MOSCOW Ukrainian drones struck wealthy districts of Moscow on Tuesday, in what one politician called the most dangerous attack since World War II, while Kyiv was also hit by air for the third time in 24 hours.
Drone attacks deep inside Russia have intensified in recent weeks, with strikes on oil pipeline installations and even the Kremlin earlier in May that Moscow has blamed on Ukraine.
Tuesdays early morning raid targeted some of Moscows wealthiest areas, including where Russian President Vladimir Putin and the elite have homes. The leader was in the Kremlin later and received a briefing on the attack, a spokesman said.
Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin said two people were injured, one of whom was hospitalised, in the early morning attack. Moscows airports remained open. No deaths were reported.
Residents in south-western Moscow said they heard loud bangs, followed by the smell of petrol. Some filmed a drone being shot down and a plume of smoke rising over the Moscow skyline.
This morning, the Kyiv regime launched a terrorist attack with unmanned aerial vehicles on premises in the city of Moscow, Russias defence ministry said. Eight unmanned aerial vehicles were involved in the attack. All enemy drones were hit.
The ministry said special electronic counter-drone technology was used to divert three of the Ukrainian drones, while five more were shot down, including by Pantsir missile systems that help defend Moscow.
Ukrainian presidential aide Mykhailo Podolyak denied Kyiv was directly involved in Tuesdays attacks, though he said we are pleased to watch and forecast more.
Kyiv denied that it was behind the drone raid on the Kremlin earlier in May, though The New York Times reported that US intelligence believes Ukraine was behind that attack.
More than 15 months into one of the deadliest wars in Europe since World War II, there is little sign of peace, and Moscow has repeatedly warned that the West is escalating the war by supplying Kyiv with so much weaponry.
It was unclear how Russian President Vladimir Putin will react to the attack on Moscow, which brings the war in Ukraine to the capital of the worlds biggest nuclear power.
So far, Mr Putin has been successful in keeping the war in Ukraine far from Moscow, where life has continued relatively normally despite the biggest crisis in Russias ties with the West since the 1962 Cuban missile crisis.
Russian lawmaker Maxim Ivanov said Tuesdays drone attack was the most serious assault on Moscow since Nazi attacks during World War II, and no citizen could now avoid what he called the new reality.
You will either defeat the enemy as a single fist with our Motherland, or the indelible shame of cowardice, collaboration and betrayal will engulf your family, he said. More On This Topic Russia hits military base in Ukraine in new wave of strikes Ukraine aide proposes post-war demilitarised zone in Russia Also on Tuesday, Ukraine said it downed 29 out of 31 drones, mainly over Kyiv and the Kyiv region in the latest Russian barrage the third on the capital in 24 hours.
On Monday, Russia fired a barrage of missiles at Kyiv, sending panicked residents running for shelter in an unusual daytime attack on the Ukrainian capital following overnight strikes.
The latest barrages landed as the Ukrainian capital was still recovering from an overnight Saturday drone attack, the biggest since Russia began its campaign in Ukraine in February 2022. Rescuers working in a residential building that was damaged by drone attacks, in Kyiv, Ukraine, on May 30, 2023. PHOTO: AFP Kyiv received its first shipments of the American-made Patriot surface-to-air missile system in April, and US President Joe Biden on Monday suggested more aid was to come.
Asked about Russias fierce attacks on Kyiv, Mr Biden told reporters, Its not unexpected, adding: Thats why weve got to continue to give Ukraine all that it needs.
Kyiv has been preparing an offensive, although its timing and focus have been the subject of months of speculation. REUTERS, AFP More On This Topic Russia launches 15th air raid on Kyiv in May; Ukraine destroys over 70 drones, missiles Ukraine reports most important drone attack on Kyiv since invasion
Renewable capacity additions, especially solar, will continue to drive the growth of US power generation over the next two years, according to the US Energy Information Administration (EIA).
According to its latest “Short-Term Energy Outlook” (STEO), the EIA expects that US utilities and independent power producers will add 26 gigawatts (GW) of solar capacity to the US electric power sector in 2025 and 22 GW in 2026.
Last year, the electric power sector added a record 37 GW of solar power capacity to the electric power sector, almost double the solar capacity additions in 2023. The EIA forecasts wind capacity additions will increase by around 8 GW in 2025 and 9 GW in 2026, slight increases from the 7 GW added in 2024.
Generating capacity for most other energy sources will remain mostly unchanged in 2025 and 2026. Natural gas-fired capacity growth slowed in 2024, with only 1 GW of capacity added to the power mix, but natural gas is still the largest source of US power generation.
The EIA forecasts that US coal retirements will accelerate, removing 6% (11 GW) of coal generating capacity from the US electricity sector in 2025 and removing another 2% (4 GW) in 2026. Last year, coal retirements represented about 3 GW of electric power capacity removed from the power system, which is the lowest annual amount of coal capacity retired since 2011.
The EIA expects that planned renewable capacity additions will support most of the growth in US electric power generation, which is anticipated to increase by 2% in 2025 and by 1% in 2026. The US electric power sector produced a total of 4,155 billion kilowatt-hours (kWh) of electricity in 2024, up 3% from 2023.
Natural gas. In 2024, US natural gas-fired power plants generated a total of 1,767 billion kWh, 4% more than in 2023. Natural gas-fired power accounted for around 42% of the US electricity mix, mostly unchanged compared with 2023. The EIA expects natural gas generation to decline in 2025 by 3% to 1,712 billion kWh and decrease a further 1% to 1,692 billion kWh in 2026.
