On the night of May 14, missiles and drones struck Kyiv in several waves: first ballistic missiles, then cruise missiles. According to the Air Force, Russia used over 670 strike unmanned aircraft and 56 missiles of various types. Air defense neutralized 41 missiles and 652 drones — the rest reached their targets.
20 locations, three deaths
According to the State Emergency Service, three people were killed in Kyiv — the body of the third person was pulled from under the rubble of a multi-story building in the Darnytskyy district in the morning. 40 people were injured, including two children and a police officer. Damage was recorded at 20 locations across six districts: residential buildings, a school, a veterinary clinic, an apartment hotel, and a car dealership.
Among commercial facilities are two business centers: in the Holosiivskyi district, debris fell on one of them. The Kharkiv shopping mall in the Kharkiv Massif was also damaged.
A target with logic: why Skyeton
A separate target of the strike was the Kyiv office of Skyeton — a Ukrainian manufacturer of reconnaissance UAVs, known for the Raybird-3 complex. The unmanned aircraft can stay in the air for over 24 hours, cover 2,000 km, and has protection against electronic warfare means. These are exactly the systems that provide intelligence at the front lines.
"We understood that sooner or later Skyeton would become a target for the Russians, so we were prepared for this and relocated our production facilities to different parts of our country and abroad."
— Skyeton, official statement after the strike
The office was destroyed, but the company had previously dispersed its production facilities across different regions of Ukraine and abroad. There were no casualties. According to the company's statement, the supply of unmanned technologies to the Defense Forces continues.
Context: strategy of attrition
According to Liga.net, the May 14 attack is one of the most powerful during the full-scale war. The day before, on May 13, Russia struck 23 times against Ukrzaliznytsia facilities: energy infrastructure, bridges, depots, and three locomotives came under fire. Strikes on Kremenchuk and Chornomorsk that night indicate a coordinated attack on critical and industrial infrastructure simultaneously in several regions.
The strike on Skyeton fits this logic: Russia consistently attempts to hit Ukrainian defense enterprises at their known addresses — regardless of whether production still remains there.
The question is not whether Skyeton will continue operations — the company has already confirmed it will. The question is how many other defense enterprises have not yet managed to relocate — and whether they will survive the next strike.