean Peninsula over the past week. 

 


Deadly militant offensive sweeps northern and eastern Burkina Faso

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Deadly militant offensive sweeps northern and eastern Burkina Faso

  • Burkina Faso, ruled by a military junta since September 2022, has faced more than 10 years of raids by groups linked to Al-Qaeda and the Daesh
ABIDJAN: Al-Qaeda-affiliated JNIM has in recent days claimed to have inflicted heavy losses in Burkina Faso as a surge in deadly militant attacks sweeps across the Sahelian state.
Burkina Faso, ruled by a military junta since September 2022, has faced more than 10 years of raids by groups linked to Al-Qaeda and the Daesh, including the Group for the Support of Islam and Muslims (JNIM).
A February UN Security Council report noted that the “pace of JNIM attacks” had slowed in September as fighters were diverted to Mali to back an attempted fuel blockade.
“The group’s efforts in Mali have been the primary focus since early September last year,” said Heni Nsaibia, analyst at conflict monitor ACLED.
But attacks never fully stopped, and JNIM has launched a string of large-scale assaults in northern and eastern Burkina Faso since mid-February, killing dozens, including civilians.
“Since February 14, JNIM has claimed responsibility for 10 attacks across different regions of Burkina Faso,” said Hasret Kargin, an Africa studies researcher at intelligence firm Mintel World.
Deadly assaults
The deadliest incidents targeted Titao’s military base on February 15 in the northwest, where the group says it killed dozens of soldiers.
A separate ambush on the same day left around 50 forestry officers dead in Tandjari in the east.
Around 10 civilians were also killed in Titao, including seven Ghanaian traders.
“This latest round demonstrated a high degree of coordination, given the number of large-scale attacks that occurred between 12 and 22 February,” Nsaibia said.
“Over 130 people” — Burkinabe soldiers, civilian auxiliaries and JNIM fighters — “were killed in this series of battles.”
Kargin noted that JNIM has issued no formal statement explaining the recent uptick after several months of reduced activity.
But militant groups often strike “right before and during” the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, he said, adding current dry-season conditions had helped them on the ground.
‘Smuggling zones’
Recent attacks have gripped the country’s north and east, areas seen as financial hubs for Al-Qaeda’s Sahel branch.
“These are zones with numerous gold sites and key routes that fuel the group’s smuggling activities,” a Burkinabe security analyst said, requesting anonymity.
The north “acts as a bridge” to JNIM’s “main central command” in Mali, Kargin said, while he east — home to a vast nature reserve straddling Niger, Benin and Burkina Faso — allows the group to push into neighboring countries.
The forests, he added, both shield fighters from airstrikes and generate income through illegal timber sales and control of artisanal gold mining.
The Tandjari attack near regional capital Fada N’Gourma highlights JNIM’s growing freedom of movement after having “gained a lot of ground in recent years,” Nsaibia said.
“The question is not the frequency of attacks — they never stopped — but how these groups are able to inflict such heavy losses” when the army claims to be better equipped and better organized, said a Burkinabe political scientist.
The army, which rarely comments on attacks, said in mid-February it now controls 74 percent of national territory, with some “600 villages retaken.”
According to the UN report, JNIM recently appointed a senior leader in eastern Burkina Faso tasked with expanding into Benin, Ivory Coast, Ghana, Niger and Togo.