海角大神

Ukraine drone strike exposed Russian vulnerability, and sent a signal to Trump

Satellite images show the Belaya Airfield before and after the Ukrainian drone attack that targeted Russian military defenses.
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Planet Labs PBC (left)/Capella Space/Reuters
A combination picture shows satellite images of the Belaya Airfield before and after the Ukrainian drone attack that targeted Russian military airfields in the Irkutsk region, Russia. The photo on the left was taken May 17, 2025. The one on the right, June 2, 2025.

A spectacular drone attack by Ukraine that hit deep into Russia 鈥媡his weekend has shaken the Kremlin and shown the world how technology is changing modern warfare. What remains to be seen is whether it can move Ukraine closer to peace on favorable terms.

The top-secret operation 鈥 a year and a half in the making 鈥 reportedly damaged 30% of Russia鈥檚 long-range aircraft, including planes used to fire missiles at Ukrainian cities and nuclear-capable bombers.

While damage assessments are ongoing, what is clear is that Ukraine has once again redefined modern warfare with cheap drones and exceptional spy craft, dealing a considerable blow to a great power.

Why We Wrote This

The capacity of relatively low-cost drones to damage strategic big-power assets is a lesson that is rippling worldwide, highlighting how technology may rewrite military playbooks in fast-evolving and unexpected ways.

In the process, the audacious asymmetric attack has raised questions among military analysts about everything from the future of air defenses to the nature of nuclear deterrence.

The country鈥檚 defiance in the face of stepped-up Russian bombardments and seemingly endless supply of soldiers, analysts say, also reassures Kyiv鈥檚 supporters that the democracy still stands 鈥 and that it will fight on despite the odds.

鈥淪urprise attacks carry significance in military history,鈥 said Col. Martin O鈥橠onnell, U.S. spokesperson for NATO鈥檚 Supreme Allied Command. 鈥淭hey provoke response, can alter attitudes, [and] are known to reshape military tactics and strategies.鈥

One such attitude that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said he hoped to alter is Russian President Vladimir Putin鈥檚 spurning of peace talks. The hope, Mr. Zelenskyy said, is that such strikes 鈥渁re what will push [Moscow] toward diplomacy.鈥

This has not proved to be the case so far: Russia once again rejected a ceasefire in Istanbul on Monday in a meeting that lasted just over an hour.

Ukrainian Defense Minister Rustem Umerov, his head down in conversation, leaves the Ciragan Palace with his delegation after brief Russia-Ukraine peace talks.
Murad Sezer/Reuters
Ukrainian Defense Minister Rustem Umerov leaves the Ciragan Palace after delegations from Russia and Ukraine concluded peace talks, which lasted just more than an hour, on Monday in Istanbul. The officials left with plans to swap prisoners but no breakthrough on a proposed ceasefire, June 2, 2025.

A message to Russia or the U.S., or both?

But Mr. Zelenskyy鈥檚 true target audience could be the United States. After the operation, he urged President Donald Trump to place more sanctions on Russia.

As Moscow continued hammering civilian targets, contrary to Mr. Trump鈥檚 stated wishes, the U.S. president expressed some skepticism about Mr. Putin鈥檚 good faith. 鈥淚t makes me think that maybe he doesn鈥檛 want to stop the war 鈥 he鈥檚 just tapping me along.鈥

Vice President JD Vance, for his part, said recently that perhaps Russia is 鈥渁sking for too much鈥 in negotiations.

Yet many of Mr. Trump鈥檚 supporters, who routinely express distrust of Mr. Zelenskyy, warn that the latest Ukrainian attack on Russia crosses Mr. Putin鈥檚 red lines. They also worry aloud that it has the potential to be escalatory and, at the extreme, to unwittingly draw the U.S. into a nuclear war.

The U.S. 鈥渟hould not only distance itself from this attack but end any support that could directly or indirectly enable attacks against Russian strategic nuclear forces,鈥 Dan Caldwell, a former Pentagon aide to Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, said Sunday in a .

The Kremlin has been largely silent on the Ukraine operation. Newspapers friendly to Mr. Putin describe it as a terrorist attack and say it proves Kyiv isn鈥檛 ready for peace.

