Major Russian drone and missile attacks on Feb. 9 tore into Ukraine’s electrical and gas infrastructure, killing civilians and knocking out power for tens of thousands as winter temperatures plunged.
Russian forces struck power and gas facilities across the Zaporizhzhia, Kherson, Kharkiv and Donetsk regions, Ukrainian authorities reported, deepening nationwide blackouts and escalating a winter campaign aimed at crippling civilian life as ceasefire discussions stalled.
United Nations officials said strikes between Jan. 16 and Jan. 19 hit Kharkiv, Dnipro, Chernihiv, Donetsk, Kherson, Zaporizhzhia and Sumy.
“The secretary-general condemns all attacks on civilian infrastructure by any party,” U.N. spokesperson Farhan Haq told Military.com on Monday.
Military.com reached out to additional Ukrainian and Russian officials for comment.
Cold Winter Impact
Russian strikes killed nine civilians and injured more than 50 during a four-day stretch of attacks across eastern and southern Ukraine, even before the massive Feb. 9 barrage.
Temperatures dropped to roughly -20 degrees Celsius as rolling blackouts swept the country, straining hospitals, heating systems, water treatment plants and rail networks.
Russian attacks also damaged power facilities in occupied areas of Zaporizhzhia and Kherson, triggering widespread outages. Frontline assaults forced authorities to evacuate more than 1,300 residents from the Donetsk region over four days, including 170 children.
EU Slams Russia, Pledges Billions in Energy Aid
Brussels moved quickly to shore up Ukraine’s battered grid as the winter assault intensified.
European Union officials directly blamed Moscow for the latest wave of strikes, saying Russia’s energy campaign worsened humanitarian conditions in temporarily occupied territories and compounded blackouts during subzero temperatures.
“Russia alone bears responsibility for continuing the war of aggression against Ukraine and could bring it to an end immediately by ceasing its aggression,” Anitta Hipper, EU spokesperson for foreign affairs and security policy, told Military.com in a statement provided through the European Commission.
The EU has allocated more than 1.2 billion euros, roughly $1.3 billion USD, in humanitarian assistance and mobilized 927 million euros, or about $1 billion, for emergency gas purchases through the Ukraine Facility and a Norwegian grant.
Officials said the bloc delivered 160,000 tons of generators, heating appliances and solid fuels through the Civil Protection Mechanism to stabilize critical services.
“Europe will not let Russia freeze Ukraine into submission,” Hipper told Military.com.
The funding push follows months of targeted Russian strikes on substations, transmission lines and gas facilities that forced repeated emergency repairs.
UK, NATO Warn Russia After Massive Energy Barrage
Missiles and drones have turned Ukraine’s power stations into frontline targets.
British officials said Russia launched 34 missiles and 339 drones in a single wave, following four previous nights in which 537 drones targeted Ukrainian cities and energy facilities. The United Kingdom announced 20 million euros, about $25 million, for urgent grid repairs on Jan. 16.
NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg condemned the attacks during public remarks earlier this month.
“We have seen last night again, hundreds of drones and tens of missiles hitting Ukraine, and particularly now hitting the civilian infrastructure, innocent civilians,” he said at a public forum.
The strikes had “nothing to do with the combat on the front line,” he added.
He said sustained allied air defense support remains critical as Russia presses its winter campaign against civilian utilities.
US Offers No Detailed Assessment
Washington has not publicly outlined its evaluation of the Feb. 9 barrage.
Military.com contacted the U.S. State Department seeking comment on the civilian toll, damage to Ukraine’s grid, potential air defense implications and whether the issue was raised in diplomatic channels.
A spokesperson responded but did not address questions about the U.S. assessment of the strikes, air defense posture, or diplomatic engagement tied to the attacks.
Military.com also reached out to the U.S. Defense Department for comment on any Pentagon evaluation of the missile and drone wave or additional security assistance. The department did not respond.
Power Grid Becomes a Battlefield
Russia began targeting Ukraine’s power plants, substations and gas facilities in the early months of the invasion and repeatedly escalated those strikes during winter, when outages strain heating systems, hospitals, water supplies and transportation networks.
Earlier waves showed the playbook in detail: one overnight barrage included 67 missiles and 194 drones, with Ukrainian officials saying the strikes hit energy and gas production sites—part of a push to deny civilians heat and light while degrading the systems that support the broader war effort.
Ukraine has also framed air defenses as grid protection. President Volodymyr Zelenskyy pressed allies for additional Patriot systems as scheduled outages continued and Russian strikes damaged power infrastructure.
Zaporizhzhia remains strategically vital. It hosts Europe’s largest nuclear power plant, a six-reactor facility that depends on stable external power for cooling systems.
The plant has previously relied on diesel backup generators after losing key external power connections, providing a reminder that grid disruptions can carry nuclear safety stakes alongside humanitarian consequences.
The winter pattern also continued into late January, when Ukraine reported another large strike package and said its air defenses shot down or jammed dozens of incoming threats, while some missiles and drones still hit multiple locations, extending the blackout cycle even as talks continued.
The Feb. 9 barrage reinforced how the energy system now sits at the center of the conflict, where military strategy and civilian survival intersect.
Repair crews worked through the night as air raid sirens sounded again in several regions.