The bombs were raining, and the Ukrainian defense line was again knocked by the Russian army. It was not a mere airstrike, but a complete carpet-like extinction. 268 guided air bombs were spilled over a large portion of Ukraine in a day, and the Russian military even "lazy" into the Ukrainian air defense zone, with long-range guided glider bombs hit targets in the safe area, precision to horror.
Kharkiv and Donetsk became the focus. Su-34 fighter-bombers took turns working like factory assembly lines, and Thunder-E1 rocket-powered gliding bombs came from 120 kilometers away. This picture was like the infinite brush in the game. Monsters, new waves of damage kept coming one after another. The Ukrainian army is distressed. The crumbling defense line has been almost crushed layer by layer.
But all this, much more than that. On the one hand, the bombs washed the ground, on the other hand, the drone bees danced. The Russian army launched more than 6,000 drones in a day and quickly filled the map of Ukraine with coordinates. In addition to the 4941 cannon attacks, as well as various long-range missiles and intensive fire forces, it exploded into a pot of turmoil between Kiev and Nikolayev. It has been said that Ukraine's night is more bustling than the day, with guns, explosions, drones whispering, as if the time of the battlefield doesn't stop the alarm clock.
The Russian army has recently been called a "record-making machine." The largest ballistic missile strike, the largest guided bomb salvo, and the density of precision ammunition strike all set a new chapter in the history of war. If we can describe it in one sentence, it would be: we have just touched the threshold of modern warfare, and we have already advanced technology for ten years.
But there are always reversals in war. The 92nd Independent Assault Brigade of Ukraine has played a new trick. They used Shark-M drones to command the Haima rocket launchers and accurately destroyed the Russian S-400 air defense system and the "Big Bird" radar "in a point-to-point manner. This kind of small team counterattack is like a last-minute goal in a football game, which finally gave the morale of the Ukrainian army some breathing. But if you look at the overall situation, such a victory is too like a lone hero, and it is difficult to reverse the tide if you go upstream.
The front line is dangerous, and the rear line is also not thumping. A large oil depot in Crimea was continuously hit by Ukrainian drones; A rough count shows that 22 oil tanks have been reduced to ruins. Even the substation in Ulyanovsk Oblast, Russia, was not spared. In the race between bombs and drones, whoever runs out of endurance first will crash first.
The Western world was also frightened by cold sweat. The United States and Europe suddenly realized that Patriot air defense missiles are not enough. The US Loma Company followed $2.7 billion orders, starting in 2026, producing 3,000 Patriot-3 guides annually. The new factory started to land, and the production capacity would increase by 30%. The United States has produced 6,000 Patriot missiles since 2000, but these years were instantly exhausted. In 2025, the annual production will reach 700 units, and apparently this "massive PK race" has entered the era of military-industrial operations.
During the talks, Trump directly denied supplying Tomahawk cruise missiles to Ukraine, and the United States also began to be cautious. Budanov, director of the Security Service of Ukraine, said that 99% of the weapons used in recent attacks on Russian refineries were domestically produced. This sentence sounds like "I can do it myself", but in the face of the rolling wave of firepower, how long can the domestic system last?
The situation has evolved to the present day, each war report update seems to be turned to see who first finished the ammunition, to see who can't stand up earlier. Russia once cluster strikes, sea and air high-precision weapons united appear, the Ukrainian army, mercenaries, air defense positions all included in the cleaning list. Ukraine is not losing, with Haimas, drones and striking counter-strikes to create "miracles", but the future remains undecided.
When you read this, you can’t just be amazed by the numbers. Every bomb landed, and behind it was a dark stream of trade, technology and even politics. The Russian army fought the winds, the U.S. military plunged its heads and supported Ukraine hard and hard. Whoever shot the food first will accept the fate. Do you think Ukraine will have a quiet night tonight?
This rhythm does not seem to stop.