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Russia-Ukraine War 2026
13MAY

Glide bombs kill four in Sloviansk

2 min read
20:00UTC

An 11-year-old and her mother died when a Russian aerial bomb struck their apartment building — part of a daily bombardment that dropped 264 such weapons across Ukraine in a single day.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

Russia is systematically destroying the cities it demands as concessions, ensuring any ceasefire line runs through rubble.

Three Russian guided aerial bombs hit central Sloviansk on 10 March. One struck a residential apartment building. Four people were killed — a mother and her 11-year-old child among them — and 16 were wounded 1. Six residential buildings were damaged 2.

The day before, Russian aircraft dropped 264 guided aerial bombs across Ukraine. Sloviansk and its twin city Kramatorsk anchor Ukraine's eastern defence in Donetsk Oblast . Two days earlier, a Russian airstrike on Kramatorsk killed one person and damaged nearly 40 houses . On 7 March, a cruise missile collapsed an entire entrance section of a five-storey building in Kharkiv, killing ten . The bombardment of Ukrainian urban centres is not episodic. It is daily, and it is accelerating.

Guided aerial bombs — Soviet-era munitions retrofitted with UMPK glide kits — allow Russian aircraft to strike from 40–70 km, beyond the effective envelope of most Ukrainian short- and medium-range air defences. The volume outpaces what Ukraine's limited F-16 fleet and ground-based systems can intercept. The strikes concentrate on urban centres within the four oblasts Russia demands Ukraine cede as ceasefire preconditions . Each bomb that hits an apartment building in Sloviansk reduces the habitable territory that future negotiators will argue over.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Russia is bombing the exact cities — Sloviansk, Kramatorsk — that it says Ukraine must hand over in any peace agreement. This creates a brutal logic: the bombing either forces residents to flee before any formal transfer, or it destroys the military infrastructure Ukraine would use to defend them. For those who remain, daily life means bomb shelters, destroyed buildings, and the knowledge that diplomats elsewhere are debating whether their city belongs to another country. The 264 guided aerial bombs dropped across Ukraine on 9 March alone indicates this is not sporadic — it is a sustained industrial-scale campaign.

Deep Analysis
Synthesis

The convergence of Russian ceasefire demands naming specific cities and Russian guided-bomb campaigns targeting those same cities is not coincidental. Systematic destruction lowers the political cost to Kyiv of eventually conceding devastated, depopulated territory compared with intact cities — making destruction itself a negotiating instrument.

Root Causes

Russia's KAB glide-bomb programme applied relatively cheap guidance kits to legacy Soviet iron-bomb stockpiles — effectively inexhaustible inventory — creating precision-strike capacity whose ceiling is sortie rate rather than munition supply. Unlike cruise missiles requiring specialised manufacturing, glide-bomb conversion can be industrialised rapidly, making this a structural asymmetry, not a temporary advantage.

Escalation

Russia dropped 264 guided aerial bombs on 9 March alone — a single-day figure implying multiple simultaneous strike packages from tactical aviation. This tempo is sustainably above previous monthly averages and indicates Russian tactical air has effectively solved the Ukrainian air-threat problem in the eastern theatre, operating with near-impunity over Donetsk.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    264 guided aerial bombs in a single day indicates Russia has shifted eastern strike tempo beyond what Ukrainian air defences in that sector can meaningfully contest.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Consequence

    Sustained bombardment of Sloviansk and Kramatorsk accelerates civilian displacement, compounding an already severe Ukrainian demographic crisis.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    If ceasefire negotiations resume with these cities as Russian demands, their destroyed state lowers Kyiv's internal political cost of concession — shifting the negotiating equilibrium toward Russian terms.

    Medium term · Suggested
  • Precedent

    Bombing demanded-concession cities while negotiating establishes a coercive template: destroy the prize to reduce the other side's will to contest it.

    Long term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #4 · Ukraine pivots to drone exporter

Al Jazeera· 15 Mar 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Glide bombs kill four in Sloviansk
Sustained glide-bomb bombardment of the Kramatorsk–Sloviansk defensive anchor — 264 bombs in a single day — is destroying the urban infrastructure of the cities Russia demands as ceasefire preconditions, at volumes that exceed Ukrainian interception capacity.
Different Perspectives
NATO eastern flank (B9 + Nordics)
NATO eastern flank (B9 + Nordics)
The B9+Nordic Bucharest joint statement on 13 May reaffirmed Ukraine's sovereignty within internationally recognised borders and backed NATO eastern flank reinforcement; the summit accepted Zelenskyy's bilateral drone deal proposal as a structural alternative to the stalled US export approval pathway, treating it as a European defence architecture question rather than aid delivery.
IAEA / Rafael Grossi
IAEA / Rafael Grossi
Grossi is still negotiating a sixth ZNPP repair ceasefire with no agreement after 50 days of 750 kV line disconnection; the 3 May ERCL drone strike that destroyed environmental monitoring equipment represents a qualitative escalation in infrastructure degradation that the IAEA has documented but cannot compel either party to halt.
Péter Magyar / Hungary
Péter Magyar / Hungary
Magyar's incoming foreign minister pledged on 12 May that Hungary will stop abusing EU veto rights; the pledge is a statement of intent rather than a binding legal commitment, and Magyar's MEPs voted against the €90 billion loan as recently as April, while a planned referendum on Ukraine's EU accession preserves a downstream blocking lever.
EU Council and European Commission
EU Council and European Commission
The Magyar cabinet formation on 12 May removes the Hungary veto that had blocked the €9.1 billion first tranche since February; the Commission is now coordinating the three-document disbursement package for an early-June vote. The structural blocker is gone; the disbursement question is now scheduling, not politics.
Donald Trump / White House
Donald Trump / White House
Trump announced a 9-11 May three-day ceasefire with a 1,000-for-1,000 prisoner exchange attached, then called peace 'getting very close' on 11-13 May while Russia's 800-drone barrage was under way; his public framing adopted Russian diplomatic language without securing any Russian operational concession or verifying the exchange was agreed.
Vladimir Putin / Kremlin
Vladimir Putin / Kremlin
Putin told reporters on 9 May the war is 'coming to an end' while Peskov confirmed on 13 May that territorial demands are unchanged and Russia requires full Ukrainian withdrawal from all four annexed regions; the verbal accommodation costs Moscow nothing and conditions any summit on a pre-finalised treaty Kyiv cannot accept.