鈥淚 got some cards鈥

Operation Spider鈥檚 Web, the code name for the covert June 1 drone strike, was personally overseen by Mr. Zelenskyy, Ukrainian government sources say.

The attack has 鈥渟eriously weakened鈥 Moscow鈥檚 military operations and will go down 鈥渋n the history books,鈥 President Zelenskyy said Monday.

Retired Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges, former commander of U.S. Army forces in Europe, says he now likes to contemplate Mr. Zelenskyy鈥檚 involvement in the operation as he thinks back to the Ukrainian leader鈥檚 contentious February meeting in the Oval Office with President Trump and Vice President Vance.

鈥淭hey were telling Zelenskyy, 鈥榊ou鈥檝e got no cards.鈥 And it鈥檚 interesting that Zelenskyy, when he was getting yelled at by these two people, already knew that this plan was approaching,鈥 General Hodges says. 鈥淪o it鈥檚 kind of cool, from a human standpoint, that he鈥檚 sitting there listening and thinking, 鈥榊ou just wait. I got some cards.鈥欌

鈥婽he capacity of relatively low-cost drones to damage strategic big-power assets is a lesson that is rippling worldwide. The threat hadn鈥檛 been unknown, but from the Pentagon to Beijing, the operation is highlighting how technology may rewrite military playbooks in fast-evolving and unexpected ways.

The drone raid by Ukraine was aimed at stopping incessant Russian attacks on Ukrainian civilians and infrastructure, like hospitals and electrical grids. While the conflict has been at a stalemate for some time, with Russia controlling roughly 20% of Ukrainian territory, Mr. Putin has far greater reserves of soldiers and firepower.

A member of the Ukrainian armed forces stands in an enclosed wire structure, preparing drones that will attack Russian defenses.
Alina Smutko/Reuters
Nazar, a member of the Ukrainian armed forces, prepares first-person view drones that were to be launched toward Russian troops during a proposed three-day ceasefire declared by Russia. This photo was taken near a front line in the Dnipropetrovsk region, Ukraine, May 8, 2025.

This latest attack involved dozens of small, first-person view drones. Hidden in large container units with retractable roofs, the drones were designed to circumvent Russia鈥檚 sophisticated air defenses. They were reportedly smuggled in, in part by unwitting Russian truck drivers who thought they were delivering building materials and drove their loaded trucks straight onto remote Russian bases.

By keeping its aircraft out of range of Ukrainian strikes, Russia had presumed its air assets 鈥 some of which were kept more than 2,600 miles from the border 鈥 were safe. There are also indications that the attack鈥檚 targets included Russia鈥檚 Northern Fleet headquarters, where nuclear submarines are docked.

Echoes of previous stealth attacks

Operation Spider鈥檚 Web echoed Ukraine鈥檚 2023 attack using drones and missiles that destroyed an estimated one-third of Russia鈥檚 Black Sea assets, forcing Moscow to relocate its fleet farther east.

In terms of its tradecraft, Operation Spider鈥檚 Web resembled the Israeli Mossad鈥檚 pager attack on Hezbollah last year, in which Israeli intelligence replaced Hezbollah fighters鈥 regular pagers with devices containing explosives. That attack killed top Hezbollah leaders and sowed widespread uncertainty within its ranks.

鈥淎chieving a surprise effect like this will create so much distrust and uncertainty inside Russia,鈥 General Hodges says. 鈥淵ou can imagine it would鈥檝e been no fun to come into the office in Moscow to explain how truckloads of Ukrainian quadcopters got so deep into multiple bases inside Russia.鈥

Pro-war Russian bloggers, for their part, have dubbed the attack 鈥淩ussia鈥檚 Pearl Harbor鈥 and are urging that retaliation on Ukraine be punishing.

Despite Moscow鈥檚 efforts to downplay the damage, many of Mr. Putin鈥檚 supporters, in decrying the operation, could not help but point to its success.

The attack will discredit Russian security services and create 鈥渃olossal tension鈥 in Russian society, one popular pro-Kremlin blogger predicted.

That is in keeping with Ukraine鈥檚 aims, analysts say. It also forges one more potential path, they add, toward an end to the war.

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