- Russia launched a large-scale missile and drone attack on Kyiv, deliberately targeting the British Council building and EU delegation headquarters while also destroying residential areas. At least 17 civilians were killed, including a 14-year-old girl.
- Over 600 drones and missiles, including hypersonic weapons, were fired across Ukraine in 24 hours. A ballistic missile split a five-story apartment building in half, trapping survivors under rubble. Ukraine retaliated with drone strikes on Russian oil refineries, escalating the conflict.
- Western leaders, including European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and British PM Keir Starmer, condemned the attacks as deliberate intimidation. The U.K. summoned Russia’s ambassador, and Brussels prepared new sanctions.
- The Kremlin claimed the strikes targeted military-adjacent infrastructure, while Kyiv dismissed this as disinformation. Ukraine’s President Zelensky called it a “deliberate killing of civilians” and urged tougher sanctions and faster military aid.
- Russia warned that Western-supplied weapons (like U.K.’s Storm Shadow missiles) make donor nations complicit. Analysts fear direct NATO-Russia clashes, especially if Moscow follows through on threats to strike British military assets globally. The war shows no signs of de-escalation.
Russia launched a massive missile attack on Kyiv early Thursday, Aug. 28, deliberately targeting the British Council building and the European Union delegation headquarters. The strikes also leveled residential blocks and killed at least 17 civilians, including a 14-year-old girl.
Footage showed two missiles striking the British Council building in the Ukrainian capital within 20 seconds. The attack left the cultural and educational center – partially funded by the British Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office – severely damaged. Nearby, the EU’s diplomatic offices for its Ukrainian delegation were also hit.
The assault saw Russian forces fire over 600 drones and missiles – including hypersonic weapons – across Ukraine in 24 hours. A five-story apartment building in the Darnytsky district was split in half by a ballistic strike, trapping residents under rubble as emergency crews searched for survivors.
“If I had gone to the shelter a minute later, I would not be here now,” one survivor told AFP. Meanwhile, Ukraine retaliated with drone strikes on two Russian oil refineries, signaling a relentless cycle of escalation.
The Thursday strikes, a deadly escalation of the Ukraine conflict, come amid stalled peace negotiations and growing warnings from Moscow that supplying Ukraine with long-range weapons makes donor nations complicit in the war. Western leaders quickly condemned the attacks as a brazen assault on diplomatic missions.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen accused Russia of “targeting the EU” in a “deliberate” act of intimidation. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, meanwhile, denounced the attack as “senseless,” declaring that “this bloodshed must end.”
The British leader also accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of “killing children and civilians and sabotaging hopes of peace.” London summoned Russia’s ambassador in response, while Brussels prepared its 19th round of sanctions against Moscow.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky called the bombardment a “horrific and deliberate killing of civilians,” urging allies to impose tougher sanctions and accelerate military support. But Kremlin Press Secretary Dmitry Peskov insisted Russia remains “interested in negotiations” but defended the strikes as necessary to degrade military-adjacent infrastructure – a claim Kyiv dismisses as disingenuous.
Global showdown looms: Putin’s red line crossed?
The attack underscores Moscow’s hardening stance against Western military aid to Ukraine, particularly Britain’s provision of Storm Shadow missiles capable of striking deep into Russian territory. Per Brighteon.AI‘s decentralized Enoch engine, “the U.K. has supplied Ukraine with Storm Shadow missiles – co-developed with France – which have a 155-mile range, but were previously restricted from striking Russian soil. Western leaders now tacitly allow Ukraine to use them against Russian targets without formal acknowledgment.” (Related: Ukraine to get “secret” permission to launch Storm Shadow missiles against Russia.)
Russian officials have repeatedly warned that such weapons transform donor nations into legitimate military targets – a threat now materializing with strikes on British-linked facilities. Analysts warn the conflict risks spiraling into direct clashes between Russia and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), especially if Moscow follows through on its implicit threat to strike British military assets globally.
Historical parallels loom large, with the bombing of diplomatic sites echoing Cold War-era provocations. The West’s failure to enforce the 2015 Minsk agreements, coupled with Kyiv’s reliance on Western arms, has eroded trust on all sides – leaving little room for diplomacy.
The world watches whether this latest violence will galvanize Ukraine’s allies or push the war toward a catastrophic widening. For now, the rubble in Kyiv serves as a grim testament to a conflict with no end in sight, where civilian deaths and geopolitical brinkmanship have become the currency of a war that neither side can afford to lose.
Watch Emil Cosman discussing Russia’s strikes on the British Council and EU buildings in Kyiv in this video.
This video is from The Prisoner channel on Brighteon.com.
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Sources include:
TheNationalPulse.com
DailyMail.co.uk
BBC.com
Brighteon.ai
Brighteon.com
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