Renewables. The EIA expects renewable power generation will increase by 12% in the US to 1,058 billion kWh in 2025 and increase a further 8% to 1,138 billion kWh in 2026. Renewable sources were the second-largest contributor to US power generation in 2024 and accounted for 945 billion kWh, up 9% from 2023.
Nuclear. The EIA forecasts that US nuclear power generation will grow 2% to 796 billion kWh in 2025 and increase a further 1% to 800 billion kWh in 2026. Nuclear power generation in 2024 was up slightly from 2023, totaling 781 billion kWh.
Coal. Coal electricity generation was 647 billion kWh in 2024. The EIA expects US coal power generation to remain unchanged at around 640 billion kWh in 2025 and 2026.
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Forty-one bodies had been pulled from the river as of Friday afternoon, including 28 that had been positively identified, Washington DC fire chief John Donnelly Sr said at a news conference.
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He said next of kin notifications had been made to 18 families, and that he expects that all 67 of the bodies of the dead will eventually be recovered.
“It’s been a tough response for a lot of our people,” Mr Donnelly said, noting that more than 300 responders were taking part in the effort at any one time.
Investigators have already recovered the cockpit voice recorder and flight data recorder of the American Airlines plane, which struck the helicopter as the plane was coming in for a landing at the airport next to Washington.
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49:10
Plane Crash: What went wrong?
Officials are scrutinising a range of factors in what National Transportation Safety Board chairwoman Jennifer Homendy has called an “all-hands-on-deck event”.
Investigators are examining the actions of the military pilot as well as air traffic control, after the helicopter apparently flew into the jet’s path.
Air crash investigations normally take 12-18 months, and investigators told reporters on Thursday that they would not speculate on the cause.
It has been suggested the helicopter exceeded an altitude limit.
Mr Trump said in a Friday morning post on his Truth Social platform that the helicopter was “flying too high” at the time of the crash.
“It was far above the 200 foot limit. That’s not really too complicated to understand, is it???” he said.
His comments came a day after he questioned the helicopter pilot’s actions while also blaming diversity initiatives for undermining air safety.
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Details have been emerging about others who died in the crash, including Danasia Elder, a flight attendant on the American Airlines flight, WSOC-TV in Charlotte, North Carolina, reported.
One of the most high-profile prisoners to be released by Israel has told Sky News that the world has ignored Palestinians and says Britain is one of the countries he blames for taking away his freedom.
Zakaria Zubeidi was imprisoned in 2019 after being found guilty by an Israeli military court of involvement in terrorism.
He was released as part of the ceasefire agreement and welcomed back to the West Bank by crowds of well-wishers, including the man who was prime minister less than a year ago.
In his first interview with a European broadcaster, Zubeidi told Sky News he still believes in “a resistance that will lead us to freedom” but claimed that Israeli occupation of the West Bank was wholly down to the international community.
“My life is worthless without freedom,” he said, speaking in Ramallah. “Freedom has no price. But the world that has denied me my freedom – particularly Britain, France, and the United States – must return what they have taken from me and my children.
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“They are the ones who need to reconsider their mistakes, not me.
“They are the ones who have wronged us, and they should think about rectifying the harm they have caused to me and my children.”
Zubeidi, whose mother, brother and son have all died as a result of Israeli military action, has admitted involvement in a 2002 bombing that killed six people.
However, he has also been acclaimed by many in the West Bank as a symbol of the resistance.
He was famously part of a group of prisoners who briefly escaped their Israeli jail after using kitchen utensils to dig a tunnel.
“My message to the Palestinian people is to prioritise their safety and well-being because the assault being carried out against them is immense. I have no message for the occupation [Israel],” he said.
“My message is to the world – the same world that granted the occupation the right to live on my land – to grant me my freedom.”
In common with many other released prisoners, he claimed to have been beaten while behind bars, saying: “The situation in Israeli prisons is extremely harsh. We’ve witnessed it all: severe beatings, attack dogs, relentless insults. Every form of abuse imaginable has been inflicted on the bodies of our prisoners.”
While many in Israel will consider Zubeidi to be a dangerous, murderous extremist, he is considered a totemic figure in the West Bank, and a natural leader in Jenin, where he grew up in a refugee camp.
After being released, Israeli authorities banned him from returning to Jenin.
Instead, he has remained in Ramallah, where a long line of people came to a school building to shake his hand and hug him.
Among them, former prime minister Mohammad Shtayyeh, who resigned less than a year ago.
He embraced Zubeidi and told Sky News the release of prisoners could be a catalyst for an enduring peace deal.
“We would like to see all prisoners released and we would like to see all hostages going home,” said Mr Shtayyeh.
He continued: “It’s a historic moment for everybody. It’s time for this bloodshed to stop. And I think it is a moment of truth for everybody.
“In Gaza, 60,000 people have been killed, more than 120,000 have been injured. And of course, there have been so many casualties in Israel, too.
“We know that. And this time Palestinians are desperate for peace. We want a genuine peace process that does really bring peace and justice for everybody.”
More than 47,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s offensive, according to Hamas-run authorities in Gaza, which does not distinguish between civilians and combatants.
The offensive followed Hamas’s attack on Israel on 7 October 2023, when it took 250 people hostage and killed around 1,200 others.